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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> K v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Russia) [2003] UKIAT 00082 (23 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00082.html |
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APPEAL No. [2003] UKIAT 00082 K (Russia)
Date of hearing: 26 March 2004
Date Determination notified: 23 April 2004
K | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
(1) Home Office polices - "in accordance with the law" in Article 8(2)
(2) Delay – false asylum claims
(a) We consider the relevance of an application for consideration under the announcement in October 2003 of "an audit exercise of all family applications for asylum lodged before 2nd October 2003" (hereafter referred to as the October Exercise) to the phrase "in accordance with the law" as that phrase is used in Article 8(2).
Our consideration of this argument is set out at paragraphs 14.1 to 14.13 below.
(b) We consider the relevance of a false asylum claim to the delay of the Secretary of State in reaching a decision on that claim. We also consider the relevance of long residence in the United Kingdom in the case of an Article 8 claim to private and family life, where the private and family life arrangements have been entered into whilst awaiting a decision from the Secretary of State on the false asylum claim and whilst pursuing an appeal against the refusal of the asylum claim.
Our consideration of this is set out at paragraph 15.14(a) below.
(a) with regard to the Article 8 claim. This challenge was brought only with regard to the Adjudicator's decision on proportionality.(b) with regard to the Adjudicator's assessment of credibility.
Permission to appeal was granted only with regard to Article 8 claim.
19th May 1996: | The Appellant arrived in the United Kingdom. She was granted limited leave to remain for 3 months subject to certain restrictions. |
On an application for an extension of her leave, she was granted further leave to remain, subject to the same restrictions until 19th November 1996. | |
19th Nov 1996: | She applied for asylum. |
7th Jan 1997: | She submitted her completed "Statement of Evidence Form". |
3rd Oct 1997: | She met her husband. He is a fellow Russian national. At this stage, her husband did not have leave to remain in the United Kingdom. |
7th Sept 1999: | Their first child was born. He is now about 4 ½ years old. |
3rd Feb 2000: | The Appellant's partner was granted 4 years' exceptional leave to remain in the United Kingdom. |
19th Jun 2000: | The Appellant and her partner married. |
20th Sept 2000: | The Appellant applied for variation of her leave, as a spouse. |
19th Oct 2000: | The Appellant was interviewed about her asylum and human rights claims. |
25th Jan 2001: | The Respondent refused her asylum and human rights claims. |
Aug 2001: | The Appellant's and her husband's second child was born. He is now 2 years 7 or 8 months old. |
(a) That the Adjudicator had failed to take into account the delay on the part of the Respondent in making a decision on the Appellant's application for asylum. Reliance is placed on Arben Shala v. SSHD [2003] EWCA Civ 233.(b) That the Adjudicator had attached undue weight to the Appellant's precarious immigration history pending resolution of her asylum claim. In Mahmood v. The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2001] INLR 1, [2001] IAR 229, the Court of Appeal enunciated the principle that knowledge of the precarious immigration status on the part of the other party to the marriage at the time of the marriage militates against a finding that removal violates Article 8. The grounds of application contend that the instant appeal is distinguishable in that the Appellant had not been refused leave to enter or remain at the time of her marriage. Further, or in the alternative, it is asserted that, before the decision was made in this case, the Appellant had met her husband, had a child and been married.
(c) In stating that he could see no valid reason why the Appellant could not return to Russia and make an entry clearance either as a student or a spouse, the Adjudicator had not taken into account the difficulties which she would face in Russia or the uncertainty over the length of separation between the Appellant and her family members. Women in Russia face discrimination. There is bribery and corruption in the propiska regulation system which is required for access to the most civil, social and economic rights.
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
(i) firstly, the jurisdiction of an Adjudicator (and the Tribunal) in a Section 65 appeal is limited to considering whether the decision is contrary to the ECHR. There is simply no scope for the Tribunal to allow the Appellant's appeal simply because the Secretary of State has not reached a decision on her application for consideration for leave to remain under the October Exercise;(ii) to allow the Appellant's appeal outright would effectively confer on her a benefit which she does not have under the October Exercise (for the reasons we give in paragraphs 14.9 to 14.12 below).
"will be eligible for the concession".
(a) the Appellant suffers from eczema and asthma (page 98 of the Appellant's bundle). In 1997, she was diagnosed with an ovarian cyst (page 102 of the Appellant's bundle). According to the letter dated 16th October 2001 on page 101, she had a previous history of post-natal depression. The letter dated 18th June 2003 states that she suffered an episode of depression following the loss of her job in 1998 and a 6-month episode of post-natal depression following the birth of her first son in 1998 (we assume that this is a mistake and that the year of the birth of the first son was in fact 1999).
