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 High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Jawad v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] EWHC 1800 (Admin) (16 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/1800.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1800 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
AT BIRMINGHAM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
MOHAMMAD JAWAD |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Richard Kimblin (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 14 May 2010
Further written submissions received 12 July 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Wyn Williams:
Relevant facts
"The purpose of the interview is to obtain further details about the asylum claim given on the Statement of Evidence Form (Self-Completion). Those children who are invited to discuss the basis of their claim will be interviewed by officers specifically trained to interview children. An adult acting as an independent 'friend' will be able to accompany the child to the interview in addition to a representative and interpreter. Where asylum claimants are not entitled to funded representation at the asylum interview, cannot afford their own representation and wish to have their asylum interview tape-recorded, IND will offer facilities. Please note that if you do have such representation, then choosing not to have your representative present during interview will not entitle you to have your interview tape-recorded. If you wish your interview to be recorded, you must give IND 24 hours' notice…."
"Further to our meeting yesterday I am writing to outline a number of concerns I have in relation Jawad's outstanding asylum claim and in my opinion how the lengthy delay in the failing to reach a decision in accordance with the Home Office Better Outcomes: The Way Forward 'Improving the care of unaccompanied Asylum seeking children', January 2008 commitment to 'resolving immigration status more quickly' has unfairly prejudiced him in a number of ways.
On 27 August 2008 Jawad will turn 18 years old. Many of his peers having arrived in the UK in November 2005 will have been granted Discretionary Leave to Remain which would expire just prior to on their 18th birthday and they would have applied to the Home Office to extend/vary this leave just prior to the expiry date. In doing so, when the application was made 'in time' the Home Office would have deemed their DLR to have continued beyond the expiry date until such time a final decision had been reached on their asylum claim. It would then be practice for these young people to receive support from our team to apply for benefit payments to include Job Seeker Allowance/Income Support and Housing Benefit. Whilst waiting for the benefits to be received each young person would continue to receive financial and accommodation support from Solihull Education and Children's Services. Jawad will continue to receive this support in the short term, but because he is not eligible for public funds like his peers he will be required to make an application for NAFF support since that Agency has the responsibility for providing the support in Jawad's situation.
This will further impact on him since the accommodation provided by this team will not be financed under the NASS provisions and will therefore necessitate a move for Jawad, potentially away from his friend, support and education and in my opinion is an unnecessary event in Jawad's life.
The delay in Jawad not having received a decision on his asylum claim has meant that he has not been able to receive a National Insurance number in line with his peers and therefore been unable to engage in employment in accordance with the provisions of his DLR.
Finally, in not being in receipt of benefit payments (JSA etc) which act as the gateway to concessionary fees or free access to other services, for example, education, Jawad will be unable to continue his education attending any other courses beyond basic ESOL in September 2008."
Unlawful delay
"34. It was not in dispute that, at least under domestic law, the Secretary of State was under a public law duty to decide the asylum application within a reasonable time. Both parties, as I understood them, accepted what I said in Home Secretary v S [2007] EWCA Civ 546 at para 51:
"The Act does not lay down specific time limits for the handling of asylum applications. Delay may work in different ways for different groups: advantageous for some, disadvantageous for others. No doubt it is implicit in the statute that applications should be dealt with within 'a reasonable time'. That says little in itself. It is a flexible concept, and having scope for variation depending not only the volume of applications and available resources to deal with them, but also on differences in the circumstances and needs of different groups of asylum seekers. But (as was recognised by the White Paper) in resolving such competing demands fairness and consistency are also vital considerations."
"35. Although the concept is flexible, and the dividing line may often be not easy to define, in this case the position seems to me to be reasonably clear…..
36…..had an application for judicial review come before and administrative judge on [these] facts I have little doubt the case for a mandatory order, if necessary, would have been accepted (even if in practice an undertaking would probably have been offered). That to my mind is sufficient indication that …..the dividing line between reasonable and unreasonable may have been crossed…."
"16…..This court has held more than once that for the Secretary of State to fail to take account of or give effect to his own published policy renders his decision not "in accordance with the law": see, for example, Secretary of State for the Home Department v Abdi [1996] IMMAR 148 at 157."
"30….that claims such as these based on delay are unlikely, save in very exceptional circumstances, to succeed and are likely to be regarded as unarguable. It is only if the delay is so excessive as to be regarded as manifestly unreasonable and to fall outside any proper application of the policy or if the Claimant is suffering some particular detriment which the Home Office has failed to alleviate then the claim might be entertained by the court."
Relief
"Further to the ongoing current proceedings I have instructions from my client to offer the following undertaking:
The SSHD will consider any application for Discretionary Leave which your client wishes to make following the conclusion of this judicial review so long as that application is made within one month of the date on which judgment is handed down.
The SSHD will determine any such application for Discretionary Leave made by your client within 3months of the date it is received by the SSHD, absent exceptional circumstances. This undertaking is offered without any admission whatsoever in respect of any ground of the Claimant's judicial review claim."
