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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 >> Drammeh, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] EWHC 2754 (Admin) (02 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/2754.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2754 (Admin) |
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ADMIN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN (on the application of OUSMAN DRAMMEH) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Alan Payne (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 10th, 11th & 15th December 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hayden :
BACKGROUND HISTORY
i) 6th October 2008. Being drunk and disorderly, fined £80;
ii) 13th August 2010. Breach of the peace, fined £130;
iii) 9th March 2011. Possession of Class A drugs (received an admonishment from the Glasgow City Justices);
iv) 19th March 2012. Threatening and abusive behaviour, resisting arrest and obstructing police, acting in a racially aggravated manner intending to cause distress. 3 months imprisonment.
i) The lack of hard physical evidence;
ii) C's refusal to submit to examination which contributed to the uncertainty concerning his situation;
iii) The significant risk of absconding;
iv) Risk to the public
a) The absconding risk posed by C, as evidenced by his continuing refusal to cooperate with the EDT process, his use of false identity when arrested by the police, his previous pattern of absconding and failing to leave the UK when required to do so, and the FTT's rejection of the credibility of his claim for asylum;
b) The fact that he had not been under 24 hour observations until 6 July 2013, that his condition was not consistent with someone who had not been taking any fluid for in excess of 10 days, and his weight appeared to be unchanged/slightly increased.
c) The fact that whilst there was some evidence of dehydration (in the form of observations of cracked lips and a dry tongue) the day before the letter was written (7 July 2013) C had been deemed fit for detention.
d) The evidence did not suggest that C was at the point of expiry.
"During my hospital and general practice career, I have worked extensively in the care of patients with mental illness. The psychiatric problems which I have treated cover a broad spectrum including: depression, anxiety states, post-traumatic stress disorder, psychotic illness, bipolar disorder, dementia, alcohol misuse, drug and alcohol withdraw states and personality disorders. My hospital psychiatry experience included all these conditions. This post involved clinical responsibility, since when on duty I was the first contact for all the psychiatric emergencies on the ward or in the accident & emergency department, without a more senior colleague on-site. "
A "His underlying level of psychological distress: he has symptoms of psychosis depression, PTSD and anxiety. These are likely to have been exacerbated by his immigration detention (this is known to adversely affect mental health –Rojant 2009). This mental state tends to reduce appetite and is not conducive to caring for oneself."
B "The psychotic illness itself – he describes hearing voices telling him not to eat. This is clinically plausible as part of schizoaffective disorder or psychotic depression (in both conditions, 'voices' can tell patients to harm themselves). He has some paranoia symptoms and these have contributed to his decision not to taking medication. The psychosis is likely to have worsened as a result of stopping medication, so his refusal of food, fluid and treatment is likely to have caused a spiralling deterioration of his mental health."
C "The plans for his removal for his removal from the UK, his resulting (subjective) fear of persecution and his perceived helplessness to do anything about his situation (after his former solicitor stopped representing him). These appear (from his stated history) to have been the precipitating factors for his initial decision to refuse food."
D "There is some evidence that the state of fasting itself makes people more prone to continuing food refusal because it pushes thinking towards anger and lack of self care (Fessler 2003); and fasting reduces the sense of thirst."
"Para38. Nutrition: Mr Drammeh appeared to have lost weight. His cheeks and eyes sockets looked hollow. His thighs and lower legs showed signs of muscle wasting and his abdomen was thin. His upper arms were less thin with reasonable muscle bulk, but with no sign of subcutaneous fat. He weighed just under 60kg.[These are signs of weight loss. If he did weigh 8kg previously then he has lost 25% of his body weight. It is likely that both fasting and dehydration have contributed to this weight loss. Given the height of 1.7 metres recorded in the healthcare records, his body mass index is 20.8, which is not underweight (normal BMI is 20-25) but the % weight loss is nevertheless serious, and the history suggest that Mr D was previously well-built and muscular since he describes using the gym regularly while detained, until he started fasting.]"
"All this puts [C] at imminent risk of collapse from dehydration and circulatory failure and at imminent risk of kidney failure. If nothing is done, he could collapse and die at any time now and is likely to die from dehydration within days. In hot weather (as there is currently) fluid loss is faster, so [C's] survival time maybe further shortened (depending on the temperature in the healthcare units)."