We note that there is nothing in these letters which indicates that the Appellant is now suffering from any depression, nor is there any indication that she is receiving any treatment for depression. Accordingly, it appears that, at present, she suffers from eczema and asthma. There is no indication in these documents of the severity of either condition.
(b) The Appellant's second son (Master Anton Sukonkin) has suspected atopic eczema. This is a skin condition which is often linked to allergies. According to the letter dated 2nd June 2003, he has been referred for allergy skin patch testing. Dr. T. Strommer of the Staunton Group Practice has a strong suspicion that the child may be allergic to house dust mites living in carpets. Our attention was not drawn to the results of any such skin patch testing. There is a strong family history of atopy and asthma. The Appellant is worried that her son may develop asthma in the near future.
There is nothing to suggest that the Appellant's second son is actually suffering from asthma. He suffers from atopic eczema. In May 2003, he was suffering from severely infected eczema. We have not been told what his condition is now and whether the eczema is under control.
People who have a well-founded fear of persecution from the local authorities in one of the regions of the Russian Federation, without the involvement of or the complicity of the federal authorities, may, in principle, find effective protection elsewhere in Russia.
The CIPU report then goes on to mention the difficulties in settling elsewhere, including the difficulties in registering oneself elsewhere.
23. This reasoning ................ within it there is in my view to be found an important truth which bears generally on cases such as this. Firm immigration control requires consistency of treatment between one aspiring immigrant and another. If the established rule is to the effect – as it is – that a person seeking rights of residence here on grounds of marriage (not being someone who already enjoys a leave, albeit limited, to remain in the UK) must obtain an entry clearance in his country of origin, then a waiver of that requirement in the case of someone who has found his way here without an entry clearance and then seeks to remain on marriage grounds, having no other legitimate claim to enter, would in the absence of exceptional circumstances to justify the waiver, disrupt and undermine firm immigration control because it would be manifestly unfair to other would-be entrants who are content to take their place in the entry clearance queue in their country of origin.(our emphasis)
(a) The Appellant was only granted two short periods of limited leave. On the last day of her lawful leave, she made a false asylum claim. During the period of the delay of 4½ years when her false asylum claim was being considered by the Secretary of State, she knew she had made a false asylum claim and yet she entered into her private life and family life arrangements. The state's interest in legitimate aim of immigration control is not merely a reference to the fact that claimants are normally expected to be return to their own countries and make entry clearance applications and that exceptional factors have to be shown to excuse them from having to do so. Where an Article 8 claim is based on arrangements entered into whilst a false asylum claim is being considered by the Secretary of State and/or an appeal against that the refusal of that false asylum claim is being pursued, Adjudicators must give deference to the state's interest in deterring false asylum claims. The abuse of the system by persons who make false asylum claims clog up the system and reduce the state's effectiveness in dealing promptly with genuine claims. Whilst it may be asserted that the pursuit of an appeal on Article 8 grounds is separate from the pursuit of the appeal on asylum grounds, the inescapable fact is that, if that individual had never made the false asylum claim in the first place, it is highly unlikely that they would have been able to "clock up" their residence in the United Kingdom and/or establish their private and family life – in other words, they would not have had an Article 8 claim at all, if they had not made a false asylum claim. In cases where a false asylum claim has been made, Adjudicators should therefore consider not only the state's interest in preventing queue jumping but also the state's interest in deterring the abuse of the asylum system. For these reasons, we concluded that, whilst the delay of the Secretary of State in reaching a decision on the Appellant's asylum claim and the long residence of the Appellant in the United Kingdom (nearly 8 years) are relevant factors, they do not detract to any significant extent from the weight which is normally given to the state's interest in immigration control.(b) The facts of this case are distinguishable from Shala. In the Shala case, the claimant was married to someone who had been granted indefinite leave to remain as a refugee. The applicant in that case would not have fallen into the category of persons who are required to apply for entry clearance from abroad but for the delay in reaching a decision in his case. In the instant appeal, the Appellant has no other basis for remaining in the United Kingdom. She has a chance (that is the most we can say) that she might be granted indefinite leave to remain under the October Exercise. When she met her husband in October 1997 and when her first child was born, neither she or her husband had leave to remain in the United Kingdom. Her husband was granted exceptional leave to remain only in February 2000. He has made an application for indefinite leave to remain but the grant of indefinite leave to remain is by no means a forgone conclusion. He has only recently become eligible for consideration for the grant of indefinite leave to remain.
Decision
The appeal is DISMISSED.
Ms. D. K. GILL
VICE PRESIDENT Date: 19th April 2004