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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> PD (Grounds, implied variation, section 86(3)) Sri Lanka [2008] UKAIT 00058 (23 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2008/00058.html Cite as: [2008] UKAIT 58, [2008] UKAIT 00058 |
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PD (Grounds - implied variation - section 86(3)) Sri Lanka [2008] UKAIT 00058
ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
Date of hearing: 28 May 2008
Date Determination notified: 23 July 2008
Before
Senior Immigration Judge Gill
Between
PD | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
For the Appellant: Mrs. J. Rothwell, of Counsel, instructed by Oaks Solicitors.
For the Respondent: Ms. R. Brown, Senior Home Office Presenting Officer.
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
(1) The jurisdiction of the Tribunal is in all cases limited to the grounds of appeal, as varied before the Immigration Judge, plus any grounds contained in section 120 statements and Robinson obvious points. The Tribunal is not empowered by section 86 of the 2002 Act to allow an appeal on some other basis. Grounds of appeal cannot be varied by implication.
(2) Paragraph (1) informs the approach that the Tribunal must take on reconsideration in determining whether an Immigration Judge has materially erred in law.
(3) The Respondent's failure to consider the eligibility of an appellant under the backlog policy, announced in the White Paper entitled: "Fairer, Faster and Firmer - A Modern Approach to Immigration and Asylum" issued on 27 July 1998, does not raise any Robinson obvious point.
Representation:
For the Appellant: Mrs. J. Rothwell, of Counsel, instructed by Oaks Solicitors.
For the Respondent: Ms. R. Brown, Senior Home Office Presenting Officer.
Basis of Claim
The Immigration Judge's determination
"26. On the issue of desertion he said that police in hundreds have abandoned posts and later resigned prompting speculation that they were to be charged with cowardice. He said it remains unclear whether the appellant would face formal charges though he might be disciplined. He considered it highly unlikely that the JVP would represent a threat or have an adverse interest in the appellant and he has little to fear from the JVP on return to Sri Lanka. He considers what the appellant says about being on the LTTE hit list. He considers this presents a serious threat as the LTTE is and has been capable of ruthless elimination of opponents, which has not receded. He lists a number of individuals assassinated as anti LTTE activist [sic], supporters and suspected collaborators. He considers that the large number of such assassinations indicates that the Sri Lankan authorities are incapable of protecting individuals who face persecution and harassment from the LTTE. He also considers the risk of asylum and detention at the airport. This he accepts usually applies to failed Tamil asylum seekers but considers it plausible that the appellant will undergo the same suspicions and experiences.
27. The country conditions described by Mr. Rampton do not differ from that in the extracts of the COIR relied on by Ms Jagaraja. Whether these conditions pose a real risk for the appellant is the issue I must decide. I accept Mr. Rampton as an expert on the political conditions in Sri Lanka however, he does not address the very pertinent issue of whether the LTTE would have any reason to target the appellant 12 years after he left the country nor help as to the numbers of former police officers who have been targeted and killed. Of the long list of people assassinated, he does not indicate whether any or how many are former intelligence officers. The fact that a number of people have been killed in a conflict does not assist in deciding the individual risk to the appellant. Mr. Rampton refers to hundreds of police deserting and no doubt many of these are for reasons similar to the appellant. There is no evidence before me that they have been hunted and killed and I do not consider it likely that the LTTE is concentrating on locating all those whom they considered as past enemies. Whatever view the LTTE had of the appellant, he ceased to be responsible for or involved in the arrest of their members many years ago. I do not consider that the breakdown of the peace process would be likely to put the appellant at any greater risk today than in 2002."
"30. I find that the assertion that the appellant would be detained and interrogated is mere speculation and as already found, consider his detention at the airport to be unlikely. The risk of suicide appears to related to this event and consequently I find the risk to also be unlikely.
31. There are a number of letters from the appellant's GP and other medical professional [sic]. There is the suggestion that the appellant may have taken an overdose of paracetamol but the hospital discharge notes that are disclosed merely record that his friends found a large quantity in his possession not that he took any. The notes refer to the recent break up with his fiancée because of his visa. He was found to have moderate depression due to his social circumstances. Although he was referred to his GP for further follow up and probably going to his local CMH, he failed to keep appointments that were given and ultimately his case was closed. A letter dated 30 August 2006 from Vartouhi Ohanian Consultant Clinical Psychologist at West Middlesex University Hospital following a referral said that the appellant required to be seen by the Brief Intervention & Counselling Service rather than long-term psychological services. In light of these letters and reports, I attach little weight to the assessment of Dr Kanagaratnam that the appellant's symptoms are complex and requires treatment not available to him in Sri Lanka. The COIR report at 26.01 - 26.17 shows that whilst resources are stretched, it is inaccurate, as Dr Kanagaratnam appears to suggest mental health services would not be available to the appellant."
