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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> VB (Desertion, Chechnya War, Hamilton) Russia CG [2003] UKIAT 00020 (04 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2003/00020.html Cite as: [2003] UKIAT 00020, 2003 Imm AR 591, [2003] Imm AR 591, [2003] UKIAT 20 |
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VB (Desertion-Chechnya War-Hamilton) Russia CG [2003] UKIAT 00020
Date of hearing: 1 October 2002
Date Determination notified: 04/07/03
VB | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"There is compelling support for the view that refugee status should be accorded to one who has refused to undertake compulsory military service on the grounds that such service would or might require him to commit atrocities or gross human rights abuses or participate in a conflict condemned by the international community, or where refusal to serve would earn grossly excessive or disproportionate punishment… But the applicants cannot, on the facts as found, bring themselves within any of these categories" (para 8).
"In describing this as the first issue [i.e. the issue of does punishment for draft evasion by an "absolute" conscientious objector amount to persecution] I should for clarity's sake explain what I do not intend to include. Thus I am not here dealing with Mr Howell`s argument that the putative persecutor must be subjectively actuated by the Convention reason in question, before his actions can amount to persecution which qualifies the claimant for asylum within the Convention. I must address that separately, as I must the case of the "partial" objector. Next I should emphasise that it is plain (indeed uncontentious) that there are circumstances in which a conscientious objector may rightly claim that punishment for draft evasion would amount to persecution: where the military service to which he is called involves acts, with which he may be associated, which are contrary to basic rules of human conduct; where the conditions of military service are themselves so harsh as to amount to persecution on the facts; where the punishment in question is disproportionately harsh or severe. I am here addressing the case where none of these additional factors is present" (emphasis added).
(a) where the conditions of military service are themselves so harsh as to amount to persecution on the facts;
(b) where the military service to which a person is called involves acts, with which he may be associated which are contrary to basic rules of human conduct;
(c) where the punishment in question is disproportionately harsh or severe.
"Mr Sepet had to show, not merely that he reasonably feared being required to engage in such condemned actions, but that there was more than a fanciful chance that such a fear would eventuate in fact; but that is contradicted by the adjudicator's finding" (emphasis added).
"The decision-maker will begin by considering the reason in the mind of the persecutor for inflicting the persecutory treatment. That reason would, in this case, be the applicants` refusal to serve in the army. But the decision-maker does not stop there. He asks if that is the real reason, or whether there is some other effective reason. The victims` belief that the treatment is inflicted because of their political opinions is beside the point unless the decision-maker concludes that the holding of such opinions was the, or a, real reason for the persecutory treatment. On the facts here, that would not be a tenable view, since it is clear that anyone refusing to serve would be treated in the same way, whatever his personal grounds for refusing".
1) In order to establish that military service gives rise to a real risk of persecution a claimant must first of all establish that he is a conscientious objector. However, he will usually be able to establish that he is a conscientious objector quite easily. in establishing this, a moral and ethical basis to his objections may be irrelevant unless they are so extreme as to engage Art 1F considerations[1]. To what extent it is relevant whether a person's objections are genuinely held will depend on the nature of the particular case.
2) Assuming a person can establish conscientious objection in this very broad sense, he can only show there is a real risk of persecution where one or more additional factors obtain:
(a) where the conditions of military service are themselves so harsh as to amount to persecution on the facts;
(b) where the military service to which he is called involves acts, with which he may be associated which are contrary to basic rules of human conduct;
(c) where the punishment in question is disproportionately harsh or severe.
3) Even if a person on the basis of one of these additional factors can establish a real risk of persecution, he will not qualify as a refugee unless he can further demonstrate that the persecution is by reason of a Refugee Convention ground (race, religion, etc).
Application to the facts of this case
Conscientious objection
Conditions of military service
Actual participation in Chechnya
Military service leading to participation in armed conflict contrary to international law
"Those words of the Handbook have stood for a very long time: although they do not have the force of law, they represent the nearest approach so far to an international code of refugee law, and there are sound reasons of international comity why the legitimacy of a particular campaign should not be passed on by either an individual asylum-seeker or an individual court, but left to the judgment of the international community. We regret we are unable to agree with the approach in Foughali".
