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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 >> Begum v Special Immigration Appeals Commission & Ors [2020] EWCA Civ 918 (16 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/918.html Cite as: [2020] WLR(D) 421, [2020] 1 WLR 4267, [2020] Imm AR 1364, [2020] EWCA Civ 918 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE SPECIAL IMMIGRATION APPEALS COMMISSION (T2/2020/ 0644)
(SITTING ALSO AS A DIVISIONAL COURT IN CO/798/2020) (T3/2020/0708)
AND
ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT (T3/2020/0645)
MRS JUSTICE LAING
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FLAUX
and
LORD JUSTICE SINGH
____________________
SHAMIMA BEGUM |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SPECIAL IMMIGRATION APPEALS COMMISSION |
Defendant |
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- and – SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT -and- (1) THE UN SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON THE PROMOTION AND PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND FUNDAMENTAL FREEDOMS WHILE COUNTERING TERRORISM -and- (2) THE NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR CIVIL LIBERTIES ("LIBERTY") |
Respondent Intervenors |
____________________
Sir James Eadie QC, Mr Jonathan Glasson QC and Mr David Blundell QC (instructed by The Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
The Defendant, the Special Immigration Appeals Commission, was not represented
Mr Angus McCullough QC and Mr Adam Straw (supported by Special Advocates' Support Office) Special Advocates representing the interests of the Appellant
Mr Guglielmo Verdirame QC, Mr Jason Pobjoy and Ms Belinda McRae (instructed by Leigh Day) for the First Intervenor (by written submissions only)
Mr Richard Hermer QC and Ms Ayesha Christie (instructed by Liberty) for the Second Intervenor (by written submissions only)
Hearing dates: Thursday 11 June and Friday 12 June 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, release to BAILII and publication on the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30am on 16 July 2020.
Lord Justice Flaux:
Introduction
(1) Whether the effect of the Secretary of State's decision dated 19 February 2019 rendered Ms Begum stateless as at the date of the decision;
(2) Whether the Secretary of State's deprivation decision dated 19 February 2019 was unlawful because of its direct and foreseeable consequence of exposing Ms Begum to a real risk of mistreatment which would constitute a breach of Article 2 or 3 ECHR and/or would be contrary to the Secretary of State's practice as set out in a Supplementary Memorandum published in January 2014;
(3) Whether Ms Begum could have a fair and effective appeal against the deprivation of citizenship from outside the United Kingdom and in Syria.
(1) An OPEN judgment of SIAC determining all three preliminary issues against Ms Begum. There was no separate judgment in SIAC in respect of the LTE human rights appeal.(2) A judgment of the Administrative Court granting permission to apply for judicial review but dismissing the substantive claim for judicial review of the LTE decision.
(3) A CLOSED judgment of SIAC in the deprivation appeal. Since SIAC had said in its OPEN judgment that it had been able to resolve the preliminary issues in OPEN, that CLOSED judgment was not relevant to the present appeal and application. Shortly before the present hearing we refused an application by the Secretary of State for the Court to read the CLOSED judgment.
The factual background
The submissions to the Secretary of State and the deprivation decision
"(e) SCU [the Special Cases Unit] notes that individuals such as BEGUM who were radicalised whilst minors may be considered victims. This does not change the threat the Security Service assesses that BEGUM poses to the UK. Whilst accepting that BEGUM may well have been a victim of radicalisation as a minor, SCU does not consider this justifies putting the UK's national security at risk by not depriving her of her citizenship, for this reason.
(h) SCU considers that should BEGUM become aware of the deprivation decision whilst in al-Hawl it is difficult to see how she might effectively exercise her appeal right from that location. However, SCU's position is that where she has been out of the UK for several years through her own choice, we would argue that it would be incorrect to allow her to return to the UK to engage with her appeal. In any event BEGUM seemingly has no immediate prospect of leaving al-Hawl/travelling to the UK or another location so as to more effectively pursue the appeal, and neither can HMG facilitate BEGUM's travel out of Syria. President Trump has recently reiterated the US expectation that countries take back their own detainees.