"33. The appellant submits that his rights under Article 8 of the 1950 Convention are engaged. He said that he has a private life with his friends and distant relatives, has a job and owns a property. These issues have been previously adjudicated on. His circumstances have not changed and I find any breach of his private life is lawful and proportionate. The fact that he has been in the UK for 12 years should not come to his aid when it is his determined attempts to avoid removal since 2001 that had let to him accumulating at least half of that period. The claim that he has no family in Sri Lanka I find not of significance. I do not find that he has established family life in the UK. He has no close relatives here and the medical records suggests [sic] he lives alone. I accept that after 12 years he would have established a private life here however he had no close family when he came here. He was able to learn the language and obtain employment and property. Such enterprise will be of assistance when he returns to his home country as a resourceful able-bodied single man. It would not be unlawful nor disproportionate for the appellant to be removed to Sri Lanka. I find that the decision appealed against would not cause the United Kingdom to be in breach of its obligations under the 1950 Convention."
"8.29 Such delay will not normally be a factor at all in the consideration of applications in the backlog dating from after 1995. Applications from before that date will be considered broadly in two groups. In certain of the very oldest cases, where an asylum application was made before the coming into force on 1 July 1993 of the Asylum and Immigration Appeals Act 1993, delay in itself will normally be considered so serious as to justify, as a matter of fairness, the grant of indefinite leave to enter or remain. This will not apply, however, to applicants whose presence here is not conducive to the public good (for example, on the basis of their conviction for a serious criminal offence), nor to any application for asylum made after the commencement of removal or deportation action against the applicant. Such cases will continue to be assessed on their merits without any presumptive weight being given to the delay in reaching a decision. Altogether in the pre-1993 Act group there are estimated to be a total of around 10,000 cases still outstanding.
8.30 For applications made between 1 July 1993 and 31 December 1995, estimated at about 20,000 cases, delay will not normally of itself justify the grant of leave to enter or remain where asylum is refused, but in individual cases will be weighed up with other considerations and, if there are specific compassionate or other exceptional factors present which are linked to the delay or which compound its effects on the applicant's situation, a decision to grant limited leave to enter or remain may then be justified. The sort of factors which might be relevant here, not otherwise by themselves sufficient to justify leave to enter or remain, could include such things as the presence of children attending school or a continuing record of voluntary or other work by the applicant in the local community."
"18. For unexplained reasons the respondent did not get round to considering his case in 2000. By that time the conditions in Sri Lanka were improved. The appellant complains that he should have also benefited from a policy that the respondent had in place for clearing the 50,000 asylum cases that were then blocking the system. The respondents [sic] say that it is the appellant's fault as he failed to co-operate and send them information when requested. I find this a fair and reasonable response. In his representations (p71) the appellant suggests that it was his original solicitors who were responsible for the default however the respondents [sic] cannot be blamed for his poor representation. He did not respond to 2 letters under the backlog policy. I have been provided with a copy of the policy which applied in 1998. It reads "for applications made between 1 July 1993 and 31 December 1995, estimated at about 20000 cases, delay will not normally of itself justify the grant of leave to enter or remain where asylum is refused, but in individual cases will be weighed up with other considerations and if there are specific compassionate or other exceptional factors present which are linked to delay or which compound it's [sic] effects on the applicants [sic] situation, a decision to grant limited leave to enter or remain may then be justified." It goes on to indicate the type of factors that may be relevant. The appellant did not present any evidence to the respondent to assist on deciding whether the policy that in any event is discretionary, should be exercised in his favour. Further as reminded in MM [2005] UKIAT 00163 (Serbia and Montenegro) the applicant is not entitled to just sit back and then rely on delay. There is no evidence of any contact made by the appellant or his representatives to progress his case until after the initial refusal of his asylum claim in 2000. Thereafter the appellants [sic] continued presence in the United Kingdom has been because of his pursuing legal challenges to his removal. He is of course entitled to do so but I do not find that the appellant who did no [sic] cooperate with the respondent, is entitled to benefit from any policy that may have been operative prior to the determination of his asylum claim. There is no evidence he would have met the criteria to be granted any form of leave. I find [sic] is not relevant to the issues before me. I will return to this when considering his representations under Article 8."
