EU lidstaten verleenden 76.300 aanvragers asiel in 2008 (en)

Met dank overgenomen van Europese Commissie (EC) i, Eurostat (ESTAT) i, gepubliceerd op dinsdag 8 december 2009.

STAT/09/175

8 December 2009

Asylum decisions in the EU27

EU Member States granted protection to 76 300 asylum seekers in 2008

The EU27 Member States granted protection to 76 300 asylum seekers in 2008. The largest groups of beneficiaries of protection status 1 in the EU27 were citizens of Iraq (16 600 persons or 22% of the total number of persons granted protection status), Somalia (9 500 or 12%), Russia (7 400 or 10%), Afghanistan (5 000 or 7%) and Eritrea (4 600 or 6%).

These data on the results of asylum applications in the EU27 are taken from a report 2 issued by Eurostat, the Statistical Office of the European Communities . They are published on the occasion of the Human Rights Day 3 which will occur on 10 December.

Nearly 30% of EU27 asylum decisions at the first instance resulted in protection status

In 2008, 281 100 decisions on asylum applications 4 were made in the EU27 , of which 209 200 were first instance decisions and 71 900 final decisions on appeal. At the first instance 5 59 300 persons were granted protection status, and 17 000 received a final positive decision 6 on appeal. The rate of recognition of asylum applicants, i.e. the share of positive decisions in the total number of decisions, was 28% in the first instance and 24% for final decisions. Of the 76 300 persons who were granted protection status, 40 000 persons were granted refugee status, 25 500 subsidiary protection and 10 800 granted authorisation to stay for humanitarian reasons.

Two thirds of all grants of protection status in the EU27 registered in France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Italy and Sweden

In 2008, the highest number of persons granted protection status were registered in France (11 500), followed by Germany (10 700), the United Kingdom (10 200), Italy (9 700), Sweden (8 700), the Netherlands (6 100) and Austria (5 700).

The rate of recognition varies considerably among Member States. The highest rates in the first instance were recorded in Poland (65%), Lithuania and Portugal (both 64%), Austria (62%) and Denmark (58%), and the lowest in Greece (less than 1%), Slovenia (3%), Spain (5%), the Czech Republic , France and Romania (all 16%). The highest rates of recognition for final decisions were registered in Finland (87%), the Netherlands (52%) and Sweden (49%). However, it should be kept in mind that the country of citizenship of applicants differs greatly between Member States.

Iraqis were the single largest group of persons granted protection status in ten EU27 Member States. Of the

16 600 Iraqis granted protection status in the EU27 , 6 400 were registered in Germany , 4 000 in Sweden and

2 300 in the Netherlands . Of the 9 500 Somalis granted protection, 3 500 were recorded in Italy and 1 500 each in Sweden and the Netherlands , and of the 7 400 Russians , 2 700 were in Poland , 2 000 in Austria and

1 200 in France .

Decisions on a sylum applications in 2008

 
 

Decisions *

Positive decisions **

Total

First instance

Final decisions on appeal

Total

First instance

Final decisions on appeal

 

#

Rate of recognition (%)

#

Rate of recognition (%)

EU27 ***

281 120

209 230

71 890

76 320

59 305

28.3

17 015

23.7

BE

18 860

13 620

5 240

3 905

3 505

25.7

395

7.6

BG

700

670

25

305

295

43.8

10

33.3

CZ

2 880

1 400

1 480

260

215

15.5

45

3.1

DK

1 725

1 250

480

890

730

58.3

165

34.3

DE

30 405

19 330

11 070

10 650

7 870

40.7

2 775

25.1

EE

15

10

0

5

5

33.3

0

0.0

IE

7 250

4 790

2 460

1 760

1 465

30.6

295

11.9

EL

30 915

29 580

1 340

415

55

0.2

360

26.8

ES

6 250

5 130

1 120

290

275

5.4

10

1.1

FR

56 115

31 765

24 350

11 470

5 150

16.2

6 320

25.9

IT

20 260

20 225

30

9 740

9 740

48.2

0

0.0

CY

:

:

2 845

:

:

:

