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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Gurung v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2003] EWCA Civ 654 (1 May 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/654.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 654 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE IMMIGRATION APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BUXTON
and
LORD JUSTICE RIX
____________________
SHYAM BAHADUR GURUNG | Appellant | |
-v- | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 020 7404 1400 Fax: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss P Whipple (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
(AS APPROVED BY THE COURT)
©CROWN COPYRIGHT
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE WARD:I will ask Lord Justice Buxton to give the first judgment.
LORD JUSTICE BUXTON:
"The Appellant became a member of the Communist Party of Nepal - Maoist (CPN) on 10 January 1996. In February 1997 he became the General Secretary of the student branch of the party at the Pokhara Pritchibi Narayan Campus for a period of three years. He says he does not believe or participate in violence himself and considered that this was the work of extremists. At all events, he was arrested by the police on 26 August 1999 for distributing party newsletters and brochures. He was subjected to verbal abuse but was released after payment of a fine. Three months later there was a fire on the campus and the police declared him and other Maoist activists as the culprits. As a result he stopped going to college and went into hiding. The police visited his home several times to look for him and questioned his parents and little sister. A warrant for his arrest was issued and served at his home. It was a nationwide warrant which meant that he would be arrested anywhere in Nepal. The warrant was produced to the Adjudicator. It made no reference to a fire at the campus but referred to the Appellant causing an obstruction to peace and security and cited his support of the Maoists."
"In this appeal the Appellant was not merely a sympathiser of CPN. He was a member from 1996. Then he became the leader of CPN students in his college campus from 1999, three years after the insurgency began. In national terms his office would be seen as low level, but locally it would be significant and would be bound to attract the attention of the authorities. The Appellant said he was not in favour of violence. With all due respect he could not, at least by 1999, have been under any illusions as to the extreme violence undertaken by his party in pursuance of its insurgency, or credibly pretend ignorance that his active support for it, even if personally non-violent, advanced its cause and was illegal. In claiming now that he would continue his support if returned, he shows that even after having access in the United Kingdom to information about the true nature of CPN, he would still participate in a party that commits murder. He would also be supporting a party that is trying to subvert the elections in November.
If there was a fire on his campus in 1999 - and the Appellant confirmed that there was - it is perfectly reasonable that the authorities would link it to CPN. Murder and sabotage is its hallmark. He would be a natural object of suspicion."
"In the context of the campaign of violence being waged by CPN, the Adjudicator was fully entitled to find that the authorities would have a legitimate interest in the Appellant. Given his admitted membership of CPN, and the fire on the campus, they would have a legitimate basis for investigation and potentially prosecution if there was sufficient evidence. Such a prosecution cannot in the view of the Tribunal be characterised as persecutory per se as claimed."
"There is a mention in the objective material of the use of torture on occasion to extract information and confessions from detainees, but there is no evidence that this is widespread or endemic. The Appellant was not ill treated when he was arrested earlier in 1999 having been caught distributing CPN literature. The Appellant has been out of the country since late 1999 and has never been engaged in any acts of violence. He has been in the UK throughout the period of the state of emergency. He was only involved with CPN as a student. Given his stated opposition to violence he would not engage in it on return. He does not have the profile that might expose him to any real risk of significant adverse interest or ill-treatment in detention. Nor, given his profile and history, is there any real risk that he would be seen as sufficiently important by the police that there would be a real risk he would be targeted personally or disappear in detention, or otherwise face persecution or ill-treatment in breach of his human rights."
We do not know and have not been shown in any detail the objective material upon which that conclusion was reached, but on its face it is a conclusion of the kind that is well within the jurisdiction of the tribunal to reach, granted that it is an assessment by an expert tribunal of the state of affairs in the country of return, and of the particular impact upon this appellant, with his history, of that state of affairs.
"If the Nepalese authorities saw the appellant as a member of the CPN (Maoist) party, it was difficult to see that they would limit themselves to a legitimate process of prosecution. Going by the objective country materials placed before us, we see no reason to differ from the conclusions reached by the Tribunal in Rajesh Gurung and subsequent cases such as Prakesh Sharma [2002] UKIAT 02943 and Hane [2002] UKIAT 03945. Indeed, in our view the more comprehensive and in some respects more recent objective materials placed before us serve only to confirm the findings of fact reached by the Tribunal in these cases to the effect that someone currently viewed as a Maoist would face persecution rather than simple prosecution."
The tribunal continued, at paragraph 139:
"... these materials do indicate that the use of torture, disappearances, and arbitrary detention remains widespread, particularly in areas affected by the Maoist insurgency. Whilst extrajudicial killings have not been widespread, most of those concerned were suspected of being sympathisers with the Maoists. ... Reports of government excesses against Maoists in the early part of 2002 in the context of police and military drives against the Maoists are particularly alarming."
At paragraph 140 the tribunal said:
"In view of the considerable body of evidence showing that Maoists are far more likely to experience torture and ill treatment in detention, such persecution would also demonstrably be for a Convention reason of political opinion."
LORD JUSTICE RIX:
LORD JUSTICE WARD: