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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> TT (Risk Return, Snakeheads) China CG [2002] UKIAT 04937 (22 November 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2002/04937.html Cite as: [2002] UKIAT 04937, [2002] UKIAT 4937 |
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TT (Risk-Return- Snakeheads) China CG [2002] UKIAT 04937
HR/06254/2002
Date of hearing: 9 July 2002
Date Determination notified: 22 November 2002
TT | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"They pose a significant threat to his life. If he returns he will not be able to meet the debts that he owes them. They charge an extortionate amount of interest and are likely to use violence against him to enforce the debts that he owes. They may even kill him if they think he cannot pay the debt. His wife has informed him that the Snakeheads have visited the family home to ask when they will be repaid. On each occasion they have threatened to kill his wife and family if it remains unpaid. He thinks they will therefore kill him and his family as he cannot pay off the debt. There is nowhere in China where he can hide from the Snakeheads".
"I am therefore in a better position to assess credibility than the previous Adjudicator in the asylum appeal".
"..wholly incredible, in his evidence as to the building of the temple and therefore that being the reason why he fled China".
"..the discrepancies set above are such that I do not believe his evidence as to the building of the temple and the authorities seeking to arrest him in connection with that building. I also do not believe his evidence that the authorities there did not allow him to practise his religion and faith".
16. In this regard the Adjudicator considered the objective material particular paragraph 6.110 of the CIPU Report from which he noted that the Chinese authorities had publicly committed themselves to combating Snakehead operations and that arrests were made.
"The Appellant admits and apologises that the Temple story was a fabrication which he claims was coached to him by his first set of lawyers and he then followed on with it. Snakeheads are those whom the Appellant really fears".
"If the Appellant was 'safe' then according to the Tribunal he can expect harassment which is the view of the Respondent as argued by Mr Graham in Bin Hou (O1/BH/00059). It is not therefore now open to the Respondent to argue otherwise.
This Appellant was a safe arrival. He was undetected granted Temporary Admission. He has been working and sending money home".
"Success is measured in two ways: safe illegal entry initially, plus independence from Snakehead ties ultimately (for the customer) and payments (irrespective of source, be it from the customer or their families) for the Snakehead. Experts consulted by the IRB say payment is usually broken down into a deposit (typically of about $1,000 to $3,000) and a final payment (usually $33,000) payable on a 'safe' (i.e. undetected) arrival in the US. The experts consulted by the IRB gave similar accounts of how the Snakehead will discount part or the full final payment if the arrival is 'unsafe' i.e. the customer is detected by Immigration Authorities and returned to China".
"The Snakeheads guarantee safe delivery so if you do not arrive safely the fee is not owed as the contract is to gain admission…
In the present case the Appellant borrowed 80,000 from the loan shark and the rest of the fee for the fee balance from a Snakehead...therefore if this Appellant was an unsafe arrival he would not be discharged from the debt to the loan shark but he would be discharged from the debt to the Snakehead. This Appellant was a safe arrival however. He was granted Temporary Admission and he sent money home. He managed to pay 180,000 Yuan a low price because he had paid a high deposit on the fee in order to get an overall lower fee".
"..free of the smuggling contract with that group of Snakeheads but he is tied down for the debt he incurred in paying off the contract to the Snakehead who loaned him 100,000 and the loan shark who loaned him 80,000 with which to pay the fee. The Adjudicator accepted this account..
I say to return the Appellant would be in breach of Articles 3, 4 and 8".
"I submit that to try and paint this man's circumstances as being at issue with the objective material referred to is a totally unrealistic submission. The Adjudicator had found at paragraph 35 of his determination that money was owed. He had accepted the Appellant did owe money to Snakeheads (whether he meant Snakeheads and/or loan sharks was not entirely clear)."
"Exemplified the confusion which the Adjudicator had already noted."
What we are left with is not knowing how much the Appellant owes or even who to? On his own evidence his claim has not been made out to the necessary standard when the evidence is examined.
"The Adjudicator in paragraph 35 has made a finding that it is the Snakeheads whom the Appellant fears. If he is correct then we turn to 'safe' or 'unsafe' arrivals again".
"We do not consider that the fact that…the loan sharks and Snakeheads are ruthless practitioners of violence when those who have successfully reached the United Kingdom and the United States of America or other country of choice failed to repay them, can be said thereby to involve the same treatment being meted out to persons who are unsuccessful in their efforts to settle in and earn money in a wealthier country. In this context we note also the comment we have referred to above from Mr Fisher of the RCMP Criminal Intelligence Service that he was not aware of reports of loan sharks pursuing returnees or their families…
In conclusion therefore we find the evidence to be such that even on the basis of a reasonable degree of likelihood, we do not consider that either Respondent has made out his case for showing that he is at risk of treatment contrary to Article 3 on return to China. We consider the weight of the objective evidence is very much against the argument they raised and we do not consider that that evidence is in any sense outweighed by the wealth of evidence concerning the practice of loan sharks and Snakeheads towards people whose contracts with them have succeeded and who have failed to repay them. We therefore allow the Secretary of State's appeal in each case in relation to the Article 3 claim."
"a loan shark's main concerns are security and profit maximisation...the loan shark is normally delighted to extend a loan as long as he is convinced of the borrower's ability to meet his obligations. Matters therefore only become nasty when a borrower is returned to China where he will have no ability to meet interest charges let alone to repay the capital. It is what the loan shark would do to him and his family in that eventuality that the Appellant fears."
"..free of the smuggling contract with that group of Snakeheads but he is tied down for the debt he incurred in paying off the contract to the Snakehead who loaned him 100,000 and the loan shark who loaned him 80,000 with which to pay the fee".
Mr N H GOLDSTEIN
CHAIRMAN