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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 >> Secretary of State for the Home Department v Abdi [2011] EWCA Civ 242 (09 March 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2011/242.html Cite as: [2011] EWCA Civ 242 |
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C4/2010/2742 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
MR JUSTICE DAVIS
MR JUSTICE MITTING
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
____________________
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HASSAN ABDI |
Respondent |
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AFRAH KHALAF |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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Mr Raza Husain QC and Ms Laura Dubinsky (instructed by Birnberg Peirce & Partners) for the Respondent in the case of Hassan Abdi
Mr Raza Husain QC and Mr Rory Dunlop (instructed by Duncan Lewis & Co) for the Appellant in the case of Afrah Khalaf
Mr Robin Tam QC and Ms Sarah Hannett (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent in the case of Afrah Khalaf
Hearing dates: 8th to 10th February 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
All three members of the court have contributed to the judgment which follows.
The issue
The law
Detention or control pending deportation
2 (1) Where a recommendation for deportation made by a court is in force in respect of any person, and that person is not detained in pursuance of the sentence or order of any court, he shall, unless the court by which the recommendation is made otherwise directs or a direction is given under sub-paragraph (1A) below, be detained pending the making of a deportation order in pursuance of the recommendation, unless the Secretary of State directs him to be released pending further consideration of his case or he is released on bail.E+W+S+N.I.
(1A)Where—
(a) a recommendation for deportation made by a court on conviction of a person is in force in respect of him; and
(b) he appeals against his conviction or against that recommendation,
the powers that the court determining the appeal may exercise include power to direct him to be released without setting aside the recommendation.
(2) Where notice has been given to a person in accordance with regulations under section 105 of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 (notice of decision) of a decision to make a deportation order against him, and he is not detained in pursuance of the sentence or order of a court , he may be detained under the authority of the Secretary of State pending the making of the deportation order.
(3) Where a deportation order is in force against any person, he may be detained under the authority of the Secretary of State pending his removal or departure from the United Kingdom (and if already detained by virtue of sub-paragraph (1) or (2) above when the order is made, shall continue to be detained unless he is released on bail or the Secretary of State directs otherwise).
There is no dispute as to the principles that fall to be applied in the present case. They were stated by Woolf J in Re Hardial Singh [1984] 1 WLR 704, 706D in the passage quoted by Simon Brown LJ at paragraph 9 above. This statement was approved by Lord Browne-Wilkinson in Tan Te Lam v Tai A Chau Detention Centre [1997] AC 97, 111A-D in the passage quoted by Simon Brown LJ at paragraph 12 above. In my judgment, Mr Robb correctly submitted that the following four principles emerge:
i) The Secretary of State must intend to deport the person and can only use the power to detain for that purpose;
ii) The deportee may only be detained for a period that is reasonable in all the circumstances;
iii) If, before the expiry of the reasonable period, it becomes apparent that the Secretary of State will not be able to effect deportation within that reasonable period, he should not seek to exercise the power of detention;
iv) The Secretary of State should act with the reasonable diligence and expedition to effect removal.
It is not possible or desirable to produce an exhaustive list of all the circumstances that are or may be relevant to the question of how long it is reasonable for the Secretary of State to detain a person pending deportation pursuant to paragraph 2(3) of schedule 3 to the Immigration Act 1971. But in my view they include at least: the length of the period of detention; the nature of the obstacles which stand in the path of the Secretary of State preventing a deportation; the diligence, speed and effectiveness of the steps taken by the Secretary of State to surmount such obstacles; the conditions in which the detained person is being kept; the effect of detention on him and his family; the risk that if he is released from detention he will abscond; and the danger that, if released, he will commit criminal offences.