"[C] is severely malnourished and is at an advance stage of food refusal. Although not underweight according to his Body Mass Index, there is evidence that he has lost a great of deal of weight (the precise loss is unknown since his base line weight was not accurately recorded, according to the Health care records). He may have lost about 25% of body weight according to his own estimate of his normal weight (some of this may be fluid loss due to dehydration, since on clinical assessment he is at least 10 % dehydrated. "
"Para68. If he stops his fluid and food refusal, Mr Drammeh is at high risk of electrolyte imbalance (deranged blood chemistry) and refeeding syndrome (the complications of refeeding after a long fast, which are dangerous). He should be refed and rehydrated initially in hospital, in a setting where blood tests are immediately available, as stipulated in DoH guidelines."
The litigation history
"On the basis of Dr Hartree's report, C's position appears critical. He is refusing to agree to transfer to a hospital unless he is released from custody. Despite his underlying mental illness, Dr Hartree does not suggest that the refusal is a manifestation of that illness...I am not being asked to order C's transfer against his will"
"On the basis of his past immigration history, the Defendant is justified in not granting him bail or temporary admission. His deportation is imminent and he has expressed a strong desire not to be returned to Gambia, so there is a high risk that he will abscond. He has a past history of absconding, failing to comply with conditions of his stay, giving a false name to police, and failing to co-operate with immigration authorities. He has been convicted of a serious criminal offence and he has been assessed as posing a serious risk of harm to the public.
Whilst those who are medically unfit should not be detained, hunger strikes cannot be used as a means of securing release which would not otherwise be appropriate.
He has mental capacity and I cannot order him to be transferred to hospital or treated against his will. There may come a time when the defendant has to consider an application to Court to seek a declaration as to his medical care and treatment.
C has failed to establish arguable grounds for judicial review of the Defendant's decision to detain him and therefore there is no basis for the grant of interim relief".
"Home Office letter says, "…one report states that Mr Drammeh has not passed urine… when under 24 hour observation Mr Drammeh did go to the toilet on 06 July." I should explain that "going to the toilet" in the observations recorded does not necessarily mean that Mr Drammeh passed urine. "
"During my visit and subsequently over the telephone, he has repeatedly told me that he has been to the toilet and attempted to pass urine or to open his bowels, but despite straining, has been unable to do so."
"3.37 The extent of his weight loss was unclear. As discussed in my report dated 12 July2014, his weight on arrival in Harmondsworth was recorded as 57Kg, but this was later considered by the IRC doctor as probably erroneous. His weight on 08 July was noted in IRC records as 60K and on 15 July as 55Kg. His weight in Hillingdon is given as 60.5Kg on 20July – this is recorded in the doctor'snotes as weighed wearing clothes, though on the nutritional assessment form, this value was placed in the 'usual weight' box. According to prison medical records, Mr Drammeh was 70Kg on 06 July 2012, with a body mass index of 24.2 at the upper end of normal (normal range 18-25). That was long before his food refusal began, and his weight could feasibly have altered meanwhile…
3.38 It is clinically plausible that Mr Drammehs's recorded weight could increase by 5.5Kg between 15 -20 July, even if Mr Drammeh refused food until 19 July. This is because during starvation or if a patient is taking limited fluid, there will usually be some degree of dehydration, which can increase weight loss considerably. If the patient increases fluid intake, weight can increase rapidly even if there is still malnutrition in terms of energy and vitamins. 5.5 Kg is equivalent to 5.5 litres of fluid, or 10% of his body weight at 55Kg. Severe dehydration is usually defined as the loss of 10% of more body weight, so this increase in weight between 15 and 20 July quite plausibly reflects a change form severe dehydration to normal dehydration. Rehydration could have taken place during the first day of his hospital admission. The hospital records record his weight as 60.5 Kg in the doctors entry at midday on 20 July , but as far as I could see there was no record of his being weighed in hospital before this, for example on arrival in the emergency department. The initial assessment handfilled page has an unfilled box for weight (page 127 of the pagination in my scanned copy). He was given a saline infusion of one litre shortly after arrival, and if drinking fluids would also have been rehydrating by the oral route as well as the intravenous one. Muscle bulk, etc, is unlikely to cause such rapid changes in weight gain, so these recorded weights support the clinical concerns raised in July 2013, that Mr Drammeh was severely dehydrated, which was noted in my assessment and in the IRC doctors' notes on various dates.
