I. INTRODUCTION
There is nothing new about mass flight from war, or the mass movement of people across borders. Refugee crises are a recurring phenomenon,Footnote 1 yet large-scale influxes have long posed an acute challenge to countries implementing their obligations under the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of RefugeesFootnote 2 (Refugee Convention) because its asylum procedures are designed to assess in detail individual applications for protection and to grant permanent asylumFootnote 3 (subject to the invocation of a cessation clause).Footnote 4 Hence, the Refugee Convention, although in principle relevant, is not necessarily the most suitable framework for dealing with flight from armed conflict or massive violations of human rights that result in a large number of individual claims for asylum.Footnote 5
Other salient reasons for the limited suitability of the Refugee Convention include the absence of a positive obligation to offer admission to territory,Footnote 6 circumstances of flight which may not at first sight be actually covered by the Refugee Convention,Footnote 7 and the problem that some States (including, for example, Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates) have not yet ratified the Refugee Convention.
Anticipating these limitations, the drafters of the Refugee Convention
expresse[d] the hope that the Convention relating to the Status of Refugees will have value as an example exceeding its contractual scope and that all nations will be guided by it in granting so far as possible to persons in their territory as refugees and who would not be covered by the terms of the Convention, the treatment for which it provides.Footnote 8
Furthermore, Preamble to the Refugee Convention expressly provides
that the grant of asylum may place unduly heavy burdens on certain countries, and that a satisfactory solution … cannot therefore be achieved without international cooperation.Footnote 9
Possibly inspired by these provisions and pre-existing humanitarian traditions (such as rescuing persons in distress at sea)Footnote 10 , or indeed by the promise of preventing permanent integration,Footnote 11 temporary refuge developed as a key element of the response of States towards victims of armed conflict or massive violations of human rights.
The practice of temporary refuge emerged in the early part of the twentieth century and was soon extended to many parts of the world in order to provide a practical, humane, and immediate solution in cases of large-scale influx of refugees, pending the finding of a permanent home.Footnote 12 Thus, it was always meant to be a short-term solution to an emergency situation and has generally been applied for the duration of a conflict.Footnote 13 However, due to the prolonged length of some armed conflicts, temporary refuge has in some cases developed into a de facto permanent resettlement in the country of refuge.Footnote 14
It has been identified as a rule of customary international law by numerous scholars, based on a considerable amount of consistent State practice across the globe, accepted as law.Footnote 15 It has grown into what is known as temporary protection,Footnote 16 but the reality of protracted conflicts and the issue of non-return have ‘exercised powerful influence’ on what countries (particularly Western countries) are prepared to offer.Footnote 17 This article uses the phrase ‘temporary refuge’ throughout in order to emphasize the customary nature of the rule; it uses the phrase ‘temporary protection’ only where States and/or international organizations expressly refer to it as such.
This article focuses on temporary refuge as a rule of customary international law, separate and independent from refugee law treaties and from non-refoulement, and binding on all States. It examines the practical application of temporary refuge to ‘war refugees’ today. With ‘15 conflicts either erupted or re-ignited over the past five years’,Footnote 18 the empirical focus of this article is on refugees from the conflict in the Syrian Arab Republic (Syria). The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has described this situation as ‘the world's single largest driver of forced displacement with half of the population displaced’ (approximately 12 million).Footnote 19
Temporary refuge is a ‘diverse and multifaceted’ phenomenon, with ‘no single manifestation, purpose or character’.Footnote 20 Thus, section II begins with clarifying the scope of temporary refuge (both ratione personae and ratione temporis) by reference to evidence of practice worldwide as analysed by scholars. This section also discusses UNGA resolutions, UNHCR EXCOM conclusions, and case law of international courts as further evidence of the normative character of such practice. Section III briefly discusses pertinent elements of current practice that may be considered to be undertaken pursuant to the customary obligation of temporary refuge (as opposed to treaty or EU law) in the Syrian context. It signals that in the case of EU countries, State practice is primarily rooted in treaty law (eg, the Refugee Convention) or EU law. Section IV examines the implementation of existing customary obligations in the daily practice of three countries neighbouring Syria (Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey), where the vast majority of refugees are located. It then contrasts these practices with the response of the EU.
The three neighbouring countries were selected for legal and geopolitical reasons. Turkey, despite having ratified both the Refugee Convention and the 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees (Refugee Protocol), maintains a geographical limitation to the effect that only asylum seekers from countries of the Council of Europe can be ‘Convention refugees’. Neither Lebanon nor Jordan has ratified the Refugee Convention and/or the Refugee Protocol. Hence, the practice of these three countries is particularly relevant in examining custom-based practices independently from refugee treaty law. In contrast, EU Member States are all parties to the Refugee Convention and Refugee Protocol. Footnote 21 Hence, the challenge in the context of EU countries consists in identifying distinctive custom-based practices and not just current practices based on treaty and EU law. In addition, the position of the European Union, as a supra-national organization (sui generis), is examined as further manifestations of practice by its Member States.
Section V concludes by considering the contours and pertinence of the rule of temporary refuge for Syrian refugees and argues that, although anchored in understandings of shared responsibility, it has been implemented primarily in a regional context by those countries proximate to Syria.
