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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> SP (Time for reply, Rules 30(2) and 45(4)(c)) (Pakistan) [2006] UKAIT 00010 (08 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2006/00010.html Cite as: [2006] UKAIT 00010, [2006] UKAIT 10 |
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SP (Time for reply – Rules 30(2) and 45(4)(c)) Pakistan [2006] UKAIT 00010
Date of hearing: 8 November 2005
Date Determination notified: 08 February 2006
SP | APPELLANT |
and |
|
ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER - ISLAMABAD | RESPONDENT |
Procedure Rule 30(2) is mandatory, subject to the possibility of prospective variation of the time-limit, as envisaged in Rule 45(4)(c)
"Subject to the following paragraphs of this rule, these rules apply to any appeal or application to an Adjudicator or the Immigration Appeal Tribunal which was pending immediately before 4 April 2005, and which continues on or after that date as if it had been made to the Tribunal by virtue of a transitional provisions order."
"Where, immediately before commencement, an appeal to an Adjudicator is pending to which any of the old appeals provisions apply, those provisions shall continue to apply to the appeal after commencement, subject (except where Article 3 applies) to the modification that any reference in those provisions to an Adjudicator shall be treated as a reference to the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal."
" 'The old appeals provisions' means the following provisions, insofar as they continue to have effect immediately before commencement in relation to a pending appeal –
(i) Part IV of, and Schedule 4 to, the Asylum and Immigration Act 1999;
(ii) Section 8(1) to (4) of the Asylum and Immigration Act 1993;
(iii) Sections 13 to 17 of the Immigration Act 1971."
"30(1) When the other party to the appeal is served with an order for reconsideration, he must, if he contends that the Tribunal should uphold the initial determination for reasons different from or additional to those given in the determination, file with the Tribunal and serve on the applicant a reply setting out his case.
(2) The other party to the appeal must file and serve any reply not later than five days before the earliest date appointed for any hearing of or in relation to the reconsideration of the appeal.
(3) In this rule, 'other party to the appeal' means the party other than the party on whose application the order for reconsideration was made."
"'Where the Tribunal acting under paragraph 14.2 transfers the proceedings, it shall prepare written reasons for its finding that the original Tribunal made a material error of law and those written reasons shall be attached to, and form part of, the determination of the Tribunal which substitutes a fresh decision to allow or dismiss the appeal."
"Directions of the Tribunal may in particular –
…
vary any time limit in these Rules or in directions previously given by the Tribunal for anything to be done by a party."
"A prisoner shall be encouraged and assisted to establish and maintain such relations with such persons and agencies outside prison as may, in the opinion of the governor, best promote the interests of his family and his own social rehabilitation."
We have also read the summary of submissions made by Action for Prisoners' Families to the Green Paper consultation and the comments there on the problems experienced most likely by children who have a prisoner, in particular a parent, within the family. It is said that children will never maintain a healthy emotional link with the parent in prison while there are so many barriers both in relation to visiting prison and receiving support in the community. There is also reference to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and the Human Rights Act 1988, both holding that all children have a right to maintain personal contact with both parents but that many children find themselves separated from, and unable to maintain contact with the parent or sibling in prison. There is also a paper from a Mr Murray a PhD student at the Institute of Criminology at the University of Cambridge where it is said among other things that over the last ten years some prisons have developed family and children's extended visits giving children longer and more normal contact time with their fathers in prison but that these are few and far between and only offered to a small number of prisoners.
Signed: Date:
Mr D K Allen, Senior Immigration Judge