Breen C IJRL 2008 Direct Provision
Breen C IJRL 2008 Direct Provision
Breen C IJRL 2008 Direct Provision
Abstract
This article considers Irelands policy of Direct Provision, which curtails severely the social
welfare entitlements of asylum seekers. This article sets out the rights of asylum seekers in
Ireland and explains the policy of Direct Provision. It analyses the right to adequate housing as provided for within the United Nations and the European legal frameworks. It acknowledges that such rights are subject to some limitations but argues that Irelands policy
of Direct Provision violates asylum seekers rights to an adequate standard of living, with
particular focus on the right to adequate housing and the interrelated rights to food and
health. It further argues that such limitations are discriminatory and that they undermine
the fundamental principles of equality and human dignity. The article concludes that a
correct interpretation of international and domestic law suggests that Ireland must abolish
the policy of Direct Provision and revert to according social welfare entitlements on the
basis of need rather than nationality.
1. Introduction
In 2000, Ireland introduced the policy of Direct Provision, which curtailed severely the social welfare entitlements of asylum seekers. This article briefly sets out the rights of asylum seekers in Ireland and explains
the policy of Direct Provision. It analyses the right to adequate housing
as provided for within the United Nations and the European legal frameworks. It acknowledges that such rights are subject to some limitations
but argues that Irelands policy of Direct Provision violates asylum
seekers rights to an adequate standard of living, with particular focus on
the right to adequate housing and the interrelated rights to food and
health. It further argues that current limitations are discriminatory and
that they undermine the fundamental principles of equality and human
dignity. The article concludes that a correct interpretation of international and domestic law suggests that Ireland must abolish the policy of
Direct Provision and revert to according social welfare entitlements on
the basis of need rather than nationality.
* Senior Lecturer, Law School, University of Waikato, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton, New Zealand.
Email: cbreen@waikato.ac.nz. I would like to thank Joseph B. Mannix for his assistance in the preparation for this article.
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For the purposes of this article, asylum seekers are individuals awaiting
determination of their application for refugee status.2
Irish legislation accords a number of rights to asylum seekers, especially
with regard to housing. The origins of Direct Provision are to be found in
section 171 of the Social Welfare (Consolidation) Act, 1993, which makes
provision for supplementary welfare for every person and every dependent
of that person whose means are insufficient to meet their needs allowance.
According to section 170, these allowances can be in the form of cash or
in kind. Section 180(1) states that the direct provision of goods and services, rather than a cash payment, is to be made only in exceptional circumstances and on a case-by-case basis at the discretion of the health board
that administers the allowance. Prior to 2000, asylum seekers were able to
access the social welfare system. Nationality, or lack of Irish nationality,
was not a determining feature in the allocation of means-tested social
assistance payments.
In early 2000, the Government implemented a number of changes to its
refugee policy. The Directorate of Asylum Seeker Support and the Refugee Agency were merged into one body, the Refugee Integration Agency
(RIA), which operates from within the Department of Justice Equality and
1 The Long Title of the Refugee Act, 1996 describes it as an Act: An Act to Give Effect to the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees done at Geneva on the 28th day of July, 1951, The Protocol
Relating to the Status of Refugees done at New York on the 31st day of January, 1967, and the Convention Determining the State Responsible for Examining Applications for Asylum Lodged in one of the
Member States of the European Communities done at Dublin on the 15th day of June, 1990 .
Currently, the process for seeking asylum and the determination of refugee status is governed by the
1996 Act, as amended by the Immigration Act, 1999, and the Illegal Immigrants (Trafficking Act),
2000. However, the current legislative framework is due to be overhauled with the introduction of the
Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill 2008 in Jan. 2008. According to the Minister for Justice,
Equality and Law Reform, the landmark legislation would bring together into one process the business
of determining whether a person who claims refugee status will be permitted to stay in the state. See,
<http://www.justice.ie/en/JELR/Pages/Launch%20of%20new%20Immigration%20Bill>, last accessed