(i) SCU considers that there are no substantial grounds to believe that a real risk of mistreatment contrary to Articles 2 (right to life) or 3 (prohibition of torture) of the ECHR arises as a result of BEGUM being deprived of her British citizenship while in Syria. We do not consider that any potential Article 2/3 risks that may arise in countries outside Syria are foreseeable as a consequence of the deprivation decision. SCU's legal position is that the ECHR does not have extra-territorial effect in relation to this case. Notwithstanding that legal position, it has been the publicly stated practice of the Home Office to consider the Article 2 and 3 risks associated with deprivation action and only recommend deprivation action if SCU considers that such action would not give rise to a real risk of a breach of Articles 2 or 3 of the ECHR were those articles to be engaged. This practice was confirmed publicly in an ECHR memorandum during the passage of the Immigration Act 2014, which stated that as a matter of practice the (then) Home Secretary would not deprive anyone of citizenship where she was satisfied that such action would constitute a breach of Articles 2 or 3 had they been within the jurisdiction and those articles therefore engaged. A Mistreatment Risk Statement specific to BEGUM's circumstances in Syria (Annex C) and a broader statement on conditions in Syria which was updated in January 2019 (annex D) is provided."
"SIAC concluded that the risks which the Home Secretary is required to assess are risks of harm which would breach articles 2 or 3 of the ECHR (if they applied) that are a direct consequence of the decision to deprive. SIAC described a two-stage test which it drew from the case law of the European Court of Human Rights: (i) a test of 'direct consequence' as the criterion for establishing state responsibility, liability being incurred if a state takes action which as a direct consequence exposes the individual to the relevant risk; and (ii) a test of 'foreseeability' as the criterion for establishing whether there are substantial grounds for believing the individual would be exposed to the relevant risk. The risk must be both foreseeable and a direct consequence of the deprivation."
"A UK-linked individual who has been deprived of his/her British nationality is likely to receive broadly the same treatment (for better or worse) as an individual who retains British nationality; although speculative it is possible that, at some point in the future, British nationals will be treated differently, insofar as arrangements may be made to return some individuals to the UK."
"6. It is not possible to speculate what will happen to women in refugee and IDP camps, whether or not they are suspected of being ISIL-linked. We do not consider that a repatriation to Bangladesh is a foreseeable outcome of deprivation and as such the Home Secretary may consider that there is no real risk of return-let alone of mistreatment on return-for the purpose of complying with his practice. However, for completeness we consider those risks here.
7. Open source reporting indicates that there is a real risk that individuals in Bangladesh could be subject to conditions which would not comply with the ECHR; there is some media reporting to suggest that the Bangladeshi authorities may have carried out extra-judicial killings (EJKs) of detainees and other enemies of the state."
The judgment of SIAC
"We pay tribute to the industry of [Ms Begum's]'s legal team in amassing the evidence which they have on this issue. We accept that conditions in the Al Roj camp would breach [Ms Begum's] rights under art.3 , if art.3 applied to her case. We are also prepared to accept, for the sake of the argument, but without deciding, that, at the date of Decision 1, conditions in the Al Hawl camp would also have breached A's art.3 rights had art.3 applied. That makes it unnecessary for us to consider art.2 risks."
"The question which the Policy posed for the Secretary of State was whether it was a foreseeable and a direct consequence of Decision 1 that there were substantial grounds for believing that A would be exposed to a real risk of ill treatment breaching the ECHR. We consider that Mr Hickman's submissions tended to conflate those two separate requirements of the Policy, and to treat them as interchangeable. The question for us is whether the Secretary of State was entitled, on the material before him, to decide that it was not. We remind ourselves that we are not deciding this question on its merits. We must approach it, rather, by applying the principles of judicial review."
"In our judgment, the Secretary of State was reasonably entitled to rely on that material. The Secretary of State's assessment of the material reasonably entitled the Secretary of State to decide that, as respects [Ms Begum's] circumstances at the time of Decision 1 [the deprivation decision], Decision 1 would not breach the Policy, because a change in the relevant risks was not a foreseeable and direct consequence of Decision 1. We also consider that, on the material in Annex C and Annex D, the Secretary of State was not required to speculate about the future: for example, the possibility that [Ms Begum] might be removed from Syria to Bangladesh or to Iraq. Nor was he required to speculate about the possibility that, at some point in the future, British or British-linked adults might be returned to the UK. Those conclusions mean that, despite their apparent attractions, we must dismiss Mr Hickman's arguments."
"The difficulty at the heart of Mr Hickman's submissions is that, if they are right, the fact that a person who has been deprived of her nationality on grounds of national security outside the UK and is unable, for whatever reason, to instruct lawyers and/or to take part in her appeal by video link, entails, in and of itself, that her appeal should succeed, without any examination of its merits, and, in particular, without any consideration of the national security case against her."
"An intention to enact such an (implied) universal rule cannot sensibly be imputed to Parliament. Once that is accepted, we consider that it is impossible to craft an implied rule which is sufficiently granular to apply to some people with whom the court might have sympathy, while not protecting those with whom the court does not sympathise… The design of such a rule is a job for the legislator, Parliament, and not for the court."
"…Parliament clearly anticipated that such appeals [under section 40A of the BNA] would often, if not regularly, be brought from outside the UK. Once that is recognised, it seems to us to follow that Parliament must also be taken to have recognised that such appeals would be brought by appellants whose circumstances outside the UK would vary in many different respects, and that some, at least, would, or might, face significant restrictions, depending on where they are when they appeal, on their ability to take part in their appeals (as we think Mr Hickman accepted). It is striking, we consider, that Parliament has not stipulated that the Secretary of State should take any steps to make it easier for such appellants to exercise their right of appeal. Nor has Parliament stipulated that the ability of an appellant effectively to exercise her right of appeal should have any bearing on the fate of the appeal."
"In [85] of the judgment, Beatson LJ said that the question was whether an appeal to SIAC would be "a practical and effective remedy for determining whether an out-of-country appeal against the decision to make the deprivation order would be 'effective'". Beatson LJ distinguished the circumstances considered in paragraph 65 of Kiarie. W2 would be appealing against a decision of the Secretary of State. "If he is successful in that and [the Commission] considers that his presence in the UK is necessary in order for his appeal to succeed, it will allow the appeal". That decision would bind the Secretary of State…That meant that an effective remedy would be available in the Commission…It would consider the evidence submitted by him in support of his argument that an out-of-country appeal would not be effective for him. The Commission would then be able to see what was necessary to secure an effective remedy (at [87]). It could consider his litigation difficulties, and the extent to which oral evidence was necessary, and decide, in the light of Kiarie , whether the refusal of entry clearance was unlawful. It could consider whether there "is a Convention-compliant system" for the conduct of the appeal from abroad in (at [87])."
"i. If and in so far as the statements in [85] relate to W2's deprivation appeal, they are inconsistent (without explanation) with the express reasoning in [83]–[85] of S1.
ii. If the statements relate to the LTE appeal, they go further, without explanation, than [86] of S1. They assume that the fact that an applicant can play no meaningful part in his appeal imposes, either, a duty on the Secretary of State to grant entry clearance, or a duty on the court, if entry clearance is refused, to order the Secretary of State to grant entry clearance. That cannot be right, as the Secretary of State will have to balance, when considering whether to grant entry clearance, the appellant's procedural difficulties against the public interest in keeping him out of the UK because of the threat he poses to national security, as will the court on any appeal (in an art.8 case) or application for judicial review (in a non-art.8 case).
iii. The definite terms of [85] are not consistent with the last sentence of [88] of the judgment, which appears to recognise that the Commission might have to consider a range of issues before it could allow an appeal.
iv. The Court of Appeal may have been led by the submission from Mr Fordham QC, recorded at the start of [85] of the judgment, to think that it could not hold that an appeal or appeals to the Commission were a suitable alternative remedy to judicial review unless it decided that the Commission would be bound to grant a remedy on the facts. We consider that the question was whether the Commission had jurisdiction to consider the issues raised by the appellant, rather than whether the Commission was bound to grant him the remedy he sought."