II. THE SCOPE OF TEMPORARY REFUGE
This section reviews academic authorities on relevant State practice, before considering the position of international organizations and international courts concerning the rule. Its current application in relation to Syrian refugees is examined in sections III and IV.
A. Doctrine
Temporary refuge has been described by Coles as a practice ‘to facilitate admission and the obtaining of satisfactory solutions’ in situations where the scale of such influx is such that problems of a humanitarian nature, of public order, of national security or even of international peace and security may be at stake.Footnote 22 It emerged at a time when State practice indicated that ‘the only sort of refuge was permanent asylum’.Footnote 23
From the start, it was premised on ‘polite or explicit quid pro quos’ that other countries than the countries of temporary refuge would screen and grant resettlement to a large proportion of the population concerned; ‘[t]he promise of resettlement was the defining “temporary” element in the refuge offered by the States of first asylum, because the causes of flight were often of indefinite duration’.Footnote 24 For instance, in South Asia, the 1979 Agreement provided for temporary asylum to be given to refugees from Indochina on condition of resettlement in a third country; it was replaced by the Comprehensive Plan of Action in 1989.Footnote 25 In other instances, temporary refuge was provided (short-term) until voluntary repatriation could start, eg, in Eastern Pakistan in 1971, following events which resulted in the sudden arrival in India of some ten million refugees (‘evacuees’).Footnote 26 Should voluntary return not be possible, or offers of resettlement not be forthcoming from the international community, material assistance to the countries of temporary refuge was expected and was generally given.
It has often been argued by scholars that the obligation to provide temporary refuge in cases of mass influx finds its roots in the principle of non-refoulement (Article 33, Refugee Convention), which covers persons fleeing armed conflict.Footnote 27 Less noted is the origin of this legal obligation in an emerging rule of customary international law of temporary refuge, distinct from refugee law and finding authority in a considerable amount of relevant State practice accepted as law.Footnote 28
Mushkat, for instance, one of the first scholars to have written about temporary refuge in 1982, considered Hong Kong to be a country-colony of temporary refuge for Vietnamese refugees, unlike its Asian neighbours, and pointed to the challenges of having ‘to cater’ for their needs on a long-term basis when the situation becomes protracted.Footnote 29 She explained that non-refoulement and temporary refuge both entail ‘an obligation of states to permit entry’ but they differ significantly in that temporary refuge ‘appears to impose additional obligations on receiving countries and is a more tangible step towards a durable solution’.Footnote 30 She further noted that, despite the practice having ‘found expression – whether explicit or implicit – in a number of legal instruments’, there exists among States a ‘reluctance to institutionalise the phenomenon’, which she described as ‘avoidance of self-conscious choice’ so as not to undermine non-refoulement and permanent asylum.Footnote 31
Four years later, Perluss and Hartman argued that ‘as a norm of customary humanitarian law, temporary refuge is far better equipped than current codified law to deal with situations of mass influx’ for practical and juridical reasons; it circumvents individualized determination of refugee status and it does not require the same level of factual evidence of persecution as under the Refugee Convention.Footnote 32 They explained that the norm ‘has emerged out of the essential principle of humanitarian law: the balance between necessity and humanity’Footnote 33 and it exists ‘at the point of intersection of … international humanitarian law, refugee law, and human rights law’.Footnote 34 The norm ‘resides within that portion of humanitarian law which remains uncodified’,Footnote 35 ie, the humanitarian law of rescue.
Durieux develops the ‘rescue paradigm’ by reference to the discourse of disaster and emergency. For Durieux ‘the primary duty of frontline States’ must be conceptually separated from the duty of non-refoulement for reasons of fundamental fairness.Footnote 36 He proposes instead thinking about large refugee influxes as ‘complex emergencies’, in which the victims of the disaster are not just the refugees themselves but also the frontline States and their populations, and the ‘rescuer’ becomes all other States.Footnote 37 This idea resonates with the duty imposed by international law for the nearest country to provide a ‘place of safety’ to those persons rescued at sea,Footnote 38 and the customary international law rule of temporary refuge, which is rooted in international cooperation and understandings of shared responsibility (see section IIB below).Footnote 39
To be sure, State practice provides numerous instances where countries have obstructed access to protection (eg, through push-back policies), but as Perluss and Hartman have argued, these must be seen as mere examples of States evading meeting their obligations under the rule, nothing more.Footnote 40 Thus, temporary refuge is clearly distinguished and detached from treaty law, that is, the Refugee Convention, and in Europe the EU Qualification DirectiveFootnote 41 and the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).Footnote 42 The rule may (on occasion) overlap with the principle of non-refoulement but the two are distinct.Footnote 43
Independently from its customary nature, the rule of temporary refuge has ‘crystallized’ in other sources of international law, reinforcing its normative character. The Organization of African Unity Convention, which extends protection to persons fleeing events such as external aggression or occupation, provides that
Where a refugee has not received the right to reside in any country of asylum, he may be granted temporary residence in any country of asylum in which he first presented himself as a refugee pending arrangement for his resettlement.Footnote 44