11 Oct. 2008.
2 See, Refugee Act, 1996, ss 8, 9, 10, and 11, as amended by the Immigration Act 1999, which seeks
to put on a domestic footing the right to seek asylum, as contained in Art. 3 of the Convention Relating
to the Status of Refugees 1951, 189 UNTS 137 and the Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees,
31 Jan. 1967, 606 UNTS 267 (the 1967 Protocol).
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Law Reform. In April 2000, the policy of Direct Provision, which was
accompanied by a separate dispersal policy, was introduced by a ministerial circular emanating from the Department of Justice, Equality and Law
Reform.3 The schemes are administered by the RIA but it is the Department, by virtue of its administration of the RIA, that enters into contracts
with proprietors of hostels, guesthouses and hotels across the country to
provide full board and accommodation for asylum seekers, contracts which
make no mention of asylum seekers rights.4
Consequently, asylum seekers are no longer regarded as being in need
of the supplementary welfare allowances. Instead, they are given a weekly
payment of 19.10 per adult and 9.60 per dependent child, plus two
exceptional needs payments of 100 per annum. Section 13 of the Social
Welfare (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 2003 puts the exclusion of asylum
seekers, as a group, from receiving rent allowance on a legislative footing.
As of 1 May 2004, newly arrived asylum seekers became ineligible for
these social assistance payments by virtue of the habitual residence rule
introduced by section 17 of the Social Welfare (Miscellaneous Provisions)
Act 2004. To be considered habitually resident in Ireland, and thus claim
welfare benefits, an individual has to have been residing in Ireland for two
years or more. Consequently, asylum seekers who arrived after May 2004
are largely dependent upon the weekly payments and the twice-yearly payments to pay for items such as bus fares, toiletries and other basic necessities. The current payments remain at 2000 levels although most other
social welfare payments have been increased significantly in that time.5
These provisions have resulted in many asylum seekers being forced to live
in over-crowded conditions of abject poverty since as far back as 2000.
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These two provisions relate to the same subject matter, as per Article
30(1) of the VCLT. Neither the earlier Refugee Convention nor the later
human rights treaties specify that they are subject to or not to be considered as incompatible with each other. Accordingly, the provisions of the
later human rights treaties ought to be incorporated into any determination of the rights of asylum seekers. Equally, the provisions of an earlier
treaty, such as the Refugee Convention, still apply but only to the extent
8 GA res. (XXI), UN GAOR 21st Sess., (Supp. No. 16), at 49, UN doc. A/6316 (1966).
9 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties 1969 (VCLT), UNTS, vol. 1155, 331.
10 Charter of the United Nations, 26 June 1945, 59 Stat. 1031, TS 993, 3 Bevans 1153.
11 GA res. 217A, (III) UN doc. A1810 (1948).
12 Refugee Convention, above n. 2, Preamble, para. 2.
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that they are compatible with the provisions of a later treaty, such as the
ICESCR, where that later treaty makes no reference that it was intended
to suspend or terminate the provisions of the earlier treaty.13 Human rights
treaties make no such reference. Rather, human rights treaties do make
reference to the fact that they are: inherent, and therefore they belong to
everybody because of their common humanity; inalienable, so that no one
can give up his or her human rights or be deprived of them by governments; and universal, and, as such, they apply regardless of distinctions
such as race, sex, language or religion or other status.
Given the broad application underpinning international human rights
law, it would be somewhat incongruous if the more generous provisions of
human rights treaties were to be regarded as excluding asylum seekers
thereby limiting the level of protection accorded to this group to the basic
standards provided for in the Refugee Convention. Similarly, an argument
for an expansive interpretation of the rights contained in the Refugee Convention may also be derived from the fact that treaty provisions often overlap. For example, the rights of refugees are provided for not only in the
Refugee Convention, but also by virtue of Article 14 of the UDHR, which
provides that everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries
asylum from persecution. Similarly, Article 13 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 1966 (ICCPR) accords protection to
aliens who are lawfully in the territory of a state party.14 Thus, the basic
standards with regard to housing contained in the Refugee Convention
may be expanded upon by other human rights instruments and processes.