35

1.3

LV

25

10

15

5

5

25.0

0

0.0

LT

140

105

35

65

65

64.1

0

2.8

LU

965

485

480

240

185

38.4

55

11.5

HU

965

910

55

400

395

43.7

0

1.8

MT

2 915

2 685

230

1 410

1 410

52.4

0

0.4

NL

11 725

10 925

800

6 090

5 675

52.0

415

51.6

AT

13 705

5 905

7 795

5 675

3 640

61.6

2 035

26.1

PL

4 425

4 245

185

2 800

2 770

65.3

30

15.8

PT

105

105

0

70

70

64.2

0

0.0

RO

715

675

45

150

110

16.0

45

:

SI

260

160

100

5

5

2.5

0

0.0

SK

445

370

70

100

90

24.0

10

12.5

FI

1 770

1 675

95

740

655

39.1

80

87.2

SE

31 220

29 545

1 680

8 670

7 845

26.6

825

49.0

UK

33 525

23 665

9 865

10 190

7 080

29.9

3 115

31.6

IS

65

55

10

10

10

17.0

0

10.0

NO

10 325

9 015

1 310

3 710

3 050

33.9

655

:

CH

13 805

7 550

6 255

5 725

4 830

64.0

895

14.3

Data are rounded to the nearest five.

0 means less than 3.

  • not available
  • The total number of decisions refers to the number of administrative decisions rather than the number of individuals

** Rate of recognition is the share of positive decisions (first instance or final on appeal) in the total number of decisions at the given stage. In this calculation, the exact number of decisions has been used instead of the rounded numbers presented in this table.

*** EU27 as a sum or average of available data.

EU27: Belgium (BE), Bulgaria (BG), the Czech Republic (CZ), Denmark (DK), Germany (DE), Estonia (EE), Ireland (IE), Greece (EL), Spain (ES), France (FR), Italy (IT), Cyprus (CY), Latvia (LV), Lithuania (LT), Luxembourg (LU), Hungary (HU), Malta (MT), the Netherlands (NL), Austria (AT), Poland (PL), Portugal (PT), Romania (RO), Slovenia (SI), Slovakia (SK), Finland (FI), Sweden (SE) and the United Kingdom (UK).

Iceland (IS), Norway (NO), Switzerland (CH)

Largest group s granted protection status, 2008

 
 

Largest group

Second largest group

Third largest group

Citizens of

#

% *

Citizens of

#

% *

Citizens of

#

% *

EU2 7 **

Iraq

16 640

21.8

Somalia

9 520

12.5

Russia

7 440

9.7

BE

Iraq

625

16.1

Russia

595

15.3

Serbia

390

10.0

BG

Iraq

230

76.6

Afghanistan

25

8.3

Iran

10

3.0

CZ

Belarus

50

19.5

Iraq

45

16.4

Russia

35

14.1

DK

Iraq

260

29.0

Russia

110

12.2

Iran

100

11.1

DE

Iraq

6 380

59.9

Iran

655

6.1

Afghanistan

475

4.5

EE

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

IE

Nigeria

410

23.3

Iraq

160

9.1

Democratic Rep. of Congo

115

6.5

EL

Iraq

355

85.7

Afghanistan

20

5.3

Central African Republic

10

1.9

ES

Iraq

60

21.5

Colombia

30

9.7

Stateless

25

8.0

FR

Sri Lanka

1 715

14.9

Russia

1 235

10.8

Mali

990

8.6

IT

Somalia

3 545

36.4

Eritrea

1 625

16.7

Afghanistan

1 050

10.8

CY ***

Iran

10

25.0

Georgia

10

22.2

Serbia

5

19.4

LV

:

:

:

:

:

:

-

-

-

LT

Russia

50

77.6

Ethiopia

5

4.5

Cuba

5

4.5

LU

Serbia

90

36.4

Montenegro

30

12.8

Angola

20

7.4

HU

Somalia

105

26.4

Afghanistan

60

15.6

Iraq

55

13.8

MT

Somalia

1 120

79.3

Eritrea

260

18.5

Sudan

15

1.0

NL

Iraq

2 305

37.9

Somalia

1 515

24.9

Afghanistan

200

3.3

AT

Russia

2 020

35.6

Afghanistan

875

15.4

Serbia

435

7.6

PL

Russia

2 695

96.3

Iraq

30

1.1

Belarus

20

0.7

PT

Somalia

20

27.9

Colombia

10

17.6

Sri Lanka

5

10.3

RO

Iraq

105

68.2

Somalia

10

5.3

Serbia

5

4.6

SI

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

SK

Afghanistan

35

34.7

Iraq

35

33.7

Cuba

10

9.2

FI

Iraq

235

31.8

Somalia

150

20.3

Afghanistan

70

9.8

SE

Iraq

3 975

45.9

Somalia

1 540

17.8

Eritrea

655

7.6

UK

Zimbabwe

1 635

16.0

Eritrea

1 455

14.3

Afghanistan

1 260

12.3

IS

Russia

5

40.0

Sri Lanka

5

40.0

:

:

:

NO

Eritrea

715

19.3

Iraq

610

16.5

Afghanistan

495

13.4

CH

Eritrea

1 355

23.7

Sri Lanka

525

9.1

Turkey

440

7.7

Data are rounded to the nearest five.