Damages
"45….in short he claims that by virtue of the Qualification Directive K's claim to refugee status relates to a "civil right" for the purposes of the Convention; and under Article 6 of the Convention, he is entitled to determination of that right by a fair hearing within a reasonable time; and that under section 8 of HRA he is entitled to a compensatory remedy, by way of "just satisfaction" for loss caused by breach of that right. He accepts that this argument goes against the grain of traditional Strasbourg jurisprudence, under which decisions relating to the entry or expulsion of aliens have not been regarded as within Article 6. However, he says that, since 2006, the Qualification Directive has brought about a fundamental change in the legal status of the claim to refugee status, in Convention law, as well as EU law."
Cranston J, at first instance, rejected that argument and on this issue he was upheld by the Court of Appeal.
"80. For the purposes of the present appeals, we do not need to determine the issues raised by Mr Scannell's submissions. What we will say is obiter. However, we do foresee that these issues will have to be decided at some stage, probably in the near future and possibly by a reference to the ECJ; accordingly we propose to give a tentative view about them.
81. It appears to us that the intention of the Qualification and Procedures Directives is to require a member state to make a decision on entitlement within a reasonable time of the application and to allow the issues raised in it to be subject to an appeal. We do not consider that the fact that an appeal from removal directions is by way of judicial review rather than statutory appeal, is, of itself, an insuperable objection. But we do think that, in a case in which the Applicant raises a cogent argument within his statutory appeal that there may not be a safe route of return, the Secretary of State must address that question and the issue must be considered as part of the decision on entitlement. Postponement of such consideration until the Secretary of State is in a position to set safe removal directions would effectively be to postpone the decision until the cessation provisions have come into play.
82. We also consider that it is the intention of the Qualifications Directive that all matters relating to safety on return should form part of the decision on entitlement. Article 8 envisages that a person may properly be returned to his country of origin if only part of it is safe. It excludes 'technical obstacles to return' from the determination of entitlement. On its face, however, this provision has to do principally with internal relocation, which makes it difficult to derive any general proposition from it about the Directive as a whole or as to what the Directive envisages as to safety during return. It gives some modest support to the suggestion that what Mr Thomann calls 'the mechanics of return' are not intended to form part of the case for protection. But not much support – for it starts with the words "As part of the assessment of the application for international protection…." Nevertheless, its first paragraph treats the availability of internal relocation as a factor negating any need for protection, and its third paragraph excludes from this calculation any "technical obstacles to return to the country of origin".
83. Leaving aside the mysterious verb "stay" at the end of the first paragraph, suggesting as it does that the Applicant is already there but probably meaning "go to and remain in", there remains a question about what constitute "technical obstacles" to return. In our view these are probably confined to administrative difficulties such as documentation; they may include physical difficulties such as the lack of return flights; but the phrase does not readily signify a requirement to ignore risks to life or limb once the returnee is back in the country of origin, no only because it does not say so – it speaks only of return to the country of origin – but because to do so would be to permit the very thing that the Directive is designed to prevent, refoulement to a situation of real danger. Our view is that the mere fact that technical obstacles are excluded from consideration suggests that issues of safety during return are to be considered.
84. In conclusion, our provision view is that the Directives read together require that the issues of safety during return (as opposed to technical obstacles to return) should be considered as part of the decision on entitlement. Only technical obstacles of the kind we have sought to identify may legitimately be deferred to the point at which removal directions are being made or considered. We are aware that the entitlements which appear to follow may be considered an unintended consequence of the Directives; but this, as we have said, is an issue for another day. Our provisional view, in the light of the Directive, is that if there is a real issue on safety on return the Secretary of State must engage with it in his decision on entitlement to protection, and his conclusion can be the subject of appeal. In any case in which the Home Secretary did not deal with safety during return (because he did not consider that any issue arose) but where the Appellant raises a cogent argument that there might not be a safe route of return, the appeal tribunal would have to deal with that issue, possibly after calling for information from the Home Secretary as to his intentions. In any event, as it seems to us at present, the decision on entitlement must be taken within a reasonable time and cannot be left until the Home Secretary is in a position to set safe removal directions."
"43. It is also significant in my view that there is now separate European legislation governing the timing of the consideration. That is to be found in Council Directive 2005/85/EC ("the Procedures Directive") which sets minimum standards for procedures for granting refugee status. Article 6(2) says that Member States shall ensure that each adult having legal capacity has the right to make an application for asylum on his or her own behalf. Article 23 ("Examination Procedure") requires Member States to handle applications for asylum in accordance with the principles set out in the Directive and to ensure that the procedure is concluded "as soon as possible without prejudice to an adequate and complete examination". Where a decision cannot be taken within six months, the Applicant concerned must be informed of the time by which the decision is expected to be given, but:
"Such information shall not constitute an obligation for the Member State towards the applicant concerned to take a decision within that time frame.""