Dear @Malcolm
Based on your account of your friend’s situation, I can only think of the following possible grounds for the review of her subsidiary protection:
- If she applied for or renewed her passport from her home country.
- She was a minor under 18 years of age when she received the protection.
- She received the protection status by making false claims or using falsified documents.
- The conditions in her home country that led her to receiving subsidiary protection have changed. The change must be significant and not just of a temporary nature. It is BAMF’s obligation, rather than your friend’s, to prove that such a substantial and lasting change has taken place.
As part of the procedure, she must be informed both that a review of her protection is underway and also the reasons for this. This is in accordance with an EU directive on granting and withdrawing international protection. It is in article 45, section 1, part (a) of this directive:
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:32013L0032
During the process she may be required to provide a statement in writing or at an interview in person. She must be informed in writing about any obligations on her part to do so. Her cooperation in this procedure is only required if the cooperation is both necessary for the review and reasonable for her to do so.
An interview is generally required if she received her status as part of a written asylum procedure which was used in particular for asylum seekers from Syria and Iraq in the years 2015 and 2016. If she had an in-person interview ‘Anhörung’ as part of her asylum application, then if she is requested to go to a review interview, she can request BAMF in writing as to whether this is necessary.
I cannot assess the chances of her status being revoked or maintained as I do not know enough about her situation.
She can apply for permanent residency now. Generally a person needs to have been working for 5 years to be entitled to this. If she was not working for some of the last 5 years because she was looking after her children, then this is taken into account.
She cannot apply for 25b as it only applies for people with the document ‘Duldung’.
I recommend she applies for permanent residency and checks the letter from BAMF again to make sure that a specific reason for the review was not mentioned. It is open to her to seek legal advice or support from a migrant advice service to establish the grounds for the review. But based on your description of the situation, she has as of yet only been informed of the review process and isn’t under any obligation do to anything.
Best,
Éanna