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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> De Sousa v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2006] EWCA Civ 183 (06 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/183.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 183 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM IMMIGRATION APPEAL TRIBUNAL
[AS/00333/2004]
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
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DE SOUSA | CLAIMANT/APPELLANT |
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- v - | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
TREASURY SOLICITOR appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
"9. In her statement the Appellant says that her father had been involved in politics for many years and was a member of FLEC. In 2003 her father became more involved in politics and started to hold meetings at the Appellant's house. The meetings happened approximately once a week. When the meetings took place her father would tell the Appellant to leave the house and the Appellant would go across the street to a neighbour's house from where she could see when people left her house and therefore when the meetings were over.
"10. The Appellant's mother would sometimes also attend the meetings and the Appellant could tell that the Appellant's mother was worried about her father's involvement in the meetings. However, the Appellant's mother told the Appellant that she should not get involved or be interested in what was happening. The Appellant remembers that after the last meeting that took place at her house her mother and father were both extremely upset. The Appellant was scared to ask her mother why her parents were so upset because she had been told not to take an interest in the meetings. After that meeting her mother would not allow the Appellant out of the house, even to go to do her work of selling food in the street in Chibo. The Appellant sensed that both her mother and father were afraid of something but did not know what it was they were afraid about.
"11. One day her father left the house and did not return. The Appellant's mother said that her father's disappearance was connected to his political activities but did but did not know where the Appellant's father was and kept saying that she did not know if they had killed the Appellant's father.
"12. Approximately a week later two armed men wearing normal civilian clothes came to the house and put a gun to the Appellant's mother's head and asked where the Appellant's father was. The Appellant's mother said that she did not know but the men did not believe her and took her away with them. The Appellant assumes that the men were police because they were armed although they were not wearing uniforms. The Appellant added in her SEF statement the information that the men told her that if her mother were not telling the truth they would come back and kill her and her daughter.
"13. Towards the end of that day a friend of the Appellant's father, called Antonio, came to the house. Antonio had been one of the people who had attended some or most of the meetings which happened at the Appellant's house. The Appellant felt that Antonio knew that something had happened because he was scared and kept asking the Appellant where her mother had gone. The Appellant was very upset and told him what had happened and that the two men had taken her mother away. Antonio was very scared himself and told her that it was not safe for her to stay there and that she and her baby would be killed if they did not leave."
"A week after his disappearance I was at home when two men wearing civilian clothes came to our house and asked my mother the whereabouts of my father. I believe that the two men were policemen as they were armed. My mother told them that she did not know where my father was. The two men became angry and they pointed a gun at my mother saying that she was lying and they told her to follow them. They told me that if my mother refused to tell the truth they would come back and kill my daughter and me."
"The Appellant has no evidence that her father was a member of FLEC, she simply assumes that he might have been because he held political meetings in his house. Similarly she does not know for sure that the men who came and took her mother away were police, she presumes that they were because they had guns but they were not in uniform. Given these facts, I find that, even on the low standard of proof applicable, the Appellant has not satisfied the burden upon her of showing that her father was a member of FLEC or of interest to the authorities. I note that, despite the armed men's threats to her, she herself was not harmed. The fact that she was not taken away with her mother would appear to show that, whoever the armed men were, they did not think that she would have the information about her father that they were seeking.
"I have taken into account the fact that a man called Antonio, who attended at least some of the meetings at the Appellant's house, clearly thought that the Appellant was in danger. In the light of the objective evidence of abuses by the police and armed forces, I accept that, if the armed men who came to her house were indeed police, this may have been a realistic fear. Nonetheless, if the armed men were police they clearly thought the Appellant had no useful information to give them or they would have arrested her at the same time as her mother. I therefore find that, even if the Appellant's father was a member of FLEC, no similar political opinion was imputed to the Appellant at the time of her mother's arrest and that there is therefore no reason why the Appellant should be of interest to the authorities if she were returned to Angola when she ceases to be a minor."
"I have taken into account the objective material on the risk of returnees to Angola. I note that the UNHCR considers that people cannot safely be returned to the Appellant's home area of Cabinda. However there is no objective evidence before me as to why the Appellant should not return to another area of Angola when she is of age."
That reference to the views of the UNHCR is a reference to a letter dated 1 June 2004 from a Government representative. It in fact related to a different asylum seeker. It contained the following statement:
"As you are aware from UNHCR's paper on Angola, UNHCR position on return of rejected asylum seekers to Angola January 2004, clearly states that UNHCR is not permitting return to Cabinda province and continues to advise against any involuntary return of rejected asylum seekers to that province at this time. Armed conflict there continues between FLEC and FAC and the Angolan armed forces and both groups have allegedly committed abuses against civilians in Cabinda."
On that basis the adjudicator accepted that the Appellant could not be returned to Cabinda. That was not challenged by the Home Secretary. However, the question of return to another part of Angola remained a live issue.
"9. … The Appellant's inability to return to Cabinda was not challenged on the grounds of appeal or in the submissions before us. We therefore consider the Appellant's return to Luanda on the profile as found by the adjudicator.
"10. The Appellant would be returning to Angola, [but] unlike the Appellant in FP without any political profile. There was no evidence presented that her father was such high profile as to be of interest to the authorities or that the authorities were actively seeking members of the Appellant's family. The passages drawn to our attention by Mr Bild [for the applicant] highlighted human rights abuses in Cabinda but did not detail evidence of abuses against those originating from Cabinda living in Luanda or other parts of Angola. We are not satisfied on the evidence presented to us that the Appellant would face a real risk of persecution or serious ill- treatment on the basis of her Cabindan origins or her father's involvement in politics in the Cabinda region.
"11. The Appellant will be returning to Angola as a single female with two young children. We recognise that the humanitarian condition in Angola is still generally poor compared for example to standards in the west. However, that is not the test. As was noted in the case of FP (Angola) and as we also noted here the UNHCR letter before us does not suggest that the return of people to Luanda would breach their Article 3 rights. As Mr Bild also accepted the situation is improving. Paragraph 6.2 of CIPU notes that there have been substantial improvements made in the country although human rights abuses do continue. Whilst the Constitution provides for various protections for women it is clear from the documentation that these protections, in the fields of employment and domestic violence, are not always respected. The conditions are poor nevertheless the Article 3 threshold is a high one. Nothing in the submissions of the parties or in the objective evidence drawn to our attention supported a conclusion that the difficulties that the Appellant would experience on return would reach the threshold for treatment to amount to persecution or breach of Article 3."
"… they clearly thought the Appellant had no useful information to give them or they would have arrested her at the same time as her mother."
There is no mention there of the statement, which I have quoted from the Appellant's own witness statement, that she had been told that if the mother were not telling the truth they would come back and kill her and her daughter. That seems to me all too clear an indication that they were interested in the daughter in her own right. I find it difficult to see how one can infer from that that she was thought to have no useful information. They might well have taken the view that they would try to get what they could out of the mother, and, if they failed, come back to get the daughter. In any event, the failure to refer at all to that particular part of the Appellant's evidence indicates a failure to take account of a material factor and was itself, in my view, an error of law.
"Taking all those factors in the round, we consider that the enforcement of these particular removal directions would involve a breach of the Refugee Convention and of Article 3 ECHR.
"We add that insofar as the decision in Monteiro is read as expressing the view that the general situation in Luanda means that to return non-Luandans would necessarily involve a breach of Article 3, we respectfully consider that that goes too far. Even if the situation is unchanged from April 2002, which would not fully reflect the encouraging political signs in the October 2002 assessment, the advice of the UNHCR is primary although not exclusively related to living conditions in Angola generally, the security and human rights position generally. Failed asylum seekers can be returned to Luanda if they came from there or have connections there. That is to avoid increasing internal displacement. The stay on the return of others to Luanda is to avoid increasing the already large number of returned and displaced persons there. This is to avoid worsening the position and to make it more manageable; as those displaced resettle, others can be returned. This UNHCR statement does not suggest that the return of people to Luanda would breach their Article 3 rights if they came from Luanda or had relatives there, and would only do so if they did not. We do not in general accept that to return someone to live in the conditions in Luanda, wretched though they are for many, which the Angolan Government is struggling to improve rather than deliberately imposing, would involve a breach by the United Kingdom of its Article 3 obligations."
Order: Application allowed.