TNAG-1800-FCO40-2560-Hong-Kong-Vietnamese-refugees-principle-of-first-asylum-1988 — Page 228

FCO40 Hong Kong Department Records 聯邦事務部香港部檔案 All

EC/SCP/16

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19. In support of the notion of temporary refuge, one expert mentioned that the 1951 Convention already made a distinction between those rights to be accorded to persons whose presence was "lawful" (Article 32) and those who had illegally entered a country of asylum (Article 31). Persons in the former category were entitled to a more comprehensive range of rights involving the exercise of a State's sovereignty than those whose presence in a country of asylum was deemed to be illegal. Another expert believed that this distinction was not relevant in the present connection since a refugee whether legally or illegally in the territory was protected against refoulement. He also pointed out that in any event most refugees entered a territory "illegally" in the sense that they were admitted without proper papers until their situation had been regularized through a series of procedures. view was supported by another expert who noted that in the context of a large-scale influx, it was virtually impossible for a refugee to enter a territory otherwise than by irregular means.

This

20. Most speakers agreed that whilst the 1951 Convention made a distinction between the standard of treatment to be accorded to refugees who were lawfully in a territory and those who had entered illegally, this did not of itself constitute an implicit recognition of a specific category of temporary refuge. One expert commented that, moreover, the rights enumerated in the

Convention represented a minimum standard and were also complementary to a

number of other rights set out in other international instruments which were

applicable to all persons, irrespective of whether or not they were in the

territory legally or illegally.

21.

A number of experts never theless expressed the view that the standard of

treatment which should be accorded a person in the intermediate stage between

admission and the finding of a durable solution merited further

clarification. The basic minimum standards identified in the working paper

were, in the view of several experts, an excellent starting point: In this

context, it was generally recognized that the country of asylum should be

obliged to regularize the situation of an asylum-seeker if, after a certain

period, a durable solution was not for thcoming. In this connection, one

expert mentioned the practice of his country whereby, in the absence of a

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