3.39 Mr Drammeh's body mass index on 20 July 2013 is given as 21, in the normal range. A normal body mass index does not exclude malnutrition, because nutrition is not only about body mass; the levels of vitamins and micronutrients are for great importance. A person who was previously at the higher end of normal for body mass, or was overweight, could undertake a prolonged fast and become severely malnourished in terms of vitamin/mineral levels, without becoming underweight.
3.40 It is unclear at what point Mr Drammeh started taking nutrition. He had told me that he attempted to drink milk on or around 16 July, but said he had vomited it. In Dr Barnes's ward round he is noted as having drunk milk on 16 July, without mentioning vomiting. However during a busy ward round, some of the history may be missed, as in that setting often only a brief history is taken. It is possible that Mr Drammeh may have covertly taken nutrition prior to being hospitalised; the hospital records cannot either confirm or refute this. However his fast pulse rate on arrival and the subsequent fall in blood pressure suggest he was not physically well or stable, in keeping with refeeding commencing at around that time."
"'it is therefore imperative that [C] be assessed and treated in hospital urgently, without delay'. "
Accordingly, an application to revoke the Deportation Order was made.
12. As Ms Stephanie Harrison QC acknowledges, it is an unattractive position for the claimant to take and one which ordinarily will not only be viewed which scepticism but refusal by this court. However, she also properly reminds the court that there is in the background of all of this matter, objectively clear evidence that the claimant does suffer from mental illness. He has been diagnosed with a schizoaffective disorder from an early stage. It is likely that that is schizophrenia. He is suffering from auditory and other hallucinations, indeed the description of the symptoms has some parallels with paranoid schizophrenia. He also suffers from depression and it may also be, post traumatic stress disorder. In those circumstances, although he appears to retain capacity, Ms Harrison urges the court to view this case as one of some exceptionality on the basis that his stance, which appears objectionable, should be ameliorated against the background of that mental illness.
13. Perhaps of even more concern is another matter which Dr Hartree has provided an opinion about, namely that those who have over a prolonged period of time refused food and/or water intake can reach a stage, which she considers as likely to be reached in this case, where the very effect of that initial desire to refuse food and water can in itself affect the brain, whereby the individual becomes incapable of reversing that decision, and that is a matter which again ought to be taken into account in this case.
14. The view that I have reached, having heard the most recent medical evidence from Dr Hartree and also considering the evidence medically provided by the detention centre is that the situation has now reached a sufficiently critical point whereby the court must closely scrutinise as to whether it is appropriate for the claimant to remain in detention. In addition, clearly, I do take into account the most recent evidence from Dr Hartree, which, at least on the face of it, although I make no firmer view than that, appears to provide some objective evidence to support the fresh claim for asylum in country. Whether or not in reality it does have that effect will be a decision for another day by the Secretary of State. However, in view of her policy in relation to those who are indeed suffering from serious medical conditions, it seems to me that there are not here sufficiently exceptional circumstances for his continued detention in the detention centre. On that basis, I am exceptionally in this case prepared to grant bail. It will be in the terms of the draft order which I have already discussed with counsel and will provide for his release on bail on conditions, primarily so that he can receive treatment at hospital and thereafter at an address which is approved by the Secretary of State. It will also provide, lastly, for liberty to apply by either party on 24 hours' written notice so far as the provisions of the order are concerned.
11. In my judgment, therefore, the situation is materially different to that which was considered by Lang J on 9 July 2013. Having said that, I remain of concern in this case because the reality is that if the claimant had agreed to do so, he could have been transferred at any time up to now to a hospital so that treatment could be effected on him for his lack of food and fluid intake but he has chosen not to, and I entirely endorse the sentiments which were expressed in writing by Lang J when she refused interim relief, namely that the courts should stand firm against manipulation of the situation by individuals within the immigration system, because the situation is that apparently the claimant will agree to go to hospital if he is granted bail.
"review of blood results is normal and urine ketone <3; patient can be discharged safely."
i) C ate breakfast, had a negative result in terms of Ketone (a high Ketone score suggests lack of food) and was fully mobile.
ii) C's weight was recorded as 60.5 kg.
iii) "Bloods & no electorite imbalance…NOT clinically dehydrated".
iv) C had passed urine on two occasions.
v) C informed staff that whilst detained he intermittently had had water, and having had milk on 16 July 2013.
vi) C's "gait" was "independent and normal".
vii) There was "no obvious evidence of weight loss".
viii) Under management it is recorded "aim for early discharge".
