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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 >> WA (Pakistan) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2019] EWCA Civ 302 (06 March 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/302.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 302 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER)
Deputy Upper Tribunal Judge Hill QC
Appeal No. AA/08054/2014
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
and
LORD JUSTICE SINGH
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WA (PAKISTAN) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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-and- |
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UNITED NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR REFUGEES |
Intervener |
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Isabel McArdle (instructed by The Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Michael Fordham QC, Shane Sibbel and Gayatri Sarathy (instructed by Baker McKenzie LLP) for the Intervener
Hearing dates: 30 and 31 January 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Irwin:
Introduction
The Facts
"It is not accepted that you are of the Ahmadi faith. I have taken into account that your passport indicates this as your faith, and that at AIR Q36 you indicate all your family are Orthodox Ahmadi. You have also shown some knowledge of the faith at AIR Q83. However, other discrepancies in your evidence undermine your links with the Ahmadi faith.
It is not accepted that you have been propagating the Ahmadi faith (you have occasionally called it preaching) because you have been inconsistent over to whom you would propagate. You claim to have propagated to two of your friends, because they are "fair minded boys who liked to listen and reason with our belief" (AIR 84 and 85). However, you later claim to have propagated to "those students and friends who I knew were understanding persons and were not causing opposition. I would not propagate our beliefs to those who were our enemies because that would cause problems". Propagating to those who were understanding persons is quite distinct to having only told two friends, and this undermines your claim to have preached at all. Additionally, you indicate an understanding that propagating to "our enemies" might lead to adverse or unwanted consequences (AIR Q89 and 111). This level of understanding indicates an awareness that propagating would be a dangerous activity which you would understandably fear. Therefore it is concluded that you did not engage in it. Bearing in mind the risk associated with propagating the Ahmadi religion, it is highly unlikely you would have done so, even "jokingly" (AIR Q122). Further, you claim to have been propagating since some time around the age of 8 (AIR Q91). This is considered to be an attempt to exaggerate any claim to have propagated in Pakistan. It is implausible that a child of approximately 8 years old would have the necessary understanding of the subject matter."
"18. … Ahmadis in Pakistan can go their mosques, places of worship but the Constitution prohibits them declaring their place of worship as mosque which is a Muslim gesture. Ahmadis in Pakistan cannot call Azan before offering a prayer. My problems with the Mullahs aggravated when I started calling for prayer in the mosque."
And his statement concluded as follows:
"28. It is not possible for me to relocate to some other part of the country. I am a staunch religious man and my religious activities will attract the Mullahs of the KN in any other part of the country as it did in my native town. I cannot live without my faith. I cannot sever this aspect of my life from me. It is not possible for me to carry out these activities in Pakistan as I have done in the UK, without the fear of the draconian blasphemy laws.
29. My family in Pakistan has left the village and are staying at Rabwah at the moment. They moved to Rabwah about two years ago. My three brothers and one sister have moved to Germany. My sister is married to a German national whereas my brothers have claimed asylum. Two of my brothers have been granted refugee status in Germany. The asylum claim of one of my brother is pending.
30. In the UK, I am leading the life according to my faith. I am participating in the activities and religious functions as is required from me as an Ahmadi. I can openly call for prayer from which I was stopped in Pakistan. In Pakistan, I was leading a dual life. I could not preach or propagate which I believed. I have a fear of my life in Pakistan. I request the Secretary of State of grant me International Protection."
"He was engaged in preaching putting his faith. All Ahmadis in Pakistan were afraid as they were not allowed to call themselves Muslim. His family had now moved to Rabwah. If he went back to Pakistan he would preach his faith. He would carry on preaching even if it caused risk to his life."
"…he would preach his faith. He would preach in public, although it would get him into trouble. His main role in the UK had been to preach" (paragraph 34).
"37. There are basically four issues before me to determine. Firstly, whether or not the Appellant belongs to the Ahmadi faith as claimed. Secondly, whether I accept his account of his experiences in Pakistan before he came to the United Kingdom as credible. Thirdly, whether I find that he has truly been actively practising his faith since his arrival in this country. Lastly, and most importantly, if he has been actively practising his faith here, whether he would continue to do so after his return to Pakistan to such an extent that he would come into confrontation with the authorities with the result that he would be at risk of persecution and ill-treatment."
"8. Ahmadis who are not able to show that they practised their faith at all in Pakistan or that they did so on anything other than the restricted basis described in paragraph 2(ii) above are in general unlikely to be able to show that their genuine intentions or wishes are to practise and manifest their faith openly on return, as described in paragraph 2(i) above.
