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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 >> LE (Democratic Republic of Congo) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 193 (13 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/193.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 193 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM & IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No. AS/04696/2004]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS
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LE (Democratic Republic of Congo) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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MR J EADIE (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tuckey:
"… a Registered Nurse (Mental Health) with additional specialist qualifications within Child & Adolescent Mental Health (ENB 603) to enable me to practice as an Advanced Nurse Specialist. I have worked for the Child & Adolescent Mental Health Services for 10 years, across various team settings".
"[The appellant] and A provided as much information as they possibly could, due to the language barrier, a lot of questions could not be answered (as an appropriate interpreter could not be found in time for the appointment).
A's low mood and negative thoughts are very much focused around his physical ill health and the bullying that he experiences within Priory School.
He wishes that these would stop and that would make everything happier, although he realises that his physical ill health will not change.
Upon exploration of A's mental health status, it all appears rather within the normal ranges, apart from his disturbed sleep and eating pattern, which again is mainly disturbed when he is in pain due to the sickle cell. On the whole he feels a fairly happy young man, except when he experiences pain or bullying, and at that time he makes negative comments about the value of his life."
The letter went on to set out what further steps Mr Sampson proposed in order to deal with A's and the appellant's health problems.
"… the situation regarding A has altered quite dramatically.
… During the course of this interview it transpired that this family have had an extremely traumatic time in the Congo, including different family members being kidnapped by political soldiers during the night, [the appellant] being raped and subsequently having A as a result of this, and the children being cared for by family friends who emotionally cared for the children, however may not have been physically appropriate with them. The family fled from the Congo to this country and are still here with no legal long term documents, their case is currently being review [sic] by the Home Office and it is feared that if it is rejected and the family sent back to the Congo, then Mum would be arrested upon return and the children would be sent to different family members to be cared for …
We feel … [the appellant] needs help in her own right and would benefit from psychological counselling, with an interpreter of course, to help her with some of her post traumatic difficulties and depressive thinking.
The children are obviously picking up on Mum's trauma and presenting with post traumatic stress syndrome behaviours themselves, and therefore I have subsequently referred A to [a named Child & Adolescent Psychotherapist] for a full assessment.
… I am writing to the school as A complains the bullying is carrying on, to see if we can alleviate this, and A himself is presenting with classic post traumatic stress behaviours and some depressive signs and symptoms, although we hope that through psychotherapy these will be alleviated. The main problem is that this family could be deported at any time and therefore we need to work with them sooner rather than later."
"… in a nutshell … it would mean the splitting up of his family unit, the loss of his mother and brother (in terms of death), no further treatment for his Sickle Cell Anaemia and his own arrest by political forces back in the DRC".
This report contains no diagnosis of PTSD and no reference to any assessment by the psychotherapist to whom Mr Sampson referred in his letter to the GP of 20 February.
"[We] treat with great caution the opinions of Mr Sampson. He is a nurse and is not qualified to diagnose PTSD. His complete change of opinions as to the magnitude of A's psychological problems is firmly based on a total acceptance of the account given to him of the family's experiences in the DCR and of the likelihood of the appellant being detained as a political prisoner on return and the children therefore being abandoned.
"We have rejected the account of past traumas and the claimed risk of the appellant being separated from her family on return. We are satisfied from the oral evidence as to [a friend's] loyalty and perseverance on the family's behalf that any suggestion of abuse within her care should be discounted. We are concerned that the very understandable moments of anguish and despair suffered by the appellant and her son as a result of his illness, of their separation from friends and family and of the uncertainty of these proceedings have been magnified into psychological/psychiatric illnesses."
"We are satisfied that the appellant and her son are sufficiently stable to be able to overcome the disappointment of the final removal decision without resorting to suicide. Neither has attempted self-harm. Neither has been hospitalised as being mentally at risk and Mr Sampson's views, untrammelled by the history of past abuse which we have rejected, was that A had no real mental health needs. They are already in the care of very committed health/welfare professionals who could help them manage the problem. It is for the appellant and for A's counsellors in this country to disabuse him of the likelihood of his mother being thus imprisoned and taken away from him."
"No evidence has been put forward to persuade us that the risk of either A or his mother attempting to take their lives on return would approach the threshold of Article 3. We are satisfied from the objective evidence that there are medical facilities in the DRC and that the appellant could continue to manage any depression with the mild anti-depressants which have sustained her here."
"On her own account the appellant has stated that A did receive medical treatment to manage his bouts of extreme pain [in Kinshasa]. There is no evidence … as to medical treatment even in this country which can wipe out the source of these unpleasant symptoms, including that of the hip joint pain. There is objective evidence as to a specific specialised sickle cell unit being available in Kinshasa. The appellant and her husband were living in Kinshasa before and she can resettle there with access to this medical treatment and with the support of at least one very good friend."
Lady Justice Arden:
Lord Justice Lawrence Collins:
Order: Appeal dismissed.