The Claimant's case
Ground 1
It was contrary to the Defendant's published policy in respect of those with a serious mental illness in Chapter 55.10 EIG;
Ground 2
The changes to detention policy relating to food and fluid refusal were unlawful and incompatible with S149 of the Equality Act 2010;
Ground 3
The Claimant's detention was unlawful under the Hardial Singh principles;
Ground 4
The Defendant breached the Detention Centre Rules 2001 by failing to ensure an effective system and/or proper implementation and compliance with Rule 35;
Ground 5
Detention breached the Claimant's human rights under Articles 5(1), 2, 3 and/or 8 ECHR.
The Legal Framework
"55.10 Persons considered unsuitable for detention
…
The following are normally considered suitable for detention in only very exceptional circumstances, whether in dedicated immigration detention accommodation or prisons:
…
... those suffering from serious medical conditions which cannot be satisfactorily managed within detention
... those suffering serious mental illness which cannot be satisfactorily managed within detention (in CCD cases, please contact the specialist Mentally Disordered Offender Team). In exceptional cases it may be necessary for detention at a removal centre or prison to continue while individuals are being or waiting to be assessed, or are awaiting transfer under the Mental Health Act;
... those where there is independent evidence that they have been tortured.
"…Separately to the issue of transferring individuals held in prison, detainees held in IRCs who are refusing food and/or fluid may be transferred to prison medical facilities, if this is considered necessary to manage any resulting medical conditions."
Chapter 55.8A incorporates Rule 35 of the Detention Centre Rules 2001, and states that:
"…The purpose of Rule 35 is to ensure that particularly vulnerable detainees are brought to the attention of those with direct responsibility for authorising, maintaining and reviewing detention. The information contained in the report needs to be considered in deciding whether continued detention is appropriate in each case….
Upon receipt of a Rule 35 report, caseworkers must review continued detention in light of the information in the report (see 55.8 – Detention Reviews) and respond to the centre, within two working days of receipt, using the appropriate Rule 35 pro forma."
Chapter 55.8 (Detention Reviews) requires that continued detention must be reviewed at specified points. At each review "robust and formally documented consideration" should be given to the removability of the detainee and to "all other information relevant to the decision to detain. Additional reviews "may also be necessary on an ad hoc basis, e.g. where there is a change in circumstances relevant to the reasons for detention."
Section 149 of the Equality Act 2010
149 Public sector equality duty
E+W+S
This sectionnoteType=Explanatory Notes has no associated
(1) A public authority must, in the exercise of its functions, have due regard to the need to—
(a) eliminate discrimination, harassment, victimisation and any other conduct that is prohibited by or under this Act;
(b) advance equality of opportunity between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it;
(c) foster good relations between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it.
(2) A person who is not a public authority but who exercises public functions must, in the exercise of those functions, have due regard to the matters mentioned in subsection (1).
(3) Having due regard to the need to advance equality of opportunity between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it involves having due regard, in particular, to the need to—
(a) remove or minimise disadvantages suffered by persons who share a relevant protected characteristic that are connected to that characteristic;
(b) take steps to meet the needs of persons who share a relevant protected characteristic that are different from the needs of persons who do not share it;
(c) encourage persons who share a relevant protected characteristic to participate in public life or in any other activity in which participation by such persons is disproportionately low.
(4) The steps involved in meeting the needs of disabled persons that are different from the needs of persons who are not disabled include, in particular, steps to take account of disabled persons' disabilities.
(5) Having due regard to the need to foster good relations between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it involves having due regard, in particular, to the need to—
(a) tackle prejudice, and
(b) promote understanding.
(6) Compliance with the duties in this section may involve treating some persons more favourably than others; but that is not to be taken as permitting conduct that would otherwise be prohibited by or under this Act.
(7) The relevant protected characteristics are—
(8) A reference to conduct that is prohibited by or under this Act includes a reference to—
(a) a breach of an equality clause or rule;
(b) a breach of a non-discrimination rule.
(9) Schedule 18 (exceptions) has effect.
The Hardial Singh principles:
i) The Secretary of State must intend to deport the detainee and can only use the power to detain for that purpose;
ii) The deportee may only be detained for a period that is reasonable in all the circumstances;
iii) If, before the expiry of the reasonable period, it becomes apparent that the Secretary of State will not be able to effect deportation within that reasonable period, he should not seek to exercise the power of detention;
iv) The Secretary of State should act with reasonable diligence and expedition to effect removal.