9. A sur place claim by an Ahmadi based on post-arrival conversion or revival in belief and practice will require careful evidential analysis. This will probably include consideration of evidence of the head of the claimant's local United Kingdom Ahmadi Community and from the UK headquarters, the latter particularly in cases where there has been a conversion. Any adverse findings in the claimant's account as a whole may be relevant to the assessment of likely behaviour on return.
10. Whilst an Ahmadi who has been found to be not reasonably likely to engage or wish to engage in paragraph 2(i) behaviour is, in general, not at real risk on return to Pakistan, judicial fact-finders may in certain cases need to consider whether that person would nevertheless be reasonably likely to be targeted by non-state actors on return for religious persecution by reason of his/her prominent social and/or business profile."
"52. Whilst I have found that the Appellant was an Ahmadi and had been practising his faith whilst in the United Kingdom, I remind myself of my adverse credibility findings against the Appellant as regards his claimed experiences in Pakistan before he came here. I also remind myself that the Appellant had submitted false documents in support of his claim in the form of FIRs and arrest warrant. I also note that the letters issued by the AMA UK, whilst confirming the Appellant's faith, have not suggested that the Appellant would continue to practise his faith if returned to Pakistan in the manner that was likely to bring him into contact with the authorities or non-state actors and thereby expose him to a real risk of persecution or ill-treatment (emphasis added).
53. The Appellant appeared to be an intelligent young man. Considering his most recent witness statement, he appeared to demonstrate familiarity with the laws of Pakistan which placed Ahmadis under restrictions regarding the practice of their faith. Those restrictions and prohibitions, as identified by the tribunal, prohibited Ahmadis from referring to their place of worship as a mosque, call to prayer as azan, call themselves Muslims or refer to their faith as Islam. Whilst I do not expect the Appellant to suppress his desire to practise his religion in Pakistan to avoid persecution and ill-treatment, I do not believe that he would be so naïve as to deliberately expose himself to a real risk (emphasis added). Instead of just saying that he would practise his faith after return to Pakistan even if it exposed him to personal risk, the Appellant had to do more to persuade me about his intentions. The Appellant was involved in the AMA UK and yet there was no-one from that organisation or the Ahmadi community generally who could provide evidence in support to the Appellant's declaration that he would practise his faith even at the expense of personal harm to himself.
54. I expect the Appellant to be pragmatic after his return to Pakistan. I do not accept, in the absence of any other evidence, that he would be so naïve and foolish to deliberately expose him to serious personal risk at the hands of the authorities in Pakistan or any non-state actors. I therefore do not find the Appellant's account credible when he stated that he would practise faith in Pakistan regardless of harm to himself (emphasis added).
…
56. Having considered the Appellant's account in the round, I find that the Appellant has not established that he will practise his faith after returning to Pakistan in the manner that could bring him to the adverse attention of the authorities or any non-state actors. I find that the Appellant has not established, on the lower standard of proof, that he had a well founded fear of persecution for a 1951 convention reason if returned to Pakistan. I therefore dismiss the appeal on asylum grounds.
57. For the same reasons, I find that the Appellant would not be at a real risk of ill-treatment if he returned to Pakistan. The appeal is therefore also dismissed on article 3 grounds."
"12. … suggesting it disregarded the import of the judgment of the Supreme Court in HJ (Iran) (above) to the effect that persecution (in that case on the ground of sexual orientation) still exists even if the person persecuted can eliminate the harm by taking avoiding action. It is clear from the context that the Judge was doing nothing more in this paragraph than setting out the broad scheme which he would adopt in disposing of the appeal and guiding the reader as to the ordering of his judgment. It did not purport to be a definitive and comprehensive statement of every nuance of the issue to be addressed. It was merely a short hand identification of the points he was coming to, and in my view a perfectly adequate one. I consider Mr Palmer's criticism of this paragraph to be misplaced."
"24. Despite the able argument of Mr Palmer, I cannot accept this submission as it proceeds on a misreading of both the Judge's determination and of the guideline authority of MN and others. The Judge positively rejected the Appellant's assertions of intention as not being credible. He was perfectly entitled to do so.
25. As the headnote in MN and others makes clear there are two types or strains of the Ahmadi faith: open practice (type 2(i) activities) which brings the individual into conflict with Pakistan's domestic law and restricted practice (type 2(ii)) which does not. The headnote emphasises that determining which type of practice applies in any given case is a fact-specific exercise and an evidential burden rests on an Appellant.
