Bulgaria: Immigration Detention in Bulgaria: Fewer Migrants and Refugees, More Fences (April 2019)
KEY FINDINGS
• Despite a 91 percent drop in irregular arrivals since 2015, detention remains a key feature in the country’s response to migration flows.
• Conditions in detention are generally substandard and marred by allegations of abuse and poor access to procedural standards.
• Asylum seekers are sometimes held in “pre-removal” detention while their claims are processed.
• Depending on their nationality, asylum seekers can face severe discrimination, which observers argue is intended to serve as a method of deterrence.
• While migration law prohibits the detention of unaccompanied children, it is permitted under asylum law.
1. INTRODUCTION
Bulgaria is often viewed as a transit country into the European Union. While it received an
important number of arrivals during the refugee “crisis,” the number of irregular non-citizens
apprehended in the country has decreased dramatically, including a 90 percent drop
between 2015 and 2017.1 Despite this decrease, immigration detention has remained a key
tool in Bulgaria’s response to migration and asylum flows, in addition to other measures
such as the construction of a border fence.
A 2019 report on the treatment of asylum seekers in four frontline European Union (EU)
countries, which was produced by several European NGOs—including the Global Detention
Project (GDP), the Bulgarian Foundation for Access to Rights (FAR), and the Hungarian
Helsinki Society (HHC)—found that “Exceptional measures of a temporary character” like
mass detention have become “normalised” in Bulgarian public discourse. The report noted
the contradictory rationales used to characterise these measures, which are presented as a
“humanitarian” response even as officials describe the actions as protecting the public from
national security threats.”
In 2018, Bulgaria was one of several central and eastern EU countries that refused to
endorse the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM). Although the
country held the EU presidency for the first time while the GCM was being drafted, the
government argued that the non-binding document, which was signed by more than 150
countries, would weaken its ability to control migration.
Bulgaria, which has the lowest gross domestic product per capita in the European Union,
has experienced a steady emigration haemorrhage since 1990.5 Nevertheless, it has spent
some 85 million EUR on a razor-wire fence along its south-eastern border to prevent
irregular crossings. Construction began in 2014, at the height of the “refugee crisis” when
the country was experiencing an influx of Syrian refugees, and was completed in October 2017. Described as a “temporary fence facility” by the government, it stretches for over 236
km along the country’s border with Turkey.
Many migrants, asylum seekers, and refugees have experienced pushbacks back into
Turkey, a practice that numerous NGOs have denounced. According to Save the Children,
“the largest number of violent pushbacks (involving children in 2018) was reported at the
borders between Bulgaria and Turkey (154).” UNHCR has also raised the issue of
pushbacks with Bulgarian authorities.
The massive costs associated with building the border fence have also been a source of
controversy. In 2017, the Supreme Cassation Court “ordered the State Agency for National
Security and the State Financial Inspection Agency to investigate allegations of corruption
amongst senior state officials” in relation to the project.
Bulgarian border control has been bolstered by the deployment of the European Border and
Coast Guard (formerly Frontex) along its land borders with Turkey and Serbia. In 2017, this
was comprised of “126 officers (including crew members of the deployed assets) supported
by 6 thermo-vision vehicles, 38 patrol cars, 1 CO2 detector, 39 smartdeck cameras and 3
mobile offices.”
According to reports, certain nationalities of asylum applicants face discrimination in the
treatment of their claims in Bulgaria, which observers say is used as a deterrence
measure.
This would likely amount to a violation of both domestic and international laws.
Often held in detention for more than three months while their applications are assessed,
asylum seekers from countries like Pakistan, Ukraine, Algeria, and Turkey have reportedly
had their claims systematically rejected, resulting in a zero percent recognition rate for those
nationalities. The recognition rate for Afghan asylum seekers was just 1.5 percent in 2017,12
compared to the 46 percent overall EU average.