"When assessing risk on the basis of serious human rights violations outside the context of military service cases, decision-makers do not hinge their decisions on whether or not these violations have also been internationally condemned, although such condemnation may be part of the evidence. It would be illogical to behave differently in relation to an overlapping field of public international law governed by the same fundamental norms and values".
The recent EU texts discussed by their lordships in Sepet and Bulbul (paragraphs 14-16 of the speech of Lord Bingham of Cornhill) clearly reflect an attempt to build on these, by reference to the international law criteria contained in Art 1F.
.
"(b) where the military service to which he is called involves acts, with which he may be associated which are contrary to basic rules of human conduct as defined by international law…"
The conflict in Chechnya
The issue of disproportionately harsh or severe punishment
"Prisoners rights groups reported that the total number of inmates in Russian prisons and pre-trial detention facilities decreased, but that overcrowding, unsanitary conditions, and disease epidemics remained a severe problem. The AIDS Foundation East-West estimated that almost thirty-five thousand of Russia`s 950,000 inmates were living with HIV, a drastic rise from fifteen thousand in 2001."
"Nevertheless, under this provision the State must ensure that a person is detained in conditions which are compatible with respect for his human dignity, that the manner and method of the execution of the measure do not subject him to distress or hardship of an intensity exceeding the unavoidable level of suffering inherent in detention and that, given the practical demands of imprisonment, his health and well-being are adequately secure.
When assessing conditions of detention, account has to be taken of the cumulative effect of those conditions, as well as the specific allegations made by the applicant (see Dougoz v Greece, no. 40907/98 para 46 ECHR 2001 – II). (paragraph 95)".
"It was acknowledged that, for economic reasons, conditions of detention in Russia were very unsatisfactory and fell below the requirements set for penitentiary establishments in other member States of the Council of Europe. However, the Government were doing their best to improve conditions of detention in Russia. .."
The issue of Convention ground
Summary of Conclusions
I) In order to establish that military service gives rise to a real risk of persecution a claimant must first of all establish that he is a conscientious objector. However, in establishing this, a moral and ethical basis to his objections may be irrelevant unless they are so extreme as to engage Art 1F considerations[2]. To what extent it is relevant whether a person's objections are genuinely held will depend on the nature of the particular case.
II) Assuming a person can establish conscientious objection in this very broad sense, he can only show there is a real risk of persecution where one or more additional factors obtain:
(a) where the conditions of military service are themselves so harsh as to amount to persecution on the facts;
(b) where the military service to which he is called involves acts, with which he may be associated which are contrary to basic rules of human conduct as defined by international law;
(c) where the punishment in question is disproportionately harsh or severe.
III) Even if a person on the basis of one of these additional factors can establish a real risk of persecution, he will not qualify as a refugee unless he can further demonstrate that the persecution is by reason of a Refugee Convention ground (race, religion, etc).
IV) For a claimant to succeed under II (a), would require highly unusual circumstances.
V) For a claimant to succeed under II (b), he would need to show that the armed conflict in question was characterised by violations of the laws of war on a widespread and systematic basis and that he would be required to be an active participant in such violations.
VI) Where under II(c), as part of his punishment for draft evasion or desertion a claimant faces having to serve his sentence in poor prison conditions, he will not be able to succeed in showing he faces thereby a real risk of persecution or treatment contrary to his human rights unless the objective country materials disclose the existence of a consistent pattern of gross and systematic abuse of the human rights of (military) prisoners.
VII) The adjudicator was correct to conclude that the appellant in this case had failed to show that either the punishment he would receive as a deserter or the requirement that he perform military duties in Chechnya would give rise to a real risk of persecution or treatment contrary to his human rights.
72. For the above reasons this appeal is dismissed.
DR H H STOREY
VICE PRESIDENT
Note 1 The Tribunal has recently dealt with Art 1F cases in the starred determination of Gurung [2002] UKIAT 04870 [Back] Note 2 The Tribunal has recently dealt with Art 1F cases in the starred determination of Gurung [2002] UKIAT 04870, [2003] INLR 133. [Back]