"Firstly, she could continue with the appeal. Secondly, she could ask for a stay of the appeal, in the hope that, at some point in the future, she will be in a better position to take part in it. Thirdly, if she does not ask for a stay, a possible consequence is that she might, in due course, fail to comply with a further direction of the Commission pursuant to r.40 of the Procedure Rules. We accept that that could lead the Commission, after complying with r.40, to strike out the appeal. But, if [Ms Begum's] circumstances were to change in the future, it might be open to her to apply to reinstate her appeal under r.40(3), if the Commission were satisfied that [Ms Begum] had not complied with the direction because circumstances outside her control made it impracticable for her to comply with it."
The judgment of the Administrative Court
The parties' submissions
"158. Second, we consider that the duty to consult identified by Lord Sumption in Bank Mellat and by the majority of the Court of Appeal in Ex parte Fayed is one which arises in cases of judicial review or its equivalent. That is really made clear by the passage in [37] of Lord Sumption's judgment which we quoted above, where he says: "It would I think be surprising if the mere fact that the right of persons affected to apply for judicial review had been superseded by a statutory application with substantially the same ambit, were to make all the difference to the content of the Treasury's common law duty of fairness."
159. In our judgment, he is not purporting to deal with cases where there is a full merits right of appeal. We agree with Mr Swift that the procedural rights and obligations which the common law has recognised in the case of judicial review such as the obligation on the decision maker to consult before a decision is made arise precisely because judicial review is not a merits right of appeal. Where there is a full right of appeal on the merits such as in the present case, in our judgment the absence of prior consultation does not render the decision procedurally unfair."
"Mr Eadie submitted that, since the court is engaged in an exercise of review, the relevant question is strictly whether the Secretary of State could properly have concluded that there is no real risk. He accepted, however, that the court would apply anxious scrutiny in answering that question and that it would make no material difference in practice whether the court proceeded by way of review of the Secretary of State's conclusion or made its own independent assessment of risk on the evidence before it, as it would in a case under article 3. In our judgment, the question whether the Secretary of State's practice complies with his policy requires the court to determine for itself whether detainees transferred to Afghan custody are at real risk, and it is therefore for the court to make its own assessment of risk rather than to review the assessment made by the Secretary of State. That is how we have proceeded. We agree, however, that in practice the two approaches lead to the same answer in this case."
"Those areas of security risk resulting from the inability to serve a TPIM notice on a UK passport holder personally would be alleviated by, and can only be alleviated by, exercise of the prerogative power to cancel the individual's passport wherever the individual may be. It seems highly unlikely that Parliament would have intended to increase the risk to public security by abolishing the power to cancel passports in such circumstances without any express provision to that effect; and particularly unlikely in a statute which creates a new and wide-ranging suite of anti-terrorism powers."
"We do not consider that there is a choice of equally effective measures. Deprivation, which ensures that U2 cannot ever come to the United Kingdom unless he gets entry clearance, is the most effective way of managing the risk which he poses. Lesser measures, such as a TEO, or a TPIM, would not be as effective in managing that risk. We reject Ms Harrison's submission that risk can be better managed if a person is in the United Kingdom. It seems to us obvious that no amount of conditions, or careful watching of a person who is in the United Kingdom, can achieve the assurance of knowing that they are outside the United Kingdom permanently. We also reject her submission that the best way of managing any risk is to allow U2 to return and to prosecute him."
"Speaking generally, in my opinion, the presumption when considering any such policy issue is that CIL, once established, can and should shape the common law, whenever it can do so consistently with domestic constitutional principles, statutory law and common law rules which the courts can themselves sensibly adapt without it being, for example, necessary to invite Parliamentary intervention or consideration."