The present state of affairs
In our judgment, the fact that a FNP is refusing to return voluntarily, or is refusing to cooperate in his return (for example, by refusing to apply for an emergency travel document, as initially did WL) is relevant to the assessment of the legality of his continued detention: see R (A) v Secretary of State for the Home Department cited below. So is the fact that the period of his detention has been increased, and his deportation postponed, by his pursuit of appeals and judicial review proceedings seeking to challenge his deportation order or his application for asylum or leave to remain, particularly if his applications and appeals are obviously unmeritorious. In our judgment, as a matter of principle, a FNP cannot complain of the prolongation of his detention if it is caused by his own conduct.
The Abdi case
79. In conclusion therefore, I find on the evidence that thus far Mr Abdi has not been unlawfully detained so as to entitle him to damages. But in all the circumstances he should now be released, as I conclude, on the application of Hardial Singh principles. Clearly I would impose conditions as to the terms of his release, and I will hear counsel on that. Mr Abdi will understand that if he reoffends, or otherwise breaches the terms of the conditions, he will not be saved from prospective further detention.
The Khalaf case
32. Applying those principles to the facts of this case, it is clear that the claimant's appeals and application to the Strasbourg Court are going effectively to be determined by some time in early 2011. By that time he will have been detained, even on a pessimistic view, for significantly less than two years, a period which, even after appeal rights have been exhausted, has been held not to be unreasonable in a string of domestic cases.
These appeals
76. Given all these circumstances, I think that the time has come in this particular case to say that enough is enough here. The relevant legal proceedings are likely to go on for a long time, so far as concerns Mr Abdi, potentially even running into years. It is time now, in my view, that Mr Abdi be released from detention and I so order. Rejecting, as I do, Mr Tam's argument that the court should ignore any period of time, whether in the past or hereafter to be spent in detention, whilst Mr Abdi is pursuing his appeal and any other related litigation, I do not think that it can now be said that Mr Abdi will be or is likely to be removed within a reasonable time; and I think that by now a reasonable period of time for detaining him has elapsed.
28. I am unconvinced that, save in exceptional circumstances where in truth no final point can be put upon the litigation, the fact that the claimant is detained while he pursues his remedies by way of appeal or application is simply a factor to be taken into account rather than a factor which is to be discounted in assessing the period, for the purpose of Hardial Singh principles for which it is reasonable for him to be detained.
(i) There being no realistic prospect of removal within a reasonable time, the power of detention had in any event lapsed before the hearing.
(ii) Detention had in any event by then exceeded a reasonable time.
(iii) If, which is contested, anything more is required than reliance on the unlawful policy nothing less than inevitability of continued detention will suffice.
To count or to discount?
112. The Court recalls that it is not in dispute that Mr Chahal has been detained "with a view to deportation" within the meaning of Article 5(1)(f). (Art. 5(1)(f)) does not demand that the detention of a person against whom action is being taken with a view to deportation be reasonably considered necessary, for example to prevent his committing an offence or fleeing; in this respect Article 5 (1)(f) provides a different level of protection from Article 5 (1)(c).
Indeed, all that is required under this provision is that "action is being taken with a view to deportation". It is therefore immaterial, for the purposes of Article 5(1)(f) whether the underlying decision to expel can be justified under national or Convention law.
113. The Court recalls, however, that any deprivation of liberty under Article 5(1)(f), will be justified only for as long as deportation proceedings are in progress. If such proceedings are not prosecuted with due diligence, the detention will cease to be permissible under Article 5(1)(f).
It is thus necessary to determine whether the duration of the deportation proceedings was excessive.
114. The period under consideration commenced on 16 August 1990, when Mr Chahal was first detained with a view to deportation. It terminated on 3 March 1994, when the domestic proceedings came to an end with the refusal of the House of Lords to allow leave to appeal Although he has remained in custody until the present day, this latter period must be distinguished because during this time the Government have refrained from deporting him in compliance with the request made by the Commission under Rule 36 of its Rules of Procedure.
115. The Court has had regard to the length of time taken for the various decisions in the domestic proceedings.
As regards the decisions taken by the Secretary of State to refuse asylum, it does not consider that the periods were excessive, bearing in mind the detailed and careful consideration required for the applicant's request for political asylum and the opportunities afforded to the latter to make representations and submit information.
