The right of asylum (sometimes called right of political asylum, from the Ancient Greek word ἄσυλον) is an ancient juridical concept, under which a person persecuted by one's own country may be protected by another sovereign authority, such as another country or church official, who in medieval times could offer sanctuary. This right was recognized by the Egyptians, the Greeks, and the Hebrews, from whom it was adopted into Western tradition. René Descartes fled to the Netherlands, Voltaire to England, and Thomas Hobbes to France, because each state offered protection to persecuted foreigners.
The Egyptians, Greeks, and Hebrews recognized a religious "right
of asylum", protecting criminals (or those accused of crime) from legal
action to some extent. This principle was later adopted by the
established Christian church, and various rules were developed that
detailed how to qualify for protection and what degree of protection one
would receive.
The Council of Orleans decided in 511, in the presence of Clovis I,
that asylum could be granted to anyone who took refuge in a church or
on church property, or at the home of a bishop. This protection was
extended to murderers, thieves and adulterers alike.
That "Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution" is enshrined in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948 and supported by the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees. Under these agreements, a refugee
is a person who is outside that person's own country's territory owing
to fear of persecution on protected grounds, including race, caste,
nationality, religion, political opinions and participation in any
particular social group or social activities.
Medieval England
In England, King Æthelberht of Kent proclaimed the first Anglo-Saxon laws on sanctuary in about 600 AD. However Geoffrey of Monmouth in his Historia Regum Britanniae (c. 1136) says that the legendary pre-Saxon king Dunvallo Molmutius (4th/5th century BC) enacted sanctuary laws among the Molmutine Laws as recorded by Gildas (c. 500–570). The term grith was used by the laws of king Ethelred.
By the Norman era
that followed 1066, two kinds of sanctuary had evolved: all churches
had the lower-level powers and could grant sanctuary within the church
proper, but the broader powers of churches licensed by royal charter extended sanctuary to a zone around the church. At least twenty-two churches had charters for this broader sanctuary, including
- Battle Abbey
- Beverley (see image, right)
- Colchester
- Durham, England
- Hexham
- Norwich
- Ripon
- Wells Cathedral
- Winchester Cathedral
- Westminster Abbey
- York Minster
Sometimes the criminal had to get to the chapel itself to be protected, or ring a certain bell, hold a certain ring or door-knocker, or sit on a certain chair ("frith-stool").
Some of these items survive at various churches. Elsewhere, sanctuary
held in an area around the church or abbey, sometimes extending in
radius to as much as a mile and a half. Stone "sanctuary crosses" marked
the boundaries of the area; some crosses still exist as well. Thus it
could become a race between the felon and the medieval law officers to
the nearest sanctuary boundary. Serving of justice upon the fleet of
foot could prove a difficult proposition.
Church sanctuaries were regulated by common law. An asylum seeker
had to confess his sins, surrender his weapons, and permit supervision
by a church or abbey organization with jurisdiction. Seekers then had
forty days to decide whether to surrender to secular authorities and
stand trial for their alleged crimes, or to confess their guilt, abjure the realm, and go into exile by the shortest route and never return without the king's permission. Those who did return faced execution under the law or excommunication from the Church.
If the suspects chose to confess their guilt and abjure, they did
so in a public ceremony, usually at the church gates. They would
surrender their possessions to the church, and any landed property
to the crown. The coroner, a medieval official, would then choose a
port city from which the fugitive should leave England (though the
fugitive sometimes had this privilege). The fugitive would set out
barefooted and bareheaded, carrying a wooden cross-staff as a symbol of
protection under the church. Theoretically they would stay to the main
highway, reach the port and take the first ship out of England. In
practice, however, the fugitive could get a safe distance away, abandon
the cross-staff and take off and start a new life. However, one can
safely assume the friends and relatives of the victim knew of this ploy
and would do everything in their power to make sure this did not happen;
or indeed that the fugitives never reached their intended port of call,
becoming victims of vigilante justice under the pretense of a fugitive who wandered too far off the main highway while trying to "escape."
