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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> XM (Albania, Victims of extortion, Sufficiency of protection) Albania [2004] UKIAT 00178 (02 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00178.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 00178, [2004] UKIAT 178 |
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APPEAL No. XM (Albania, Victims of extortion, Sufficiency of protection.) Albania [2004] UKIAT 00178
Date of hearing: 21 May 2004
Date Determination notified: 2 July 2004
XM | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"The Appellant claims to have a well-founded fear of persecution in Albania from the Mafia because he reported them to the police after his daughter Viola, aged 15, was kidnapped by them on 22 April 2002. She was released on 26 April 2002. Having reported the kidnapping to the authorities, one of the two kidnappers was arrested before [the Appellant] left the country. As a result of reporting this gang which the Appellant claimed was linked with the Mafia, he received death threats and decided to leave Albania on 18 May 2002, obtaining visit visas to the United Kingdom on 28 May 2002 and he left on his own passport on 2 June 2002."
9. We were asked to note that the police had arrested one kidnapper and had been able to identify the other. The Appellant was, suggested Ms. Sigley, given support and protection. The Adjudicator's finding, that the Appellant would have a sufficiency of protection in Albania, was, Ms. Sigley urged, sustainable. According to the Appellant's expert, no one has a sufficiency of protection in Albania. The "expert" is a "D. Phil." research student. At the foot of page 1 of his report, he refers to members of the special police commander unit, who always wear masks and this, suggests the expert is,
"…so as to protect the unit from reprisals".
The report goes on to suggest that should their identities be known, it is widely acknowledged that they would have been assassinated. The expert says,
"The Government has no way to offer adequate protection to its own elite police units, let alone regular police officers or witnesses."
Ms Sigley asked us to note that members of the United Kingdom Special Forces and police units, when on active duty, often wear masks simply to protect their identity. It is not suggested that the reason is to protect them from assassination, neither is it suggested that the United Kingdom Government is not able to offer protection to them. She submitted that the "expert" report had wholly ignored the help and assistance given by the Albanian Authorities to this Appellant, before he left Albania. She asked us to note the difference between the comments on trafficking in persons in the US State Department Report for 2002, and those for 2003. In 2003, at the end of paragraph 4 on the first page, the US State Department reported that,
"…trafficking in persons remained a problem, which the Government took steps to address." (our emphasis)
It was clear, the Presenting Officer submitted, that there have been improvements in the time between the dates of the two reports. She asked us to note paragraphs 6.24 to 6.49 of the CIPU Report. The problem of corruption amongst Police officers is being tackled by the Government of Albania. Prosecutions are taking place against corrupt officers and against trafficking and trafficking has decreased. The objective material does support the Adjudicator's findings. She invited us to dismiss the Appeal.
"…..while I have in the main found the Appellant's Account of his experiences to be genuine, I do not believe his evidence that those who abducted his daughters were members of a gang or that they were part of the Mafia group. I do not believe that there was a connection between those who abducted his niece and this abduction. I do not accept the Appellant's evidence of a connection between those who abducted his daughter with the individual he named as part of a greater gang as this information came only in his oral evidence and I concluded that it was a further embellishment of his claim."
"79. The Article does not name the Appellant's family however it describes a man ending up in handcuffs after defrauding his neighbour for prostitution and continues by saying:
"Mentor Daci was arrested from police agents of Commissariat Number 2 in Tirana. His arrest is done after a denunciation from the parents of a 15 year old girl who has been (eligible) from Mentor Daci and his collaborator Xhelil Koldoshi. These two people have tried to traffick the teenager for prostitution. Immediately after the denunciation to the police forces of Sariet Number 2 are set and have arrested the 33 year old Daci. Meanwhile Xhelil Koldoshi is declared a wanted person from the police because his arrest was not made possible".
80. There is no reference in this Article to a gang or a group in addition to the two abductors and the Account records vigorous action by the Police, the arrest and the detention of one of these men and the pursuit of the other."
"The Appellant has asserted that these two individuals named in the report are part of a greater gang led by a person who abducted his niece. In his oral evidence he called it the Vengeance Gang which the Appellant had not previously stated and I concluded that his account of this particular armed gang was an embellishment to his original claims.
"I do not believe that any complete or comprehensive exposition can be devised which would precisely and comprehensively define the relevant level of protection. The use of words like "sufficiency" or "effectiveness", both of which may be seen as relative, does not provide a precise solution. Certainly no one would be entitled to an absolute guaranteed immunity. That would be beyond any realistic practical expectation. Moreover it is relevant to note that in Osman v United Kingdom (1998) 29 EHRR 245. The European Court of Human Rights recognised that Account should be taken of the operational Responsibilities and constraints on the provision of police protection and accordingly the obligation to protect must no be so interpreted as to impose an impossible or disproportionate burden upon the Authorities. At the least, as is noted in condition (iii) to Rule 344 which I have quoted earlier, the person must be able to show that if he is not granted asylum he would be required to go to a country where his life and freedom would be threatened. There must be in place a system of domestic protection and machinery for the detection, prosecution and punishment of acting contrary to the purposes, which the Convention requires to have protected. More importantly, there must be an ability and a readiness to operate that machinery. But precisely where the line is drawn beyond that generality is necessarily a matter of the circumstances of each particular case."
"…will continue to experience harassment and threats in Albania until they withdraw their complaints against the traffickers involved in her forcible kidnap. Therefore they will likely suffer an escalating campaign of violence. The Albanian Government has no capacity to protect them from such a sustained campaign."
He is also of the opinion that the capacity of the Albanian police to deal with violence against women is "extremely limited". He goes on to say:-
"..it could be considered that the Albanian police have been negligent in their duty of care towards such women as Ms Muca."
We have considered his report together with the Country Information and Policy Unit assessment. We were provided with the April 2004 assessment.
24. Unicef, in their 2003 Report, noted that,
"The recent actions of the Albanian Government had as huge impact in lowering the numbers of trafficking victims transited through Albania in the previous year."
31. For all these reasons we have concluded that we must dismiss this Appeal.
Appellant's appeal dismissed.
Richard Chalkley
Vice President