3.1 Asylum seekers right to adequate housing:
the UN framework
Asylum seekers rights to adequate housing are outlined, in the first instance, by Article 21 of the Refugee Convention, which imposes a positive obligation upon the state, including all relevant public authorities,
such as municipalities, to accord to refugees the most favourable treatment possible, which should never fall below that granted to aliens generally. As such, it constitutes a standard that goes beyond the negative duty
not to discriminate against refugees.
The origins of the right to adequate housing can be located in Article
25(1) of the UDHR, which concerns the right of everyone to an adequate
standard of living for the health and well-being of the individual and his
family, which includes food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of a lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.15 This provision was expanded
13
14
15
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Ibid., para. 8. See further, WHO, Health Principles of Housing (Geneva: WHO, 1990).
General Comment 4, ibid., para. 7(d).
Ibid., para. 7(e).
Ibid., para. 7(f).
Ibid., para. 7(g).
CESCR, The right to adequate food (Art.11): 12 May 99, E/C.12/1999/5, General Comment
12, para. 1.
26 Ibid., para. 4.
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nutrients.27
Ibid., para. 6.
Ibid., para. 8.
Ibid., para. 11.
CESCR, The right to the highest attainable standard of health (Art. 12): 11 Aug. 2000,
E/C.12/2000/4, General Comment 14, para. 3.
31 European Social Charter (ETS No. 163). Art. 2(2) of the Appendix to the ESC confines the
interpretation of asylum seekers right to housing to the narrow provisions of the Refugee Convention
where the asylum seeker is from a state which is not a contracting party.
32 Revised European Social Charter, Strasbourg, 3 May 1996. The Revised Treaty is regarded as
being a treaty independent of its predecessor and designed to replace it eventually.
33 Art. 31.
34 Council of Europe, 2005, European Social Charter Digest of the Case Law of the ECSR, Mar.
2005, 110-12.
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facilities and electricity, and it must be suitable for the number of persons
and the composition of the household in residence.35
The European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms 195036 (ECHR) does not contain a specific right to adequate
housing. However, Article 8(1) is relevant as it states, [E]veryone has the
right to respect for his private and family life, [and] his home . . .. The
meaning to be accorded to Article 8, with regard to the right to housing,
was first delineated by the European Court of Human Rights (the Court)
in Chapman v. United Kingdom in which it stated that, It is important to recall
that Article 8 does not in terms recognise a right to be provided with a
home. Nor does any of the jurisprudence of the Court acknowledge such
a right.37 However, subsequent cases have taken a broader view of Article
8. The interrelationship between the right to respect for ones home and
other rights contained in the Convention was noted in Gillow, where the
Court held that the applicants right to respect for their home was a right
which was pertinent to their own personal security and well-being. The
importance of such a right to the individual must be taken into account in
determining the scope of the margin of appreciation allowed to the
Government.38
The meaning of Article 8 was also interpreted to exclude the imposition
of intolerable living conditions upon individuals in Moldovan and Others v.
Romania.39 The applicants had been hounded from their village and homes
after their houses were burned down by a mob and they had to live in
crowded and improper conditions.40 The Court found that Article 8 was
clearly applicable41 and considered that:
the applicants living conditions in particular the severely overcrowded and
unsanitary environment and its detrimental effect on the applicants health and
well-being, combined with the length of the period during which the applicants
have had to live in such conditions and the general attitude of the authorities,
must have caused them considerable mental suffering, thus diminishing their
human dignity and arousing in them such feelings as to cause humiliation and
debasement.42
The Court has availed itself of a number of other opportunities to discuss the margin of appreciation open to states in their implementation of
the rights and obligations contained in Article 8. In Chapman43 the
35
36
Ibid., at 110.
213 UNTS, 221, no. 2889; Council of Europe, European Treaty Series, 4 Nov. 1950, no. 5;
Council of Europe, Collected Texts, Strasbourg (1987), 3-21.