Knowing the grim options, some fugitives rejected both choices
and opted for an escape from the asylum before the forty days were up.
Others simply made no choice and did nothing. Since it was illegal for
the victim's friends to break into an asylum, the church would deprive
the fugitive of food and water until a decision was made.
During the Wars of the Roses,
when the Yorkists or Lancastrians would suddenly get the upper hand by
winning a battle, some adherents of the losing side might find
themselves surrounded by adherents of the other side and not able to get
back to their own side. Upon realizing this situation they would rush
to sanctuary at the nearest church until it was safe to come out. A
prime example is Queen Elizabeth Woodville, consort of Edward IV of England.
In 1470, when the Lancastrians briefly restored Henry VI to the throne, Queen Elizabeth was living in London with several young daughters. She moved with them into Westminster for sanctuary, living there in royal comfort until Edward IV was restored to the throne in 1471 and giving birth to their first son Edward V
during that time. When King Edward IV died in 1483, Elizabeth (who was
highly unpopular with even the Yorkists and probably did need
protection) took her five daughters and youngest son (Richard, Duke of
York) and again moved into sanctuary at Westminster. To be sure she had
all the comforts of home, she brought so much furniture and so many
chests that the workmen had to knock holes in some of the walls to get
everything in fast enough to suit her.
Henry VIII
changed the rules of asylum, reducing to a short list the types of
crimes for which people were allowed to claim asylum. The medieval
system of asylum was finally abolished entirely by James I in 1623.
Modern political asylum
Article 14 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states that "Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution." The United Nations 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees guides national legislation concerning political asylum. Under these agreements, a refugee
(or for cases where repressing base means has been applied directly or
environmentally to the refugee) is a person who is outside that person's
own country's territory (or place of habitual residence if stateless) owing to fear of persecution on protected grounds. Protected grounds include race, caste, nationality, religion, political opinions and membership or participation in any particular social group or social activities. Rendering true victims of persecution to their persecutor is a violation of a principle called non-refoulement, part of the customary and trucial Law of Nations.
These are the accepted terms and criteria as principles and a fundamental part in the 1951 United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees non-refoulement order.
Since the 1990s, victims of sexual persecution (which may include
domestic violence, or systematic oppression of a gender or sexual
minority) have come to be accepted in some countries as a legitimate
category for asylum claims, when claimants can prove that the state is
unable or unwilling to provide protection.
Right of asylum by country of refuge
European Union
Asylum in European Union member states formed over a half-century by application of the Geneva Convention of 28 July 1951 on the Status of Refugees. Common policies appeared in the 1990s in connection with the Schengen Agreement
(which suppressed internal borders) so that asylum seekers unsuccessful
in one Member State would not reapply in another. The common policy
began with the Dublin Convention in 1990. It continued with the implementation of Eurodac and the Dublin Regulation in 2003, and the October 2009 adoption of two proposals by the European Commission.
France
France was the first country to recognize the constitutional right to asylum, this being enshrined in article 120 of the Constitution of 1793. The modern French right of asylum is recognized by the 1958 Constitution, vis-à-vis the paragraph 4 of the preamble to the Constitution of 1946,
to which the Preamble of the 1958 Constitution directly refers. The
Constitution of 1946 incorporated of parts of the 1793 constitution
which had guaranteed the right of asylum to "anyone persecuted because
of his action for freedom" who are unable to seek protection in their
home countries.
In addition to the constitutional right to asylum, the modern French right to asylum (droit d'asile) is enshrined on a legal and regulatory basis in the Code de l'Entree et du Sejour des Etrangers et du Droit d'Asile (CESEDA).
France also adheres to international agreements which provide for
application modalities for the right of asylum, such as the 1951 United Nations (UN) Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (ratified in 1952), the additional 1967 protocol; articles K1 and K2 of the 1992 Maastricht Treaty as well as the 1985 Schengen Agreement, which defined EU immigration policy. Finally, the right of asylum is defined by article 18 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union.