3.(i) If an Ahmadi is able to demonstrate that it is of particular importance to his religious identity to practise and manifest his faith openly in Pakistan in defiance of the restrictions in the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) under sections 298B and 298C, by engaging in behaviour described in paragraph 2(i) above, he or she is likely to be in need of protection, in the light of the serious nature of the sanctions that potentially apply as well as the risk of prosecution under section 295C for blasphemy."
"28. … The Judge turned his mind to the Appellant's stated intention and disbelieved him. This was a factual finding which was open to the Judge on the evidence. It therefore follows that the discrete point under the principle in HJ (Iran) concerning the suppression of religious identity never fell to be engaged because of the logically prior finding of the Judge disbelieving the Appellant's stated intention in the first place."
Procedural History and the Application to Amend the Grounds
"…crucial to determine whether he was to demonstrate that it is of particular importance to his religious identity to practise and manifest his faith openly in Pakistan in defiance of the restrictions … and whether he would not do so in order to avoid persecution."
Grounds to the Court were settled by junior counsel in this case on 12 November 2015.
"The arguable point of law of general public importance raised is that the Court of Appeal's decision has the potential to undermine the principles in [HJ (Iran) and HT (Cameroon) v SSHD [2010] UKSC 31; [2011] 1 AC 596] and [RT (Zimbabwe) and ors [2012] UKSC 38; [2013] 1 AC 152] about the right to live openly. There is a category of single 'quiet' Ahmadis who do not face persecution but the country guidance case of [MN and others (Ahmadis – country conditions – risk) Pakistan CG 2012] UKUT 389 (1AC)], as interpreted by the Court of Appeal in this case, does not make it sufficiently clear that the "quiet" ones must be living in this way entirely voluntarily and not because of fear of the consequences of behaving otherwise."
"a. The UT erred in dismissing error of law by the FTTJ, in failing to assess the case at first instance against the range of conduct identified as protected in MN and others (Ahmadis – country conditions – risk) Pakistan CG [2012] UKUT 389 (IAC);
b. The UT should have intervened in the decision of the FTTJ given the FTTJ's failure to address a material fact upon which argument was based, namely whether the Applicant's religious identity was of sufficient importance to him that the requirement to suppress its expression in Pakistan would place the Applicant into a situation of persecution, so that he was entitled to protection in the United Kingdom as a refugee."
"1. The FTT's decision was inconsistent with HJ (Iran) [2011] 1 AC 596, and RT (Zimbabwe) [2013] 1 AC 152. In particular, the FTT erred in failing to ask: why the Appellant would desist from practicing his faith openly? If the answer was so as (in part) to avoid well-founded fear of persecution that would otherwise ensue, the Appellant fell to be recognised as a refugee, and that was indeed the answer on the FTT's own approach. The Refugee Convention protects the Appellant's 'right to live freely and openly' as an Ahmadi Muslim in Pakistan 'without fear of persecution' (Grounds, paras 3b, 19, 22 [A/10, 17, 18], HJ (Iran)). See Skeleton, Section 5 at paras 47-52.
2. In the alternative (and if, which the Appellant denies, MN sets out the correct legal approach), the FTT failed to address adequately or at all the question there identified, namely whether it was now of particular importance to the Appellant to practice and manifest his Ahmadi Muslim faith openly in Pakistan. This question was important because MN provides that if the answer was in the affirmative, the Appellant 'is likely to be in need of protection' and it was 'no answer to expect an Ahmadi … to avoid engaging in [such behaviour] to avoid a risk of persecution' (Grounds, paras 3a, 12-18 [A/10, 13-17], MN and others, headnote paras 2-3, 5-6, paras 119-120, 122-123). See Skeleton, Section 7 at paras 72-75."
"73. Whilst it is important that this court – like all other courts – is not a slave to form, the Civil Procedure Rules set out procedural requirements, and not mere aspirations. They do so for good reason. The time of both parties and the court can be wasted if issues are not identified clearly and succinctly in the grounds of appeal, supported by relevant circumstances giving rise to the appeal and the appellant's arguments or submissions as set out in a skeleton argument. Without such proper focus, it is impossible for appeal courts to deal with their prodigious workloads efficiently and effectively."
Hickinbottom LJ amplified his remarks in paragraphs 74 and 75 and this Court reinforced their importance in Harverye v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2018] EWCA Civ 2848, see paragraphs 38, 52-59.
