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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 >> AR & FW, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Rev 1) [2009] EWCA Civ 1310 (04 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1310.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 1310, [2010] INLR 489 |
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C4/2009/0774 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
MR JUSTICE CRANSTON
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF MS, AR & FW |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Jason Beer (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: Thursday 5 November 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
16 (1) A person who may be required to submit to examination under paragraph 2 above may be detained under the authority of an immigration officer pending his examination and pending a decision to give or refuse him leave to enter.
(2) If there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that a person is someone in respect of whom directions may be given under any of paragraphs 8 to 10A or 12 to 14, that person may be detained under the authority of an immigration officer pending—
(a) a decision whether or not to give such directions;
(b) his removal in pursuance of such directions.
21(1) A person liable to detention or detained under paragraph 16 above may, under the written authority of an immigration officer, be temporarily admitted to the United Kingdom without being detained or released from detention; but this shall not prejudice a later exercise of the power to detain him.
(2) So long as a person is at large in the United Kingdom by virtue of this paragraph, he shall be subject to such restrictions as to residence, as to his employment or occupation and as to reporting to the police or an immigration officer as may from time to time be notified to him in writing by an immigration officer.
Construction of reference to person liable to detention
(1) This section applies to the construction of a provision which—
(a) does not confer power to detain a person, but
(b) refers (in any terms) to a person who is liable to detention under a provision of the Immigration Acts.
(2) The reference shall be taken to include a person if the only reason why he cannot be detained under the provision is that—
(a) he cannot presently be removed from the United Kingdom, because of a legal impediment connected with the United Kingdom's obligations under an international agreement,
(b) practical difficulties are impeding or delaying the making of arrangements for his removal from the United Kingdom, or
(c) practical difficulties, or demands on administrative resources, are impeding or delaying the taking of a decision in respect of him.
(3) This section shall be treated as always having had effect.
(1) A person arriving in the United Kingdom by ship or aircraft shall for purposes of this Act be deemed not to enter the United Kingdom unless and until he disembarks, and on disembarkation at a port shall further be deemed not to enter the United Kingdom so long as he remains in such area (if any) at the port as may be approved for this purpose by an immigration officer; and a person who has not otherwise entered the United Kingdom shall be deemed not to do so as long as he is detained, or temporarily admitted or released while liable to detention, under the powers conferred by Schedule 2 to this Act or by Part III of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999or section 62 of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 or by section 68 of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002.
……………..
(5) A person who enters the United Kingdom lawfully by virtue of section 8(1) above, and seeks to remain beyond the time limited by section 8(1), shall be treated for purposes of this Act as seeking to enter the United Kingdom.
39. …..In my judgment, the power to grant temporary admission contained in paragraph 21 of Schedule 2 of the 1971 Act is to be interpreted by reference to section 67 alone. Paragraph 21 does not itself confer a power to detain but refers to a person "liable to detention". Thus section 67 applies. The relevant issue is simply whether there are practical difficulties impeding or delaying the making of arrangements for removal from the United Kingdom.…. .
(i) AR is a Palestinian from the West Bank. Having failed in his claim for asylum he was given temporary admission in March 2004. Since then he has obtained a copy of his birth certificate, which includes the ID number that will have been on the identity card issued to him at birth. But he has been unable to obtain a travel document from the Palestinian General Delegation in London because these can only be issued in the West Bank or Gaza. For this, according to the Delegation, he needs either a relative or an agent with a power of attorney to go to the Ministry of the Interior in Ramallah and get a West Bank identity card and a travel document issued in his name. But the expert evidence is that even with a relative to make the application the chance of success is only about 10%, and that otherwise it is zero.
(ii) FW was born in Ethiopia of an Eritrean father, long settled in Ethiopia, and an Ethiopian mother. The adjudicator who dismissed her asylum and human rights claims accepted that she had never lived in Eritrea and had no known relatives there. Because of the recent history of annexation and secession, neither state is keen on accepting as its nationals persons who have ancestral links with the other state. But both, at least according to their embassies or consulates, will recognise a person as one of their nationals if one of that person's parents was one of their nationals. This means in theory that FW could obtain travel documents for return to either state.
In practice, Eritrea requires three Eritrean witnesses (of what is not clear), although it has now told the Home Office that it will interview any applicant needing documentation for removal. But Eritrea is in no true sense FW's country of origin: Ethiopia (for which fresh directions would have to be given) is. The Ethiopian embassy, however, has interviewed FW and has refused her a travel document on the ground that she is Eritrean. This appears to be contrary to the accommodation reached in 2003-4 for not treating Ethiopians of Eritrean descent as stateless; but it corresponds with the understanding of the US Department of Homeland Security that Ethiopia will only issue travel documents to people who prove, among other things, that both their parents were born in that country (which FW's father was not).
