Legal representation of unaccompanied children

Poland

Country Report: Legal representation of unaccompanied children Last updated: 13/06/24

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Independent

The Law on Protection provides for the appointment of a legal representative to an unaccompanied child – a special guardian (kurator).[1] There are no exceptions; each child has to have a legal representative and all unaccompanied children get one in practice. The Head of the Office for Foreigners or the BG immediately lodges the request to the district custodial court. The court appoints the legal representative. Under the law, the deadline for appointing the guardian is 3 days. There is no information on compliance with this rule in practice. One guardian is appointed for the following proceedings: international protection, Dublin procedure, social assistance, and voluntary return.

There is no special requirement in the Law on Protection for being eligible as a representative of an unaccompanied child for an asylum procedure: the representative should be an adult and have legal capacity. Under the law, only the person who undertakes procedural acts in the proceedings granting international protection to an unaccompanied minor should fulfil certain conditions.[2] No remuneration is provided to legal representatives. In practice, in the last years, there were problems arising from the insufficient numbers of trained legal representatives for unaccompanied children. NGO personnel and students of legal clinics at universities are appointed as guardians. The legal representative should be present during the interview, together with a psychologist, and may ask questions and make comments.[3]

The Border Guard reports that since December 2015, they use a list of NGO workers who declared their willingness to be a representative of a child.[4] However, as the Border Guard confirms, due to the lack of funding, some NGOs withdrew their representatives from the list. The last update of the list took place in 2019. As of 2023, there were a total of 11 legal representatives on the list, for a total number of 217 unaccompanied children.[5] Their presence on that list is not binding, which means they are not obliged to become a representative.[6] In 2023, the Border Guard indicated that, for every UAM, the competent court was asked to appoint a representative and the representative was chosen from the persons eligible by a respective court.[7]

In Poland, according to the Commissioner for the Rights of the Child (Ombudsperson for Children), ensuring legal representation for unaccompanied children remains a challenge, as the legal provisions are not adapted to the needs of such children.[8]

In the shadow report to the Committee on the Rights of the Child from 2020, NGOs stress that some guardians do not have any personal contact with the unaccompanied minor they represent and because of such a practice, the child does not have much information on their legal situation.[9] Children do not have access to any information that would be adjusted to their age (leaflets, websites). Additionally, guardians are not supported by interpreters, which makes communication even more difficult.[10]

Problems concerning legal representations of unaccompanied minors are clearly presented in a case litigated by the Commissioner for Human Rights in 2022.[11] An unaccompanied minor O.A. was intercepted by the Border Guard with a group of other foreigners 60 km from the border with Belarus. On the same day, the Border Guards issued to all of them orders to leave Poland. The unaccompanied minor was considered a dependent of another foreigner and returned in the same manner. Two days later, O.A entered Poland again. This time he was appointed a legal guardian, was placed in foster care and applied for international protection. The Commissioner for Human Rights lodged a complaint against the order to leave Poland to the Voivodeship Administrative Court in Bialystok. In the complaint it was brought up, i.a., that the Border Guard took no action to identify O.A. as an unaccompanied minor and infringed the Convention on the Rights of the Child by not appointing a legal guardian, ensuring his best interest. In the judgement from 27 October 2022, the Court admitted that the unaccompanied minor should have had a legal guardian appointed for the case and the lack of appointment indeed constituted an infringement of Article 12 of the Convention of the Rights of the Child. The Court also noted that the Border Guard should have informed the intercepted foreigners about the possibility to apply for international protection in order to respect the principle of non-refoulement.

In 2023, SIP started a project which envisages training for candidates for legal representative of UAM and for the personnel of foster care facilities. Within this project they trained 44 persons and 8 facilities in 2023. They also created a list of persons ready to act as a guardian in case there is an unaccompanied minor in need.[12]

In Poland, unaccompanied children are placed in various intervention facilities instead of being placed in a central institution. After the court ruling appointing the representative, they can be placed in foster care facilities or foster families. In 2022, as in the past years, unaccompanied minors were mostly placed in foster care facilities in Kętrzyn (16 persons) – due to the proximity to the detention centre in Kętrzyn, from which they are released because of age – or in Warsaw (4 persons). In 2022, they were placed also in Elk (4 persons), Gorzów Wielkopolski (3 persons) and Wasilków (3 persons).[13] In 2023 the Office for Foreigners answered that the court decides in which institution the child would be placed and did not provide further information.[14]

If the asylum procedure terminates with a negative decision, the minor remains in the same foster family or institution. In April 2024 the Commissioner for the Rights of the Child met with the Border Guard and the main issue discussed during this meeting was foster care. There are not enough places in foster care institutions and there are very few foster families, ready to take care of foreign child.[15]

In 2023, there were 292 unaccompanied children (up from 217 in 2022) applying for international protection in Poland.[16]

 

 

 

[1] Article 61 Law on Protection.

[2] Article 66 Law on Protection.

[3] Article 65(3) and (4) Law on Protection.

[4] Information provided by the Border Guard, 17 January 2023.

[5] Information provided by the Border Guard on 4 March 2022, KG-OI-III.0180.7.2022/JL, still applicable for 2022.

[6] Information provided by the Border Guard, 17 January 2023.

[7] Information provided by the Border Guard, 18 March 2024.

[8] Fundamental Rights Agency, Migration: Key fundamental rights concerns, Bulletin 2, June 2021, available (EN) at: https://bit.ly/3GENm1Q, 27.

[9] NGOs alternative report to the government report on implementation of the Convention of the Rights of the Child, submitted to UNICEF, August 2020, available (PL) at: https://bit.ly/3s3hZXK.

[10] NGOs alternative report to the government report on implementation of the Convention of the Rights of the Child, submitted to UNICEF, August 2020, available (PL) at: https://bit.ly/3s3hZXK.

[11] Judgement of the Voivodeship Administrative Court in Bialystok, no II SA/Bk 558/22 of 27 October 2022, see the judgement and comments from the Ombudsman: https://bit.ly/40HvxsO .

[12] SIP, Ruszamy z projektem wspierającym dzieci bez opieki w Polsce, 14 September 2023, available at: https://bit.ly/4a2rwUA.

[13] Information provided by the Office for Foreigners, 3 February 2023.

[14] Information provided by the Office for Foreigners, 16 February 2024.

[15] Commissioner for the Rights of the Child, Children need to be protected at the border, 19 April 2024, available at: https://bit.ly/3Wq7nVr.

[16] Information provided by the Office for Foreigners, 16 February 2024 and 3 February 2023.

Table of contents

  • Statistics
  • Overview of the legal framework
  • Overview of the main changes since the previous report update
  • Asylum Procedure
  • Reception Conditions
  • Detention of Asylum Seekers
  • Content of International Protection
  • ANNEX I – Transposition of the CEAS in national legislation