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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 >> AJ (Bangladesh) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2013] EWCA Civ 493 (21 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/493.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 493 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(IMMIGRATION & ASYLUM CHAMBER)
[Appeal No: IA/00474/2011]
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
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AJ (BANGLADESH) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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Ms Lisa Busch (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards:
"The issue is one of proportionality. The starting point is a consideration of the best interests of the appellant's two children, those best interests being a primary consideration. We proceed on the basis of the assumption that, ordinarily, a child's best interests are served by living with both parents. Notwithstanding the appellant's convictions for serious offences, there is nothing to indicate that his offending has in a direct way affected them, in the sense of putting them at risk."
"All the evidence points in favour of the conclusion that, notwithstanding the appellant's offending and the gambling and debts that appear to have accrued at about the time of these offences, the best interests of his children are that he should remain with them as part of their family unit."
"58. Plainly, the offences for which the appellant was convicted are very serious, as reflected in the sentencing remarks and in the actual sentence that was imposed with [an] extended period of licence for public protection. We note that the appellant arrived in the UK when he was 10 years of age; he is now aged 33. The offences were committed up to October 2005. During that time the appellant has not been able to reoffend whilst he has been in custody but there have been no offences since his release.
59. The appellant is from Bangladesh, as is his wife, although she and the children are British citizens. We have already expressed our view as to the reasonableness of expecting the appellant's wife and children to return to Bangladesh. His family situation is a matter on which we have already commented, taking the view that he has now re-established a settled family life. We are prepared to accept that the appellant's wife did not know about the offences that the appellant was committing, although there is some indication that there may have been a suspicion on her part as to his behaviour. That however, in our view, is not a relevant consideration and we proceed on the basis that she was completely unaware of his offending. Again, we have taken into account the fact that he has two children aged 7 and 8 and his close relationship with them as disclosed by the evidence to which we have referred. We have taken into account the best interests of the children as set out above.
60. It is evident that the appellant, having been in the UK for many years, has established deep roots here. . We have not heard anything about his social ties except that he fell into bad company in relation to gambling. Nevertheless, we bear in mind that he has been in various employments over the years and was employed as a bus driver."
"63. We take into account the effect of the appellant's removal, in particular on his wife and children. We have no doubt at all that were the appellant to be removed it would be very distressing for the children, hardly mitigated by the occasional visit or contact by phone or letter. There is little to be said for the proposition in favour of removal that they have experienced life without their father already whilst he has been in prison. That is true, but it is evident that they value his presence very highly and are anxious at the prospect of his being removed.
64. So far as the appellant's wife is concerned, there is evidence that she suffers from depression and that whilst the appellant was in prison she had difficulty bringing up the children on her own. We accept the evidence in this regard, also accepting that her language skills make it difficult for her to cope in some circumstances...We accept that his removal would have a significant impact on her and, for the reasons already given, on the children. The letter from the appellant's father, undated though it is, is evidence that his removal would also be keenly felt by his parents.
65. Similarly, it should not be overlooked that the appellant's removal would undoubtedly have a profound effect on him, separating him from his wife and children, as well as from his parents. He would also be removed from the country to which he has become accustomed and in which the lifestyle, culture, language and customs are familiar to him. There would be some corresponding unfamiliarity with all those things if the appellant were to return to Bangladesh, subject to the observations we have already made about his connections with that country."