The Cartagena Declaration, which also extends protection to persons fleeing situations of generalized violence, internal conflicts, or massive violations of human rights, emphasizes consideration of UNHCR EXCOM conclusions, particularly No 22 on the Protection of Asylum Seekers in Situations of Large-Scale Influx (see section IIB below).Footnote 45 As a result, there is considerable practice relating to temporary refuge in AfricaFootnote 46 and Latin AmericaFootnote 47 where there have been large-scale influxes from armed conflict and where group determination of prima facie refugee status is the norm. This has also been the case in India and other Asian countries.Footnote 48
The United States too has afforded protection against the return of large numbers of people fleeing armed conflict or natural disaster, be they from Haiti, Cuba, El Salvador, or Nicaragua.Footnote 49 These ad hoc responses resulted in the adoption of Temporary Protected Status in 1990, which has even been granted in the context of environmental disasters, eg, the earthquake in Haiti in 2010 or the volcanic eruptions in Montserrat in 1995 and 1997. This involved both admission and temporary status being provided to Haitian and Montserratian refugees by the United States, and a decision by other countries not to forcibly return those already within their territories.Footnote 50
Finally, in Europe, States have long afforded some form of protection on a temporary basis to persons fleeing armed conflict who fall outside the framework of the Refugee Convention (de facto refugees). For instance, Austria temporarily hosted large numbers of refugees from Czechoslovakia in 1968 while solutions for permanent settlement in Western countries were found.Footnote 51 The practice of de facto humanitarian status increased significantly in the late 1970s and 1980sFootnote 52 and reached a considerable magnitude in the 1990s following the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia and Kosovo. Some countries introduced a policy of temporary protection as a way to cope with ‘an all-time high’ number of asylum seekers.Footnote 53 Over half a million received temporary protection in Germany, with large numbers also going to Austria, Sweden and Switzerland, pending their return home after the conflict. The great disparity between EU countries in the numbers of refugees received prompted numerous calls for ‘burden sharing’ from the most affected countries, the European Union, and the Council of Europe,Footnote 54 leading eventually to the adoption of a EU Directive on Temporary Protection.Footnote 55
Because it has developed from general practice accepted as law, the exact contours and content of temporary refuge have never been entirely clear as some countries confine beneficiaries of temporary refuge to camps, whereas other countries offer far more, even in some cases refugee status or a status akin to it.Footnote 56 The premise of temporary refuge (in terms of durable solutions) has also varied, namely eventual return to the country of origin (the model in Europe during the 1990s) in contrast with resettlement in a third country and only later repatriation (the model used in the case of Indochina).Footnote 57
As will be apparent from section IV below, EU countries have been reluctant to provide large-scale resettlement, and return is likely to remain the model in Europe given that cessation provisions are now increasingly invoked and proposals have been brought forward for a systematic and ‘compulsory status review’ mechanism of international protection statuses.Footnote 58 The practices of countries neighbouring Syria, on the other hand, show temporary refuge being applied.
B. International Organizations
International organizations have long recognized the imperative for States to offer temporary refuge for large numbers of people fleeing armed conflict. This imperative is reflected in UN General Assembly (UNGA) resolutionsFootnote 59 and UNHCR Executive Committee (EXCOM) conclusions.Footnote 60 Whilst this body of work does not constitute custom, it nonetheless provides evidence of the normative character of such practice.Footnote 61
A snapshot of UNGA instruments reveals several instances where the General Assembly recommended States to offer provisional asylum or temporary refuge as a collective measure of solidarity.Footnote 62 For instance, UNGA Resolution 69/152 (2014)
Urges all States and relevant non-governmental and other organizations, in conjunction with the Office of the High Commissioner, in a spirit of international solidarity and burden-sharing, to cooperate and to mobilize resources, including through financial and in-kind assistance, as well as direct aid to host countries, refugee populations and the communities hosting them, with a view to enhancing the capacity of and reducing the heavy burden borne by countries and communities hosting refugees, in particular those that have received large numbers of refugees and asylum seekers, and whose generosity is appreciated.Footnote 63
Pursuant to these policy directives, the UNHCR has played a leading role in fostering the growing interest of States in temporary refuge.Footnote 64 The UNHCR referred to ‘temporary asylum’ for the first time in 1977,Footnote 65 but the first explicit reference to temporary refuge in the context of mass-influx appears in EXCOM Conclusion 15 (XXX) in 1979: ‘In cases of large-scale influx, persons seeking asylum should always receive at least temporary refuge.’Footnote 66 The point was reaffirmed a few months later in EXCOM Conclusion 19 (XXXI), which also called for further study of the practice.Footnote 67 Following a Group of Experts meeting on temporary refuge, EXCOM Conclusion 22 (XXXII) was adopted which provided detailed provisions concerning protection and international solidarity, burden sharing and the duties of States.Footnote 68 EXCOM Conclusion 23 (XXXII) is the last to refer to ‘temporary refuge’,Footnote 69 leading Fitzpatrick to write that ‘By 1985 the UNHCR had almost assimilated the norm of temporary refuge into the fundamental protection regime for refugees.’Footnote 70
The shift in label from temporary refuge to temporary protection dates back to 1992,Footnote 71 but the importance of temporary refuge, as expressed in EXCOM Conclusion 22 (XXXII), has continued to be reaffirmed ever since.Footnote 72 By the early 1990s, temporary refuge was recognized ‘as a legitimate tool of international protection’,Footnote 73 a strategy for asylum clearly distinct from other forms of protection, such as complementary (or subsidiary) protection.Footnote 74 It was essentially aimed at unburdening asylum procedures in cases of mass influx and, for UNHCR it was clearly anchored in international cooperation and responsibility sharing.Footnote 75
Notwithstanding this level of interest and involvement, by 2012, UNHCR conceded that ‘No consensus has however been reached on the situation in which temporary protection could be applied or its minimum content’.Footnote 76 Following two Roundtables on Temporary Protection,Footnote 77 the UNHCR adopted Guidelines elaborating on the duty of States to cooperate, to protect against refoulement, and to provide basic minimum treatment pending the finding of a durable solution.Footnote 78
The acknowledgement of ‘shared responsibility to manage large movements of refugees and migrants … through international cooperation’ was again made explicit in the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants, signed by 193 Member States at the first UN Summit on Refugees and Migrants on 19 September 2016.Footnote 79 Although not expressly about temporary refuge, the Declaration acknowledges the disproportionate burden that protracted refugee crises and the resulting large movements of refugees place on countries of refuge and their communities.Footnote 80 The Declaration enshrines the commitment of States ‘to a more equitable sharing of the burden and responsibility for hosting and supporting the world's refugees’, and empowers the UNHCR to develop and initiate a comprehensive response.Footnote 81
C. The Case Law of International Courts
Decisions of international and national courts are subsidiary means for the determination of rules of customary law.Footnote 82 Decisions by International courts on the issue of temporary refuge are scarce. The International Court of Justice, although in theory competent to interpret the Refugee Convention, has never been called upon to do so; neither has it been seized to pronounce on a matter relating to temporary refuge.
It is nevertheless worth noting that in the last decade, the European Court of Human Rights has extended its protective role to persons fleeing an armed conflict and for whom ‘substantial grounds’ exist for believing that they would face a ‘real risk’ of treatment contrary to Article 3 of the ECHR.Footnote 83 The European Court of Human Rights recently ruled unanimously that the forced return of three asylum applicants (one stateless Palestinian from Syria and two Syrian nationals) to Syria would violate their right to life and lead to a real risk of torture or of inhuman or degrading treatment under the ECHR.Footnote 84 This was the first judgment by the European Court of Human Rights in the context of the Syrian conflict (since most European countries do not at present carry out involuntary returns to Syria but process Syrian claims). The Court accepted that the applicants ‘originated from Aleppo and Damascus, where heavy and indiscriminate fighting has been raging since 2012’Footnote 85 and concluded that ‘if the applicants were expelled to Syria, it would be in breach of Articles 2 and/or 3 of the Convention’.Footnote 86
The Court also referred to a policy summary published by the UK Home Office in 2014 according to which ‘Internal relocation within Syria to escape any risk from indiscriminate violence is extremely unlikely to be possible or reasonable’ due to the unpredictability of the violence, the humanitarian situation for internally displaced, and the very limited ability to move safely within Syria.Footnote 87
Whilst only safeguarding the applicants against their refoulement to Syria, it may be argued that, read in conjunction with other judgments of the European Court of Human Rights on minimum standards of protection expected to be provided to asylum seekers in the country of return,Footnote 88 this finding requires contracting parties to guarantee admission to their territory and access to certain basic rights (both of which are also core elements of the rule of temporary refuge).
In conclusion, the analysis above indicates that temporary refuge has become a cornerstone of the response of States in cases of large-scale influx of refugees. The rule is rooted in shared responsibility and the search for durable solutions through international cooperation. Its scope includes a duty on all States to offer immediate admission to territory for a limited duration (usually the duration of the conflict). It also includes an obligation to provide certain minimum rights, including non-refoulement and basic socio-economic rights, until a more durable solution is found (eg, asylum, resettlement, or voluntary repatriation). Its normative value (and clear roots in shared responsibility) is further set out in UNGA declarations and resolutions UNHCR EXCOM conclusions, and regional instruments. That there is only scant authority in the case law of international courts does not undermine this conclusion.
III. ELEMENTS OF CURRENT PRACTICES PURSUANT TO THE RULE OF TEMPORARY REFUGE
Customary international law emerges from ‘evidence of a general practice accepted as law’.Footnote 89 These two elements (practice and opinio juris) are sometimes ‘closely entangled’ and ‘the relative weight to be given to each might vary according to the circumstances’, but they are ‘indispensable’.Footnote 90 Thus evidence of both elements is commonly found in the same materials, although each must be ascertained individually.Footnote 91 General practice means primarily the practice of States.Footnote 92
To identify current practice in the case of Syria, this article draws on the following: conduct on the ground in Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon, and in the EU and its Member States; conduct undertaken in connection with and also independently of the Refugee Convention and/or EU law; public statements by the governments of these countries; national legislation, including newly enacted legislative acts. This material was examined for the purpose of identifying the admissions practices of these countries independently and separately from treaty or EU law, the number of refugees they have been taking in or have allowed to stay, and the status granted to these people (temporary or permanent protection). Particular challenges are associated with identifying current practices that are primarily based on the Refugee Convention or EU law, such as in the EU Member States.