The Fundamental Question: HJ (Iran), The MN Guidance and the "Why?" Question
"40. A gay man applies for asylum in this country. The Secretary of State is satisfied that, if he returns to his country of nationality and lives openly as a homosexual, the applicant will face a real and continuing prospect of being beaten up, or flogged, or worse. But the Secretary of State is also satisfied that, if he returns, then, because of these dangers of living openly, he will actually carry on any homosexual relationships "discreetly" and so not come to the notice of any thugs or of the authorities. Is the applicant a "refugee" for purposes of the United Nations Convention relating to the Status of Refugees 1951 ("the Convention")? The answer is Yes."
"…minded to swell the ranks of gay martyrs, when faced with the real threat of persecution, [he] would have no real choice: he would be compelled to act discreetly. Therefore, the question is whether an applicant is to be regarded as a refugee for the purposes of the Convention in circumstances where the reality is that, if he were returned to his country of nationality, he would have to act discreetly in order to avoid persecution."
"The approach to be followed by tribunals
82. When an applicant applies for asylum on the ground of a well-founded fear of persecution because he is gay, the tribunal must first ask itself whether it is satisfied on the evidence that he is gay, or that he would be treated as gay by potential persecutors in his country of nationality. If so, the tribunal must then ask itself whether it is satisfied on the available evidence that gay people who lived openly would be liable to persecution in the applicant's country of nationality. If so, the tribunal must go on to consider what the individual applicant would do if he were returned to that country. If the applicant would in fact live openly and thereby be exposed to a real risk of persecution, then he has a well-founded fear of persecution - even if he could avoid the risk by living "discreetly". If, on the other hand, the tribunal concludes that the applicant would in fact live discreetly and so avoid persecution, it must go on to ask itself why he would do so. If the tribunal concludes that the applicant would choose to live discreetly simply because that was how he himself would wish to live, or because of social pressures, e g, not wanting to distress his parents or embarrass his friends, then his application should be rejected. Social pressures of that kind do not amount to persecution and the Convention does not offer protection against them. Such a person has no well-founded fear of persecution because, for reasons that have nothing to do with any fear of persecution, he himself chooses to adopt a way of life which means that he is not in fact liable to be persecuted because he is gay. If, on the other hand, the tribunal concludes that a material reason for the applicant living discreetly on his return would be a fear of the persecution which would follow if he were to live openly as a gay man, then, other things being equal, his application should be accepted. Such a person has a well-founded fear of persecution. To reject his application on the ground that he could avoid the persecution by living discreetly would be to defeat the very right which the Convention exists to protect – his right to live freely and openly as a gay man without fear of persecution. By admitting him to asylum and allowing him to live freely and openly as a gay man without fear of persecution, the receiving state gives effect to that right by affording the applicant a surrogate for the protection from persecution which his country of nationality should have afforded him.
83. The Secretary of State should, of course, apply the same approach when considering applications of this type. Although I have, for the most part, concentrated on the position of gay men, the Secretary of State and tribunals should approach applications concerning lesbian women in the same way."
"35. …(d) The next stage, if it is found that the applicant will in fact conceal aspects of his sexual orientation if returned, is to consider why he will do so. If this will simply be in response to social pressures or for cultural or religious reasons of his own choosing and not because of a fear of persecution, his claim for asylum must be rejected. But if the reason why he will resort to concealment is that he genuinely fears that otherwise he will be persecuted, it will be necessary to consider whether that fear is well founded. (e) This is the final and conclusive question: does he have a well-founded fear that he will be persecuted? If he has, the causative condition that Lord Bingham referred to in Januzi v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2006] 2 AC 426, para 5 will have been established. The applicant will be entitled to asylum."
"22. …whether the HJ (Iran) principle can apply to an individual who has no political beliefs and who is obliged to pretend to support a political regime in order to avoid the persecution that he would suffer if his political neutrality were disclosed. Is the position of such a person analogous to that of a homosexual who is obliged to live a "discreet" life in order to avoid the persecution that he would suffer if he revealed his sexual orientation?"
"In the context of religious belief, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has said (in my view, rightly):
"Applying the same standard as for other Convention grounds, religious belief, identity or way of life can be seen as so fundamental to human identity that one should not be compelled to hide, change or renounce this in order to avoid persecution": Guidelines on International Protection: Religion-Based Refugee Claims under article 1A(2) of the 1951 Convention and/or Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees (2004) para 13 (emphasis added)."