The Detention Centre Rules 2001
Medical examination upon admission and thereafter
34.—(1) Every detained person shall be given a physical and mental examination by the medical practitioner (or another registered medical practitioner in accordance with rules 33(7) or (10)) within 24 hours of his admission to the detention centre.
(2) Nothing in paragraph (1) shall allow an examination to be given in any case where the detained person does not consent to it.
(3) If a detained person does not consent to an examination under paragraph (1), he shall be entitled to the examination at any subsequent time upon request.
Special illnesses and conditions (including torture claims)
35.—(1) The medical practitioner shall report to the manager on the case of any detained person whose health is likely to be injuriously affected by continued detention or any conditions of detention.
(2) The medical practitioner shall report to the manager on the case of any detained person he suspects of having suicidal intentions, and the detained person shall be placed under special observation for so long as those suspicions remain, and a record of his treatment and condition shall be kept throughout that time in a manner to be determined by the Secretary of State.
(3) The medical practitioner shall report to the manager on the case of any detained person who he is concerned may have been the victim of torture.
(4) The manager shall send a copy of any report under paragraphs (1), (2) or (3) to the Secretary of State without delay.
(5) The medical practitioner shall pay special attention to any detained person whose mental condition appears to require it, and make any special arrangements (including counselling arrangements) which appear necessary for his supervision or care.
i) Was the Defendant entitled to conclude that the mental health of the Claimant could be satisfactorily managed in detention until 9 June 2013?
ii) Post 9 June 2013, was Chapter 55.10 of the Enforcement Instructions and Guidance (EIG) and the Rule 35 policy applicable to the Claimant during his food and fluid refusal?
iii) If so, was his detention lawful during his food and fluid refusal?
iv) Was the policy relating to food and fluid refusal cases lawful as compatible with s149 of the Equality Act 2010?
v) Was the Claimant's detention lawful under Hardial Singh principles 2 and/or 3 after 1 July 2013?
vi) Did the detention of the Claimant on or after 1 July 2013 subject him to degrading treatment in breach of article 3 and/or was it a disproportionate interference with his right to moral and physical integrity contrary to article 8 ECHR?
"57. These cases take the words of the phrase "suffering from a serious mental illness which cannot be satisfactorily managed within detention" as a whole. It is clear from them that the diagnosis is not in itself the key to the applicability of the policy, even if the individual has been referred for treatment by specialist secondary services. It is also necessary for the individual concerned to be "suffering" and for the illness to be one which "cannot be satisfactorily managed within detention". Accordingly, although (see Sullivan LJ in R (MC (Algeria)) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] EWCA Civ 347 at [41]) the policy is in principle capable of applying to anyone with a "mental disorder" within the definition in the Mental Health Act 1983 as amended by the Mental Health Act 2007, the mere fact that they are does not suffice. The effects of the illness on the particular individual, the effect of detention on him or her, and on the way that person's illness would be managed if detained must also be considered."
58. The effect of mental illness on an individual does not follow as a necessary consequence of a particular diagnosis. It can vary according to its particular features, the particular characteristics and circumstances of the individual, and the treatment provided. The Royal College of Psychiatrists' position statement states (p 6) that whether mental illness is serious is a fact-sensitive question. The facilities for managing detainees may also vary. For example, the court was informed that some detention centres do not have counselling services. Additionally, as Miss Rose recognised, whether mental illness can be "satisfactorily managed" in detention may depend on the duration of detention contemplated. Where it is clear that there is only to be a very short time of detention before removal, there may well be no significant difference to the patient's condition during that short period."
"The purposes of and criteria for detention under the Mental Health Act 1983 differ substantially from the purposes of and criteria for immigration detention and for the operation of the policy in the bullet point in §55.10 of the policy about those with mental illness. The 1983 Act does not use the concept of a "serious" mental illness. Moreover, as a result of section 3(2) of the Mental Health Act 1983 and its requirement that "appropriate medical treatment" is available, those whose condition is serious but whose condition is not treatable cannot be detained in hospital under the Act. As Miss Rose submitted, the criteria in the 1983 Act seek to identify those who, because of their mental illness, are suitable for detention in a hospital in order to enable treatment to be given for the benefit of the patient, whereas the policy seeks to identify those who, because of their mental illness, are not suitable for detention in an immigration centre. To in substance align the criteria in the policy with those in the 1983 Act by regarding the policy as broadly only applicable where the criteria in the 1983 Act are met glosses over these important differences."
