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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> RH (Para 289A/HC395, no discretion) Bangladesh [2006] UKAIT 00043 (18 April 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2006/00043.html Cite as: [2006] UKAIT 00043, [2006] UKAIT 43 |
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RH (Para 289A/HC395 - no discretion) Bangladesh [2006] UKAIT 00043
ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
Date of hearing: 14 March 2006
Date Determination notified: 18 April 2006
Before
Mr C P Mather, Senior Immigration Judge
Between
RH | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
The documents specified under para 289A(iv) of HC395 (and to be found in section 5 of chapter 8 of the IDIs) are not subject to interpretation and the requirements do not allow for the use of discretion as to the acceptance of other documents by an Immigration Judge.
"The requirements to be met by a person who is a victim of domestic violence and who is seeking indefinite leave to remain in the United Kingdom are that the applicant:
(i) was admitted to the United Kingdom or given an extension of stay for a period of two years as the spouse of a person present and settled here; or
(ii) was admitted to the United Kingdom or given an extension of stay for a period of two years as the unmarried partner of a person present and settled here; and
(iii) the relationship with their spouse or unmarried partner, as appropriate, was subsisting at the beginning of the relevant period of leave or extension of stay referred to in (i) or (ii) above; and
(iv) is able to produce such evidence as may be required by the Secretary of State to establish that the relationship was caused to permanently break down before the end of that period as a result of domestic violence.
That paragraph was inserted into the immigration rules as from 18 December 2002. It has since been amended by HC582 with effect from 24 October 2005. The amendments do not have any relevance to this appeal. It should be noted that the rule as printed in Phelan 4th Ed contains errors. It refers to 12 months in sub-paragraph (i) not 2 years; and puts the word 'or' at the end of sub-paragraph (ii) when it should be 'and'.
"5.2 Standard of Proof
In order to establish a claim of domestic violence evidence should be sought in the form of:
i. an injunction, non-molestation order or other protection order made against the sponsor (other than an ex parte or interim order); or
ii. a relevant court conviction against the sponsor; or
iii. full details of a relevant police caution issued against the sponsor."
"It is often difficult for victims of domestic violence to produce documentary evidence of violence as set out at 1.2 (sic) above, and there is often unwillingness or insufficient evidence to take the matter to court. Although caseworkers should still try to obtain police or court evidence confirmation of domestic violence, where this is not possible, acceptable evidence may take the form of more than one of the following [emphasis in the original]:
- A medical report from a hospital doctor confirming that the applicant has injuries consistent with being a victim of domestic violence;
- a letter from a family practitioner who has examined the applicant and is satisfied that the applicant has injuries consistent with being a victim of domestic violence;
- an undertaking given to a court that the perpetrator of the violence will not approach the applicant who is the victim of the violence;
- a police report confirming attendance at the home of the applicant as a result of a domestic violence incident;
- a letter from a Social Services Department confirming its involvement in connection with domestic violence;
- a letter of support or report from a women's refuge.
For the avoidance of doubt, the Immigration Judge quotes from the respondent's letter in the determination. There, the requirements are referred to not as bullet points but paragraphs (a) to (e). The provisions are otherwise identical.
"3.2…..The only documentary evidence the appellant had submitted was a letter dated 3/05/2005 from her GP, Dr Kakad (J2), which stated that she had first gone to her doctor's on 29/03/2005 where she mentioned an assault that took place in October 2004. However, the report did not confirm that the appellant was examined and found to have injuries consistent with being a victim of domestic violence. An extract from a police officer's notebook (B3-B4) which had not been substantiated with a crime reference or a crime report (sic). Furthermore, Home Office enquiries with the police showed no trace of an incident involving the appellant. Also submitted was a letter dated 08/04/2005 from The Sisters Haven (G2) which confirmed that the appellant was residence (sic) with them and that they were supporting her, however, this alone was insufficient evidence to prove the appellant was a victim of domestic violence. The Secretary of State was therefore not satisfied the appellant had produced sufficient documentary evidence to meet the requirements of paragraph 289A(iv) of the Immigration Rules.