"45. There is no support in any of the human rights jurisprudence for a distinction between the conscientious non-believer and the indifferent non-believer, any more than there is support for a distinction between the zealous believer and the marginally committed believer. All are equally entitled to human rights protection and to protection against persecution under the Convention. None of them forfeits these rights because he will feel compelled to lie in order to avoid persecution."
Consideration of MN (Ahmadis) Pakistan CG
"6. The next step (2) involves an enquiry into the claimant's intentions or wishes as to his or her faith, if returned to Pakistan. This is relevant because of the need to establish whether it is of particular importance to the religious identity of the Ahmadi concerned to engage in paragraph 2(i) behaviour. The burden is on the claimant to demonstrate that any intention or wish to practise and manifest aspects of the faith openly that are not permitted by the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) is genuinely held and of particular importance to the claimant to preserve his or her religious identity. The decision maker needs to evaluate all the evidence. Behaviour since arrival in the UK may also be relevant. If the claimant discharges this burden he is likely to be in need of protection.
7. The option of internal relocation, previously considered to be available in Rabwah, is not in general reasonably open to a claimant who genuinely wishes to engage in paragraph 2(i) behaviour, in the light of the nationwide effect in Pakistan of the anti-Ahmadi legislation.
8. Ahmadis who are not able to show that they practised their faith at all in Pakistan or that they did so on anything other than the restricted basis described in paragraph 2(ii) above are in general unlikely to be able to show that their genuine intentions or wishes are to practise and manifest their faith openly on return, as described in paragraph 2(i) above.
9. A sur place claim by an Ahmadi based on post-arrival conversion or revival in belief and practice will require careful evidential analysis. This will probably include consideration of evidence of the head of the claimant's local United Kingdom Ahmadi Community and from the UK headquarters, the latter particularly in cases where there has been a conversion. Any adverse findings in the claimant's account as a whole may be relevant to the assessment of likely behaviour on return.
10. Whilst an Ahmadi who has been found to be not reasonably likely to engage or wish to engage in paragraph 2(i) behaviour is, in general, not at real risk on return to Pakistan, judicial fact-finders may in certain cases need to consider whether that person would nevertheless be reasonably likely to be targeted by non-state actors on return for religious persecution by reason of his/her prominent social and/or business profile."
"Where it is found that an Ahmadi will be 'discreet' on return the reasons for such discretion need to be considered in the light of HJ (Iran)." (see paragraph 74)
"100. We draw the following principles from the various authorities we have referred to.
a. For interference with the right to the freedom of religion guaranteed by Art 10(1) of the Charter and Art 9(1) of the Human Rights Convention to constitute an act of persecution within the meaning of Art 2(d) of the Directive, there must be a significant effect on the person concerned.
b. Acts which interfere with the right to the freedom of religion, if not of the gravity equivalent to the protected human rights from which there can be no derogation under Art 15(2) of the Human Rights Convention, will not constitute persecution within the meaning of Art 9(1) of the Directive and the Refugee Convention.
c. Limitations on the exercise of the Freedom of Religion must be provided for by law and respect the essence of the rights and freedoms recognised by the Charter. They must be proportionate and made only if necessary and genuinely meet the objectives of general interest recognised by the Union or the need to protect the rights and freedoms of others. (Art 52 of the Charter)
d. There is no basis for distinguishing interference with core aspects from interference with marginal areas of the right to freedom of religion. This is because of the broad definition of religion in Art 10(1)(b) of the Directive.
e. Nevertheless it is only serious violation of the right to freedom of religion that will give rise to persecution or serious harm or ill-treatment and that will be determined by the nature of the repression on the individual concerned and its consequences with reference to the severity of the measures and sanctions likely to be adopted.
f. If it is reasonably thought that an individual will engage in religious practices (which may include public manifestations of that religion) or would wish to do so because of the particular importance to the person concerned in order to preserve his religious identity, the fact that an individual could avoid a risk by abstaining from certain religious practices which will expose him to a real risk of persecution is irrelevant."
It is this statement of principle which formed the foundation of the headnote.
"104. In the context of the number of incidents recorded in the past 24 years, it may be thought that the risk to Ahmadis is not as great as has been urged in these appeals. We accept however the explanation in the submissions from the appellants' representatives that this is in part due to the way in which Ahmadis in general deal with their difficulties in Pakistan by self denial, civil obedience and by keeping a low profile. Although some of the incidents reported on www.thepersecution.org and its sister site might suggest otherwise, on the whole, it appears to have been a successful approach. With this moderation of the ways in which Ahmadis express and practise their faith including its propagation, we accept that there have been fewer prosecutions and complaints made than might otherwise have been the case. We accept the evidence of Dr W about the increasing Islamisation in Pakistan which undoubtedly would heighten the risks for Ahmadis who chose to flout the law and we accept that the need to keep a low profile is likely to have increased."