37 Chapman v. United Kingdom, Judgment of 18 Jan. 2001, para. 99.
38 Gillow v. United Kingdom, Judgment of 24 Nov. 1986, at para. 55.
39 Moldovan and Others v. Romania, Judgment No. 2, 12 July 2005, Final Judgment 30 Nov. 2005.
40 Ibid., para. 103.
41 Ibid., at para. 105.
42 Ibid., at para. 110.
43 Chapman, above n. 37.
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applicant, who was a Gypsy, alleged that the refusal of planning permission to station caravans on her land and the enforcement measures implemented in respect of her occupation of her land disclosed a violation of
Article 8. In determining whether the applicants right to respect for her
home had been violated, the Court considered that the legal and social
context would be a relevant factor in determining the legitimacy of the
impugned measure that had been taken against the applicant.44 Other factors which the Court considered to be relevant included the need by
national authorities to take into account the existence, or otherwise, of
alternative accommodation.45 In the context of this case, the evaluation of
the suitability of alternative accommodation would involve a consideration of, on the one hand, the particular needs of the person concerned
his or her family requirements and financial resources and, on the other
hand, the rights of the local community to environmental protection.
According to the Court, a wide margin of appreciation should be granted
to national authorities, who were better placed to make the requisite assessment. The Court found that the applicants rights had been violated under
Article 8(1) but that such a violation was justifiable under Article 8(2) as it
was legitimate and that the interference with the applicants right was necessary in a democratic society.
The Court had previously examined complaints about the planning and
enforcement measures imposed on a Gypsy family who occupied their own
land without planning permission in Buckley v. the United Kingdom.46 In that
case, the Court acknowledged that the interests of the community had to
be balanced against the applicants right to respect for her home, a right
which the Court held to be pertinent to her and her childrens personal
security and well-being. The importance of that right for the applicant and
her family also had be taken into account in determining the scope of the
margin of appreciation allowed to the respondent state.47 The Court reaffirmed the margin of appreciation which was to be afforded to the state in
such circumstances.48 However, the Court also found that Article 8(1) had
been violated and that there was no proper justification for the serious
interference with the applicants rights and those of her family.49
It is against this background that the meaning of Article 8 in terms of
housing rights and a states margin of appreciation was discussed in Connors v. United Kingdom.50 The applicant and his family, who were Travellers,
were evicted from the site where they had lived giving rise to consequent
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
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difficulties in finding a lawful alternative location for their caravans, in coping with health problems and young children and in ensuring continuation
in the childrens education. According to the Court, the family was, in
effect, rendered homeless, with the adverse consequences on security and
well-being which that entailed.51 With regard to the provisions of Article
8, the Court noted that Article 8, concerns rights of central importance to
the individuals identity, self-determination, physical and moral integrity,
maintenance of relationships with others and a settled and secure place in
the community.52 According to the Court, where general social and economic policy considerations have arisen in the context of Article 8, determining the scope of the margin of appreciation would involve attaching
particular significance to the extent of the intrusion into the personal
sphere of the applicant,53 as Article 8 concerned rights of central importance to the individuals identity, self-determination, physical and moral
integrity, maintenance of relationships with others and a settled and secure
place in the community.54 Thus, the procedural safeguards available to the
individual would be especially material in determining whether the
respondent state has, when fixing the regulatory framework, remained
within its margin of appreciation. In particular, the Court had to examine
whether the decision-making process leading to measures of interference
was fair and such as to afford due respect to the interests safeguarded to the
individual by Article 8.55 According to the Court:
The vulnerable position of gypsies as a minority means that some special consideration should be given to their needs and their different lifestyle both in the relevant regulatory framework and in reaching decisions in particular cases To this
extent, there is thus a positive obligation imposed on the Contracting States by
virtue of Article 8 to facilitate the gypsy way of life 56
Thus, the jurisprudence of the Court with regard to the extent of protection afforded by Article 8 takes, as its starting point, the fact that an
applicant has a home but that the right to respect for that home has been
interfered with whereby such interference has had a negative impact on
associated rights of the applicant and his or her family. In such cases, the
question for the Court to consider has been whether such interference was
both in accordance with the law and necessary in a democratic society.
In addition, the issue of housing rights has been considered in the context of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the ECHR, which provides that every
natural or legal person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his
51
52
53
54
55
56
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met He explained, during the course of a lengthy interview, how he was compelled to ration bottle feeds to the twins as a result:
The two of them are crying now I give them half and half, I am supposed to give them
one and one (one bottle each), but I will not. If I give them like that I will die, because I will not
have anything to think of no money let them have just a little then later again I will give
them half again, it is not easy its terrible.
