Syrian refugees returning from Lebanon are seen in a bus at the Jdaidet Yabous border crossing, west of Damascus, Syria, on Dec. 26, 2019. Around 1,400 Syrian refugees returned to their homeland from different areas in Lebanon on Thursday, Lebanese media reported. Photo: Xinhua
Governments that send refugees back to countries severely affected by climate change could be in breach of their human rights obligations, a UN committee said on Monday.
The independent experts on the Human Rights Committee issued a non-binding but closely watched ruling in a case brought by Ioane Teitiota from the Pacific island nation of Kiribati.
Teitiota was disputing his expulsion in 2015 from New Zealand, where he had applied for protection in 2013.
He had argued that his own island of South Tarawa became badly overcrowded because rising sea levels had made other islands belonging to Kiribati uninhabitable, causing land disputes and reduced access to safe drinking water.
The committee ruled against the claim, saying his life was not immediately in danger, but agreed that "environmental degradation can adversely affect an individual's well-being and lead to a violation of the right to life."
Several Pacific island nations including Kiribati are seen as among the most vulnerable in the world to climate change as they are just a few meters above sea level.
"Given that the risk of an entire country becoming submerged under water is such an extreme risk, the conditions of life in such a country may become incompatible with the right to life with dignity before the risk is realized," the experts said.
The experts said countries planning to deport failed asylum claimants should take into account the effects of climate change in the country of origin or risk breaching their obligations to defend the claimants' right to life.
Israeli professor Yuval Shany, the committee's vice chair, said the experts were "leaving the door open for such cases."
"We did indicate quite clearly that we can envisage future situations in which individuals will be able to claim a right-to-life violation on the basis of climate change," he said, urging governments to take this into consideration when reviewing asylum claims.
Amnesty International called the case "ground breaking."
"The decision sets a global precedent," Kate Schuetze, Pacific researcher at Amnesty, said in a statement.
"The message is clear: Pacific Island states do not need to be under water before triggering human rights obligations to protect the right to life," she said.
Schuetze said Pacific Island nations were the "canary in the coal mine for climate-induced migrants."
AFP