"66. Although we have accepted that the risk of reoffending in the present circumstances is low, we take into account the decision in N (Kenya) [2004] EWCA Civ 1094 and what was said about the public policy need to deter and to express society's revulsion at the seriousness of the criminality. We also take into account what was said at paragraph 65 of N (Kenya) about the risk of reoffending being a factor in the balance but not the most important public interest factor in the case of very serious crimes. . The decision in OH (Serbia) [2008] EWCA Civ 694 reflects and reinforces what was said by the Court of Appeal in N (Kenya) and restates the proposition that proper weight must be given to the Secretary of State's policy on deportation and her view as to the public interest warranting deportation in cases of serious crime. The policy factors in favour of deportation were repeated by the Court of Appeal in AP (Trinidad and Tobago) [2011] EWCA Civ 551 at paragraph 44. The principle of deterrence expressed in N (Kenya) is again reiterated in RU (Bangladesh) [2011] EWCA Civ 651 at paragraph 43 in which it was said that:
'The point about 'deterrence' is not whether the deportation of a particular 'foreign criminal' may or may not have a deterrent effect on other prospective offenders. It concerns a much more fundamental concept which is explained by Judge LJ at [83] of his judgment in N(Kenya). The UK operates an immigration system by which control is exercised over non-British citizens who enter and remain in the UK. The operation of that system must take account of broad issues of social cohesion in the UK. Moreover, the public has to have confidence in its operation. Those requirements are for the 'public good' or are in the 'public interest'. For both of those to requirements to be fulfilled, the operation of the system must contain an element of deterrence to non-British citizens who are either already in the UK (even if refugees) or who are thinking of coming to the UK, 'so as to ensure that they clearly understand that, whatever the circumstances, one of the consequences of serious crime may well be deportation'. That element of 'public interest' or 'public good' is a part of the legislative policy, declared by Parliament in section 32(4) of the UKBA, that the deportation of 'foreign criminals' is conducive to the public good.'"
"Recognising the consequences of the removal of the appellant, we are nevertheless satisfied that that removal is proportionate to the legitimate aim of the prevention of disorder and crime, taking into account all the factors to which we have referred. This is not a conclusion we come to lightly in view of the very serious consequences for the family of his removal."
"The tragic consequence is that this family, short-lived as it has been, would be broken up for ever, because of the appellant's bad behaviour. That is what deportation does."
The Tribunal said that the facts of that case were different in many respects and that the appellant's relationship with his family was not by any means short-lived; but, in the Tribunal's view, this was one of those cases in which the proportionality question fell to be resolved in the Secretary of State's favour.
"The applicant has no basis for complaint on his own behalf. His long presence in this country was properly noted, as was the limited extent to which he was likely to reoffend. But the tribunal was entitled to hold that the offence was extremely serious, of a sexual nature, and well met the need for deterrence that has been reiterated by this court in the series of decisions referred to by the Tribunal in paragraph 66 of its Determination.
I do grant permission in respect of the effect of deportation on the children and, to a lesser extent, on the wife. While it is important not to overstate the guidance in ZH (Tanzania), the examination of the impact of deportation on the children seems to have taken place as a factor in the applicant's case, rather than as a freestanding consideration of the interests of the children themselves. The tribunal may not have been assisted in this respect by the terms of the argument before it; but having found, Determination para 67, that removal would have a profound and long-lasting effect on the children in particular, but also on the wife, the tribunal arguably needed to explain why the best interests of the children did not militate against that removal."
"(a) The risk of reoffending is one facet of the public interest but, in the case of very serious crimes, not the most important facet.
(b) Another important facet is the need to deter foreign nationals from committing serious crimes by leading them to understand that, whatever the other circumstances, one consequence of them may well be deportation.
(c) A further important facet is the role of a deportation order as an expression of society's revulsion at serious crimes and in building public confidence in the treatment of foreign citizens who have committed serious crimes.
(d) Primary responsibility for the public interest, whose view of it is likely to be wider and better informed than that of a tribunal, resides in the respondent and accordingly a tribunal hearing an appeal against a decision to deport should not only consider for itself all the facets of the public interest but should weigh, as a linked but independent feature, the approach to them adopted by the respondent in the context of the facts of the case."
Essentially the same ground was gone over in AP (Trinidad and Tobago) v SSHD [2011] EWCA Civ 551 and RU (Bangladesh) v SSHD [2011] EWCA Civ 651, to both of which the Tribunal in the present case also referred at paragraph 66 of its determination.
Lord Justice McFarlane:
Lord Justice Lewison:
Order: Appeal dismissed.