Two and a half hours later during the interview he stated:
Look at them now. They will not sleep now because they are not well fed. (original italics)67
Shared accommodation also proves to be of concern as up to five asylum seekers may be required to share one bedroom. One asylum seeker
has observed, [L]iving with different people you have to be very careful
we have different cultures, we have different ways of living.68 The extended
confinement of asylum seekers in crowded conditions also exposes them to
an increased risk of physical and mental illness. Existing within the environment of Direct Provision has generated feelings of powerlessness and a
lack of autonomy or control, which in turn can lead to on-going mental
health problems, such as depression. According to one consultant psychiatrist who has worked with asylum seekers, in some ways the system of
Direct Provision could do as much long-term damage to asylum seekers
mental health as the trauma from which they had fled. A similar regime in
Britain had profoundly demoralised asylum seekers, causing depression
and other mental health problems. A similar observation was made by a
specialist registrar in public health medicine at a conference on services for
asylum seekers who noted that a major issue for asylum seekers was control
over their lives and that most asylum seekers have found it difficult to go
from leading an active, productive life to one of waiting and inactivity. The
latter medical practitioner, who had conducted research on immigrants
from thirty-five countries in two Irish locations, said some 48 per cent of
the study group were found to have poor mental wellbeing.69 In a newspaper interview, one asylum seeker who had attempted to commit suicide
said:
I thought, this is the end of the world. What am I doing here? I cant go back to
my country and Im not even allowed to stay here. What do I do? The best solution is to kill myself and just get out of this cruel world.
67 B. Fanning et al., Beyond the Pale: Asylum-Seeking Children and Social Exclusion in Ireland, research on
behalf of the Irish Refugee Council, Dublin 2001, at 37. See also, Refugee claims his wife starved to
death, Irish Times, 22 Jan. 2007.
68 Nasc, The Irish Immigrant Support Centre (2008), Cuan Cinnte? (A Safe Harbour?): Nascs
Campaign on the Asylum/Protection System and Direct Provision, <http://www.nascireland.org/
pages/policy/direct_prov_policy.htm>.
69 See, P. OMahony, Irelands Asylum System Still a Shambles?, working notes, Reflection and
Analysis on Social and Economic Issues, Feb 2007, 4.
625
Youre not allowed to work. Youre not allowed go to school even if youre interested in a course you wont be able to go into it. What kind of lifestyle is that?
Were just fading away.70
Such observations not only clearly illustrate the complexity of the right
to adequate housing and its interrelationship with other human rights such
as the right to health, they are also illustrative of Irelands failure to grasp
this complexity, thus placing it in violation of the raft of international
human rights obligations that it has undertaken, stemming from Article
25(1) of the UDHR through to Article 11 of the ICESCR and the latters
expansive interpretation by the CESCR.
The long-term effect on children, many of whom would never have
seen a parent go out to work, nor indeed cook a family meal, remained to
be seen.71 Moreover, the Ombudsman for Children has stated that:
[V]ictims of trafficking, and indeed unaccompanied minors generally, receive a
lower level of protection and assistance than Irish children in care, In total
more than 300 unaccompanied minors seeking asylum have gone missing from
State care over the past five years.72
If the right to adequate housing was viewed purely from the perspective
of having a roof over ones head, then the policy of Direct Provision would
meet the basic needs of Irelands asylum seekers. However, the holistic
view required of international standards emanating both from the UN and
Europe suggests that Irelands current approach to meeting asylum
seekers rights to adequate housing, food, and health is severely lacking.
Asylum seekers in Ireland run the risk of malnourishment, physical
and mental health problems and social exclusion, which, as demonstrated
in the following section, raises concern about racial prejudice and
xenophobia.
However, as the jurisprudence of the European Court demonstrates,
states do have a margin of appreciation in the implementation of the
human rights obligations. The jurisprudence of the Court suggests that
Ireland is under no obligation to provide a home, either to its own nationals
or to asylum seekers. However, this lack of obligation cannot be interpreted
as permitting the imposition of intolerable living conditions upon individuals. Where it is alleged that Article 8 has been violated, the starting point
for consideration is whether actions of the state do in fact constitute a violation of the right to respect for the applicants home and whether such interference can be justified as falling within the states margin of appreciation.
