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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 >> B A, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2014] EWHC 4223 (Admin) (12 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/4223.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4223 (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 :
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The Queen on the application of B A |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Defendant |
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Catherine Rowlands (instructed by TSOL) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 10th December 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ McKenna :
Introduction
Background
"Your client's claim to be a victim of torture had been addressed on 23/10/2013 and we do not believe your client's claims.
Your client has demonstrated a blatant disregard for the immigration laws of the United Kingdom. She was encountered exiting a lorry that had just arrived in the UK. Therefore attempting to enter the UK by clandestine means.
Your client has no proven close ties in the UK therefore we can not be sure that she will remain in one place or she will surrender to custody to implement her removal.
Your client has not produced satisfactory evidence of any lawful basis to remain in the United Kingdom.
There are no other proven compelling or mitigating factors to consider her release.
Your client's detention will, however, be reviewed at regular intervals and should your client's detention be no longer considered appropriate release will be arranged accordingly".
The issues
i) From 23rd October 2013 until 17th January 2014 because the Defendant should have released her as a result of the Rule 35 report, or the Defendant failed to give proper reasons for deciding to continue detaining the Claimant ("the Rule 35 issue"); orii) From shortly after 22nd November 2013 when the removal directions were deferred, the judicial review application was filed and no further removal directions were set, there being reasonable alternatives to detention; or
iii) From 9th December 2013 when the Defendant refused temporary release without adequate or lawful reasoning ("the reasonableness of detention issue").
Legal Framework
i) The Defendant's policy as set out in her Enforcement Instructions and Guidance Chapter 55.10 on categories of persons who are considered generally unsuitable for detention, unless very exceptional circumstances justify their continued detention. The categories include those in respect of whom there is independent evidence that they are victims of torture; andii) The implied limitations on the exercise of the power of detention known as the Hardial Singh principles namely:
i) The Defendant must intend to deport the person and can only use the powers to detain for that purpose;ii) The deportee may only be detained for a period that is reasonable in all the circumstances;iii) If, before the expiry of the reasonable period, it becomes apparent that the Defendant will not be able to effect deportation within that reasonable period, she should not seek to exercise the power of detention;iv) The Defendant should act with reasonable diligence and expedition to effect removal.
"25. In this connection the Secretary of State has published policy guidance (the Guidance), which, although it has the quality of policy rather than law, can, where that policy has not been applied, render the Secretary of State liable for the tort of false imprisonment. Thus the Secretary of State is obliged to follow policy absent good reason not to do so and, where the breaches bear directly upon detention may, by vitiating authority for detention, sound in damages for false imprisonment: see Lumba and R (Kambadzi) v. SSHD [2011] UKSC 23. Causation goes to damages not liability.
26. The decision on such questions is for the court itself, and does not depend on the application of Wednesbury principles of review: R(A) v. SSHD [2007] EWCA Civ 804 at [71] per Keene LJ, and Anam v. SSHD [2010] EWAC Civ 1140 at [77] per Maurice Kay LJ.
27. At the liability stage, the burden of proving lawfulness is on the Secretary of State: Lumba at [44]".
• "20 If the medical practitioner is concerned that a detainee may have been a victim of torture he/she must always make a rule 35(3) report. Rule 35 places medical practitioners at the centre of the process and fundamentally it is for the medical practitioner to decide if he/she has concerns in a professional capacity that a detainee may have been the victim of torture.
• "21 The medical practitioner has no obligation to report an allegation from the detainee if this allegation does not cause the medical practitioner him/herself to be concerned, in the context of the overall medical examination, that the person may be a victim of torture. However, if an allegation does cause the medical practitioner to be concerned, then he/she should report it. The medical practitioner should set out clearly if his/her concern derives from an allegation with no or limited medical evidence in support.
• 23…The medical practitioner must identify any medical evidence which may be contrary to the account given by the detained person.
• 25 A Rule 35 report is a mechanism for a medical practitioner to refer on concerns, rather than an expert medical-legal report and so there is no need for medical practitioners to apply the terms or methodology set out in the Istanbul Protocol".
"Review the report on receipt:
If the medical practitioner clearly states that the report reflects a repeated claim or assertion rather than a reasoned medical concern (the practitioner is entitled to do this), the report must be considered, although it will likely carry less weight as a consequence);
If the report states that it raises a medical concern, but contains insufficient content to understand the medical concern, meaningful consideration of the report will not be possible (such a view must not be reached lightly). In such cases, telephone the Home Office contact management team in the IRC immediately and ask them to obtain sufficient information from the IRC medical practitioner for meaningful consideration, and to repeat the issue in process. The response timescales will resume once report with meaningful content has been received. DSO 17/2012 stipulates that timescales applicable to the IRC actions in obtaining a more detailed report (although upon receipt, every attempt must be made to respond as promptly as possible). Record on CID Notes the fact of the report's lack of content, the outcome of telephone call and the name of the person in the Home Office contact management team and agree action".
The Rule 35 issue
"I have concerns that this detainee may have been the victim of torture".
and he went on to detail the account of what she had reported to him as having happened to her as follows:
"In 1998, aged 15y, she was expelled from Ethiopia with her father and sent to Eritrea. Her father was caught as he was thought to be a criminal by the Eritrean police and she was taken with him to prison. They were kept in prison for about one month and her father died there – killed by them. She was questioned about her father, she was slapped, kicked and raped on one occasion. She was slapped and kicked on many occasions.
After one month in prison, she left prison and went to Lebanon.
She does not have any scars to document".
"In this report you have alleged that in 1998 aged 15 years your father was arrested by the Eritrean police as he was thought to be a criminal and you were taken with him to prison where you were kept for approximately one month. You stated that your father died there (killed by the Eritrean police). You have claimed that you were questioned about your father and that you were slapped and kicked on many occasions and raped on one occasion. After one month in prison you left and went to Lebanon.
When asked if you had any medical problems during your screening interview you stated that you had a problem with hearing and vision but nothing else. You also made no mention of your torture allegation during your screening interview.
The medical report which has been submitted expresses concern that you may have been a victim of torture. The medical practitioner has stated that you have no physical scars to corroborate your allegation of torture. It is noted that Healthcare at Yarl's Wood IRC has not raised any fears about any medical conditions that prevent you from being detained and he has not highlighted that your health is likely to be induressly affected by continued detention or any conditions of detention.
It is not accepted that the medical report submitted constitutes independent evidence of torture; it is a record of your claim to the medical practitioner. Your statement has not led the practitioner to express their own reasoned concern that you are a victim of torture".
The reasonableness of detention issue
i) Contrary to the contents of the letter, the Claimant's allegation of torture had not been substantively considered; on the contrary it was the Defendant's case throughout that that was a matter for the Italian authorities; andii) The decision maker appears to have misunderstood the presumption in favour of liberty and instead seems to have required the Claimant to justify her release.
Conclusion