116. In connection with the judicial review proceedings before the national courts, it is noted that Mr Chahal's first application was made on 9 August 1991 and that a decision was reached on it by Mr Justice Popplewell on 2 December 1991. He made a second application on 16 July 1992, which was heard between 18 and 21 December 1992, judgment being given on 12 February 1993. The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal against this decision on 22 October 1993 and refused him leave to appeal to the House of Lords. The House of Lords similarly refused leave to appeal on 3 March 1994.
117. As the Court has observed in the context of Article 3 (art. 3), Mr Chahal's case involves considerations of an extremely serious and weighty nature. It is neither in the interests of the individual applicant nor in the general public interest in the administration of justice that such decisions be taken hastily, without due regard to all the relevant issues and evidence
33. Is it relevant to the question posed in this case that ever since 9 April 2001 (ie from just two months after the period of administrative detention began) the appellant has been pursuing a claim for asylum which would in any event have prevented his being returned to Afghanistan? This, to my mind, is the critical issue in the case.
34. That a prolonged period of detention pending the final resolution of an asylum claim is sometimes permissible cannot be doubted: Chahal -v- United Kingdom (1996) 23 EHRR 413 illustrates the point well. The applicant was a Sikh separatist leader detained in custody for the purpose of deportation for some 3½ years (until the House of Lords' final refusal of leave to appeal). The reason for his long detention pending removal, however, was because the Secretary of State regarded him as a threat to national security; but for his asylum claim there would have been no difficulty in returning him; on the contrary, the Indian government were anxious to secure his return.
35. What Chahal illustrates is that a detained asylum seeker cannot invoke the delay necessarily occasioned by his own asylum claim (and any subsequent appeal(s)) to contend that his removal is clearly "not going to be possible within a reasonable time", so that he must be released. That, however, is by no means to say that where, as here, a detainee, whom for reasons quite other than his asylum claim the Secretary of State is unable to remove, chooses during his detention to claim asylum, that claim, whilst unresolved, precludes his asserting that limitation 2 of the Hardial Singh principles is not satisfied. Nor, indeed, did Mr Robb for the Secretary of State put it that high. On the contrary, he made little of the point and suggested no more than that this appellant's asylum claim is a factor in the case.
36. What, then, should the approach be? For my part I found the following illustration (suggested by Mr Nicol) a useful one. Prior to September 11 there was no question of returning Afghanis to Afghanistan. Consider during that period the position of two prospective deportees, one of whom claims asylum, the other not. Could it seriously be argued that there was power to detain the first but not the second? Surely not. Consider, indeed, this very case. The Secretary of State, as it happens, was prepared to regard the appellant's invalid destination appeal in April 2001 as a fresh asylum application (see paragraph 3 above). Assume that he had not done so - or, indeed, assume that the fresh claim (and the subsequent appeal process) had been determined rather more expeditiously (as, perhaps, it should have been). It would then be clear that it was the political impossibility of removing the appellant which alone was responsible for his continuing detention. Should his position be worse because he can seek to take his asylum claim further still? And would it then improve if he chose not to? The answer to these questions is surely no. I am not saying that if, for whatever reason, whilst a properly detained asylum seeker's claim is being resolved, a short-term political difficulty arises which would in any event have delayed his return, he thereby necessarily become entitled to be released. I do, however, say that where, as here, there has been no lengthening whatever of the detention period as a result of the asylum claim, the relevant and substantial cause of the detainee's non-removal should be regarded as the political impossibility of returning him, rather than his claim for asylum.
55. As regards the relevance of the appellant's asylum claim and appeal, I agree that for the reasons given by Simon Brown LJ, this is not material to the reasonableness of the length of detention. The reality in the present case is that the appellant has been detained "pending removal" since 7 February 2001, and that, as a matter of fact, the reason why he has not been removed is not because he has been pursuing an asylum claim. It is because the Secretary of State is unable to remove persons to Afghanistan whom he wishes to deport to that country.
