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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 >> Hatungimana v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2006] EWCA Civ 231 (21 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/231.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 231 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT NO. AS/49711/2003]
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
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HATUNGIMANA | CLAIMANT/APPELLANT | |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR R TAM (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor of London, WC2B 4TS) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
"… an overwhelmingly Hutu party - FRODEBU. Very few Tutsis have gone so far as to join FRODEBU. Many members of FRODEBU joined the anti-Government rebel movement. Extremist Tutsis believe that FRODEBU is a racist anti-Tutsi party. Tutsis would view any Tutsi who would join FRODEBU as the worst kind of traitor."
"It is implausible that the Appellant's husband would join such a party but it is even more implausible that he would join such a party and his friends and neighbours would be aware of that fact. The Appellant has stated that her husband kept his membership of FRODEBU low profile. If that was the case, it is implausible that the Appellant would discover from other people that he had joined the Nyangoma Wing of FRODEBU. In interview, in answer to Q44, the Appellant said that she obtained this information from other people rather than from her husband. I do not accept that the Appellant's husband would allow such information to spread, that he had joined the Hutu party and risk being viewed as a traitor by Tutsis."
"… always thought that he was being looked for by soldiers and he had either been kidnapped or killed. It was a very delicate period of change. We were waiting for political change."
No doubt she was referring to the change of power to a Hutu president, which was to take place in April. She did not really know why she was thinking of soldiers. It is not wholly clear from that evidence whether she was talking about armed forces or the militia, of which evidence was also given. At any rate, she said that she called the security agents that day because she did not suspect the government at that time to be responsible for his disappearance. She thought that by contacting the authorities at that point, they could actually help her to find out whether her husband had been the victim of a car accident or whether there had been some fight which required police attention. She said that she always maintained that her husband could have been killed, either as a result of his Tutsi ethnicity or his political opinion, by government agents or by FRODEBU party members.
In cross-examination she said she did not follow up the matter with the authorities because she was afraid that her husband had been killed by Tutsi extremists in the army, who might also kill her. The expert, Professor Longman, said that the army and the police were overwhelmingly Tutsi and that there are both moderate Tutsi and Hutu in the police force. The immigration judge said in paragraph 54:
"I do not accept that the Appellant's husband was abducted as I do not accept it is plausible that he was a member of FRODEBU. If the Appellant's husband had been abducted and she feared that Tutsis in authority might have been responsible, I do not accept that she would have approached the authorities to assist her in investigating his disappearance."
"Do you recognise me? Do you want to get ready for my visit to your place as we will be there soon."
They did not say who they were.
"If the appellant was wanted by extremist Tutsis or Hutus, she was living in the family home for four months without her husband. I do not accept that she would have been warned. If she was a target she could have been attacked at any time.
"56. I do not accept that the Appellant received threatening telephone calls from rebels or that they attacked her home because of her husband's political views or her ethnicity. I reject her evidence that neighbours heard men attacking her home, asking where the Appellant was. Her case is that her house was specifically attacked. I do not accept that neighbours would be able to hear shouts directed at the Appellant when the Appellant's home was the subject of a fierce attack. If men had wished to abduct or kill the appellant, they could have taken her when they wished, and I do not accept that they would attempt to do so when she was away from home on business. I do not accept that they would warn her by threatening telephone calls. If the Appellant did receive telephone calls threatening her, I do not accept that she would have remained at home. I reject her evidence that her home was specifically targeted. I find that if her home had been attacked, she could have sought the assistance of the authorities as she did when her husband disappeared."
"As someone with a Tutsi father and Hutu mother, she is in a small category of those with mixed ethnicities. There is little place in Burundi today for people who are 'in between' ethnicities. You must be either Hutu or Tutsi. As Burundi has become more segregated, those with mixed ethnicities have become increasingly vulnerable. Their mixed blood makes them suspect. They have been forced to prove their loyalties and those who have refused to side clearly with their ethnic groups have been seen as ethnic traitors. The appellant's family would be unwelcome in both Hutu and Tutsi neighbourhoods and would be at risk in both."
"I asked Miss Plimmer to point me to evidence in the objective bundle submitted by the Appellant, or in the CIPU, that people of mixed ethnicity are targeted in Burundi. I have given this matter careful consideration. If 85% of the population are Hutus and 15% are Tutsis in a population of over 6 million, there must be many mixed marriages. This was confirmed in oral evidence by Ms Mossi. CIPU 2003 said that children of mixed marriages may face problems with Hutu or Tutsi extremists. Ms Mossi is of the opinion that people of mixed ethnicity are persecuted. She witnessed people suffering isolation when she worked in Burundi. Professor Longman points out that people of mixed ethnicity might be seen as traitors in either Hutu or Tutsi neighbourhoods. There is no objective evidence to support the contention of the Appellant that as a person of mixed ethnicity she would be persecuted. Her children are three-quarters Tutsi. She lived in a Tutsi area. She worked as a teacher in a state school. I do not accept that with her qualifications and the physical appearance of her children, she would be a target because of her mixed ethnicity. This proposition is simply not supported by the objective evidence."
Order: Appeal approved.