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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> S v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Iraq) [2003] UKIAT 00146 (12 November 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2003/00146.html Cite as: [2003] UKIAT 146, [2003] UKIAT 00146 |
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Heard at Field House on:
4 November 2003
[2003] UKIAT 00146 S (Iraq)
Prepared on:
4 November 2003
Date Determination notified:
12 November 2003...
Between
APPELLANT
RESPONDENT
JD
Mr. A Sheikh, a Senior Home Office Presenting Officer, appeared on behalf of the Appellant . Mr. N. M. Shoffa, a Solicitor's Clerk, appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
'Mr. Wilkin submitted, as I understood him, that even if we were to allow the appeal and quash the decision of the Tribunal, the effect of that would be to revive the appeal before the Tribunal. He submitted that the situation was changing in Sri Lanka and that it would be useful for the Tribunal to consider the position in the light of the present day position.
'It might well be useful but I do not consider that it would be a proper use of this Court's powers now to send the case back to the Tribunal. The powers of this court are set out in Civil Procedure Rules 1998, R52.10. We have all the powers of the lower court. We may set aside or vary any order made by the lower court. Those provisions give us the power to allow the appeal from the Tribunal, set aside its determination, substitute a determination dismissing the appeal from the Adjudicator and thus restore his determination. The present is, in my judgement, an appropriate case in which to exercise that power. I accept that the Tribunal examines the situation in the country from which the refugee is fleeing as at the date of its determination. However, in the present case in my judgement there is nothing wrong with the Adjudicator's determination, there was therefore, no reason to appeal it, and it would be wrong for the Home Secretary, on the back of an appeal which has been dismissed, to seek to re-examine the threat to the refugee with reference to a date later than the Adjudicator's determination. To permit this would merely encourage appeals by a party who has no ground for appeal but hopes that the situation would change sufficiently to enable him to advance different arguments on different facts on appeal. Such procedures would not be in anyone's interests'.
Richard Chalkley
Vice President