"67. The authorities also show that the threshold for the applicability of the policy is that the mental illness must be serious enough to mean it cannot be satisfactorily managed in detention. As to satisfactory management, at the time detention is being considered, the Secretary of State, through her officials, should consider matters such as the medication the person is taking, and whether his or her demonstrated needs at that time are such that they can or cannot be provided in detention. Account should be taken of the facilities available at the centre at which the individual is to be detained, and the expected period of detention before he or she is lawfully removed. R (OM) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] EWCA Civ 909 at [33] shows that some of those suffering significant adverse effects from mental illness may be managed appropriately in detention. OM had attempted suicide by hanging herself. She was diagnosed as having recurrent depressive disorder and emotionally unstable personality disorder which was not suitable for treatment under the Mental Health Act 1983. The views of the experts were divided but Richards LJ stated that the balance of expert advice was that her illness could be managed appropriately in detention."
"69. I add that, whether or not the policy is strictly engaged, as part of the operation of the Hardial Singh principles (see [16] above), in assessing whether to detain a person known to have a mental illness, particular care is needed. The Secretary of State, through her officials, should consider whether, if the decision is taken to detain, particular arrangements will need to be made for the detainee's welfare and to monitor him or her for signs of deterioration."
"However, as the judge explained, the premise for the assessment of an individual as unfit for detention in a removal centre leading to removal to a hospital for treatment is that the detainee will consent to treatment. In light of the appellant's refusal to receive medical treatment (a refusal which, it should be noted, extends not only to treatment of his condition but also to any medical care that would make him more comfortable) I consider that the respondent is entitled to conclude, as matters presently stand, that notwithstanding the appellant's serious medical condition, the policy does not require his removal in detention to hospital. While it could be concluded, as the judge did, that as long as the appellant continues to refuse medical treatment of any kind his condition can be as satisfactorily managed within an IRC as in a hospital, I should prefer to put it on the ground that the continuing refusal of the appellant to accept any medical treatment removes his case from the scope of the policy statements relied on by the appellant because they simply did not envisage such a case."
"44. However, if it were necessary to decide it I should conclude, in agreement with the judge, that the facts of the present case are capable of amounting to very exceptional circumstances justifying such a departure. I come to that conclusion, not because the appellant's condition can be considered to be self-inflicted, but because of his continuing refusal to consent to medical treatment unless released, a refusal which, as matters presently stand, is a matter of his free choice made with capacity to make it." (my emphasis)
"This case is, in truth, indistinguishable from IM (Nigeria) in which the Court of Appeal held that the detention of an individual who was suffering from the consequences of FFR was lawful in circumstances where the individual had mental capacity. Applying the principles in IM (Nigeria) to the facts of this case C cannot establish that his decision to refuse food, made with capacity to take it and as a protest against his detention and/or proposed removal to Pakistan, should have led to his earlier release. "
At all times Chapter 55.10 EIG is engaged in a case of food and fluid refusal:
1. Where there is a pre-existing serious mental illness;
2. Where the mental illness causes and/or influences and/or is linked to the food and fluid refusal;
3. Even if the mental illness does not cause and/or influence and/or is not linked to the food and fluid refusal, but the consequences of the food and fluid refusal impact on the mental health of the detainee;
4. The position above is the same if the person refuses to take prescribed medication.
The Secretary of State has a duty, under EIG 55.10, to make adequate enquiries into the mental health of the detainee and must decide if EIG 55.10 applies:
(a) Whether the mental illness can be satisfactorily managed in detention;
(b) If not, whether there are very exceptional circumstances that justify detention in a detention centre.
i) they have capacity to take decisions;
ii) they decline to engage in medical treatment;
In contrast to IM, it is not suggested in this case that Chapter 55.10 is a comprehensive statement of the Defendant's policy. The Claimant in this case accepts that DSO 03/2013 and the report of 25 June also form part of the Defendant's policy with regard to the management of food refusal in detention and that the Defendant's published and unpublished policies must be considered as a whole.
