The family, including three children and their pregnant mother, lived in poor conditions for months at the Roszke camp on the Hungary-Serbia border. Reuters
The family, including three children and their pregnant mother, lived in poor conditions for months at the Roszke camp on the Hungary-Serbia border. Reuters
The family, including three children and their pregnant mother, lived in poor conditions for months at the Roszke camp on the Hungary-Serbia border. Reuters
The family, including three children and their pregnant mother, lived in poor conditions for months at the Roszke camp on the Hungary-Serbia border. Reuters

Hungary ordered to pay €28,500 to Afghan-Iranian refugees held in degrading conditions


Jamie Prentis
  • English
  • Arabic

Hungary was ordered to pay €28,500 ($34,426) in compensation to a family of Afghan-Iranian asylum seekers who spent four months in degrading conditions at a transit zone on the EU border.

The family of five, including three children and their pregnant mother, lived in a container that lacked adequate air conditioning and ventilation during the summer of 2017.

The European Court of Human Rights said there was insufficient medical care, not enough activity for the children and a lack of food at the Roszke camp on the border with Serbia.

The woman, who suffered from trauma-related mental health problems, was not given psychiatric treatment despite the authorities being aware of her case.

Male police officers were present when she was given gynaecological examinations.

“The presence of elements resembling a prison environment and the constraint inherent during confinement must have also caused the applicant children anxiety and psychological disturbance, and created degradation of the parental image in the eyes of the child,” the ECHR said.

After several months at Roszke, the family were moved to an isolation area for health reasons and were unable to contact other asylum-seeker families or representatives of NGOs.

There was no playground or activities specifically organised for the children, whose ages at the time ranged from seven months to seven years.

The court described the restrictions on movement as akin to a “type of light-regime detention facility” as the family awaited a decision on their asylum applications.

While the father – defined as a repeat asylum seeker – could have left the transit zone, this would have made his claim forfeit.

Referring to the father, the ECHR said the Hungarian government “failed to have due regard to the applicant’s state of dependency at the transit zone and failed to secure his basic subsistence there”.

The family, who were also awarded €5,000 in legal costs, have settled in Germany.

After a visit to the Roszke transit zone in September 2017, the commissioner of the UN’s refugee agency condemned the conditions and the slow rate at which refugees were admitted into Hungary.

“If you put together restrictions to access to territory – the use of detention for asylum seekers and the low recognition rates, coupled with the absence of any investment to encourage integration of those recognised as refugees – my fundamental impression is that there is an effort to limit severely the number of people allowed to come to Hungary to seek protection,” Filippo Grandi said.

“The refugees I met are simply in search of safety in Europe and now find themselves extremely anxious about their future.”

Unresolved crisis

Russia and Ukraine have been locked in a bitter conflict since 2014, when Ukraine’s Kremlin-friendly president was ousted, Moscow annexed Crimea and then backed a separatist insurgency in the east.

Fighting between the Russia-backed rebels and Ukrainian forces has killed more than 14,000 people. In 2015, France and Germany helped broker a peace deal, known as the Minsk agreements, that ended large-scale hostilities but failed to bring a political settlement of the conflict.

The Kremlin has repeatedly accused Kiev of sabotaging the deal, and Ukrainian officials in recent weeks said that implementing it in full would hurt Ukraine.

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ESSENTIALS

The flights

Emirates flies direct from Dubai to Rio de Janeiro from Dh7,000 return including taxes. Avianca fliles from Rio to Cusco via Lima from $399 (Dhxx) return including taxes. 

The trip

From US$1,830 per deluxe cabin, twin share, for the one-night Spirit of the Water itinerary and US$4,630 per deluxe cabin for the Peruvian Highlands itinerary, inclusive of meals, and beverages. Surcharges apply for some excursions.

The specs: 2019 Mercedes-Benz GLE

Price, base / as tested Dh274,000 (estimate)

Engine 3.0-litre inline six-cylinder

Gearbox  Nine-speed automatic

Power 245hp @ 4,200rpm

Torque 500Nm @ 1,600rpm

Fuel economy, combined 6.4L / 100km