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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Djassebi & Anor v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2005] EWHC 2298 (Admin) (28 October 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2005/2298.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2298 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
HAMIDREZA DJASSEBI SEYEDEHMASOUMEH MOSA YEBI |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
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Mr Alan Payne (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 21 October 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Leveson :
"We are both completely reliant on my sister in law and mother in law. I don't know what we would do without them. At the minute I cannot imagine what is going to happen to us. If they send us to Greece, that is the end of my hope. If they allow me to stay here I hope to get better little by little."
" I do everything for Hamidreza and his wife .... I take care of all their daily and practical needs. I try and give them hope . . . . When I have to go out, my husband takes care of them. Seyedeh especially cannot be left alone .... Without me they would not take [their medication] and their condition will deteriorate further."
" [M]y brother and his wife are mentally ill and they need their family and support from us to survive. Without doubt, if they enterer Iran or Greece they will be imprisoned or torched and/or killed themselves are too ill to travel too." [sic]
The Law
"(a) A certificate can only be lawfully issued if the claim would be bound to fail in the sense that there is no prospect that an appeal would succeed. Bound to fail is not the same as likely to fail.
(b) The court is required to subject the decision of the Secretary of State to anxious scrutiny. That essentially requires the court to determine whether the claim is clearly unfounded.
(c) The court can consider all the evidence that has been submitted and not merely the evidence at the date of decision."
" ... the Home Secretary must carefully consider the allegation, the grounds on which it is made and any material relied on to support it. But his consideration does not involve a full-blown merits review. It -is a screening process to decide whether the deportee should be sent to another country for a full review to be carried out there or whether there appear to be human rights arguments which merit full consideration in this country before any removal order is implemented. No matter what the volume of material submitted or the - sophistication of the argument deployed to support the allegation, the Home Secretary is entitled to certify if, after reviewing this material, he is reasonably and conscientiously satisfied that the allegation must clearly fail"
"26. First, the test requires an assessment to be made of the severity of the treatment which it is said that the applicant would suffer if removed. This must attain a minimum level of severity. The court has said on a number of· occasions that the assessment of its severity depends on all the circumstances of the case. But the ill-treatment must "necessarily be serious" such that it is "an affront to fundamental humanitarian principles to remove an individual to a country where he is at risk of serious ill-treatment": see Ullah paras [38-39].
27. Secondly, a causal link must be shown to exist between the act or threatened act of removal or expulsion and the inhuman treatment relied on as violating the applicant's article 3 rights.28. Thirdly, in the context of a foreign case, the article 3 threshold is particularly high simply because it is a foreign case. And it is even higher where the alleged inhuman treatment is not the direct or indirect responsibility of the public authorities of the receiving state, but results from some naturally occurring illness, whether physical or mental.
29. Fourthly, an article 3 claim can in principle succeed in a suicide case.
30. Fifthly, in deciding whether there is a real risk of a breach of article 3 in a suicide case, a question of importance is whether the applicant's fear of ill-treatment in the receiving state upon which the risk. of suicide is said to be based is objectively well-founded. If the fear is not well-founded, that will tend to weigh against there being a real risk that the removal will be in breach of article 3.
31. Sixthly, a further question of considerable relevance is whether the removing and/or the receiving state has effective mechanisms to reduce the risk of suicide. If there are effective mechanisms, that too will weigh heavily against an applicant's claim that removal will violate his or her article 3 rights. "
"The plain fact is that the argument throughout has been bedevilled by a failure to grasp the distinction in non-state agent cases between on the one hand the risk of serious harm and on the other hand the risk of treatment contrary to article 3. In cases where the risk "emanates from intentionally inflicted acts of the public authorities in the receiving country" (the language of paragraph 49 of D v United Kingdom 24 EHRR 423, 447) one can use those terms interchangeably: the intentionally inflicted acts would without more constitute the proscribed treatment. Where, however, the risk emanates from non-state bodies, that is not so: any harm inflicted by non-state agents will not constitute article 3 ill-treatment unless in addition the state has failed to provide reasonable protection. If someone is beaten up and seriously injured by a criminal gang, the member state will not be in breach of article 3 unless it has failed in its positive duty to provide reasonable protection against such criminal acts. This provides the answer to Mr Nicol's reliance on the UK's obligation under article 3 being a negative obligation and thus absolute. The argument begs the vital question as to what particular risk engages the obligation. Is it the risk merely of harm or is it the risk of proscribed treatment? In my judgment it is the latter."
"9. This judgment (Bensaid) establishes, in my opinion quite clearly, that reliance may in principle be placed on article 8 to resist an expulsion decision, even where the main emphasis is not on the severance of family and social ties which the applicant has enjoyed in the expelling country but on the consequences for his mental health of removal to the receiving country. The threshold of successful reliance is high, but if the facts are strong enough article 8 may in principle be invoked. It is plain that "private life" is a broad term, and the Court has wisely eschewed any attempt to define it comprehensively. It is relevant for present purposes that the Court saw mental stability as an indispensable precondition to effective enjoyment of the right to respect for private life. In Pretty v United Kingdom (2002) 35 EHRR 1, paragraph 61, the Court held the expression to cover "the physical and psychological integrity of a person" and went on to observe that
"Article 8 also protects a right to personal development, and the right to establish and develop relationships with other human beings and the outside world."
Elusive though the concept is, I think one must understand "private life" in article 8 as extending to those features which are integral to a person's identity or ability to function socially as a person. Professor Feldman, writing in 1997 before the most recent decisions, helpfully observed ("The Developing Scope of Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights", [1997] EHRLR 265, 270):
"Moral integrity in this sense demands that we treat the person holistically as morally worthy of respect, organising the state and society in ways which respect people's moral worth by taking account of their need for security." 10. I would answer the question of principle in paragraph 1 above by holding that the rights protected by article 8 can be engaged by the foreseeable consequences for health of removal from the United Kingdom pursuant to an immigration decision, even where such removal does not violate article 3, if the facts relied on by the applicant are sufficiently strong. In so answering I make no reference to "welfare", a matter to which no argument was directed. It would seem plain that, as with medical treatment so with welfare, an applicant could never hope to resist an expulsion decision without showing something very much more extreme than relative disadvantage as compared with the expelling state.
24 .... If, however, his phobia of returning to Germany were found to be genuine (whether well-founded or not), and if his account of his previous experience (including his account of the severe brutality he claims to have suffered) were found to be true, I do not think one can rule out in limine the possibility of a finding, properly made, that return to Germany would violate Mr Razgar's rights under article 8. It follows that in my opinion, agreeing with both the judge and all three members of the Court of Appeal, the Secretary of State could not properly certify this claim to be manifestly unfounded."
"In order to bring himself within such an exceptional engagement of Article 8 the applicant has to establish a very grave state of affairs, amounting to a flagrant or fundamental breach of the article, which in effect constitutes a complete denial of his rights."
"[A]lthough the [Convention] rights may be engaged, legitimate immigration control will almost certainly mean that derogation from the rights will be proper and will not be disproportionate"
In the present case, the Court of Appeal had no doubt (paragraph 26 of its judgement) that this overstated the position. I respectfully consider the element of overstatement to be small. Decisions taken in pursuit to the lawful operation of immigration control will be proportionate in all save for a small minority of exceptional cases, identifiable only on a case by case basis."
"Because there is no presumption of family life, in my judgment a family life is not established between an adult child and his surviving parent or other siblings unless something more exists than normal emotional ties: see S v United Kingdom (1984) 40 DR 196 and Abdulaziz, Cabales and Balkandali v United Kingdom [1985] 7 EHRR 471. Such ties might exist if the appellant were dependent on his family or vice versa."
"The [Immigration] Rules state the detail of immigration policy, and in so doing prescribe in effect which classes of aliens will, in the ordinary way be allowed to enter the UK and which will not .. .In our judgement his [the adjudicator's] duty, when faced with an Article 8 case where the would be immigrant has no claim under the Rules, is and is only to see whether an exceptional case has been made out such that the requirement of proportionality requires a departure from the relevant Rules in the particular circumstances."
" ... where ties to the United Kingdom are claimed in potential third country cases would normally have their asylum claim considered substantively in this country where:
(a) an applicant's spouse is in the United Kingdom;
(b) the applicant is an unmarried minor and a parent in the United Kingdom;
(c) the applicant has an unmarried minor child m the United Kingdom.
The policy in (a) would not be applied in cases where a marriage was contracted after the applicant's arrival in the United Kingdom. In all cases "in the United Kingdom" is to be taken as meaning with leave to enter or remain or on temporary admission to this country as an asylum seeker prior to an initial decision. on their application.
Discretion may be exercised according to the merits of the case where:
(a) a married minor was involved but the criteria in (b) or (c) above were otherwise fulfilled (we would be less likely to consider cases under (c) than (b ) under these circumstances);
(b) the applicant was an elderly or otherwise dependent parent;
(c) the family link was not one which would normally be considered but there was clear evidence that the applicant was wholly or mainly dependent on the relative in the United Kingdom and that there was an absence of similar support elsewhere. "
Analysis
Conclusion