0 means less than 3.

  • Not applicable
  • No data presented for those countries of citizenship where the number of positive decisions was 2 or less during the reference period.
  • Persons with this citizenship granted protection status as a percentage of the total number of persons granted protection in this country.

** EU27 as a sum or weighted average of available data.

*** No first instance data available.

  • Protection status includes three different categories of protection:

Person granted refugee status means a person covered by a decision granting refugee status, taken by administrative or judicial bodies during the reference period. Refugee status means status as defined in Art.2(d) of Directive 2004/83/EC within the meaning of Art.1 of the Geneva Convention relating to the Status of Refugees of 28 July 1951, as amended by the New York Protocol of 31 January 1967. According to the Art.2(c) of that Directive refugee means a third country national who, owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership of a particular social group, is outside the country of nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself or herself of the protection of that country, or a stateless person, who, being outside of the country of former habitual residence for the same reasons as mentioned above, is unable or, owing to such fear, unwilling to return to it.

Person granted subsidiary protection status means a person covered by a decision granting subsidiary protection status, taken by administrative or judicial bodies during the reference period. Subsidiary protection status means status as defined in Art.2(f) of Directive 2004/83/EC. According to the Art.2(e) of that Directive person eligible for subsidiary protection means a third country national or a stateless person who does not qualify as a refugee but in respect of whom substantial grounds have been shown for believing that the person concerned, if returned to his or her country of citizenship, or in the case of a stateless person, to his or her country of former habitual residence, would face a real risk of suffering serious harm and is unable, or, owing to such risk, unwilling to avail himself or herself of the protection of that country.

Person granted authorisation to stay for humanitarian reasons means a person covered by a decision granting authorisation to stay for humanitarian reasons under national law concerning international protection, taken by administrative or judicial bodies during the reference period. It includes persons who are not eligible for international protection as currently defined in the first stage legal instruments, but are nonetheless protected against removal under the obligations that are imposed on all Member States by international refugee or human rights instruments or on the basis of principles flowing from such instruments. Examples of such categories include persons who are not removable on ill health grounds and unaccompanied minors.

  • Eurostat , Statistics in Focus, 92/2009 " 75 thousand asylum seekers granted protection status in the EU in 2008 ", available free of charge in PDF format on the Eurostat web site. The data used for this publication are provided to Eurostat by the Ministries of Interior, Justice or immigration agencies of the Member States. These data are supplied by Member States according to the provisions of Article 4 of the Regulation (EC) 862/2007 of 11 July 2007 on Community statistics on migration and international protection.
  • For more information see: http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/HRD10December2009.aspx
  • Asylum application means an application for international protection as defined in Art.2(g) of Council Directive 2004/83/EC, i.e. including requests for refugee status or for subsidiary protection status, irrespective of whether the application was lodged on arrival at border, or from inside the country, and irrespective of whether the person entered the territory legally (e.g. as a tourist) or illegally.
  • First instance decision means a decision made in response to an asylum application at the first instance level of the asylum procedure.
  • Final decision on appeal means a decision granted at the final instance of administrative/judicial asylum procedure and which results from the appeal lodged by the asylum seeker rejected in the preceding stage of the procedure. As the asylum procedures and the numbers/levels of decision making bodies differ between Member States, the true final instance may be, according to the national legislation and administrative procedures, a decision of the highest national court. However, the applied methodology defines that 'final decisions' should refer to what is effectively a 'final decision' in the vast majority of all cases: i.e. that all normal routes of appeal have been exhausted.
 

Issued by: Eurostat Press Office

Johan WULLT

Tel: +352-4301-33 444

eurostat-pressoffice@ec.europa.eu

For further information on the data:

Piotr JUCHNO

Tel: +352-4301- 3 6 240

piotr.juchno@ec.europa.eu

Eurostat press releases on the Internet: http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat