Closing Ports of Safety: A Legitimate Strategy of Migration Control?

Lena Riemer
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Abstract

In the past decades, the European Union and its member states have increasingly relied on externalization and non-arrival strategies for migration control. One of the latest developments is the decision by Malta and Italy to unilaterally close their ports to vessels carrying migrants rescued at sea. The article examines the conformity of such practices with the international law of the sea and focuses especially on the customary port of safety principle. It also addresses the applicability of the European Convention on Human Rights in cases where the rejected vessels have not entered the territory of a member state. The paper provides a novel approach for the establishment of the European Court of Human Rights’ jurisdiction in such cases of extraterritorial migration control, arguing that the jurisdiction could be founded on the imputable-public-power-test. Based on the analysis of potential violations of rights guaranteed by the Convention and its Protocols, the respective practices may, depending on the individual cases, violate the non-refoulement principle and/or the prohibition of collective expulsion.
关闭安全港口:控制移民的合法策略?
在过去的几十年里,欧盟及其成员国越来越多地依靠外部化和非抵达战略来控制移民。最新的事态发展是马耳他和意大利决定单方面关闭港口,不让载有海上获救移民的船只进入。本文审查了这种做法与国际海洋法的一致性,并特别侧重于习惯的安全港原则。它还讨论了《欧洲人权公约》在被拒绝的船只未进入成员国领土的情况下的适用性。本文为欧洲人权法院在此类域外移民控制案件中建立管辖权提供了一种新的思路,认为管辖权可以建立在可归责公共权力检验的基础上。根据对可能侵犯《公约》及其议定书所保障的权利的分析,根据具体情况,相应的做法可能违反不驱回原则和(或)禁止集体驱逐。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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