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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 >> Defending Christian Arabs, R (On the Application Of) v [2020] EWHC 1850 (Admin) (10 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/1850.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1850 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
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 DEFENDING CHRISTIAN ARABS |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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GUILDFORD MAGISTRATES' COURT |
Defendant |
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-and- |
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TONY BLAIR |
Interested Party |
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The Defendant was not represented for this hearing.
Hearing dates: 10 June 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by the Judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be listed on 10th July 2020 at 14:00.
Mrs Justice Cutts DBE :
The facts alleged
Legal framework
"On an information being laid before a Justice of the Peace, that a person has, or is suspected of having, committed an offence, the justice may issue-
(a) A summons directed to that person requiring him to appear before a magistrates' court to answer the summons."
Other provisions authorise the issue of such summonses by a District Judge (Magistrates Court).
i) The magistrate must ascertain whether the allegation is an offence known to the law, and if so whether the essential ingredients of the offence are prima facie present; that the offence alleged is not time barred; that the court has jurisdiction; and whether the informant has the necessary authority to prosecute.
ii) If so generally the magistrate ought to issue the summons, unless there are compelling reasons not to do so – most obviously that the application is vexatious (which may involve the presence of an improper ulterior purpose and/or long delay); or is an abuse of process; or is otherwise improper.
iii) Hence the magistrate should consider the whole of the relevant circumstances to enable him to satisfy himself that it is a proper case to issue the summons and, even if there is evidence of the offence, should consider whether the application is vexatious, an abuse of process, or otherwise improper.
iv) Whether the applicant has previously approached the police may be a relevant circumstance.
v) (…)
vi) (…)
i) That Tony Blair administered to, caused to be administered to or taken by Amer Jasim any poison or other destructive or noxious thing;
ii) That he thereby caused him grievous bodily harm;
iii) When he did so he was acting unlawfully and maliciously.
The decision of the DJ
"I would refuse this application for summons as I am not persuaded that this court has territorial jurisdiction. The "mischief" complained of happened overseas."
Having reached this conclusion it does not appear that the DJ directed himself to any of the other factors involved in the exercise of his discretion on whether or not to issue the summons.
The applicant's submissions
"(1) Any British subject employed under His Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom in the service of the Crown who commits, in a foreign country, when acting or purporting to act in the course of his employment, any offence which, if committed in England, would be punishable on indictment, shall be guilty of an offence, and subject to the same punishment, as if the offences had been committed in England."
It is submitted that Tony Blair fell within this definition by virtue of his position as Prime Minister and therefore the extra territorial acts alleged are justiciable in this country. It is further submitted that the only consideration in the renewal hearing is to consider whether the DJ may have been arguably wrong in his conclusion that the court had no jurisdiction to hear the case.
"The new rules apply as of 16 November 2015, but they are not limited to crimes committed after this date. The Victims' Rights Directive applies if the crime was committed in the European Union. For instance, the Directive will apply in cases related to crimes committed during the Second World War, if the proceedings take place after the 16th November 2016. Likewise, the Directive will apply to international crimes, if the proceedings take place in the European Union after 16 November 2015."
This, he submits, extends the jurisdiction of the court to try an offence which occurred in Iraq. The court should grant permission for judicial review to allow the claimant to argue that the criminal offence of using poisonous weapons is a crime under Directive 2012/29/EU.
i) It can be established that Tony Blair administered the noxious substance as when the DU in the bombs exploded they were converted to minute particles of uranium oxide which were carried by winds over large areas surrounding the battlefield. Most of South Iraq was contaminated. The poison was "administered". Releasing the substance from an airplane is no different to spraying CS gas in someone's face.
ii) Tony Blair was Prime Minister and he therefore caused the substance to be administered. He must have ordered the use of the explosives in question.
iii) This caused grievous bodily harm to Mr Jasim in the form of lung cancer.
Decision
Jurisdiction
"However, most EU Member States have recently taken steps to incorporate international crimes such as genocide, war crimes and torture into their national criminal codes and to establish universal jurisdiction over them, so that these types of crimes may be prosecuted within their national legal systems even if committed abroad. Consequently, the Directive also confers rights on victims of extra-territorial offences who will become involved in criminal proceedings which take place within the Member States."
This does not apply to this case. It is important to remember that the offence for which the applicant wishes Mr Blair to be summonsed is contrary to s.23 OAPA not for any of the international crimes named above.