The Grounds of Application
(a) (Ground 1)
(i) by erring in her assessment of the expert evidence of Mr. Rampton, in that, the Immigration Judge was highly selective in selecting the passages she quoted from the expert's report.
(ii) by erring in her assessment of the issue of sufficiency of protection. At the hearing, Mrs. Rothwell accepted that, if I concluded that the Immigration Judge did not materially err in law in her assessment of the risk on return, then sufficiency of protection would not be relevant, and accordingly, Ground 1(ii) would not be material to the outcome.
(b) (Ground 2) by failing to properly consider the medical evidence. Paragraph 7 of the grounds asserts that the Immigration Judge erred in law at paragraph 30 of the determination by linking the Appellant's mental suffering to the subjective fears of risk of arrest and detention on return and finding that they are based on mere speculation. At the hearing before me, Mrs. Rothwell submitted that this ground was relevant to the Appellant's asylum claim as well as his Article 3 claim based on his medical condition.
(c) (Ground 3) by making flawed findings in respect of the Respondent's failure to consider the Appellant's claim under the backlog policy. Paragraphs 9 and 10 of the grounds contend that the Immigration Judge's finding that the Appellant had not co-operated with the Respondent was inconsistent with the finding of the previous Adjudicator that the Appellant should not be blamed because he had not received the alleged questionnaire from the Respondent. The grounds contend that it is a known fact that, despite the stipulated discretionary factors, the Respondent did in practice exercise excessively generous discretion in granting leave to remain to most applicants under the policy.
Submissions
(On the front page of the Record of Proceedings):
"Article 8 reps - p73
Backlog policy - applied as he applied June 95 and policy was 1998
Refused at p76."
(On the penultimate page of the Record of Proceedings):
"Article 8
Do not agree what he says about J par 16, 17, 28 & 33, 42 - domestic Article 8 case applies not N - high threshold test does not apply.
Backlog
Concede argument he did not return questionnaire - likely he'd have got leave - not be an immigration offender - would not have Article 8 application to make - should be used to assess proportionality - Tozlukaya has policy applied in Article 8 case - finding in 2001 he will be killed on return -"
Assessment
Ground 1:
Ground 2:
Ground 3
"16. The head note to the determination [in AH] reads as follows:
"In a reconsideration of an appeal following an order for reconsideration made by the AIT (as distinct from a grant of permission to appeal to the IAT):(1) the reconsideration is of the appeal as a whole; therefore(2) it is not limited to the grounds of review or the grounds upon which reconsideration is ordered, but(3) it is limited to the grounds of appeal to the Tribunal (including any variation allowed under Rule 14 by the original [judicial] decision maker)[(4) to (9) ] ………."
17. In this determination, the Tribunal, presided over by Mr Ockelton (Deputy President) considered in detail the provisions of the 2004 Act and of the rules. His conclusion was that there was no justification to be found in the 2004 Act or in the rules for restricting the scope of a reconsideration, either in relation to the question as to what, if any, error or errors of law could be identified in the original decision, or as to the scope of the reconsideration if any such error of law has been found. The only constraint implicit in the structure is that the reconsideration is restricted to the grounds of the original appeal, subject to the caveat that there might be an obvious point of convention law so far overlooked (see below). This, the Tribunal reasoned, was the necessary consequence of rule 14 being omitted from the powers of the Tribunal on reconsideration. It concluded that rule 31(4) did not empower the Tribunal to restrict the scope of a reconsideration to the grounds upon which the reconsideration had been ordered, but only to "have regard" to directions given by the immigration judge ordering the reconsideration, and limiting submissions or evidence to specified issues. Rule 31(3) required the Tribunal, having identified a material error of law, to "substitute a fresh decision". It further concluded, bearing in mind in particular the decision of this court in R-v- SSHD ex p Robinson [1998] QB 929 that part of the recommendation might involve an issue which was obvious but had not formed part of the appeal…
(my emphasis)
"21. In the first instance, in relation to the identification of any error or errors of law, that should normally be restricted to those grounds upon which the immigration judge ordered reconsideration, and any point which properly falls within the category of an obvious or manifest point of Convention jurisprudence, as described in Robinson (supra). … It must [ ] be very much the exception, rather than the rule, that a Tribunal will permit other grounds to be argued. But clearly the Tribunal needs to be alert to the possibility of an error of law other than that identified by the immigration judge, otherwise its own decision may be unlawful."
(my emphasis)
"82 Right of appeal: general
(1) Where an immigration decision is made in respect of a person he may appeal to the Tribunal.
