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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 >> SM (credibility issues, absence of appellant) Iraq [2004] UKIAT 00279 (05 October 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00279.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 279, [2004] UKIAT 00279 |
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SM (credibility issues-absence of appellant) Iraq [2004] UKIAT 00279
Date of hearing: 23 September 2004
Date Determination notified: 05 October 2004
SM |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"4. The evidence of the appellant is that when at secondary school he was forced to join the Ba'ath Party. After graduating from University he started a teaching career in a secondary school and was approached by members of the Ba'ath Party to promote their ideology. On 12 November 2002 he claims to have been arrested at his school by the security forces and advised to change his ethnicity from Kurdish at Arabic. Pursuant to this arrest he was detained for 80 days, claims to have been beaten, held in solitary confinement, interrogated and threatened. He was then he alleges offered a conditional release on a promise that he would spy for the Ba'ath Party in Northern Iraq. He was expected to report back to the Ba'ath Party two days after his release to receive further instructions on the basis of his past involvement with the Ba'ath Party, his arrest and detention, the appellant claims that he fears a return to Iraq in that he may be the victim of revenge killings.
5. In terms of the credibility of the appellant, I note from the decision in Coskuner (16769) that the failure of an appellant to give evidence, although neutral as to credibility, where no evidence is given is no need for an Adjudicator to make credibility findings. It is simply open to me to conclude as I do in this instance that the appellant has not discharged the burden of proof upon him. Although I do not make any credibility findings as such, I do find the appellant's evidence to be implausible that he would after a period of 80 days of detention and questioning interrogation, and of having been subjected to ill-treatment, that he would be released by the security forces and told to report back two days later to receive further instructions when those instructions could more effectively have been given to him during detention.
6. Before arriving at my decision I reminded myself that the burden of proof in terms of both the asylum and human rights claims within this appeal is upon the appellant. The standard of proof required of him in terms of the asylum claim is that as laid down in the decisions of Sivakumaran [1988] Imm AR 147 and Kaja [1995] Imm AR 1 in which it was held that an appellant must demonstrate that there was a reasonable chance or a serious possibility, that if returned to his country of origin he would be a victim of persecution for one of the reasons listed in Article 1(a) of the 1951 United Nations Convention relating to the Status of Refugees as amended by the 1967 New York Protocol. An appellant must demonstrate both a subjective and an objective fear. With regard to the human rights claim, I note from the decisions in Kacaj [2002] Imm AR 213 and Dhima [2002] EWHC 80 but it must be shown there are substantial grounds for believing that an appellant would face a real risk of having any of the human rights contained in the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms violated by a return to the national country. Notwithstanding my conclusions above that the appellant has failed to discharge the burden of proof upon him, I have considered whether his return to Iraq would place the United Kingdom in breach of its obligations under either the Geneva or European Conventions on the basis of him being a former member of the Ba'ath Party. In this context I have considered the Country Information and Policy Unit Iraq Bulletins 3, 3A and 7. I note from Bulletin 7 that in Section 6.1 only those former Ba'athists who were known to have abused their position were being targeted for reprisals. There is no evidence before me to indicate that the appellant involved in any such activities and therefore I do not consider on the basis of the information contained in the Iraq Bulletins, to which I have referred, that the appellant has a well-founded fear of return to Iraq simply on the basis of his being forced to join the Ba'ath Party and his activities on its behalf.
7. In the circumstances and for the reasons I have given, I do not consider that the appellant has established to the lower standard of proof required of him that he is entitled to the international protection he seeks by virtue of either the asylum or human rights claims within this appeal which I accordingly consider should be dismissed on both counts".
"We entirely endorse the view that merely not giving evidence cannot, of itself, be a factor tending to show the person is not to be believed. It is also, however, and equally clearly, not a factor tending to show that the person is to be believed. If doubts have been raised about the credibility or plausibility of certain evidence, and the facts related by that evidence are not supported by other evidence, the position may be that the fact finder remains in doubt. The consequence of a fact finders doubt is or may be that the burden of proof is not discharged and so the party who has the burden of proof loses his case."
G Warr
Vice President