The ingredients of the offence
i) The application for a summons baldly states that it is not disputed that Tony Blair, as Prime Minister of the UK, ordered the use of DU penetrators in the invasion of Iraq in 2003. This is how the applicant avers he caused a noxious substance to be administered to the alleged victim. Mr Al-Ani submits that it is "not in dispute" that Tony Blair ordered the use of the noxious substance by reason of his office as Prime Minister. There is however no prima facie evidence that he did so order. The mere fact that he was Prime Minister is insufficient. The prosecutor would have to prove that he was aware of and ordered it to be used.
ii) Even if Mr Blair did order the use of DU, the prosecutor also has difficulty establishing that he administered it to, caused it to be administered to or caused it to be taken by Mr Jasim. As the House of Lords said in R v Kennedy (no 2) 2007 UKHL 38, s.23 OAPA creates three distinct offences:
a) Such an offence can be committed where the accused administers a noxious thing directly to a victim such as by injecting him with it, holding a glass containing it to the victim's lips or spraying the noxious thing in his face. That is not the allegation in this case. I do not consider that dropping DU into Iraq which is then carried by winds to other parts of the country to be in any way analogous to spraying CS gas directly into another's face.
b) It can be committed where the accused causes an innocent party to administer it to the victim, for example knowing that a syringe is filled with poison he instructs another who believes it to be a therapeutic substance to inject the victim with it. That is not the allegation in this case.
c) It can be committed where the noxious substance is not administered to the victim but it is taken by him, for example there is poison in his food and he eats it. That again is not the allegation in this case.
iii) The biggest obstacle to the prosecutor would be proving that the use of these weapons in 2003 caused Mr Jasim to suffer from lung cancer sixteen years later in 2019. That would be the case even without the intervening act of the wind carrying DU "over vast areas of Southern Iraq", as alleged in the application before the DJ. It may be that Mr Jasim believes that this was the cause of his unfortunate illness but that is not sufficient. There is no prima facie evidence that this ingredient is made out.
Vexatious prosecution
i) In box 4 of the application form for the summons which requires details of the alleged offence the applicant wrote "The statement of offences and the particulars of the conduct constituting the commission of the crime of administering poison indiscriminately to the people of Iraq are shown in the attached statement of offences to this application." (Emphasis added). There then follow 92 paragraphs setting out the dangers and effects of DU as well as the accusation that it was unsafe to disperse it through fire and explosion anywhere in the world, including Iraq. A valid question in this regard is said to be why the UK, entrusted with ruling Iraq jointly with the USA, took no measure to charge anyone who breached Regulation 6 of the Ionising Radiation Regulations 1999 which applies to practices involving the production, handling, use, storage, transport or disposal of radioactive substances. Reference is made to the consideration of the use of DU radioactivity under International Law with the conclusion that it was thereby unlawful. Reference is also made to the environmental effects of DU. Paragraphs 58-64 set out international law which bans the use of chemical weapons, including, it is submitted, DU.
ii) Mr Zuhayr Menjou, the director of the charity "Defending Christian Arabs" has provided a witness statement dated 20th May 2020 in support of the oral application for permission. At paragraph 23 of that statement he says: "Guildford Magistrates Court deliberately breached its legal duty to consider a serious application of great public interest as the application seeks to prosecute a former Prime Minister of the UK for war crimes." (Emphasis added).
iii) In the summary of grounds for the granting of permission for judicial review the applicant states that permission should be given "to enable the claimant to argue that the criminal offence of using positions [sic] weapons is a crime under customary international law."
Conclusion
Application for permission to appeal
i) That I was wrong to refuse permission in order that the applicant could apply for a declaration of incompatibility of s18(1) of the Senior Courts Act 1981. The applicant lists eight occasions when this court has refused permission for judicial review on applications arising out of the invasion and occupation of Iraq on three occasions declaring the application totally without merit. The denial of a hearing is in breach of the ECHR.
ii) That I was wrong not to grant permission in order that the applicant could argue that Attorney General was wrong not to initiate criminal proceedings against HM Government for war crimes in relation to Iraq. The applicant argues that the 2003 letter [see paragraph 32 above] was a political decision. He draws attention to five occasions when the AG's department refused to grant consent for the prosecution of war crimes.
iii) That I was wrong not to grant him permission in order that he could argue that the Legal Aid Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 is incompatible with the Human Rights Act in denying him legal aid for the purposes of judicial review.
Conclusion on application for permission to appeal