70 R. Mac Cormaic. No mans land where you cannot work and must live on 19 a week, Irish
Times, 6 June 2007.
71 See, OMahony, above n. 5, 4. See also, Health and safety risks exposed in asylum centres, Irish
Times, 31 Oct. 2007; Health at risk over language barriers, Irish Times, 30 Jan. 2007; Irish Refugee
Council (2001), Direct Provision and Dispersal - 18 Months On (Dublin: IRC).
72 C. OBrien, Failings of hostels for trafficked children raised, Irish Times, 3 July 2007.
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The CESCR has called upon states to ensure that comprehensive legislation on asylum seekers is adopted and that their economic, social and
cultural rights are duly taken into account.85
81 CCPR, General Comment No. 15: The position of aliens under the Covenant, 11 Apr. 86,
para. 5.
82 In addition, the requirement contained in Art. 4 of the ICESCR provides that states may subject
such rights only to such, limitations as are determined by law only in so far as this may be compatible
with the nature of these rights and solely for the purpose of promoting the general welfare in a democratic society.
83 See, General Comment No. 4, above n. 21, paras. 172-3.
84 Ibid., para. 172.
85 Concluding Observations of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: Italy, 14
Dec. 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.103, paras. 21, 42. See also, Concluding Observations of the Committee
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: Germany, 24 Sept. 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.68, paras. 16, 34.
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Article 1(2) of ICERD states that, this Convention shall not apply to
distinctions, exclusions, restrictions or preferences made by a state party to
this Convention between citizens and non-citizens. Similarly, in other
human rights instruments differential treatment is permissible but only to
the extent to which it conforms with the principle of non-discrimination
that underpins all human rights instruments. The Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD) has expanded upon
the interrelationship between the prohibition upon discrimination and the
enjoyment of economic, social and cultural rights of asylum seekers with
its statement that:
differential treatment based on citizenship or immigration status will constitute
discrimination if the criteria for such differentiation, judged in the light of the
objectives and purposes of the Convention, are not applied pursuant to a legitimate aim, and are not proportional to the achievement of this aim.86
86
87
General Recommendation No. 30: Discrimination Against Non Citizens, 1 Oct. 2004, para. 4.
European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, 213
UNTS, 221, no. 2889; Council of Europe, European Treaty Series, 4 Nov. 1950, no. 5; Council of
Europe, Collected Texts, Strasbourg (1987), 3-21.
88 Protocol No. 12 to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms, ETS No. 177.
89 Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, 2000/c 364/01 (2000).
90 Preamble, EU Charter, ibid., at para. 2.
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equal treatment are subject to provisos which recognise the need for differential treatment in order to avoid discrimination. For example, Article
G(1) of the ESC permits restrictions to be attached to the right to equal
treatment, but only those, such as are prescribed by law and are necessary
in a democratic society for the protection of the rights and freedoms of
others or for the protection of public interest, national security, public
health, or morals.91 One of the clearest provisos regarding the limitations
that may be put upon rights is to be found in the ECHR, with many Articles stating that the right is subject to limitation only:
except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of
the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health
or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.92
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Ibid.
Consideration of Reports Submitted by States Parties under Art. 9 of the Convention, Concluding Observations of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, Ireland, CERD/C/
IRL/CO/2, 14 Apr. 2005. Moreover, the European Committee of Social Rights which noted from the
Second report of the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance, CRI (2002) 3, on Ireland, adopted on 22 June 2001, that there existed a certain degree of prejudice and intolerance towards
persons of immigrant origin, asylum seekers and refugees: Council of Europe: European Social Charter (Revised) European Committee of Social Rights Conclusions 2004 (Ireland). See also, European
Commission Against Racism and Intolerance (1997), Report on Ireland (Strasbourg: Council of
Europe).
99 Bunreacht na hEireann (Constitution of Ireland), Art. 29. The Committee on ESC rights has
expressed regret that Ireland has not yet undertaken any measures with regard to the Committees
1999 recommendation concerning the inconsistency of Art. 40.1 of the Constitution on equality
before the law with the principle of non-discrimination as set out in Arts. 2 and 3 of the Covenant.