Analysis and conclusions
"83. Rule 4(3) of the 2003 Rules requires SIAC to satisfy itself "that the material available to it enables it properly to determine proceedings." But this general duty is not apt to provide a power to direct that someone (an appellant or witness) should be allowed to enter the United Kingdom for the purpose of giving evidence in person before SIAC. Rather it is concerned to ensure that in the event that SAIC considers it has inadequate material available to it to determine an appeal, it may use the other powers available to it under the rules to remedy the deficiency (in particular rules 10A and 39), which include powers to give directions to a party to serve further details of a case and evidence. A failure to comply with such directions may lead to the appeal being struck out, or the reply from the Home Secretary being struck out. This latter course would have the practical effect of the appeal going by default. Otherwise, the only circumstances envisaged by the 2003 Rules (rule 11B) for striking out the Home Secretary's reply, is if it discloses no reasonable grounds for defending the appeal.
84. Rule 45 of the 2003 Rules concerns witness summonses which may only be issued to persons in the United Kingdom. The appellants are not witnesses (although theoretically they might be in each other's appeals) but the rule tells against the proposition that SIAC has a disciplinary power to require the Home Secretary to facilitate entry into the United Kingdom for the purposes of participating in a SIAC appeal.
85. I am unpersuaded that, even if the appellants had made good their concerns, there was anything within the power of SIAC to help them. The appropriate course was to ask the Home Secretary to allow the appellants to enter the United Kingdom outside the Immigration Rules to prosecute their appeals, and to challenge any refusal in judicial review proceedings. The appellants took the first step, at least in substance. In the course of the SIAC appeal they asked, through the Treasury Solicitor, whether the Home Office would facilitate their return to the United Kingdom for the purpose of prosecuting the appeals. The answer was no. In September 2012 the judicial review proceedings were issued which are before us sitting as a Divisional Court.
86. In the G1 case Laws LJ recognised that the High Court, exercising its supervisory jurisdiction, could review a decision of the Home Secretary to refuse to facilitate the entry into the United Kingdom of a SIAC appellant to prosecute his appeal. It is clear that those circumstances would be rare and require clear and compelling evidence to support the proposition that absent physical presence in the United Kingdom, the person concerned could take no meaningful part in the SIAC appeal. Even then, the decision would have to be reviewed in the light of public law principles including if they apply, EU and ECHR principles. The evidence adduced by the appellants to support their contention that it was impossible for them to engage meaningfully in their appeals to my minds falls a long way short of establishing the proposition for which they contend."
"As Mr Fordham recognised, the question for this court is whether an appeal under section 2 or section 2B of the SIAC Act 1997 will be a practical and effective remedy for determining whether an out of country appeal against the decision to make the deprivation order would be "effective". I do not consider that the circumstances of this case are analogous to the scenario considered by Lord Wilson at [65] (see [77] above) of Kiarie and Byndloss. This is because in this case there is no question of W2 seeking first an unenforceable direction and then to judicially review that. He would be pursuing an appeal against a decision by the Secretary of State. If he is successful in that and SIAC considers that his presence in the United Kingdom is necessary in order for his appeal to be effective it will allow the appeal. And (see R (Evans) v Attorney General [2015] UKSC 21, [2015] AC 1787 at [52]) that decision will bind the Secretary of State"
"The question is how to determine whether an out of country appeal would, in the circumstances of this case, be, in the language of Lord Wilson in Kiarie and Byndloss, "effective". Can this be determined practically and effectively as a preliminary issue in the section 2B appeal or by way of a section 2 appeal against a refusal to grant W2 LTE pending the appeal?"
"Parliament has provided a right of appeal against her conclusion that one or other of the grounds exist and/or against her refusal to conclude that the order would make the person stateless; and it has been held and is common ground that such is an appeal in which it is for the appellate body to determine for itself whether the ground exists and/or whether the order would make the person stateless (albeit that in those respects it may choose to give some weight to the views of the Secretary of State) and not simply to determine whether she had reason to be satisfied of those matters (B2 v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2013] EWCA Civ 616, Jackson LJ, para 96)."
Lord Justice Singh
Lady Justice King