Cranston J at §23, however, cites a letter sent in February 2009 by the head of legal and consular affairs at the Ethiopian embassy, which says that "a person who was born to both or one Ethiopian parents is Ethiopian and entitled to have Ethiopian travel documents". The judge records, without comment, the Home Office's view that this letter "supersedes [FW's] previous dealings with the Ethiopian embassy" and enables her case to be resolved. Nothing is said about what the embassy will accept as proof that a parent is or was Ethiopian.
The day before we sat to hear these appeals the Home Office secured an interview for this appellant with the Ethiopian Embassy. We do not know the outcome.
(iii) MS is of Palestinian origin (which I take to mean was born in one of the occupied territories, but may mean that his parents or one of them was Palestinian) but has lived all his life in Saudi Arabia. His asylum claim, which was preceded by a history of sustained deceit, was rejected. It was part of his evidence that he still had family in Saudi Arabia and that he had been able to return there in 2002. He has Egyptian travel documents and Egypt is sometimes prepared to issue these to Palestinians who would otherwise be unable to travel, but they give the bearer no right of entry to or residence in Egypt. There appears, however, to be some possibility that Egypt will issue a visa, and the Home Office at the time of the hearing below was discussing the possibility of Egypt issuing MS with an emergency travel document.
41. In my view, even if cases involving legal difficulties fall outside the terms of section 67(2)(b), they would have to be legal difficulties arising from the law of one of the jurisdictions of the United Kingdom. Legal difficulties could not be constituted by the law of a foreign country. Quite apart from anything else, that is because of the forensic difficulties which would occur from the need to obtain expert evidence about the law of a foreign country. Expert evidence would be needed because as a matter of English law foreign law is a question of fact. But even if I am wrong in this and legal difficulties include legal difficulties constituted by foreign law, in my view there is no reason that those legal difficulties can not be at the same time practical difficulties within section 67(2)(b). It must surely often be the case that practical difficulties derive from legal difficulties. In my view the reference in section 67(2)(a) to the legal impediment constituted in the very specific way identified there does not detract from that conclusion.
42. The result is that, if I am satisfied that there are practical difficulties impeding or delaying the making of arrangements for the removal of these claimants from the United Kingdom, they are to be taken to be liable to detention by virtue of paragraph 16(2) of Schedule 2 of the 1971 Act. In other words, the grant to the claimants of temporary admission, and the detriments attached to it, would be lawful.
43. Assume, however, that this is not correct and that it is necessary to apply paragraph 16(2) of Schedule 2. In other words, the power to grant temporary admission is contingent on the Secretary of State satisfying me that each claimant's removal is "pending". It is pending in the terms Lord Brown's speech in Khadir if the Secretary of State intends to remove each claimant and there is "some prospect" of that claimant's removal.
32. The true position in my judgment is this. "Pending" in paragraph 16 means no more than "until". The word is being used as a preposition, not as an adjective. Paragraph 16 does not say that the removal must be "pending", still less that it must be "impending". So long as the Secretary of State remains intent upon removing the person and there is some prospect of achieving this, paragraph 16 authorises detention meanwhile. Plainly it may become unreasonable actually to detain the person pending a long delayed removal (ie throughout the whole period until removal is finally achieved). But that does not mean that the power has lapsed. He remains "liable to detention" and the ameliorating possibility of his temporary admission in lieu of detention arises under para 21.
(a) that legal difficulties fall outside s.67(2)(b) altogether; and
(b) that a point may come, short of sheer impossibility, when the prospect of removal is too remote to be regarded as merely a practical difficulty impeding or delaying removal.
Lord Justice Toulson:
"So long as the Secretary of State remains intent upon removing the person and there is some prospect of achieving this, paragraph 16 authorises detention meanwhile. Plainly it may become unreasonable actually to detain the person pending a long delay of removal (i.e. throughout the whole period until the removal is finally achieved). But that does not mean that the power has lapsed. He remains "liable to detention"…"
"…a provision which
a) does not confer power to detain a person, but
b) refers…to a person who is liable to detention under a provision…"
It thus refers to two different provisions.
"The reference [ie to a person who is liable to detention] shall be taken to include a person if the only reason why he cannot be detained under the provision is that…"
"What it [s 67] does is define what a reference in immigration legislation to being "liable to detention" means, making it clear that the term includes cases where the only reason the person cannot be detained at that precise moment is one of those specified in subsection (2)." (My italics)
Lord Justice Laws: