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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> RK (Serbia) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 726 (02 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/726.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 726 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM & IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No. AS/21484/2004]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
and
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
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RK (Serbia) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
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Mr C Bourne (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards:
"7. The Adjudicator accepted that the Appellant is an ethnic Roma [currently aged 62] who spent his life in northern Mitrovica [that is the Serb-dominated part of the town that lies to the north of the River Iber]. He never left that area, until he came to the UK by lorry in September 2004 with his wife. His wife is a Bosniac.
"8. He noted that the Appellant at no time lived in the Roma community. His parents were both Roma, but his father was a driver/mechanic working at Trepca Mine and distanced himself from Roma. The family enjoyed a good standard of living settled in the general community. The Appellant spoke Albanian and Serbian and attended primary and secondary education after which he gained a Diploma in Technology. His parents used the Albanian language at home and taught him no Romany. His friends were mainly Albanians and Bosnians and he only knew 3 or 4 other Roma.
"9. He worked as an engineer until 1990 and owned his own flat. In 1990 he was dismissed from his employment, but he and his wife became domestic employees of a Hungarian dentist, Zharko Kuzeljevic. He did gardening, housework and cleaning whilst his wife looked after Zharko's young daughter who was very ill and later died in February 2004.
"10. The Adjudicator accepted the Appellant's account of how he became 'caught up' in the hostilities between Serbs and Albanians. On 25th March 1999 three masked men searched his flat and took money, but after that they came for him three days later and made him (along with other Roma) assist with removal of Albanian corpses from one of the bridges over the River Iber. They were taken for burial in a mass grave. The day after, he was again made to help with burial duties, this time in southern Mitrovica. He was concerned that he had been seen by Albanians with the corpses. The following month the masked men came again for the Appellant and enlisted his help with looting the properties of Albanians who had been expelled from Mitrovica. The Appellant was never involved in the killing of Albanians and was never subsequently threatened or attacked by Albanians.
"11. As from mid-June 1999, Mitrovica was a divided city, north and south, with French NATO troops in the north to keep the peace. From September 1999, the Appellant and his wife were sheltered in 'a small clinic' [presumably the surgery] in Zharko's garden and did not dare to leave the premises. The Appellant felt unsafe in his area, because many Roma were beaten by Serbs. He recalled the inter-ethnic violence of mid-March 2004 and said that on the evening of 15th March a hand-grenade was thrown into Zharko's garden, but no-one saw those responsible. Next day, a group of people came carrying long truncheons to the property and beat the Appellant and his wife. KFOR troops arrived and the perpetrators left. They had been warned that they were living in Serbian land. UNMlK took a statement from the Appellant and promised to maintain more frequent patrols in the area.
"12. The Adjudicator noted that the Appellant told him he had experienced no problems from Albanians and there had been no problems either from Serbs between May 1999 and March 2004. This is with the exception of two assaults upon his wife. She had on an occasion in July 1999 been attacked in a local shop when a kettle of hot water was thrown over her and her hair was pulled. It was claimed that there was a later incident in September 2004 when an attempts had been made to kidnap her from Zharko's garden, but this had been foiled by the chance passing of a KFOR patrol. The adjudicator did not believe this last incident.
"13. In May 2004, the Appellant sold his flat to Zharko to raise the funds for he and his wife to be taken out of Kosovo to the UK by lorry. The arrangements made by Zharko took several months to bring to fruition."
The judge stated that he had to accept those findings of fact and then make an assessment of risk on return for this particular appellant and his wife to their home area of northern Mitrovica.
