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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> Secretary of State for the Home Department v A (Nigeria) [2004] UKIAT 00014 (05 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00014.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 14, [2004] UKIAT 00014 |
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APPEAL No. [2004] UKIAT 00014 A (Nigeria)
Date of hearing: 20 January 2004
Date Determination notified: 05 February 2004
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | APPELLANT |
and |
|
A | RESPONDENT |
This is a Home Office appeal against the decision of an adjudicator, Mr B Lloyd, sitting at Birmingham on 6 February 2003, allowing an appeal by a citizen of Nigeria against refusal of leave to remain on human rights grounds. The claimant says he arrived in 1980. The Home Office have no trace of him before 1986, when he agrees he last entered this country. We do not regard any difference there may be on that as having any substantial effect on the proper result of the case.
18. I concluded the appellant has established a stable and enduring family life in the United Kingdom which focuses in particular on his young son Ben who is presently aged 11. I believe that the relationship between the appellant and his son is genuine and developing one from which both parties have derived and will derive a large measure of personal support and security. I believe the appellant when he says that he wishes to provide the best opportunity for his young son for the future and that he is prepared to do what he can to achieve that in both financial and emotional terms.19. I conclude the removal of the appellant to Nigeria will have a devastating interference with the family life that has been established. Although the decision of the respondent taken in this case indeed in accordance with the law. It is necessary for me to decide whether such interference is quite necessary in democratic society". It is not sufficient that it is merely desirable. I am not satisfied that there is a pressing social need that gives rise to the interference in this case or that it is necessary in the interests of protection of public order, health or morals.
Having regard to the findings that I have made on the circumstances of the appellant's family life or in particular of his young son Ben and reminding myself also of the balancing exercise that I am required to conduct under Article 8, I come to the conclusion that I must attach more weight to the rights of the appellant to pursue a family life. I have regard to the major upheaval indeed devastation that he would undoubtedly be caused if he were forcibly to be removed to Nigeria and also if his wife and young son were forced as a consequence to leave their home environment to embark on the uneventful task of building a completely new life in Nigeria. The appellant and his wife moreover would be faced with the prospect of uprooting a special needs child to a wholly unknown environment. The "at risk" registration of Ben creates prohibition in itself but further the prospect of removal of the appellant would frustrate the aims and ambitions of the appellant and his wife for their young son.
The adjudicator accordingly allowed the appeal before him on the basis that the appellant's removal would be disproportionate in terms of Article 8(2) of the Human Rights Convention.
John Freeman
(chairman)