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United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> BN (MDC) Zimbabwe [2002] UKIAT 05518 (29 November 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2002/05518.html Cite as: [2002] UKIAT 05518, [2002] UKIAT 5518 |
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BN (MDC) Zimbabwe [2002] UKIAT 05518
Date of hearing: 27 September 2002
Date Determination notified: 29 November 2002
Secretary of State for the Home
Department |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
BN | RESPONDENT |
The Adjudicator's determination
The Secretary of State's submissions
The claimant's submissions
"Case study: the case of "A" in Matanga village
In the run-up to the 2000 parliamentary elections, the Mberengwa area of Midlands Province became a "no-go" zone controlled by ZANU-PF and State-sponsored "militia". Roadblocks were set up and access to the area was restricted. Those without ruling party membership cards were beaten up. During the weeks before the parliamentary election, more than 150 cases of torture and assault - including incidents of rape and genital mutilation - were reported to the police in Matanga town, according to the MDC, but there were no arrested. It appeared to visiting journalists that police officers had close ties with the "militias", one foreign journalist was threatened by a "militia" member who was then seen conferring with the commanding officer of Matanga police station ..."
"2. ...
Between the June 2000 elections and the presidential elections of March 2002 there has been a violent counter-attack on MDC supporters and suspected supporters in Nkayi. Headmen and others have been murdered and the district has been terrorised by the ZANU/PF youth militia. Her uncle has probably been at risk and I am in doubt that if she were to return to the district she would herself be at risk.
3. Gweru is not "near" the Midlands Province as is surmised in [the Adjudicator's determination]. It is the administrative headquarters of the province and the seat of its governor, Cephas Msipa.
...
It voted for Nkomo's ZAPU in 1980 and great efforts and much force was employed to win the area for ZANU/PF in subsequent elections. It is not clear where Nkangala lives in Gweru. Should it be the high density township of Mkoba, of which we heard a lot during the conference [a conference Professor Ranger had recently attended] there is no doubt that it is politically a very turbulent area.
4. The current political situation in Zimbabwe more generally has become increasingly polarised. People do not need to be office-holders in the MDC, nor even members of the party, in order to fall under suspicion or to be the victims of persecution and attack. When I was in Zimbabwe this August, many people complained to me that there was no room "in the middle"; no possibility of neutrality. To adopt a neutral position is to be characterised as a supporter of the opposition. The politburo member, Didymus Mutasa, said two weeks ago that it would be better if all MDC voters and "neutrals" vanished from Zimbabwe leaving only those were "loyal to the revolution". In such a situation it is impossible to predict exactly who will be at risk. In Zimbabwe in August I met a very wide range of people who had been assaulted or threatened and forced from their jobs. In this context Busisiwe Nkangala might well be the object of attack.
...
5. Failed asylum seekers returning to Zimbabwe and identified as such are inevitably regarded as disloyal. They are people who have tried to throw in their low with the old colonial "enemy", Britain. There is an accumulating "case-law", regularly reported at the Zimbabwe asylum circle, of returned asylum seekers being taken aside and identified at Harare airport; of some arrests; and of some subsequent attacks on family houses. I could not go so far as to say that every returned asylum seeker would by definition be at risk, but the risk grows as the situation becomes more and more polarised.
6. ... the risk to Ms Busisiwe Nkangala and to others in a similar position is of extra-legal punishment and assault. On return to the country and at the airport, the agents of the Central Intelligence Organisation represent the main threat. In the country as a whole the main threat comes from members of the youth militias under the command of some of the ex-combatants. It should be noted that this make young asylum seekers particularly vulnerable. There is great pressure on young people to join the militias and those who refuse to do so are stigmatised. (Many university students, returning to their home areas for the vacation, found themselves in this position ...)."
Mr Symes submitted that in addition to the strong body of objective country of origin information, including that contained in the CIPU Report of April 2002, that the Home Office itself acknowledged the deteriorating situation in an exchange of correspondence between the Refugee Law Centre and the Home Office. He referred us to letters in this regard in his bundle and in particular a letter from the Home Office dated 10 June 2002 which states:
"There was no evidence of unsuccessful asylum seekers being routinely or systematically detained or ill-treated on return to Zimbabwe. However, the political and security situation in Zimbabwe was deteriorating rapidly in the run-up to the March presidential election, so the Home Secretary decided to temporarily suspend removals so that we may take stock of the situation, in particular the risk to returnees, once the election has taken place."
He also referred us to a UNHCR letter of 12 June 2002, relating to returns to Zimbabwe, which included a statement that:
"Real or perceived members and supporters of the MDC or any other opposition party or movement continue to be the target of human rights violations, including ill-treatment, torture, arbitrary arrest and detention. Likewise, persons who, because of their background, might be considered to be critical of the current regime are also reported to suffer similar treatment. There have been credible reports of further population displacement, especially in Matabeleland, the stronghold of the opposition MDC, due to continuing political violence.
In the light of these observations, UNHCR reiterates its opinion that it is premature to reconsider the policy of removal of unsuccessful asylum seekers to Zimbabwe, and that under the present circumstances the suspension of removal should be maintained."
The issue
Assessment
Decision
A R MACKEY
Vice President