(2) In this Part 'immigration decision' means—
[ (a) to (k) ]
83 Appeal: asylum claim
(1) This section applies where a person has made an asylum claim and—
(a) his claim has been rejected by the Secretary of State, but
(b) he has been granted leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom for a period exceeding one year (or for periods exceeding one year in aggregate).
(2) The person may appeal to the Tribunal against the rejection of his asylum claim.
84 Grounds of appeal
(1) An appeal under section 82(1) against an immigration decision must be brought on one or more of the following grounds—
(a) that the decision is not in accordance with immigration rules;
(b) that the decision is unlawful by virtue of section 19B of the Race Relations Act 1976 (c. 74) (discrimination by public authorities);
(c) that the decision is unlawful under section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 (c. 42) (public authority not to act contrary to Human Rights Convention) as being incompatible with the appellant's Convention rights;
(d) that the appellant is an EEA national or a member of the family of an EEA national and the decision breaches the appellant's rights under the Community Treaties in respect of entry to or residence in the United Kingdom;
(e) that the decision is otherwise not in accordance with the law;
(f) that the person taking the decision should have exercised differently a discretion conferred by immigration rules;
(g) that removal of the appellant from the United Kingdom in consequence of the immigration decision would breach the United Kingdom's obligations under the Refugee Convention or would be unlawful under section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 as being incompatible with the appellant's Convention rights.
(2) In subsection (1)(d) "EEA national" means a national of a State which is a contracting party to the Agreement on the European Economic Area signed at Oporto on 2nd May 1992 (as it has effect from time to time).
(3) An appeal under section 83 must be brought on the grounds that removal of the appellant from the United Kingdom would breach the United Kingdom's obligations under the Refugee Convention.
85. Matters to be considered
(1) ………..
(2) If an appellant under section 82(1) makes a statement under section 120, the Tribunal shall consider any matter raised in the statement which constitutes a ground of appeal of a kind listed in section 84(1) against the decision appealed against.
86. Determination of appeal
(1) This section applies on an appeal under section 82(1) or 83.
(2) The Tribunal must determine-
(a) any matter raised as a ground of appeal (whether or not by virtue of section 85(1)), and
(b) any matter which section 85 requires it to consider.
(3) The Tribunal must allow an appeal in so far as it thinks that-
(a) a decision against which the appeal is brought or is treated as being brought was not in accordance with the law (including immigration rules), or
(b) a discretion exercised in making a decision against which the appeal is brought or is treated as being brought should have been exercised differently.
(4) ………
(5) In so far as subsection (3) does not apply, the Tribunal shall dismiss the appeal."
"16. It is in our view abundantly clear that the wider grounds available in an appeal under s82 are not available in an appeal under s83. Under s82, an appellant can indeed appeal on the ground that the decision against which he appeals "is otherwise not in accordance with the law" (s82(1)(e)); but that ground is not available under s83. If a person has been granted more than twelve months leave to enter or remain, his appeal is on asylum grounds only.
17. The Adjudicator erred in stating that the appeal was under s82: it was not. It was under s83, as the documents before him made clear. He also erred in taking into account grounds which were not open to the Appellant in an appeal under s83. It follows that he had no jurisdiction to allow the appeal, as he did, on those grounds only."
"17. ……….In Strasbourg jurisprudence the `in accordance with the law` requirement has essentially been seen to embody the principle of legality, itself seen as comprising three rules: identification of a basis in law, accessibility and certainty. As the Tribunal has noted in KK [2004] UKIAT 00268, the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights thus requires that governmental policies are sufficiently accessible and precise so as to enable citizens to regulate their conduct by it."
"18. Ms Weston's argument was really about a somewhat different point, namely that "in accordance with the law" under Art 8(2) encompassed the same principle of administrative law as set out in D S Abdi - that decision-makers were under a duty to apply the law (including law as founding the form of governmental policies). Here there is this difficulty. We would accept it is arguable that the principle of legality includes the principle that decision-makers should apply (as well as properly identify) the law in this broad sense. But we are not prepared to accept without more that Strasbourg has seen the principle of legality to extend that far in the context of Art 8(2). Ms Weston produced no authority in support of this contention. That being so, we do not accept that Art 8(2) can be said to encapsulate precisely the same principles as those set out in the context of UK Immigration Acts in D S Abdi."
The original Tribunal did not make a material error of law and the original determination of the appeal shall stand. That is:
The appeal is dismissed on asylum grounds.
The appeal is dismissed on humanitarian protection grounds.
The appeal is dismissed on human rights grounds.
Ms. D. K. GILL
Senior Immigration Judge Date: 25 June 2008
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