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United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> MU (Documentation, Nufus Card) Turkey CG [2002] UKIAT 03528 (06 August 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2002/03528.html Cite as: [2002] UKIAT 03528, [2002] UKIAT 3528 |
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MU (Documentation-Nufus Card) Turkey CG [2002] UKIAT 03528
HX52873-2001
Date of hearing: 22 July 2002
Date Determination notified: 06 August 2002
MU | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"He comes from an area [Bingol province in South-East Turkey] where the PKK have been very active. His support was general rather than specific. He did no more than many other villagers did. He himself was not particularly targeted. He was taken in for questioning in 1993 and 1994, but again this appears to have been part of the general and very harsh regime that was operating at the time by the Turkish authorities. He did his military service…… The [Respondent's] record of detentions was no doubt similar to many other young men from his region…… His family appear to have suffered from the authorities. Again he is not claiming that their support for the PKK was very specific….. [His] case is really based on what happened in 1998. I find that his account of the way the young men were recruited into the village guards, which was in fact a divide and rule policy by the authorities, fits well with the background evidence….. Refusal by individuals or entire villages to participate in the system is usually considered by the local forces as an indication of active or passive support for the guerrillas. Evacuation of the village and its subsequent complete or partial destruction on security grounds can follow a refusal to join…. Since 1991 over 3000 villages have been emptied. However the rate of evacuations is now reduced to almost nil……. Voluntary and assisted settlements have now begun….. Therefore it appears that the harsh regime has now ended. The Respondent's evidence was that there does not appear to have been a serious fallout from his action in refusing to join, or that of the other 10 young men in the village all of whom also left."
"On the basis of material put before me and my positive findings of credibility, it appears to me to present a picture of someone whose family has a history of being dealt with by the Turkish authorities. There is a reasonable likelihood that there is a record of his detentions and past interest in him……. Were he to return there is a reasonable likelihood that he would be identified by reference to past records and subject to detention with a serious risk of mistreatment. On the evidence I am satisfied that although his support for the PKK was only general and common to many other villagers, his refusal to join the village guards put him in a higher risk category."
5.80 There is no organisation or government that consistently and formally monitors the treatment of returnees to Turkey……… in principle the Turkish police can questioning any deported citizen upon their arrival at the airport. This interrogation aims to establish the identity of the individual and also to check whether they have been implicated in any common-law case. In general there is no follow-up unless the individual is the subject of legal proceedings. If the returnee is known to the police for whatever reasons, he is possibly taken into custody for more interviews. Amnesty International in Germany takes the view that while it is still true that most asylum seekers all returnees are released after the routine interview, there has been increasing number of cases where returned asylum seekers were picked up later by unknown men and beaten up or arrested by the police and taken into police custody. The report goes on to say that this mistreatment is carried out in order to obtain confessions from suspected persons.
5.81 The German immigration authorities state that in general rejected asylum seekers returning to Turkey do not risk persecution. A rejected asylum seeker returning voluntarily can pass through entry control unhindered provided that he/she is in possession of a valid Turkish travel document. The fact that the returnee is a failed asylum seeker does not lead to different treatment. The Turkish authorities are well aware of the fact that many Turkish nationals apply for asylum only for the purpose of getting temporary authorisation to remain in Germany……The Turkish government now recognised that the overwhelming majority of Turkish nationals who had applied for asylum overseas had done so purely for economic reasons. They were of no interest to Turkish government and would not be imprisoned on return.
5.83 Returnees without documents will be questioned. This is likely to be an in-depth questioning by the Turkish border police and is to be distinguished from the routine identity check on arrival. The German authorities state that, as a rule, the questions refer to personal data, date and the reasons for departing Turkey, possible criminal record in Germany and contacts with illegal Turkish organisations. In some cases further enquiries will be made via other offices (e.g. prosecutor's office, registrar's office at the last Turkish residence of the returnee) in order to find out if the returnee is liable to prosecution for a criminal offence. These enquiries can take from several hours to several days, during which time the returnee will be kept in custody. Currently available information indicates that undocumented returnees generally are not ill treated while being kept in custody. However ill treatment cannot be ruled out in cases where returnees are suspected separatists.
5.84 Amnesty International in Germany states, in relation to returns from Germany, that the Turkish authorities are more likely to be suspicious in cases where a person returning to Turkey is not carrying any valid personal documents in accordance with regulations, or is carrying documents indicating asylum proceedings abroad.
5.85 Being of Kurdish origin does not in itself constitute a higher risk of inhuman treatment. Everything depends on the individual and his activities in Turkey and abroad. The Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs notes that PKK activist and sympathisers who are thought to be of great interest to the Turkish authorities risk being insulted, threatened, maltreated or tortured during the questioning. A representative of the Turkish Human Rights Foundation stated that a clear shift from physical to more psychological pressure on detainees had recently been observed
"Those who enrolled and those villagers and villages that refuse to enrol were duly listed by gendarmerie intelligence. According to Dr Akin of TIHV Istanbul [a Turkish human rights organisation] these lists are available to the national security organisation. This means that all those who desert or refuse service in the village guards are supposedly on record. We believe this has clear implications when considering the return of a refused asylum seeker in one of these categories."
"On the evidence I am satisfied that although his support of the PKK was only general and common to many other villagers, his refusal to join the village guards puts him in a higher risk category."
"Currently available information indicates that undocumented returnees generally are not ill treated while being kept in custody. However ill treatment cannot be ruled out in cases where returnees are suspected separatists."
Spencer Batiste
Vice-President