"107. These arguably positive matters however do not provide an answer to important questions. The way in which the Ahmadi faith may be practised emblematized and preached in Pakistan is constrained by the criminal law with potentially severe sanctions if breached. Is it reasonable to expect Ahmadis to show restraint and not freely manifest their faith in areas that are of particular importance to the individual concerned through obedience to the anti Ahmadi legislation to avoid prosecution? It is established law that this is neither permissible (HJ (Iran)) if the purpose is to avoid persecution nor is it relevant: (Germany v Y & Z), if there is the possibility open to the claimant to avoid the risk by abstention. Is it is reasonable to expect Ahmadis to exercise similar restraint and show appeasement in order to avoid the potential for aggressive hostility from others who form the majority? The answer must be the same. Does the existence of such legislation constitute a fundamental violation of their freedom of religion such that its very existence is persecutory in the light of the consequences if it is breached? On this aspect we consider that it is not simply the existence of the legislation but the severity of consequences of the sanctions if and when applied that dictates the answer. Can the aspects of the faith that might be seen objectively as peripheral to the right of freedom of religion mean that any restrictions no matter how discriminatory are not undermining the core? Such an approach would be incorrect and irrelevant: (RT (Zimbabwe) and (Germany v Y and Z)."
"115. We earlier concluded that the legislation restricting Ahmadis is a disproportionate measure that furthermore undermines the fundamental right to religious expression. It has been in place for some time but over time the use of it by hostile non-State actors has made its effects pernicious. It is impermissible to expect Ahmadis who regard themselves as Muslims to comply with such legislation that undermines their fundamental identity and which, if flouted, runs the risk of persecutory ill-treatment. Furthermore, an active Ahmadi cannot be expected to be discreet about the practice and manifestation of his faith including its propagation if the decision to do so is to avoid coming to the attention of the authorities or non-state actors who are opposed to the fundamental tenets of the Ahmadi faith.
116. If an Ahmadi therefore, in the genuine pursuit of his faith, is unable to practise that faith openly in ways that are of particular importance to him and his identity as an Ahmadi because of the restrictions placed on him by statute in Pakistan, he is in need of protection in the light of the evidence that defiance would lead to a real risk of an unfair FIR under sections 298B or C or 295C of the Pakistan Penal Code leading to detention and the likelihood of an unfair trial at first instance with a risk of prolonged imprisonment until matters can be resolved on appeal. The risks stem from the sanctions in the legislation itself but also from non-state actors who use the law to pursue Ahmadis in a hostile way. Together, these factors are capable of amounting to a state-approved or state-condoned act of persecution within the meaning of the Qualification Directive and under the Refugee Convention."
The phrase in paragraph 116, suggesting that the open practice of faith must be of "particular importance" to the Ahmadi in question, tends to divert from a clear consideration as to why the asylum-seeker would avoid behaviour likely to be visited by persecution.
i) Is the Claimant genuinely an Ahmadi? In answering that question the guidance set out in paragraph 5 of the headnote in MN is well expressed.
ii) The next step involves an inquiry into the Claimant's behaviour if he or she is returned to Pakistan. Will he or she actually behave in such a way as to attract persecution? In answering that question, the decision-maker will again consider all the evidence and will, where appropriate, expressly consider whether the behaviour claimed by the asylum-seeker is genuinely an expression of their religious belief and is an authentic account of the way they will behave if returned.
iii) If the decision-maker's conclusion is that the Claimant, if returned to Pakistan, will avoid behaviour which would attract persecution, then the decision-maker must ask the question why that would be so. Many possibilities arise. The individual may genuinely wish to live quietly, and would do so whether or not repression existed in relation to the expression of his or her Ahmadi faith. The individual may have mixed motives for such behaviour. If such a quiet expression or manifestation of genuine Ahmadi belief is merely the result of established cultural norms or social pressures, then it is unlikely there will be a basis for asylum. However, if a material reason (and not necessarily the only reason) for such behaviour will be to avoid persecution, then it is likely that the Claimant will have a valid claim for asylum. There is no requirement that public expression of Ahmadi religious faith, of a kind which is likely to attract persecution, should be of "particular importance" to the Claimant. Such a requirement is inconsistent with the test as laid down in HJ (Iran).
The Application to this Case
Lord Justice Peter Jackson
Lord Justice Singh