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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 >> Secretary of State for the Home Department v AH [2008] EWHC 1018 (Admin) (09 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/1018.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1018 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION PURSUANT
TO THE PREVENTION OF TERRORISM ACT 2005
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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AH |
Respondent |
____________________
MR KEIR STARMER QC AND MISS STEPHANIE HARRISON (instructed by TYNDALLWOODS SOLICITORS) for Respondent
MR ANDREW NICOL QC AND MR JUSTIN COLE (instructed by THE TREASURY SOLICITOR SPECIAL ADVOCATE SUPPORT OFFICE) as Special Advocates
Hearing dates: 21, 22, 23,24,25 & 29 April 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mitting:
Background
The principal issues
i) Procedural: has AH been afforded at least the minimum requirements of procedural fairness to which he is entitled in these proceedings?ii) Substantive: is the Secretary of State's decision that AH has been involved in terrorism-related activity flawed?
iii) Article 5: did the order as originally made and renewed deprive AH of his liberty or merely restrict his liberty?
iv) Necessity: is the Secretary of State's decision that the making, renewal and continuance in force of the Control Order is necessary for purposes connected with protecting members of the public from a risk of terrorism flawed?
There are subsidiary questions which I will deal with under the appropriate head.
The Secretary of State's case
i) AH collected and organised the remittance of funds for the insurgency in Iraqii) AH used anti-surveillance techniques, such as the use of telephone kiosks to make sensitive calls and erratic driving, to escape surveillance
iii) AH is an associate of BC (identified by name in the Closed Judgement), an Islamist extremist based in the United Kingdom
iv) AH facilitated the travel of Mukhtar Ibrahim Said, Rizwan Majid and Shakeel Ismail to Heathrow, for onward travel to Pakistan, on 11th December 2004. Their journey was for terrorism-related purposes and AH knew or believed that that was so.
Procedure
"the conclusion which I draw from the four speeches of the majority in MB is that unless, at a minimum, the Special Advocates are able to challenge the Secretary of State's grounds for suspicion on the basis of instructions from the controlled person which directly address their essential features, the controlled person will not receive the fair hearing to which he is entitled except, perhaps, in those cases in which he has no conceivable answer to them".
Mr Starmer QC, AH's open advocate, accepts that distillation, with one qualification: that the possible exception in cases in which the controlled person has no conceivable answer does not exist. I was not intending in AN to state that I accepted the existence of the exception, merely that it was possible. I have read, and am persuaded by, the Judgement of Stanley Burnton J in Secretary of State for the Home Department v AF (Number 2) [2008] EWHC 689 (Admin), and agree with his conclusion in paragraph 32 that there is no such exception.
Substance
AH's association with BC
Security Awareness
The Heathrow trip and its aftermath
Article 5
i) There is no "bright line" separating deprivation of liberty from restriction on liberty: per Lord Bingham paragraph 16 p652b, per Baroness Hale paragraph 58 p664g, per Lord Brown paragraph 91 p675f. In the language of the Strasbourg Court, borderline cases fall within the area of "pure opinion": Guzzardi v Italy (1981) 3 EHRR 333 paragraph 93.ii) The test is objective: the task of the Court is to assess the impact of the measures "on a person in the situation of the person subject to them": per Lord Bingham paragraph 15 p651f, per Baroness Hale paragraph 63 p666d-e, and Lord Brown's conclusion at paragraph 105 p678h-679a. Mr Starmer accepts that the same measures cannot amount to deprivation of liberty in one case, but do in another, simply because of the effect on the morale or mental health of the individual controlled person.
iii) Many relevant factors must be taken into account, but the starting point or "core element" is the length of the curfew: per Lord Brown at paragraph 108 p680b-c and, in the Secretary of State for the Home Department v E [2007] 3 WLR 720, per Lord Bingham at paragraph 11 p725f-g and per Baroness Hale at paragraph 25 p730b.
iv) Social isolation is a significant factor, especially if it approaches solitary confinement during curfew periods: per Lord Bingham at pargraph 24 in JJ p656c and per Baroness Hale at paragraph 60.
a) Prior detention. This is irrelevant. What has happened to an individual controlled person before the Control Order is made cannot help to determine whether or not it has deprived him of liberty.
b) AH was required to live in a flat in a city which was wholly unfamiliar to him. He was subjected to a high degree of social isolation. This is a significant feature which points to deprivation of liberty rather than restriction on liberty.
c) The Secretary of State's opposition to his wife's application to come to the United Kingdom to join him. This is irrelevant. The fact that she was unable to come to the United Kingdom was not due to the imposition of the Control Order even though that was relied on as a ground of refusal by the Secretary of State, but to that entirely separate decision. The fact that his wife did not live with him in the flat is, relevant, because it was a feature of his social isolation.
d) Well intentioned advice by Norwich police officers to those who did visit him had the effect of deterring them from doing so. This is not the product of the Control Order, which imposed no restriction on those permitted to visit him, except for those who were the subject of a Control Order themselves. If it is relevant, which I doubt, its relevance is highly marginal.
e) The fitting of the electronic tag. This is relevant, but not the impact which AH says it has had on his mental health – to some extent confirmed by the report of Dr Skogstad dated 15th April 2008.
f) Prosecution for relatively minor breaches of the Order. The fact that the Order is enforceable by criminal sanctions is relevant (a person can be deprived of liberty even without the use of a lock and key), but not the fact that alleged breaches have resulted in prosecution and detention on remand for five weeks.
g) Regular entry and search of the flat. This is relevant and of some significance.
h) The claimed routine searching and handcuffing of AH. If it has occurred only by virtue of the Control Order, it is unlawful: the Control Order permits neither. If, as may be the case, it has occurred in the exercise of powers arising from the alleged breaches of the Order, it is irrelevant.
i) AH's inability to study when and where he wants or to take up all of the offers of employment made to him. They do not amount to deprivation of liberty. At most, they engage Article 8.
j) The impact on AH's mental health, as evidenced in Dr Skogstad's report. This is irrelevant, for the reasons already explained.
The necessity for the order and its continuance