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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> DE (suicide, psychiatric treatment, J applied) Turkey [2005] UKAIT 00148 (21 October 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00148.html Cite as: [2005] UKAIT 00148, [2005] UKAIT 148, [2005] UKIAT 00148 |
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DE (suicide psychiatric treatment J applied) Turkey [2005] UKAIT 00148
ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
Date of hearing: 21 July 2005
Date Determination notified: 21 October 2005
Before
Mrs S M Kebede (Immigration Judge)
Between
DE | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
This case concerns an Appellant whose core account of HADEP/DEHAP sympathies and Alevi Kurdish ethnicity was found not credible but who had a history of depression and claimed suicide risk on return. The Tribunal should assume (following J [2005] EWCA Civ 629) that the Secretary of State will provide appropriately qualified escorts on return. Approach to analysis of suicide risk (J applied). Adequate medical treatment available in Turkey for mental health conditions and Articles 3 and 8 ECHR not engaged.
(a) The appellant relied upon her actual and perceived political opinion (HADEP) and her ethnicity (Alevi Kurd);
(b) Before coming to the United Kingdom she lived in a district of Istanbul, moving regularly from one district to another with her husband and children. She worked as a quality controller in a jeans manufacturing textile business and was comfortably off;
(c) Her husband was a keen HADEP/DEHAP activist who came to the attention of the authorities and was cautioned on a number of occasions, never formally joined the Party but continued to distribute publications. In 2000, he joined the Party. At Newroz 2003, he was arrested and taken away; she had not seen him since, but paradoxically, the police began to pursue the appellant to find her husband and arrested her on at least four occasions, without charge;
(d) The appellant attended the May Day 2003 celebrations in Istanbul, taking with her an illegal publication; she was arrested and detained, sexually abused and physically beaten, then released because she was a mother. She did not report her abuse; the arrest is said to have been witnessed by her cousin, Mr BK, who saw her being treated roughly by police and driven away to the police station. The cousin has refugee status in the United Kingdom after an appeal heard in September 2003;
(e) In September 2003, the police allegedly visited the appellant's home while she was at work, looking for her husband. She was frightened, and moved in with a neighbour, who asked her to leave after two or three days, as the neighbour was nervous;
(f) When she returned home, the police came and arrested her between 8-11 pm, took her to the police station and detained her for three days, raping and beating her again. She was kept in a small dark cell and had her hair pulled; she did not report the abuse on release;
(g) She was then released and told a male work colleague what had happened to her. He arranged for an agent to get her out of the country, with her two children; the appellant left on 24 October 2003 and arrived in the United Kingdom 5 days later, claming asylum on arrival;
(h) The appellant has well-documented, longstanding, but rather confusing mental health problems and problems in managing her children. In the United Kingdom, she has lived near her mother and sister in north London until dispersed to Glasgow. She also has a brother here. Her husband's parents still live in Istanbul and there is no satisfactory evidence that they would not be prepared to help her if she returned to Turkey.
Grounds for review and grant of permission to appeal
(i) erred in law by reaching her credibility finding before considering the psychiatric report;
(ii) erred in holding it against the appellant that, on medical advice, the appellant chose not to testify; and
(iii) erred in making a finding of fact that the appellant was not arrested at a May Day celebration as alleged, without making it clear that the Home Office concession in that regard was not accepted. Relying on that concession, the appellant failed to call a vital witness, Mr BK.
Procedural history of the reconsideration hearing
"14.11 Where, immediately before 4 April 2005, an appeal was pending before an Adjudicator, having been remitted to an Adjudicator by a Court or the Immigration Appeal Tribunal, it will have already been decided that the original Immigration Judge's determination cannot stand. The Tribunal will accordingly proceed to rehear the appeal."
The abortive oral hearing
The Secretary of State's withdrawal of concession
The oral proceedings
Secretary of State's submissions (Ms Gill)
Appellant's submissions (Ms Gordon)
Medical and social worker evidence
Availability of mental health treatment in Turkey
"5.149 According to the World Health Organisation's (WHO) Department of Mental Health and Substance Dependence Project Atlas (updated 2003) the country has disability benefits for persons with mental disorders. "After being approved by a mental health board as a chronic mental health patient, the patient can benefit from the social security services." Mental health is part of the primary health care system. Actual treatment of severe mental health is available at the primary level. "Mental health in primary care is available in only some provinces." Regular training of primary care professional in the field of mental health is present and the approximate number of personnel trained over the last two years totalled 3,000.