134. The Court notes that in the present case the applicant remained in detention between February 25, 2004 and March 14, 2005, that is, for 12 months and 18 days. As the Government admitted in its observations and has been stated on several occasions by the domestic authorities, the proceedings relating to his extradition were "suspended" for most of that period. While the Government referred to the interim measure indicated by the Court under r.39 of the Rules of Court, this argument cannot be employed as a justification for the indefinite detention of persons without resolving their legal status. In the present case it does not appear that the applicant's detention was in fact justified by the pending extradition proceedings, in the absence of any such decision taken to date. This finding is exacerbated by the Court's conclusion above in relation to art.3 that no proper evaluation of the applicant's allegations under art.3 has taken place in the meantime. The Court therefore finds that the proceedings concerning the applicant's detention were not carried out with the requisite diligence.
135. There has therefore been a violation of art.5(1)(f) of the Convention on account of the unlawful nature of the applicant's detention and the absence of the requisite diligence in the conduct of the proceedings.
Discussion
"Moreover, by the use of the word 'generally' Mitting J may well only have been indicating what the position is, as it very often is, in many cases and no doubt properly considered so to be; but nevertheless in a way admitting of exceptions. If so, then I would not disagree. But if Mitting J was intending to go further and is to be taken as indicating a fixed rule of invariable application then I am afraid I must respectfully disagree."
MrAbdi's cross-appeal
(i) On 20th April 2008 the Somaliland authorities had told the Home Office that they would refuse to accept Mr. Abdi's return to Somaliland (para.52).(ii) Thereafter the Appellant proceeded on the footing that Mr. Abdi would be returned to Mogadishu (para.53).
(iii) By October 2008 the Appellant knew of the stance being adopted by the European Court of Human Rights with regard to forced returns to Mogadishu, in cases before the European Court of Human Rights (para.71).
(iv) That stance was to grant interim measures under Rule 39 of the Rules of Court "across the board" with regard to all expulsions to Mogadishu which came before the court on a "fact insensitive basis" (para.68).
(v) On 12th December 2008, at the resumed hearing of Mr. Abdi's appeal to the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal, the latest country guidance on Somalia, AM and AM [2008] UKAIT 00091 was produced, and in the light of that guidance the Home Office Presenting Officer (HOPO) accepted that Mr. Abdi would not be returned to Mogadishu with an expectation that he remain there. The HOPO argued that Mr. Abdi could relocate to Puntland (para.61, see also para 28 of the Tribunal's determination dated 30th March 2009).
(vi) In response to the HOPO's submission that Mr. Abdi could relocate to Puntland expert evidence was given to the Tribunal on this behalf that there was no safe route to Puntland from Mogadishu, and that Mr. Abdi would not be admitted to Puntland on an EU Travel document (para.61).
"……The relevant legal proceedings are likely to go on for a long time, so far as concerns Mr Abdi, potentially even running into years…… I do not think that it can now be said that Mr Abdi will be or is likely to be removed within a reasonable time; and I think that by now a reasonable period of time for detaining him has elapsed".
Conclusions
Note 1 The classic phrase of Byles J in Cooper v Wandsworth Board of Works (1863) CB (NS) 180. [Back] Note 2 We have not found it necessary to deal with the evidence before us of the Border Agency’s attitude to Rule 39 indications from Strasbourg. Since the conclusion of argument, however, our attention has been drawn by counsel to a press release issued by the ECtHR on 11 February 2011, drawing attention to a massive increase in Rule 39 applications, urging national courts to take responsibility for making appropriate suspensive orders, and concluding: “Where a lead case concerning the safety of return to a particular country of origin is pending before the national courts or the Court of Human Rights, removals to that country should be suspended. Where the court requests a stay on removal under Rule 39, that request must be complied with.” [Back]