To ascertain opinio juris, this article looks at the following: conclusions of the UNHCR EXCOM relating to temporary refuge (refer to section II B above); enactment in domestic law;Footnote 93 official publications; and public statements by State officials regarding the duty to provide temporary refuge, bearing in mind that sovereignty is a powerful factor in this area and that as a result such statements may be couched in cautious language.
With regard to public statements and the ‘duty’ to provide temporary refuge, a particularly thorny issue concerns the relationship between law and morals. The law applicable to refugees is deeply moral in that it is grounded on humanitarian principles and values. The argument has been made that in a context such as human rights, where ‘the stakes are high’ and the ‘customary norm is not morally neutral’, it is difficult to ignore public statements based on and accepted as having a moral character.Footnote 94 However, such ‘conceptual stretching’ has been met with criticism by proponents of the traditional approach to the formation and identification of customary international law.Footnote 95 Be that as it may, this article embraces Gerety's position that ‘Law does in some imperfect sense mean morality; and similarly morality means law’,Footnote 96 as best fitting situations of large numbers of refugees in dire need of emergency protection.
Next section discusses the approaches taken by Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon, and the EU, in implementing temporary refuge in the context of refugees from Syria.
IV. TESTING THE RULE OF TEMPORARY REFUGE IN THE CONTEXT OF THE SYRIAN CONFLICT
The Syrian conflict has created the largest refugee crisis today, and ‘is poised to become … the largest protracted refugee situation of the decade’.Footnote 97 Since the conflict began in April 2011, five million refugees have fled Syria; the vast majority of them have sought refuge in neighbouring countries.Footnote 98 A third of the Syrian population has been displaced within Syria (approximately seven million).Footnote 99 The conflict has also created a longer-term crisis within Syria as a result of ‘the bombing of schools, hospitals and other civilian installations’.Footnote 100 This section examines custom-based practices in the response to the large-scale influx of Syrian refugees, by countries both near to and far from Syria, with a view to identifying how the existing customary obligation of temporary refuge has been implemented.
A. The Response by Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan: Temporary Refuge
None of the Syrian ‘refugees’ in the region have been recognized as refugees under the Refugee Convention. Hence, the response of these countries is useful in identifying current practice on temporary refuge without the background of treaty obligation.
1. Turkey: temporary protection
Turkey has a long-standing practice of keeping its borders open in cases of mass influx of refugees (which it refers to as ‘guests’). This practice goes back to World War Two and the unconditional admission and hosting of Jews, Bulgarian, Turks (‘kindreds’) in 1944, 1968, and 1989, and more recently Afghans, Iraqis and Syrians.Footnote 101 According to the Turkish Government, this practice is in compliance with international law.Footnote 102 For the last two years, Turkey has hosted the largest refugee population in the world (over 2.5 million).Footnote 103
Turkey is a party to both the Refugee Convention and the Refugee Protocol. However, it maintains a geographical limitation to the effect that only asylum seekers from countries of the Council of Europe can be ‘Convention refugees’.Footnote 104 Thus, the Refugee Convention has limited application.
Turkey is also a party to the ECHR, the UN Convention Against Torture, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.Footnote 105 Hence, an argument could be made that Turkey's obligation of non-refoulement and granting certain basic rights (which are both elements of the rule of temporary refuge), may instead be based on treaty law.Footnote 106 Be that as it may, these treaty obligations post-date Turkey's practice of temporary refuge. Furthermore, there is no evidence that Turkey's conduct was in fact based on provisions of the ECHR or other human rights treaties. Thus the source of obligation for opening borders to large numbers of refugees fleeing war and violence and granting certain basic rights seems more convincingly based on customary-based practice than treaty law.Footnote 107
In 2013, the practice of temporary refuge was incorporated in Turkey's first comprehensive Law on Foreigners and International Protection.Footnote 108 Article 91 of the 2013 Law provides:
-
(1) Temporary protection may be provided for foreigners who have been forced to leave their country, cannot return to the country that they have left, and have arrived at or crossed the borders of Turkey in a mass influx situation seeking immediate and temporary protection.Footnote 109
Article 7 of Regulation No 29153 (2014) further specifies that beneficiaries of temporary protection may be anyone ‘to whom international protection status determination procedures do not apply’. Today, persons benefitting from temporary protection include all Syrian nationals, Palestinian refugees, and stateless persons living in Syria.
Temporary protection under this Regulation includes (a) unconditional admission under the open border policy; (b) compliance with the principle of non-refoulement, including non-rejection at the border; (c) the provision of basic needs and access to rights on a temporary basis.Footnote 110 However, the provision of basic needs and access to rights is subject to the discretion of the administrative authorities; significantly, the duration of temporary protection is also discretionary (being subject to a decision of the board of ministers).Footnote 111 At present, no time limit applies to Syrians, but after more than five years, temporary protection is developing into de facto permanent resettlement in Turkey.
The introduction of a national database system (launched by the Directorate General of Migration Management in May 2015), coupled with a strengthening of the registration capacity of the Turkish Government through a new Regional Refugee and Resilience Plan (3RP),Footnote 112 and, arguably, the EU–Turkey deal,Footnote 113 means that Turkey should continue to keep its borders open and admit Syrian refugees. However, in reality, since 2016, Turkey has begun forcibly returning (‘refouler’) large numbers of Syrian refugees arriving by land at its Southern border with Syria, in contravention of its own law, international law, and EU law.Footnote 114
In summary, two years after Syrian refugees began to cross the border, Turkey adopted its first legislation on temporary protection. This new legal framework appears to have successfully implemented Turkey's long-standing custom-based practice of temporary refuge (albeit the quality of protection for Syrian refugees is subject to discretion and restrictions). However, the expected collective response of the international community to alleviate the burden on Turkey has not been forthcoming. Thus what started as short-term humanitarian assistance has progressively turned into de facto permanent resettlement.
2. Jordan and Lebanon: Temporary ‘Hosting’
Neither Jordan nor Lebanon is a signatory to the Refugee Convention or Refugee Protocol. Hence, refugees from Syria do not benefit from any special status and must obtain entry and stay documentation in accordance with domestic law. In Jordan, for instance, they are often referred to as ‘visitors’, ‘guests’ or ‘Arab brothers’, ie, terms with no legal meaning under domestic law.Footnote 115 In Lebanon, an asylum seeker means ‘a person seeking asylum in a country other than Lebanon’.Footnote 116 Both countries are nevertheless parties to the UN Convention Against Torture and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,Footnote 117 but, like in Turkey, custom-based practices of opening borders to people fleeing violence have existed long before these treaties were ratified, and there is no evidence that these countries’ conduct was in fact based on provisions in these treaties.
Jordan and Lebanon have for decades hosted a particularly large number of Palestinian refugees following the 1948 Arab–Israeli conflict and the 1967 war pending repatriation. This custom continued between 2011 and 2015, with both countries operating a policy largely about keeping its borders open to Syrian refugees, for humanitarian reasons.Footnote 118 By 2016, Lebanon was hosting approximately 1.2 million refugees from Syria (ie, a quarter of its population pre-2011 and the third largest refugee-hosting country in the world) and Jordan 665,000 (as registered Syrian refugees).Footnote 119
However, in January 2013, the Jordanian government officially announced a policy of non-entry for Palestinian refugees from Syria (on the ground that they should be allowed to return to Israel and Palestine) and those already living in Jordan were denied identification cards, resulting in access being denied to basic services and in children only being able to enrol in UNRWA schools.Footnote 120 Such discriminatory restrictions on entry and denials of refuge to Palestinians fleeing Syria are not specific to Jordan and extend to Lebanon and Egypt, forcing Palestinians from Syria to travel to Turkey or Europe;Footnote 121 these restrictions appear consistent with Resolution 5093 adopted by the Council of the League of Arab States, which authorizes host countries in the region to treat Palestinian refugees in accordance with their own domestic law.Footnote 122
Under increased pressure in all sectors (employment, education, health, housing, water and electricity supply), Lebanon and Jordan have also introduced general restrictions on entry into their territory since 2015. For instance, the Lebanese Government instated visa restrictions for Syrian nationals, coupled with tight time limits of stays ranging from 24 hours to one month.Footnote 123 These have generally resulted in instances of refoulement and arbitrary detention becoming more frequent.Footnote 124 Other restrictive measures introduced include fees for Syrian refugees to access public health centres, with an exception for vulnerable families.Footnote 125
The legal and policy framework of Jordan and Lebanon for addressing the situation of refugees remains underdeveloped and is unable to cope with the challenges of these two countries economic needs. Both Jordan and Lebanon have signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the UNHCR (Jordan in 1998; Lebanon in 2003), setting out key principles of international protection, but these have limited application to Syrian refugees.Footnote 126 With offers of resettlement outside the region continuing to be low in numbers,Footnote 127 plans for local integration are now being pursued through the Migration Compact (which builds on the EU–Turkey deal)Footnote 128 and Regional Refugee and Resilience Plan (3RP),Footnote 129 at the same time as advocating positive measures to offer admission to territory.Footnote 130
3. Conclusion
Since the Syrian conflict began in April 2011, official statements and the conduct of the governments of Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan have demonstrated (until recently) an open border approach; inherent to this practice is the admission of large numbers of refugees to territory, respect for non-refoulement, and the recognition of certain minimum rights for refugees. This policy seems to be based on long-standing custom-based regional practices of offering temporary refuge to persons in need (eg, Palestinians in Lebanon and Jordan, and the ‘kindreds’ in Turkey). While Turkey's legal and policy framework addressing the protection needs of Syrian refugees has developed into a proper temporary protection legal regime, Jordan's and Lebanon's has remained rudimentary.
None of the Syrian refugees have been protected under the Refugee Convention (or Refugee Protocol), which is inapplicable in these three countries (Jordan and Lebanon are not parties; Turkey only recognizes refugees coming from Europe). It is therefore suggested that these countries constitute successful examples of implementation of the existing customary obligation to provide temporary refuge to large numbers of refugees.
However, what started as short-term humanitarian assistance has since turned into a protracted situation, creating pressure on resources for Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon. The governments of these countries feel deeply let down by the international community of States and the lack of shared responsibility,Footnote 131 as temporary refuge is transitioning to de facto permanent resettlement in all three countries. Parallel to this, a tightening of entry into their territories and the range of rights provided can be observed. The Syrian case seems to confirm historical examples that there is no precise time when it comes to the ‘temporariness’ of temporary refuge. However, after five years of conflict, the patience and resources of countries of refuge has run out, the emergency scenario has withered away, and shared responsibility has become even more imperative.
As will be discussed below, the EU's approach contrasts starkly with that of Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon.
B. The Response of the EU and Its Member States: International Protection (Asylum)
The response of the EU to the arrival of refugees from Syria has been slow and idiosyncratic, raising serious concerns about the future of the Common European Asylum System.Footnote 132 Both the EU Temporary Protection DirectiveFootnote 133 and Article 78(3) (together with Article 80) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European UnionFootnote 134 foresee a solidarity mechanism in the case of a sudden influx of refugees.
The Temporary Protection Directive (which is illustrative of opinio juris), an instrument adopted under the Common European Asylum System, has a wide personal scope and flexible eligibility criteria. In particular, it does not require a status determination procedure because membership of the designated group is sufficient, and it would apply to a significant number of people, such as all people from a particular country or region (eg, Syria). Furthermore, it requires the Member States to ensure that the temporary and immediate protection status it offers includes certain guarantees.Footnote 135 Finally, it provides for financial assistance, and a structured burden sharing mechanism, but only to the extent that Member States are to notify each other of their reception capacity but not actually undertake sharing or redistribution of asylum seekers. Compared to existing refugee resettlement and humanitarian admission programmes (both limited in their personal scope, for instance to unaccompanied children or family members), the Temporary Protection Directive would therefore offer considerable advantages.Footnote 136
However, the Directive has never been activated; individual Member States preferring instead to apply protection statuses by application of the Refugee Convention/EU Qualification Directive.Footnote 137 For instance, in 2013 most EU countries granted subsidiary protection status to Syrian refugees already present in Europe;Footnote 138 in 2014 and 2015, the UNHCR noted a welcome increase in the granting of refugee status, for instance on actual or imputed political grounds, to asylum seekers from Syria.Footnote 139
Time may also be relevant in that Syrian refugees did not arrive on the EU's doorsteps until the summer of 2015, four years after the conflict had begun. By then, it had been decided that the collective priority should be to support Syria and the region through funding, protect Europe's borders, and agree upon durable solutions (eg, a small number of resettlement) while considering other humanitarian options for accessing Europe.
Thus, Article 78(3) (together with Article 80) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union was used instead (of the Temporary Protection Directive) as a basis for collective EU action, including the adoption of a European Agenda on Migration.Footnote 140 The Agenda was followed by a set of Priority Actions for its implementation, namely, national financial pledges, Member States support for an emergency relocation mechanism for the 160,000 people already in the EU, a new ‘hotspot’ approach, and ensuring effective returns pursuant to the EU action plan on return;Footnote 141 none of these involved temporary protection.
Resettlement measures were also adopted to enable refugees from Syria to lawfully access and settle in the EU. Resettlement in EU law guarantees the person being resettled one of the following statuses: refugee status,Footnote 142 subsidiary protection status,Footnote 143 or any other similar status under national or EU law. Hence it offers a more permanent solution than, for instance, humanitarian admission programmes which are meant to be only temporary.Footnote 144 As a durable solution, resettlement is not therefore pertinent for examining the custom-based practice of temporary refuge/temporary protection; the number of actual places for resettlement in the EU has also been small.Footnote 145
Other safe and lawful options to access the EU include humanitarian visa and humanitarian admission programmes,Footnote 146 private sponsorship,Footnote 147 emergency scholarships for higher education,Footnote 148 vulnerable persons relocation scheme,Footnote 149 and family reunification programme.Footnote 150 Most of these options are not relevant either to an examination of a distinctive custom-based practice of temporary refuge because they are based on the Refugee Convention or EU law. For instance, France has been using humanitarian visas for Syrians but pre-assessment at French consulates in Syria and neighbouring countries is entirely based on the Refugee Convention and rules for subsidiary protection.Footnote 151 Similarly, Syrians granted admission under humanitarian admission programmes introduced in Austria, France and the UK, have been granted refugee status or subsidiary protection upon arrival, hence they were not offered ‘temporary refuge’ but asylum (or quasi-resettlement) as a durable solution.Footnote 152
One possible exception is the humanitarian admission programmes established in Ireland and Germany, which seem to have considered temporary protection at some point in time. However, the Irish Syrian Humanitarian Admission Programme (SHAP) was very limited in scope: it was only in place for six weeks (in Spring 2014) and only 44 applications for 119 family members were granted;Footnote 153 it operated as a private (family) sponsorship mechanism and offered up to two years residence in Ireland.Footnote 154 Where family members could no longer meet the financial requirements or at the expiry of the two-year period, most beneficiaries were able to apply for refugee status.Footnote 155 As for Germany, it introduced three humanitarian admission programmes, between March 2013 and April 2014. The programmes offered a total of 20,000 places to Syrians in Lebanon and Egypt. This was the first time a European country committed ‘to large-scale, ad-hoc admission of Syrians outside of regular resettlement quotas’.Footnote 156 Syrians arriving in Germany under one of these programmes were originally granted two-year temporary residency with the possibility of renewal for another two years. However, like in other EU countries, they have since been allowed to stay permanently.