5.150 The WHO Project Atlas (updated 2003) further states that there are 1.3 psychiatric beds per 10,000 population, and one psychiatrist, one neurosurgeon, one neurologist, one psychologist and one social worker per 100,000 population.
5.151 The Foreign and Commonwealth Office contacted Hacettepe University Hospital Psychiatric Department in April 2002 and confirmed that antipsychotic and antidepressant medication is available in Turkey.
5.152 According to the WHO Project Atlas (updated 2003)
"The following therapeutic drugs are generally available at the primary health care level: carbamazepine, ethosuximide, phenobarbital, phenytoin sodium, sodium valproate, amitriptyline, chlorpromazine, diazepam, fluphenazine, haloperidol, lithium, biperiden, carbidopa, and levodopa."
5.153 The WHO Project Atlas (updated 2003) continues
"The mental health department was established within the Ministry of Health in 1983 with the primary tasks of improving mental health services, development and dissemination of preventive mental health services, integration of mental health with primary care, community education and protection of the community from harmful behaviours. The means of achieving these aims were through determination of standards, training programmes, data collection, research, creation of counselling and guiding units, creation of psychiatric clinics in state hospitals, assigning proper tasks to personnel, developing rehabilitation facilities, carrying out public education through the help of media, educating the public on harmful behaviour, and taking care of those who succumb to those behaviours." "
Conclusions
(a) As the Immigration Judge observed, there are significant contradictions in the appellant's core account (paragraphs 94-101 of the determination) which are not related to her rape but are plain and inexplicable inconsistencies in relation to what happened to her husband and to her mother-in-law's description of the family circumstances. The Immigration Judge was entitled to regard those as reducing credibility.
(b) We consider that inconsistencies set out at paragraphs 94-101 are more than sufficient to justify the Immigration Judge's finding that there was in fact no family DEHAP/HADEP link.
(c) We also consider that if the appellant's husband disappeared at the hands of the authorities as claimed, it is most unlikely that they would continually arrest and ill-treat her to get her to tell them where he was; they would know where he was as it would be wherever they had themselves put him;
(d) The Immigration Judge was not bound by a decision of another Immigration Judge at first instance, especially given the variation in the factual accounts. The appellant's mother did not mention the matters now relied upon as this appellant's core account, although the appellant was then living with her mother in London.
(a) The appellant has had the opportunity to improve the medical evidence available and has provided further reports.
(b) However, the effect of those reports is not to clarify but further to confuse the assessment of her mental health and the risk of suicide; if anything, her GP's assessment indicates that she now denies being suicidal and she may, very slightly, be improving.. The appellant does not take her medication and has had no counselling in the United Kingdom.
(c) There is no satisfactory medical evidence from Turkey of the appellant's past medical and mental health history, and
(d) There is evidence concerning the appellant's dispersal to Glasgow and the effect of it on her health. She is having difficulty in coping with the children as is set out in the Scottish reports. However, we note that she was not ill enough to be hospitalised, despite her apparent breakdown in court, and returned to Glasgow voluntarily on the Monday after our hearing, spending just four days with her mother in North London.
Having considered the additional evidence, we do not find that it improves the appellant's situation and we maintain our negative credibility assessment. Having regard to all the different accounts given, for the reasons set out above, we find that her account of the alleged May Day incident and rape (which is correctly identified in the grant of leave as the core of this appeal) is simply not credible.
Effect of Suicide Risk
"61. As regards the risk of suicide en route to Sri Lanka, the IAT's finding was not perverse... They made it clear that the authorities in the UK would be involved in the arrangements. The IAT were entitled to infer that the Secretary of State would take all reasonable steps to discharge his obligations under section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 ("the 1998 Act"). As the IAT said in AA v Secretary of State for the Home Department at paragraph [39]:
"Third stage-transit: there are no reasons to suppose that the Secretary of State would not provide appropriately qualified escorts. This is known to be done. Other measures in other cases may include accompanying family members."