It is convenient to consider these here:
"DSO 03/2013 ('Food and Fluid Refusal in Immigration Removal Centres: Guidance') was also amended in or around May 2013, to add sections entitled 'Clarify medical assessment', 'Additional Medical Advice' and 'Transfer to prison medical facility'. The amended sections provide inter alia that:"
i) Where a doctor has given an opinion that a detainee is no longer fit to be removed and/or fit to be detained, the doctor should be asked for details of the basis for the assessment, in order to ensure that the doctor's opinion can be given due weight in deciding how to proceed. A sample assessment record was annexed to the guidance;
ii) Doctors' professional views are important, but it is for the Secretary of State to make an independent decision about whether an individual is suffering from a serious medical condition (the consequences of prolonged food and/or fluid refusal) which cannot be managed satisfactorily in detention, and if so, whether there are very exceptional reasons for maintaining detention [that is, to apply the policy in Chapter 55.10];
iii) Where an IRC doctor assesses a detainee as no longer fit to be removed or fit to be detained as a consequence of food and/or fluid refusal, consideration may be given to seeking a second clinical opinion from a doctor with more experience of assessing or managing food and fluid refusal cases in custody. A second assessment may be arranged in any case where the reasons for the IRC doctor's assessment are unclear, where there is other evidence tending not to support the assessment, or where it is otherwise considered appropriate;
iv) Detainees may be transferred to a prison medical facility at the point at which they require in-patient care, in order to access the more extensive medical facilities available and to ensure better care and management.
i) Refusal of food and fluids will not automatically preclude detention, but could lead to a deterioration in health which is so serious that the person concerned can no longer be satisfactorily managed in detention [the wording of Chapter 55.10 EIG] and may no longer be fit to be detained or be removed from the UK, in which case continued detention could be unlawful;
ii) Reviews of detention must take account of a detainee's removability, but consideration must also be given to all other information relevant to a decision to detain (Chapter 55.8 EIG);
iii) A Tactical Tasking Group meeting weekly to ensure all food and fluid refusal cases were prioritised for documentation or appeal, were managed consistently and that senior managers were aware of "these potentially high profile cases";
iv) The decision on release for all food refusal cases would be referred to a strategic director, Mr. Hugh Ind and then to the Minister.
"….there must come a time in even the most serious cases when an individual is so weak or ill as a result of food or fluid refusal that they no longer pose any risk of absconding or reoffending. In such cases, detention will be unlawful and it will be necessary to consider release with conditions designed to mitigate any residual risks the individuals may pose, for example as and when they recover."
i) The report of 25 June 2013 was not before the court in IM or W and so did not form part of the court's reasoning. The Claimant submits that the report indicates that in food refusal cases where a detainee is refusing medical treatment, the Defendant's procedure is to consider release as an alternative to detention in an IRC, rather than transfer to hospital as the court concluded in IM;
ii) In both IM and W, removal was clearly in prospect within a reasonable time. There were no barriers to removal and travel documents were thought to be quickly obtainable. In W, removal directions had previously been set. There was no argument in either case that the Hardial Singh principles had been breached because removal was not in prospect. By contrast, in the instant case the Claimant's appeal against deportation was pending until June 2013, and after that a travel document could not be obtained without the Claimant being interviewed. At best the timescale for a travel document was 3-6 months; by 27 June 2013 this had changed to 'medium term' [2-194] and from 1 July onwards there was no timescale [2-216, 2-248];
iii) Most importantly, neither IM nor W involved a detainee with a pre-existing serious mental illness, where there was clear evidence of significant mental health problems prior to food refusal. There was no evidence in IM or W that the detainee's food refusal was anything other than a rational decision made with the capacity to do so in order to bring about a desired outcome. In the instant case, on the contrary, the consistent medical evidence is that the Claimant was suffering from a serious psychotic illness prior to the food/fluid refusal, that was deteriorating. Furthermore the medical evidence (particularly Dr Burrun's assessment and the reports of Dr Hartree and Dr Vermeulen) also indicates that the Claimant's food refusal was or may be related to his mental illness and was contributed to by the further deterioration in his mental health;
iv) There is a clear difference, in fact and law, between a healthy detainee who engages in food/fluid refusal as a protest and a detainee with a serious mental illness to whom Chapter 55.10 already applies, whose decision-making is or may be affected or influenced by pre-existing serious mental illness, and where the medical evidence indicates that both physical and mental health will deteriorate as a result.
