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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 >> CO and NO (No protected family life) Nigeria [2004] UKIAT 00232 (24 August 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00232.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 00232, [2004] UKIAT 232 |
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CO and NO (No protected family life) Nigeria [2004] UKIAT 00232
Date of hearing: 14 April 2004
Date Determination notified: 24 August 2004
Entry Clearance Officer – Lagos | APPELLANT |
and | |
CO and NO | RESPONDENT |
"I note that the respondent has granted entry clearance to the appellant's father and younger brother who had subsequently travelled to this country and obtained indefinite leave to remain together with their mother and elder sister. I also note that the appellant's mother is a nurse and that strenuous efforts are made to recruit nurses within the Health Service in the United Kingdom. I do not consider for one moment that it is proportionate to preclude entry to the United Kingdom of the appellants and thus in effect split up the close family unit. I accept that the sponsor could return to Nigeria with other members of her family who have been granted indefinite leave to remain but I do not consider for one moment that it is proportionate in relation to the aim to be achieved."
"It is accepted that in circumstances where family life is put forward as existing between an adult child and his parents or an adult sibling and his other siblings there needs to be further evidence of dependency involving more than normal emotional ties. This was reaffirmed by the Tribunal in the recent case of Salad [2002] UKIAT 06698 relying on the earlier case of Advik v United Kingdom, a Strasbourg case decided in September 1995. The relevant quotation from Advik is also contained at paragraph 13 of the decision in Salad. Each case is fact dependent. In Salad adult brothers had been living apart for a long period of time and were not dependent on each other. Equally where relationships between parents and an adult child are concerned the protection of Article 8 would not necessarily be engaged without evidence of further elements of dependency. In the present appeal no evidence of such further dependency has been adduced although the appellant was offered the opportunity to bring oral evidence before us had he wished to do so."
Jonathan Perkins
Vice President