It may be worth noting that the European Commission recently embarked upon a comprehensive reform of its asylum policy to address the challenges of high migratory pressures.Footnote 157 Core to the reform is the introduction of a ‘compulsory status review’ to ensure that protection is granted only for as long as it is needed taking into account, for example, changes in countries of origin which could impact the need for protection.Footnote 158 It is therefore predicted that cases of return of persons recognized as needing protection at a particular time, from Europe to countries of origin, will likely increase in future.
To conclude, the EU has not considered it necessary to activate its own solidarity mechanism, namely the Temporary Protection Directive. In the absence of its doing so, EU Member States have responded to claims by Syrians in the usual way through their procedures for international protection—examining their eligibility for refugee status under the Refugee Convention first, and then, if they are not recognized as refugees, whether they are eligible for subsidiary protection under EU law. It is therefore unlikely that in the absence of a collectively activated temporary protection mechanism, the rule of temporary refuge is being applied in the EU with respect to refugees from Syria. One narrow exception might be the humanitarian admission programmes in Germany and possibly also Ireland, which at some point in time considered offering protection for Syrian refugees to be granted on a temporary basis. The response of the EU therefore contrasts starkly with the practices of Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan; it further highlights key challenges in identifying current practices in countries (ie, EU Member States) that primarily rely on the Refugee Convention or EU law.
V. CONCLUSION
This article has examined the customary international law rule of temporary refuge in relation to the Syrian conflict (2011–). The rule, which was first acknowledged in the legal literature in the 1980s, enshrines a positive obligation on all States to admit to territory large numbers of persons fleeing a situation of armed conflict, and to grant certain rights commensurate with human dignity, until a more durable solution is found. The application of the rule further triggers an obligation on States and international organizations to cooperate and to take concrete steps towards a durable solution. Insufficiently recognized in the academic literature, but as highlighted in this article, is that shared responsibility is the linchpin of temporary refuge.
The practices in countries neighbouring Syria (ie, Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan) during the last five years indicate that when the Refugee Convention is not applicable, temporary refuge has been relied on as a basis for protection in the case of large-scale influx of refugees. The response of these countries, which has been to keep their borders open to refugees from Syria, is based on long standing custom-based practices in the region of providing temporary refuge. In Turkey, the rule has also been enshrined in a new legislation.
These practices further confirm that temporary refuge applies to a wider category of people than refugee status because the circumstances of flight do not have to be those provided for by the terms of the Refugee Convention. Temporary refuge also appears to include a positive obligation to offer admission to territory (eg, through keeping borders open) that is distinct from the negative obligation of non-refoulement. Finally, temporary refuge supports States’ obligation to protect certain essential human rights to everyone within their territory, eg, non-refoulement, non-discrimination, education, and other human rights commensurate with human dignity, independently from any status under refugee law. This is crucial and goes to the heart of ‘understanding protractedness’, not just in terms of time but also in terms of marginalization, threats to freedom, and dependency.Footnote 159 However, after five years of conflict, rights are becoming squeezed and shared responsibility for finding permanent solutions is needed even more than ever.
The EU, in contrast, offers a very different approach. Despite temporary refuge having found expression explicitly in EU law (in the Temporary Protection Directive), EU Member States decided not to activate this mechanism, considering instead that the numbers of asylum seekers involved could simply be processed through national procedures for international protection. As a result, most refugees from Syria have been granted refugee status or subsidiary protection status under the Refugee Convention or EU Qualification Directive. In sharp contrast to Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan, the approach of the EU has remained focused on the individual and refugee/subsidiary protection status as a solution. With the exception of Germany, none of the humanitarian admission programmes come near a large-scale ad hoc admission of Syrians, and even then, in Germany, beneficiaries of these programmes ended up being granted permanent residence.
The fact that the EU has not applied the Temporary Protection Directive should not be read as a rejection by EU Member States of the practice of temporary refuge, given that these countries did engage in such practice in response to the former Yugoslavia and Kosovo wars, and subsequently codified such practice in the Temporary Protection Directive itself. The EU case does, however, represent a failure of shared (EU) responsibility, in failing to activate the optimum mechanism for dealing with the Syria crisis. This has left Member States having to apply different solutions, resulting in variations in the scale and level of protection afforded to Syrian refugees.
Temporary refuge is practised the world over, and has been codified in regional legal instruments in Europe, Africa, Asia, as well as in national law, such as in the United States and Turkey; but as long as shared responsibility is lacking, the rule is likely to continue being implemented primarily in a regional context by those countries nearest to the country affected by conflict, as in the case of Syria.