BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> BM (Iran) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] EWCA Civ 491 (20 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/491.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 491 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER)
Upper Tribunal Judge Martin
AA/09151/2012
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
and
LADY JUSTICE SHARP
____________________
BM (Iran) |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
____________________
(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
David Blundell (instructed by The Government Legal Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 12 May 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards :
The FTT's determination
"29. … A perusal of the same clearly shows that it was a carefully crafted report which is Merton compliant. No submissions to the contrary was [sic] made on the appellant's behalf by Ms Dassa [counsel for the appellant], who also did not seek to address me on matters disclosed therein which directly affect the appellant['s] credibility generally …."
"39. I also find that the appellant did not tell the truth when he said that he was uneducated. This is clearly endorsed by the fact that he was observed by social workers and he had given every appearance of somebody who had received an education, he had some clear understanding of English before he came to the centre, and although he claimed to have learnt some when in Greece, this cannot explain how he was able to make himself understood at the very early stages by staff members at the centre. Nor does it explain how he was able to type, was able to write, and was able to do mathematic calculations. I also bear in mind that the appellant has claimed that he was a shepherd in his home village. He was asked by myself how long was the gestation period in sheep. I had made quite sure that he understood the question by carefully having it explained to him by the interpreter. The appellant, who claims that he had been a shepherd since the age of 6 and claims that he is 15 and therefore been a shepherd for nine years, said that the gestation period was 25 to 30 days. I find that however illiterate the appellant might be, as a shepherd of long standing he would at least know the answer to that question and would have been able to give the correct answer. I indicated to his Counsel that I have [bred] sheep myself and knew the gestation period. The gestation period in sheep is usually counted as five months less five days or approximately 146 days and certainly not 25 to 30 days. I find therefore that the appellant as someone who has claimed that he had been a shepherd for nine years could not possibly have given the answer he gave if he had genuinely been a shepherd. This leads me to find that the appellant was not and has never been a shepherd.
40. Having considered the whole of the evidence in this case in the round, including the answers and behaviour of the appellant when assessed by the social workers, I find that the appellant was never a shepherd and was simply making up that account. The core claim of the appellant was that as a young shepherd caring for his father's sheep he came across men from PJAK. I find that the appellant clearly was never a shepherd and as a result also find that the appellant has never come across any men from PJAK. In addition, I find that his claim that two unarmed alleged terrorists would admit to his father, a complete stranger that they are fleeing from the Iranian security services and that they are members of PJAK carrying important documents, beggars belief …. In addition, I also find that the appellant's account that his father had made arrangements for the departure of only the appellant in the circumstances … again beggars belief …. "
"42. Therefore, looking at the evidence in the round, I accept that the appellant is from the Kordestan area of Iran. I do not find that the appellant was telling the truth when he says he was a shepherd and that he was illiterate. I do not accept that the appellant was telling the truth when he said that he fled Iran because he was seen in the company of two men from PJAK. I find that the appellant has made up his account in order to make a false claim for asylum and I find that there is no truth at all in his claim to be in need of international protection …."
"48. The appellant had initially raised a claim under Article 8. At the hearing it appears quite clearly that Ms Dassa has taken a pragmatic view of this case. The appellant arrived in the United Kingdom on 26 July 2012. This is barely six months. The appellant has clearly no family life in the United Kingdom and set down no roots in the United Kingdom. Applying the step-by-step approach adumbrated in the case of Razgar I find that the appellant's claim must fail at the second question.
49. The appellant's claim cannot possibly succeed under the Immigration Rules Article 8 [sic] either. He has only been in the United Kingdom for under six months."
The UT's determination
"14. … With respect to Mr Halim it is a nonsense in my view to state that the only part of a Merton compliant age assessment report that can have any evidential value is its conclusion. Its conclusion is based on the report itself; the enquiries and observations of the experts who are undertaking the task. Where they record things that have been said by the Appellant, if the Appellant says they are inaccurate it is for him to say so. In this case he did not. What is clear is that he said things to those experts which he later resiled from. In my view an age assessment report which is Merton compliant, as in this case, has the same weight as an expert's report and the Judge was entitled to take its contents into account along with all the other evidence in the case."
