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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Thanigaikumaran & Ors, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] EWHC 1701 (Admin) (20 June 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2011/1701.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1701 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF | ||
(1) THANANJEYANATHAN THANIGAIKUMARAN | ||
(2) JEYAPRASANYA THANIGAIKUMARAN | ||
(3) SHAITHANYAA THANIGAIKUMARAN | Claimants | |
v | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant |
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WordWave International Limited
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(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr M Barnes (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"When I asked Mr Thanigaikumaran what he thought would happen to him if he were forced to return to Sri Lanka, he said 'I'll surely die so I might as well die here ... I have endured a lot of torture. I won't go through the same thing again. I will try and find a way to kill myself. Even when you have a scratch you have pain. Imagine the pain of nails being pulled out. It happened to my right foot'."
"I asked Mr Thanigaikumaran how he would feel if the situation in Sri Lanka changed for the better. He said that 'I'd be the first to go back if that happened. I have a lot of land there. Why should I live here?'"
"Research has shown that it is hard for people to enter into treatment if they feel insecure and when there is risk of return. The basic sense of security which he now lacks is a bedrock on which treatment and therapeutic alliance is based. The treatment needs to work from a point of settlement and permanence ..."
The view of Dr King was that a return to Sri Lanka would be highly likely to precipitate further deterioration in her psychiatric health. The doctor said this also:
"In my judgement there is a real risk of her successfully executing a suicidal act from the time she is under specific threat of removal. In my view, this is likely to occur in the United Kingdom or in transit."
There was then detailed further discussions, and then, amongst other things, this was later said:
"Accessing this specialist treatment is in my view crucial to her recovery but because of her current symptoms she will need support to engage with it. Once engaged she is highly likely [to do] very well if she is coming from a position of relatively stability and security as far as her status is concerned."
"From a clinical perspective we have observed that the implementation of the five year policy has had a negative impact on the more vulnerable asylum seekers in our service. Once the client has been granted refugee status, often after a lengthy appeals process, they are faced with an uncertain future and the fear that they will have to go through the whole process again in five years time. We have found an increased level of long term psychiatric morbidity and changes in personality ..."
"20.3. When implementing this Chapter, Member States shall take into account the specific situation of vulnerable persons such as minors, unaccompanied minors, disabled people, elderly people, pregnant women, single parents with minor children and persons who have been subjected to torture, rape or other serious forms of psychological, physical or sexual violence.
(Pausing there, it is regrettably the case that such categorisations extend to many cases of persons claiming asylum.) Then going onto Article 20.4:
"Paragraph 3 shall apply only to persons found to have special needs after an individual evaluation of their situation..."
"As soon as possible after their status has been granted, Member States shall issue to beneficiaries of refugee status a residence permit which must be valid for at least three years and renewable unless compelling reasons of national security or public order otherwise require, and without prejudice to Article 21(3).
Without prejudice to Article 23(1), the residence permit to be issued to the family members of the beneficiaries of refugee status may be valid for less than three years and renewable."
"This [Asylum Instruction] provides guidance on the leave granted to individuals who have been granted asylum under immigration rule 334 on or after 30th August 2005 (whether the grants are made at initial
decision or following an allowed appeal). This AI does not apply to individuals granted leave
after having been brought to the UK under resettlement schemes ..."
"The Qualification Directive specifies that three years leave is the minimum period that can be
given to those with refugee status. Five years leave to remain will be a sufficient grant of leave
save in the most exceptional of circumstances. However, in accordance with Article 20, where
in light of the specific situation of a vulnerable person with special needs a longer period of leave
to remain is considered appropriate, the advice of a Senior Caseworker must be sought."
"In line with the API, which paraphrases Article 20(4) of the Qualification Directive, it was decided to grant your client LTR for 5 years as this is the appropriate grant of leave apart from in the most exceptional circumstances. Article 20(3) singles out, in defining people to be considered vulnerable in the sense described in Article 20(4) persons 'who have been subjected to torture, rape or other serious forms of psychological, physical or sexual violence'. It is accepted that your client falls into this category of vulnerable people. However, this of itself does not qualify a claimant for a grant of ILR: as mandated in the Qualification Directive, your client's specific situation has been taken into account in reconsidering this decision in the light of your submissions, but it has been decided that his circumstances do not fall into the category of 'most exceptional'. Therefore, it has been decided that the original grant which was made to him of LTR for 5 years is sufficient and should not be varied. The advice of a Senior Caseworker was sought in making this decision."
The reference to the advice of a senior caseworker having been sought in making that decision shows that section 2.2 of the Asylum Policy Instruction had been closely applied.
"... it remains the case that each application is considered on its individual merits: there is no automatic assumption that mental health problems per se constitute the 'most exceptional of circumstances' in the sense in which the phrase is used in the API quoted above."
Reference is then made to the Bamber Report, and then this is said:
"The implicit purpose of this report is two-fold in that, apart from its stated aim of considering the impact of the five year LTR policy on vulnerable refugees, it is written from a standpoint of a general disagreement with the policy..."
It is indicated that is not accepted and that the policy itself was a matter for the Secretary of State.
This further is said:
"It is not accepted, however, that there should be a blanket policy of granting ILR to refugees with mental health problems, not least since such problems are unfortunately common in refugees, as indeed Dr King points out in her psychiatric report ..."
Then it is said:
"The issue which then falls to be considered is that of whether or not your client's circumstances should be considered 'most exceptional'."
Then there is a detailed evaluation of the medical evidence then placed before the Secretary of State. This is said in the letter:
"Although it is accepted that your client and his wife are suffering from mental health problems, it is not accepted that these, taken together with the full context of their case, constitute the most exceptional of circumstances. As noted above, mental health problems are sadly common in refugees ..."
"It is considered that, since your client is being granted asylum, the risk of self-harm or suicide should logically have receded as there is now no threat of removal: your client and his family have been granted status in the UK."
There are then further comments with regard to Dr King's reports and Professor Katona's reports indicating that the specific uncertainty to which Dr King had referred had been resolved by the grant of five years' leave to remain.
There is then a further discussion of matters raised, and this lengthy letter then concludes in this way:
"Your client and his family should feel assured that the grant of five years LTR in the United Kingdom affords them the protection that they require. It is considered that the argument which you advance is likely to create unnecessary and unwarranted doubt in your client's mind and achieve the opposite of your stated purpose of providing him and his family with reassurance and stability. Although your client's circumstances are not considered to fall into the category of 'most exceptional' he and his family have been granted the 'significant and valuable' protection of five years LTR in the United Kingdom. It is hoped that this will provide them not only with protection from any persecution which they may have suffered in Sri Lanka, but also with a sense of security and the ability to improve their mental health in the United Kingdom."
"The most important difference, as it seems to me, from the perspective of the refugee, is that it gives rise to a lack of certainty, in that if the situation in the country of origin has improved in that time, the refugee is liable to be required to be returned there. As it was put by [counsel], appearing on behalf of the claimant Mr Kalobo: 'He has the threat of removal hanging over him for five years'."
I see no reason to depart from the views that I there expressed in that case. But a little further on I also said this:
"Overall, it is submitted, and I agree, that the grant of five-year leave to enter or remain, subject to further review, is significant and valuable protection."
I see no reason to depart from that view either.