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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 >> TD (Ivory Coast) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 123 (06 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/123.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 123 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No. HX/06169/2004]
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS
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TD (Ivory Coast) | CLAIMANT/APPELLANT | |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
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MR PATEL (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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"However, what she endured in the past, that is harassment, difficulties with customers, having to bribe officials and the unfortunate rape and her father's and sister's problems, in my view, although tragic and deeply unpleasant do not, in my view, engage the Refugee Convention and is possible harassment not tantamount to persecution."
And in paragraph 15:
"… the brutal rape of herself in the forest by two police officers … I find that, whilst it is possible that she may have indeed been raped, it is not necessarily the case that this was for a Convention reason, but may have been the act of ill-disciplined officers".
"Apparently, according to the adjudicator, the rape of the applicant by police officers and the rape and subsequent murder of the applicant's sister by police officers, amount to no more than 'harassment' of insufficient severity to amount to persecution … It is submitted that the adjudicator is in manifest error of law."
Alternatively it was contended:
"[in paragraph 15] the adjudicator is in manifest error of law, firstly by effectively inverting the 'standard of proof' (clearly what matters is whether it may have been for a Convention reason rather whether it may not have been) … and secondly by failing to realise that the rape of the applicant by police officers could well be both for reason of their hostility towards her as a person of mixed ethnicity whom they perceived as non-Ivorian and also for other reasons."
"The appellant's credibility was accepted. She was raped in 1999 by police following a protest … and again in 2000 because she had gone to a demonstration … We considered that the adjudicator was in error in describing this treatment as harassment not tantamount to persecution. Consideration should have been given to the question whether the appellant would be bound on return to continue her previous behaviour and what the consequences would have been. In view of the refusal to grant her a passport and the participation of the police in her ill-treatment the question of sufficiency of protection for people in her position also arises, which would also be relevant to the possibility of internal relocation."
The tribunal gave directions to the parties which included the following:
"The reconsideration is limited to the following issues:
Risk on return and relocation, based upon original adjudicator's credibility findings."
"During the hearing before us it was accepted that we would have to assess the appellant's account, as previously accepted, against the known objective background material on the Ivory Coast as at present, in order to determine whether the appellant had indeed a well founded fear of persecution if she were presently returned to the Ivory Coast. As a result of what had occurred in the past we would have to asses whether the appellant was at risk in future based on her membership of a minority ethnic group …"
This suggests that Mr Jorro's understanding of the position was correct.
"This was clearly in our view, the outrageous and unlawful behaviour of an uncontrolled unit of the police force. It was plainly not something which was directed at the appellant because of her Peuhl ethnicity or anything to do with her perceived French descent. The appellant in no way sought the protection of the authorities by reporting the incident either to NGOs or to the authorities themselves despite the fact that rape is a crime under Côte d'Ivoire law."
Of the second rapes they say:
"Again, in our view, this did not show that the appellant was being targeted specifically or that she was being targeted because of her Peuhl ethnic background or her French descent. They were plainly isolated acts of a criminal nature. Again, we noted that the appellant did not report the matter to the authorities or seek the protection of anybody in the Côte d'Ivoire."
Of the earlier incident when she was held in the police station, they say:
"She was taken to the police station where she was ill treated and questioned about her origins and then released. Again there was no evidence that this was specifically directed at her because of her ethnic origins or French descent."
And finally they said:
"Furthermore, apart from isolated acts of violence against her, which are, we accept, totally unacceptable and are nothing short of outrageous criminal behaviour, there is absolutely no evidence that she is being targeted specifically because of her ethnic background, nor is there any evidence in the objective material before us to suggest that the Peuhl people are specifically targeted by the authorities or by anyone else in the Côte d'Ivoire, which would put the appellant at risk. We find that the actions that she has complained of are isolated acts of a criminal nature falling short of persecution."
"… the appellant is not at risk because of her ethnic background either as a Peuhl or because of her perceived French descent".
"This is a case in which, had I retained the power to do so, I should have consulted the parties with a view to setting aside the impugned decision and ordering a rehearing."
That, for the reasons I have given, is what should happen.
"… who became visibly upset during the proceedings, which were not lengthy, predicated her appeal on a fear of persecution in the Ivory Coast because of her mixed ethnicity".
"Her credibility was not overtly challenged in the refusal letter, nor at the hearing when she was not cross examined in any detail and I therefore accept that the events which she described in the past may well have occurred and I also believe that it is likely that she is of the Peuhl tribe and of mixed tribal background, as claimed."
Order: Appeal allowed.