62. In our judgment, the IAT were entitled to take judicial notice of the arrangements that, no doubt conscious of his obligations under section 6 of the 1998 Act, the Secretary of State makes to escort vulnerable persons who are removed to their countries of origin. This is reflected in a document that we were shown which sets out Home Office policy for dealing with claimants who threaten suicide.
63. As regards the criticisms made of the finding in relation to the risk upon arrival in Sri Lanka, the IAT were entitled to conclude on the evidence before them that the appellant would have family support on his return to Sri Lanka. Having regard to the very high threshold for article 3 in foreign cases of this kind, the IAT's decision cannot be characterised as perverse. In particular: (i) the adjudicator had found that any subjective fears which the appellant might have on return were not objectively justified; (ii) he would have family support on his return; and (iii) he would have access to medical treatment in Sri Lanka which it was conceded was adequate (the IAT noted in this regard that most of the treatment in the UK had consisted in the prescription of anti-depressant medication; he had only been placed in an institutional setting on two occasions). "
"26. First, the test requires an assessment to be made of the severity of the treatment which it is said that the applicant would suffer if removed. This must attain a minimum level of severity. The court has said on a number of occasions that the assessment of its severity depends on all the circumstances of the case. But the ill-treatment must "necessarily be serious" such that it is "an affront to fundamental humanitarian principles to remove an individual to a country where he is at risk of serious ill-treatment": see Ullah paragraphs [38-39].
27. Secondly, a causal link must be shown to exist between the act or threatened act of removal or expulsion and the inhuman treatment relied on as violating the applicant's article 3 rights. Thus in Soering at paragraph [91], the court said:
"In so far as any liability under the Convention is or may be incurred, it is liability incurred by the extraditing Contracting State by reason of its having taken action which has as a direct consequence the exposure of an individual to proscribed ill-treatment."(Emphasis added).
See also paragraph [108] of Vilvarajah where the court said that the examination of the article 3 issue "must focus on the foreseeable consequences of the removal of the applicants to Sri Lanka "
28. Thirdly, in the context of a foreign case, the article 3 threshold is particularly high simply because it is a foreign case. And it is even higher where the alleged inhuman treatment is not the direct or indirect responsibility of the public authorities of the receiving state, but results from some naturally occurring illness, whether physical or mental. This is made clear in paragraph [49] of D and paragraph [40] of Bensaid.
29. Fourthly, an article 3 claim can in principle succeed in a suicide case (paragraph [37] of Bensaid).
30. Fifthly, in deciding whether there is a real risk of a breach of article 3 in a suicide case, a question of importance is whether the applicant's fear of ill-treatment in the receiving state upon which the risk of suicide is said to be based is objectively well-founded. If the fear is not well-founded, that will tend to weigh against there being a real risk that the removal will be in breach of article 3.
31. Sixthly, a further question of considerable relevance is whether the removing and/or the receiving state has effective mechanisms to reduce the risk of suicide. If there are effective mechanisms, that too will weigh heavily against an applicant's claim that removal will violate his or her article 3 rights. "
(1) The appellant's claim is fabricated and incredible, even to the low standard required by these appeals; the core claim does not establish a risk of ill-treatment of this appellant if returned to Turkey now at the minimum level of severity, or indeed, any risk at all at the hands of the Turkish authorities;
(2) This is a foreign case and the Article 3 threshold in relation to the claimed suicide risk on return is therefore particularly high. The alleged inhuman treatment in this case would be neither the direct nor the indirect responsibility of the public authorities of the receiving state, but is claimed to result from the appellant's mental illness;
(3) We recognise that an Article 3 claim can in principle succeed in a suicide case;
(4) The appellant's fear of ill-treatment in the receiving state is not objectively well-founded, on the facts found, and that weighs against there being a real risk that the removal breaches Article 3;
(5) Turkey has effective mechanisms to reduce the risk of suicide. Ms Gordon's contention that suspected separatists would not receive medical treatment is unsupported either by the objective evidence or by the appellant's account, given that we find it to be a fabrication. She is not, on our findings, a suspected separatist at all and thus any differential treatment of suspected separatists (of which there is no evidence) does not apply to her.
DECISION
The original Tribunal made a material error of law. The following decision is accordingly substituted:
(a) The appeal is dismissed on asylum grounds.(b) The appeal is dismissed on human rights grounds.
Signed Dated: 23 September 2005
Mrs J A J C Gleeson
Senior Immigration Judge