See, Concluding Observations of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: Ireland,
5 June 2002, E/C.12/1/Add.77 (Concluding Observations/Comments), para. 16.
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633
[1972] IR 1, at 13-14.
[1966] IR 567, 639.
[2000] 2 IR 321, at 357.
[1998] IR 321.
Lowth, ibid., at 341; Brennan [1983] LRM 419 (emphasis added).
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40.1 or whether the same is justified by objective reasons other than the mere fact
that they affect only that category of non-nationals.107
In response to that question, the Court reiterated the fact that nonnationals enjoy a constitutional right to equal treatment, and in particular the constitutional right of access to the Courts and fairness of
procedures in the Courts, [is to be] enjoyed by non-nationals and citizens
alike.108 In that case, the Supreme Court found that any limitations on
asylum seekers rights were justifiable and therefore were constitutional
on the basis that they served a legitimate public policy objective of seeking to bring about at an early stage legal certainty as regards the administrative decisions in questions. According to the Court, the same
considerations had to apply to the substantial grounds requirement and
the limitation on the right of appeal to the Supreme Court.109 The legitimate bases for limiting the fundamental rights contained in Article 40.1,
as they relate to the differential treatment currently experienced by asylum seekers in the manner of the provision of housing and the limited
provision of welfare services in Ireland, remain to be determined. Thus,
whilst it may be legitimate to differentiate between nationals and nonnationals in terms of immigration law, the nature and consequences of
the differential treatment itself must be legitimate, that is, it must be
based in law and it much achieve a significant objective by rational and
proportionate means.
International and national law recognises the need to observe state sovereignty and having due regard to Irelands immigration system in preserving that right serves an important and significant objective. The
establishment of such an objective gives rise to a series of further questions
that must be asked in order to determine whether the means chosen are
reasonable and demonstrably justified. A proportionality test must be formulated in which three further requirements must be satisfied. First, the
measures adopted must be rationally connected to the objective. Consequently, where distinctions are adopted such measures must be carefully
designed to achieve the objective in question. They must not be arbitrary,
unfair or based on irrational or negative stereotypes, such as those that
might suggest that the claims of those seeking asylum are largely bogus,110
are designed to rip off Irelands generous social welfare system,111 and
emanate from international gangs.112
107 In the Matter of Article 26 of the Constitution and Section 5 and Section 10 of the Illegal Immigrants
(Trafficking Bill 1999), [2000] 2 IR 321, para. 54.
108 Ibid.
109 Ibid., para. 56-7.
110 K. Doyle, McDowell meets UN over bogus asylum claims, Irish Times, 19 Nov. 2003.
111 M. Donohoe, Callely calls for tough line on asylum-seekers, Irish Times, 19 Nov. 1999.
112 M. Donohoe, ODonoghue may introduce smart card for asylum seekers, Irish Times, 20 Oct.
1999.
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5. Conclusion
In order for human rights violations to be redressed they first have to be
identifiable. This article has sought to identify potential violations of
international and domestic law which are violated by Irelands current
policy of Direct Provision, including, the rights to an adequate standard
of living, adequate housing, and dignity. In addition to the violation of
these rights it can be argued that the policy of Direct Provision also violates the right to equal treatment. By virtue of its ratification of various
human rights treaties, Ireland has undertaken to respect and ensure such
rights. Therefore, any right claimed by the Irish state to control its borders by way of an immigration system must be balanced with the obligation to ensure basic human rights of those within the Irish immigration
system. Accordingly, any differences in treatment must be justified.
Asylum seekers have a right to adequate housing. Moreover, the interrelated nature of international human rights law may mean that a violation of the right to adequate housing can in turn result in a violation of
other rights, such as the right to be treated with dignity, the right to equality and non-discrimination, the right to respect for private and family life,
to adequate food, and to the highest attainable standard of physical and
mental health. Any limitations placed upon these rights must also be justified. They must have a significant objective with the limiting measures
designed to achieve this objective being rational and proportionate in
nature. Irelands policy of Direct Provision fails to meet these criteria.