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URGENT
ACTION APPEAL
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PUBLIC
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AI Index: EUR 42/001/2008
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21 February 2008
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UA 46/08
Deportation/Torture
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SWEDEN
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Jamil Mohammad Burhan (m), aged 24

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The Swedish authorities are preparing to
deport asylum-seeker Jamil Burhan to
Eritrea, where he would be at real risk
of being detained and tortured simply
for having applied for asylum, which the
authorities regard as betraying the
country. Sweden is a state party to a
number of international treaties that
expressly prohibit deportation in these
circumstances.
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According to his lawyers, Jamil Mohammad
Burhan was born in Saudi Arabia to
Eritrean parents. He grew up there, and
his family still live there. It is not
clear what nationality or citizenship he
holds, but apparently he has no right of
entry to
Saudi Arabia,
so cannot be sent there.
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He came to Sweden in August 2002 and
sought asylum. His application was
rejected on
23 December 2003,
and his appeal against that decision was
rejected on 27 October 2004,
on the grounds that by his own account
he had never actually been to
Eritrea and so would be of no interest
to the authorities there, and therefore
in no danger.
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The current advice from the Office of
the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
to all governments is to "refrain from
all forced returns of rejected
asylum-seekers to
Eritrea and grant them complementary
forms of protection instead".
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This year the Swedish authorities have
already tried twice to deport Jamil
Burhan to
Eritrea.
They had to abandon a 23 January attempt
when the pilot of the aeroplane refused
to take Jamil on board, because he was
protesting so loudly. On 13 February he
was put on a chartered flight, but the
Eritrean authorities did not recognize
the identity documents Jamil Burhan was
carrying, and refused to allow him into
the country, and he returned to Sweden
the following day. The Swedish
authorities have indicated that they
will attempt to obtain the necessary
documentation from the Eritrean embassy
in Sweden to allow the deportation to go
ahead. It is not clear how long that
will take, but Jamil Burhan could be
deported to Eritrea at very short
notice.
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BACKGROUND INFORMATION
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Thousands of people are detained
incommunicado in Eritrea, in secret and
indefinitely, without charge or trial,
and are regularly tortured or otherwise
ill-treated. They have been arrested for
suspected opposition to the government,
practising their religious faith as
members of banned evangelical or other
churches, evading military conscription
or trying to flee the country. Rejected
asylum-seekers forcibly returned from
Malta in 2002 and Libya in 2003 are
still detained in secret. Hundreds of
Eritreans who are currently detained in
Libya and Sudan are at risk of
deportation.
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RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals
to arrive as quickly as possible, in
Swedish or your own language:
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- urging the authorities not to deport
Jamil Burhan to Eritrea, as this would
put him in real danger of torture;
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- reminding the authorities of their
obligations under the Convention Against
Torture and other international treaties
not to deport anyone to countries where
they would be in danger of torture;
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- calling on the authorities to make a
firm public commitment to respect UNHCR
guidelines against the forcible return
of any rejected Eritrean asylum-seekers,
arising from the serious and systematic
violations of human rights in Eritrea.
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APPEALS TO:
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Tobias Billström
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Minister for Migration and Asylum Policy
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Ministry of Justice
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Rosenbad 4
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103 33 -
Stockholm
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SWEDEN
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Fax: +46 8 723 11 76
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Email: registrator@justice.ministry.se
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Salutation: Dear Minister
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Head of immigration authority
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Director-General Dan Eliasson
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Migrationsverket
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601 70 Norrköping
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SWEDEN
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Fax: +46 1110 8155
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Email: dan.eliasson@migrationsverket.se
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Salutation: Dear Mr Eliasson
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COPIES TO:
diplomatic representatives of Sweden
accredited to your country.
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PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.
Check with the International
Secretariat, or your section office, if
sending appeals after
2 April 2008.
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