"37. Evaluating all that is before me, I conclude that there is not a real risk that this Appellant would be persecuted currently for a Refugee Convention reason upon return to north Mitrovica. There is not a reasonable degree of likelihood that he would be identified as a Roma. He is not dark-skinned and does not have markedly Roma features. He is a man of mature years and good education. He is married to a Bosniac. He is not a typical Roma. He has never been a part of the Roma community, but has always lived alongside Serbs in the general community. The claim was made that he speaks Albanian with a Roma accent and would be recognised by this, but no attempt has been made to show that this is so. The Adjudicator gave cogent reasons for disbelieving that he has a distinguishable accent. Albanian is his mother tongue that he has used all his life, living, attending school and then during his working life in Mitrovica outside the Roma community (with few Roma acquaintances). He speaks Serbian also and communicates with his wife in that medium. This is the language he would presumably use when talking to Serbs.
"38. Even if he should be recognised as a Roma married to a Bosniac, his past history does not support the claim that he has faced persecution. He lived all his life in northern Mitrovica, worked for years as an engineer and purchased a flat. He has never lived in the Roma community and has had no need to do so, or to take refuge in a camp. The facts found by the Adjudicator are that he encountered some problems towards the end of the war in 1999, when he was unwillingly made to help to bury Albanian corpses two days running and he was later made to help loot the homes of Albanians who had been driven out of the area. These were no doubt distasteful experiences, but were of limited duration and at a time of extreme strife. I do not find they to amount to persecution. It was not until nearly 5 years later that he again was touched personally by the ethnic problems, when a hand grenade was thrown into the garden of his employer's home where he was living. This occurred on 15th March 2004-the height of the inter-ethnic riots. The Appellant said that the culprits were unknown and were not caught, but he blamed Serbs and said it had been motivated by the presence of himself and his wife staying in the Dentist's surgery.
39. This is an implausible explanation for the occurrence. The events in Mitrovica, as the reports in the Appellant's bundle show, were in the form of an advance by angry Albanians across the bridge from the South into the Serb-held area and was repulsed by French KFOR troops. There was fire returned by Serbs and a report of one hand grenade being thrown. The reports are detailed, but include no mention of any backlash against ethnic minorities resident within the Northern City. Upon the basis of the material I have seen, I accept to the lower standard of proof that there was an explosion in the garden of the Appellant's employer, but there is no evidence as to motivation. The Appellant's explanation is pure speculation. Given the events that were taking place, the incident is far more likely to have been a random and non-targeted act, possibly by the Albanians.
"40. There was one further incident the following day, when the Adjudicator accepted that the Appellant and his wife were assaulted in the surgery by a group carrying truncheons and they were warned to leave the Serb area, before troops came to their aid. This appears to have been an isolated incident at a time of great tension. The KFOR troops restored order and promised to maintain a more regular patrol of the area. There was no repetition of the incident, notwithstanding that the Appellant and his wife remained there for a further 6 months. I conclude that the facts bear out that there was a sufficiency of protection by KFOR and also that there was no systematic targeting of the Appellant.
"41. The Appellant claimed that he fears targeting by extremist Albanians on account of his being seen as a Serb collaborator. I do not accept this. Firstly, he helped the Serbs only briefly and several years ago and on an involuntary basis. Secondly, there is no credible evidence that he ever came to be identified by Albanians. Thirdly, even if he were to be so targeted, north Mitrovica is a Serb stronghold and would not be accessible to Albanians. If he were a target, he would have been killed during the 5 years since 1999.
"42. The Appellant claimed, at a very late stage in the appeal proceedings, that he fears being silenced by Serbs who may believe he could give evidence of their war crimes. The timing of this claim gives the lie to the claim. If he had genuine concerns, he would have raised it earlier. In any event, the men who pressed him into helping them in 1999 were said to have worn masks, so that the Appellant could not identify them. Furthermore, he lived in the Serb community for 5 years after that time and no-one took action against him, as they surely would have. He and his wife were the live-in domestics of a dentist during this time, but this was hardly a secure or secret place, as it would have been accessible to a section of the public who were patients. There is not a reasonable degree of likelihood that he would be at real risk on this account."
Lord Justice Ward:
Lord Justice Thomas: