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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> BS (Liberty Party, CIO, Airport) Zimbabwe [2002] UKIAT 06461 (11 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2002/06461.html Cite as: [2002] UKIAT 6461, [2002] UKIAT 06461 |
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BS (Liberty Party-CIO-Airport) Zimbabwe [2002] UKIAT 06461
HX44559-01
Date of hearing: 6 December 2002
Date Determination notified: 11 February 2003
Secretary of State for the Home Department | APPELLANT |
and | |
BS | RESPONDENT |
'The United Nations High Commission for Refugees is gravely concerned about the serious human rights violations in Zimbabwe. Those who have sought asylum in the UK should be offered a safe haven and all deportations stopped. Their return to Zimbabwe under current circumstances could seriously jeopardise their physical safety, their liberty and their life.'
'The passport of the deportee is put in an envelope addressed to the Chief Immigration Officer (Harare), together with a passenger list. These documents are taken to immigration before the passengers disembark. The Central Intelligence Organisation at Harare see the passenger list in the Chief Immigration Officer's office before the passengers come into immigration. For deportees the passport will be with the Chief Immigration Officer, meaning that the CIO will have knowledge of the deportee. This results in the deportees being in a very vulnerable position. The Central Intelligence Organisation have an office at the airport, they watch arrivals and departures, they have free access to every office at the airport. The Chief Immigration Officer is also directed by the Central Intelligence Organisation.'
'26. With regard to the appellant's asylum appeal, the appellant has not satisfied me that there is a reasonable degree of likelihood that he has a genuine or objectively well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of his political opinions or his ethnic origins were he to return to Zimbabwe. I do not believe there is a serious possibility that he has been persecute for such reasons in the past. I do not believe there is a reasonable degree of likelihood therefore that he would be persecuted for such reasons in the future. He has not satisfied me that he was ever involved in politics in a way that would have brought him to the notice of the authorities and cause them to take adverse action against him. Furthermore, I do not believe that were he to return to Zimbabwe as a failed asylum seeker in the UK it would be imputed to him that he had a political view opposed to the government in Zimbabwe, and therefore a likely target of persecution. I accept that there is a reasonable degree of likelihood that the evidence produced by the Zimbabwe Association as to the treatment of returnees at Harare Airport is accurate. However I do not accept that the appellant has satisfied me that such returnees would be at real risk because of any imputed political belief. The CIOs may apprehend the appellant at the airport in Harare simply because the appellant was a failed asylum seeker. I therefore dismiss this appellant's asylum appeal.
27. In respect of the appellant's human rights appeal, Mr Walsh has said that Articles 3, 5, 6 and 14 would be breached were this appellant to return to Zimbabwe. I have considered carefully the most recent pronouncements of the United Nations High Commissioner for refugees and I have cited the general risks to failed asylum seekers from Zimbabwe when they are forcibly returned. The UNHCR has recommended that the United Kingdom government suspend its policy of returning people to Zimbabwe. The United Kingdom has stated through the Home Secretary in a press release on 14 January 2002 that all returns are to be suspended until after the March 2002 presidential elections in Zimbabwe after which the situation will be reviewed. I have considered the general situation in Zimbabwe from all the background evidence before me and I have cited some of the dangers that are faced by people return to Zimbabwe. I have cited the evidence of the Zimbabwe Association. Without further evidence, there is clearly a reasonable degree of likelihood that what is being asserted in their press release as to the activities of the CIO at Harare airport is accurate. I have no reason to believe that a return of an asylum seeker forcibly to any other part of Zimbabwe by a different route would be safer. Mr Halliday at one point suggested that a way round the problem would be for the appellant to return to Zimbabwe voluntarily. That may well be, but the decision which is being appealed before me is a decision to return this appellant to Zimbabwe as a consequence of a failed application for asylum. I have to consider whether there are substantial grounds for believing the appellant would be at real risk of his rights under the ECHR being breached as a consequence of the decision of the Secretary of State. As at the moment the Secretary of State has temporarily suspended returns. The inference I have to draw from this is that there is a real risk of some kind which has been accepted by the Secretary of State. There is no date set as to when returns can commence save that the matter will be reconsidered after the presidential elections. There is nothing in the evidence which leads me to conclude that in the foreseeable future matters will be any different from what they are now. Of course, the political situation may change after the presidential elections, but I am in no position to forecast what that change might be. Clearly the CIOs in Zimbabwe operate at times in an irrational way and are a law unto themselves. It is well documented that they have committed a number of human rights abuses. This appellant, were he to return to Zimbabwe Airport as a returned asylum seeker either now or in the foreseeable future, may well be interrogated by the CIO agents in respect of the failed asylum claim in the United Kingdom. Those agents could well detain him. They could maltreat him, they could treat him inhumanely or even torture him. Those risks are real and well documented. The recent pronouncements of the UNHCR Amnesty International and the inference I draw from the temporary suspension of returns to Zimbabwe via the Home Secretary lead me to the conclusion that this appellant must be at real risk of treatment which could well be contrary to his rights under Article 3 of the ECHR. I also think that he could be unlawfully detained in breach of his rights under Article 5. In all the circumstances therefore I allow the appellant's human rights appeal.
28. Consequently, I direct that this appellant should not be removed from the United Kingdom to Zimbabwe. I further direct that he should be given leave to remain in the United Kingdom until such time as there is no real risk to those returning to Zimbabwe having failed in their applications for asylum in the United Kingdom.'