3.3 Furthermore, in light of the above the Secretary of State was not satisfied the appellant had within a reasonable time produced the evidence requested, to establish her claim under the immigration rules and accordingly, he was not prepared to exercise discretion in her favour."
"The appellant's representative asked me to interpret the requirements of paragraph 289A generously."
There was no disagreement between the parties that the appellant satisfied the requirements of paragraph 289A(i) and (iii). The judge said the difficulties that have arisen are in connection with the interpretation of paragraph 289A(iv). She then went on to consider the evidence which had been adduced before her. She observed that the appellant had made her original complaint to Pc Ali and that she been given a copy of the entries in his notebook. She said they were contemporaneous notes from which it was clear that the appellant complained on 2 November 2004 she had been physically assaulted by her husband and that she had lived with him at 34 Priory Road, Croydon. It was also clear that PC Ali then arranged for a statement to be taken through a police interpreter and took the appellant to The Sisters Haven Refuge in Coventry. The notes also confirm that paperwork was sent to Croydon Police Station.
"is not sufficient to satisfy the requirements of paragraph (a) – a medical report from a hospital, doctor or letter from a family practitioner confirming that your injuries are consistent with being a victim of domestic violence".
We should emphasise, that the requirement she refers to is not a report from a hospital or doctor (as implied by the comma in the Immigration Judge's paragraph 35) but from a hospital doctor.
"I was significantly influenced by the evidence given by Zakia Butt particularly with regard to the manner in which she described how in her experience the general demeanour of the appellant satisfied her that she had been a victim of domestic violence. She referred to the appellant's tearfulness, general distress, feeling of lack of worth and I am satisfied to the necessary standard that she was genuinely satisfied the appellant had been the victim of domestic violence.
37. I have taken into account the Home Office Presenting Officer's view that Mrs Butt was only able to repeat the information provided by the appellant but I also take into account that Mrs Butt is an experienced hostel worker (she told me that she had had more than fifteen years experience of working with abused women) – she is a Muslim woman herself and I am satisfied that she is highly experienced in this field. I am therefore satisfied that the letter which Mrs Butt had provided and the oral evidence which she gave before me more than satisfies the requirement at (e) of "a letter of support or report from a women's refuge".
"I find that it would be impossible for the appellant to produce evidence which would satisfy paragraph (b) – an undertaking given to a court that your partner will not approach you – that would have required the appellant to have instituted civil proceedings against her husband for an injunction or a non-molestation order – as she was no longer living in Croydon at the relevant time and felt unable to report her concerns I discount that as being a possibility."
She went on to say
"Similarly, insofar as (d) is concerned – a letter from a Social Services department confirming its involvement in connection with domestic violence towards you I find that such involvement would only have been raised if the couple's children were involved – the couple have no children thereby this requirement is irrelevant".
"As indicated above I am satisfied that part of paragraphs (a) and (c) have been satisfied and that together with the evidence of Mrs Butt satisfies me to the necessary standard that the appellant has been the subject of domestic violence.
Accordingly, I am satisfied the requirements of paragraph 289A of the immigration rules have been satisfied and on that basis I allow the appellant's appeal".
"1. The Immigration Judge has used her discretion in the interpretation of the immigration rules when it was not open to her to do so. "
The grounds then go on to argue why that is demonstrated to be the case in the determination. Later in the grounds there is also criticism of the observations that the appellant could not have instituted civil proceedings for an injunction or non-molestation order because she was no longer living in Croydon, and that she could not have approached Social Services because she had no children, when that is not the case.
"that the person taking the decision should have exercised differently a discretion conferred by the immigration rules" [our emphasis].
We accept that the IDI is not an immigration rule but a document created using a power conferred by an immigration rule. In fact we know, because it says so in the explanatory statement, that the respondent did consider exercising his discretion outside the rules to grant the application notwithstanding the inability of the appellant to comply with the rule, but he declined to do so.
The appellant's appeal against the respondent's decision is dismissed on immigration grounds.
Signed Date
C P Mather
Senior Immigration Judge
Approved for electronic distribution.