"C fails in his attempt to distinguish his case from that of IM. In IM the correct interpretation of Chapter 55.10 was addressed by the Court of Appeal. At [37] Lord Justice Lloyd Jones stated: "
"37. As the judge held, Chapter 55.10 is clearly directed to the normal circumstances in which the policy is required, ie detention in removal centres and prisons. When read in this way the consequence of the applicability of the policy is not that those to whom it applies become unsuitable for detention anywhere simply because their conditions are unsuitable for treatment in a removal centre or prison. Its effect is not that, in the absence of very exceptional circumstances, continued detention is unsuitable but that the detention in the removal centre or prison is unsuitable. As both Ouseley J and Stewart J observed, the result is not that a detainee must be released unless there are very unusual circumstances but that the detainee must be moved to a suitable place of detention. A person may be fit to be detained in a hospital even if not fit to be detained in an IRC.
38 ……The failure of the policy to make express provision for those who require removal to hospital but who otherwise remain in detention is, as the judge observed, because it was so obvious as to be not worth saying that those who needed medical treatment not available in an IRC or prison would pursuant to the proper application of the policy be transferred to hospital in detention. Furthermore, any failure to state in a published policy that those not suitable for detention in an IRC should be removed in detention to hospital where their medical needs could more suitably be met does not limit the exercise of the power conferred on the respondent. She does not need to announce a policy covering a particular situation or to act in accordance with it in order to make the exercise of her powers lawful."
On this construction of the relevant policy the fact that C refused medical treatment was not a reason for finding that under D's policy the only option open to her was to release him in the absence of exceptional circumstances but rather for finding that his situation, like that of IM, was outwith the policy statements relied on by C. D must apply her policy but where the case falls outside the policy she must behave reasonably and lawfully. C's deliberate protest against detention and removal at a time when he had capacity to make the decision to reject food/fluid and necessary treatment did not require D to release him. His medical issues arose from his food/fluid refusal and fell outside Chapter 55.10. D did provide adequate medical care and the chronology shows that regular assessments were made, passed on and considered.
C stated he would refuse medical treatment unless transferred to hospital without prospect of being returned to detention and returned to Pakistan. It is hard to see on what basis his forcible removal to hospital where he planned to refuse treatment was required in order for D to comply with her legal obligations towards him. It is necessary to repeat that C's likely early removal was always anticipated by D and it was not unreasonable for D to detain him. Alternatively, there were exceptional circumstances in C's case justifying detention because the absence of consent to treatment in hospital while capacity to decide remains amounts to an exceptional circumstance.
As to illegality of the policies per se the challenge does not arise on the facts because as discussed above, the authority of IM makes plain that the policies C says are engaged are not in fact engaged in C's circumstances.
i) 20th June 2013. C complained he 'he is not eating because he wanted to get out of here';
ii) 23rd June 2013. C 'drinking but maintaining food refusal';
iii) 28th June 2013. C 'fed up with detention' and having decided to FFR 'as a protest';
iv) 1st July 2013. C understands consequences of his actions (Dr Oozeerally);
v) 9th July 2013. C observed to have 'skin turgor good', 'mouth dry', 'witnessed flushing toilet'
vi) 10th July 2013. C may have indeed taking some fluid;
vii) 12th July 2013. C told Dr Hartree he had started taking very small amounts of water;
viii) 13th July 2013. C apparently found in possession of two vitamin drinks;
ix) 14th July 2013. C refuses FFR interview;
x) 15th July 2013. C 'coherent, understanding his situation' and repeated that he had started taking 'very small amounts of water';
xi) 17th July 2013. Body Mass Index within normal range.
"On the basis of his past immigration history, the Defendant is justified in not granting him bail or temporary admission. His deportation is imminent and he has expressed a strong desire not to be returned to Gambia, so there is a high risk that he will abscond. He has a past history of absconding, failing to comply with conditions of his stay, giving a false name to police, and failing to co-operate with immigration authorities. He has been convicted of a serious criminal offence and he has been assessed as posing a serious risk of harm to the public.
Whilst those who are medically unfit should not be detained, hunger strikes cannot be used as a means of securing release which would not otherwise be appropriate.
He has mental capacity and I cannot order him to be transferred to hospital or treated against his will. There may come a time when the defendant has to consider an application to Court to seek a declaration as to his medical care and treatment."
Lang J is there summarising Mr Ind's own wider evaluation of risk all of which is of course relevant to the decision taking process.