Some of the criteria for which an asylum application can be
rejected include: i) Passage via “safe" third country, ii) Safe Country
of Origin (An asylum seeker can be a prior refused asylum if he or she
is a national of a country considered to be "safe" by the French asylum
authority OFPRA),
iii) Safety Threat (serious threat to the public order), or iv)
Fraudulent Application (abuse of the asylum procedure for other
reasons).
The December 10, 2003, law limited political asylum through two main restrictions:
- The notion of "internal asylum": the request may be rejected if the foreigner may benefit from political asylum on a portion of the territory of their home country.
- The OFPRA (Office français de protection des réfugiés et apatrides – French Office for the Protection of Refugees and Stateless Persons) now makes a list of allegedly "safe countries" which respect political rights and principles of liberty. If the demander of asylum comes from such a country, the request is processed in 15 days, and receives no social assistance protection. They may contest the decision, but this does not suspend any deportation order. The first list, enacted in July 2005, included as "safe countries" Benin, Cape Verde, Ghana, Mali, Mauritius Island, India, Senegal, Mongolia, Georgia, Ukraine, Bosnia and Croatia. It had the effect of reducing in six months by about 80% the number of applicants from these countries. The second list, passed in July 2006, included Tanzania, Madagascar, Niger, Albania and Macedonia.
While restricted, the right of political asylum has been conserved in
France amid various anti-immigration laws. Some people claim that,
apart from the purely judicial path, the bureaucratic process is used to slow down and ultimately reject what might be considered as valid requests. According to Le Figaro,
France granted 7,000 people the status of political refugee in 2006,
out of a total of 35,000 requests; in 2005, the OFPRA in charge of
examining the legitimacy of such requests granted less than 10,000 from a
total of 50,000 requests.
Numerous exiles from South American dictatorships, particularly from Augusto Pinochet's Chile and the Dirty War in Argentina, were received in the 1970s-80s.
Since the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan, tens of homeless Afghan asylum seekers have been sleeping in a park in Paris near the Gare de l'Est train station. Although their demands haven't been yet accepted, their presence has been tolerated. However, since the end of 2005, NGOs have been noting that the police separate Afghans from other migrants during raids, and expel via charters those who have just arrived at Gare de l'Est
by train and haven't had time to demand asylum (a May 30, 2005, decree
requires them to pay for a translator to help with official
formalities).
United Kingdom
In the 19th century, the United Kingdom accorded political asylum to various persecuted people, among whom were many members of the socialist movement (including Karl Marx). With the 1845 attempted bombing of the Greenwich Royal Observatory and the 1911 Siege of Sidney Street in the context of the propaganda of the deed (anarchist) actions, political asylum was restricted.
United States
The United States recognizes the right of asylum of individuals as specified by international and federal law. A specified number of legally defined refugees who apply for refugee status overseas, as well as those applying for asylum after arriving in the U.S., are admitted annually.
Since World War II, more refugees have found homes in the U.S.
than any other nation and more than two million refugees have arrived in
the U.S. since 1980. During much of the 1990s, the United States
accepted over 100,000 refugees per year, though this figure has recently
decreased to around 50,000 per year in the first decade of the 21st
century, due to greater security concerns. As for asylum seekers, the
latest statistics show that 86,400 persons sought sanctuary in the
United States in 2001. Before the September 11 attacks individual asylum applicants were evaluated in private proceedings at the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Services (INS).
Despite this, concerns have been raised with the U.S. asylum and
refugee determination processes. A recent empirical analysis by three
legal scholars described the U.S. asylum process as a game of refugee roulette;
that is to say that the outcome of asylum determinations depends in
large part on the personality of the particular adjudicator to whom an
application is randomly assigned, rather than on the merits of the case.
The very low numbers of Iraqi refugees accepted between 2003 and 2007
exemplifies concerns about the United States' refugee processes. The
Foreign Policy Association reported that:
Perhaps the most perplexing component of the Iraq refugee crisis... has been the inability for the U.S. to absorb more Iraqis following the 2003 invasion of the country. To date, the U.S. has granted less than 800 Iraqis refugee status, just 133 in 2007. By contrast, the U.S. granted asylum to more than 100,000 Vietnamese refugees during the Vietnam War.