" 30. So far as Mr Halim's final point about the Secretary of State's policy to suspend enforced returns, it has long been established that the Tribunal is not concerned with whether or not there is a policy of actual return; rather it has to consider the appeal on the basis that an Appellant will be returned. That is the same principle that requires a Judge to assess risk on return as at the date of hearing for a minor who has claimed asylum even though he has discretionary leave and so will not actually be returned until he is an adult. It is also the same principle that required Zimbabwean cases to be determined on the basis of risk on return at the date of hearing even though there were no returns to Zimbabwe. That is what the Judge has done in this case and that is correct in law."
The second ground of appeal: reliance on the council's age assessment report
The first ground of appeal: relevance of the policy on removal to Iran
"Whether a Tribunal of the Immigration and Asylum Chamber is compelled to enter into the Article 8 ECHR proportionality assessment, the fact of a policy suspending removals to the country of proposed return for the foreseeable future. Further, does such a factor particularly obtain in the case of a 'young person' who has recently reached the age of maturity and whose growth or personal development is impeded as a consequence of remaining without leave and without entitlement to work or access to services and other benefits?"
"19. I reject the submission that because the Secretary of State was at the date of the decision of the Upper Tribunal unable to enforce the return of the Appellant to Saudi Arabia, article 8 required her to grant him leave to remain. Article 8 does not confer a right to reside in the country of one's choice. The Appellant chooses to reside in this country, but was not compelled to come here by any threat of persecution. Mr Jacobs accepted that if the Appellant could be returned, he could have no article 8 claim to remain here. That is doubtless because there was no evidence before the Upper Tribunal that he had established any personal or family life here."
Sir Stanley went on to refer to the observation of Lady Hale in R (Khadir) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2005] UKHL 39, [2006] 1 AC 207, at [4], that "There may come a time when the prospects of the person ever being able safely to return, whether voluntarily or compulsorily, are so remote that it would be irrational to deny him the status which would enable him to make a proper contribution to the community here …". But he held that as at the date of the tribunal's decision, article 8 did not require the grant of leave to remain while the Secretary of State was seeking to secure the appellant's return to Saudi Arabia.
"27. Mr Jacobs argued that the appellant's statelessness meant that, at the time of the Upper Tribunal's decision, there was no prospect of removing him and that consequently Article 8 was engaged and entitled him to limited leave. He maintained that Article 8 gave the appellant the right to have a private life 'somewhere', which, because, as at the date of the decision there was no prospect of removing him to Saudi Arabia, had to be this country. He argued that leaving the appellant without status and consequently with limited access to healthcare, no right to work and no right to social security benefits deprived him of the ability to have a private life and left him in a sort of 'limbo'.
28. There may at some stage come a time when the 'limbo' argument becomes a live question, but I consider it simply unarguable that it had done so at the time of the Tribunal's decision in this case. Given the limited information provided by the Appellant and the inconsistencies in the accounts he has given, the Secretary of State was entitled to further time to make inquiries.
29. My second observation concerns the length of time for such inquiries before the 'limbo' argument could conceivably come into play. I consider that, in this context, some assistance can be gained from the decisions concerning the legality of the detention of persons the Secretary of State seeks to deport while efforts are made to establish their nationality or to obtain the requisite documentation of their nationality. One of the factors which has been held to affect the period of detention which is lawful is whether the detained person has co-operated with attempts to obtain documentation …. Similarly, the time after which the 'limbo' argument can come into play may depend on the attitude of the individual concerned to efforts to establish his or her nationality or to obtain documentation."
"38. Fourth, there is no room for argument that these applicants and this appellant are to be treated as entitled to a grant of leave to remain simply because they otherwise (so it is said) will be left in a state of indefinite limbo. True it may be that there have been times when (for example) it has not proved possible for undocumented Iranians to be removed to Iran. But it does not follow that will always remain the case; and, as found as a fact by Simler J, there at no stage has been in existence a policy that those whose removal from the United Kingdom cannot be enforced should for that reason alone be granted leave …."
"Voluntary and enforced unescorted returns
This suspension does not apply to Iranian nationals who are returning voluntarily or those cases where removal is enforced without escorts.
Documentation required for returns to Iran
We continue to be able to remove to Iran where the subject holds a valid document, either a valid Iranian passport or previously issued emergency travel document (ETD).
…
Documents to support voluntary returns
The Omani Embassy in London should now be the first point of contact for enquiries regarding documentation for Iranian cases who wish to return. It is likely that only well documented cases who want to return could benefit from assistance from the Omani Embassy. This development is untested but may provide a possible avenue for assistance within the UK."
Conclusion
Lady Justice Sharp :