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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> LB (Article 3, Monrovia, Security) Liberia CG [2004] UKIAT 00299 (28 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00299.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 00299, [2004] UKIAT 299 |
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LB (Article 3 Monrovia Security) Liberia CG [2004] UKIAT 00299
Date of hearing: 24 March 2004
Date Determination notified: 28 April 2004
LB | APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
(a) with regard to the security situation in Monrovia, we have had our attention drawn to a report from UNHCR dated 8th August 2003, which was not before the Tribunal in the 164 T case.
Our conclusion on the security situation is set out at paragraph 17.12 below.
(b) we consider whether the general humanitarian conditions in Monrovia are such that removal to Monrovia would give rise to a breach of Article 3.
Our conclusion on the general humanitarian conditions is set out at paragraph 18.6 below.
40. Given these facts I find that the Appellant has no well-founded fear of persecution were he to return to Liberia. I do not find that such a return, subject to my observation below, would be unreasonable or unduly harsh.
41. I bear in mind the submissions made in relation to Article 3 of the ECHR and the Appellant's right not to suffer torture or inhuman or degrading treatment and for the reasons set out I do not find that to return the Appellant to the [sic] Liberia would cause the United Kingdom to be in breach of its obligations under the Convention or at all.
42. I am still mindful of the daily news that emerges of the situation in Liberia. It is clear that the situation is unstable and there is considerable loss of life - much of it civilian. Whilst I have found that the Appellant has neither established a well-founded fear of persecution nor engaged the articles of the ECHR I invite the Respondent to consider whether it would [sic] appropriate, in all the circumstances, to suspend its power to give removal directions.
Oral submissions
page 11E para 19 (UNHCR) |
Reports from IDPs indicate serious maltreatment of displaced persons both within |
Monrovia and in the counties by all sides of the conflict, but particularly by the | |
Government-allied forces. Reports continue to be made of systematic lootings, extortion, harassment and intimidation within Monrovia and the rest of the country. IDPs are robbed and forced to labour, oftentimes subjected to sexual abuse. | |
page 11F para 22 (UNHCR) |
There are consistent allegations of abductions for forced labour or sexual slavery and forced recruitment by all parties in the conflict, especially government allied militia. Humanitarian agencies have documented many incidents of forced abduction of young men and women from displaced persons and refugee camps, some of which have implicated Government troops. As of the start of the year and towards the recent escalation of the conflict, abductions from IDP and refugee camps took place on a seemingly regular basis with camp residents reporting such incidents as their major concern. Abductees were allegedly used for purposes of porterage, sexual slavery, or other forms of forced labour. Forced recruitment is also known to have taken place in several locations and even within Monrovia in broad daylight, purportedly by Government allied forces. (our emphasis) |
page 11F para 24 (UNHCR) |
This states that crippling poverty, multiple displacements and continuous war has decimated Liberia's health infrastructure. At the height of the recent attacks on Monrovia there was not a single public hospital functioning in the whole of Liberia. In addition, the continuing conflict and looting of relief items has greatly reduced the capacity of the humanitarian community to respond to the current challenges in the health sector. |
para 5.18 CIPU report |
This states that there has been a reduction in violence in areas where peacekeepers have been deployed, particularly in Monrovia, but the situation remains tense. |
para 6.30 CIPU Report |
......... There have also been incidents of rape, and theft from IDPs is common. Both forces loyal to the Government and rebels have committed these crimes, which appear to have been mainly perpetrated by members of the various militias. |
para 6.52 CIPU Report |
On 4th August 2003, the first units of the peacekeeping forces began into arrive. Both rebel and Government forces have withdrawn from Monrovia, and are allowing peacekeepers to operate within the city. |
para 6.53 CIPU Report |
However, this paragraph states that fighting is continuing in many areas. This violence is marked by looting and rape, mostly by rival Government and rebel militias. |
para 6.54 CIPU Report |
In the country generally, violent clashes between rebel and Government supporters has made the provision of aid and reporting on conditions in these areas very difficult. In July 2003, the UNHCR requested that Governments do not enforce the removal of failed Liberian asylum seekers for a period of six months. This was in response to an upsurge in violence, and the resulting difficulties in providing protection to the general population. |
para 6.33 CIPU Report |
Many members of the predominantly Muslim Mandingo minority encountered hostility when they sought to return, after the end of the civil war, to their villages ............Many Mandingos were unable to reoccupy their homes ...............Mandingo citizens faced growing discrimination, arbitrary arrests, and violence based on their ethnicity. |
page 11B (UNHCR) |
This refers to violations of the Cease-fire Agreement signed between the Government and two reels groups on 17th June 2003. |
page 11A (UNHCR) |
This states that a humanitarian disaster has ensued as international aid agencies have been unable to reach most of the country, including the capital, Monrovia, with food and medical aid that many people require. The lack of food, sufficient water and sanitation facilities has led to the outbreak of contagious diseases like diarrhoea and cholera. (This is repeated at page 11E, paragraph 18.) |
page 11C (UNHCR) |
This states that, despite the signing of the cease-fire agreement, fighting resumed on 24th June 2003 in Monrovia. Since then, the city has been under siege, several denied humanitarian access and means to their livelihood. |
page 11F (UNHCR) |
Ninety per cent of Liberians live in absolute poverty (less than $1 per day); of these, half live on less than $0.50 per day. This has translated to a serious situation of hunger, malnutrition and lack of access to the basic necessities of life. |
para 5.29 CIPU Report |
This states that, in Monrovia, the lack of medical supplies, food, adequate sanitation, and damage to the city's water supply caused by fighting, has made the health crisis much worse. Large numbers of people are seeking shelter in the city, which has added to the difficulty in providing adequate assistance. Civilians have also been caught up in the fighting in Monrovia. While it is not clear if they have been deliberately targeted, there have been a large number of casualties, possibly in the thousands. |
para 6.29 CIPU Report |
This states that recent fighting would mean that the present figure of IDPs can only be estimated, and this was given as 500,000 in September 2003. |
para 6.39 CIPU Report |
The recent fighting has also caused more people to seek shelter in Monrovia. In September 2003, there was an estimated 300,000 IDPs sheltering within the city, with only limited provisions for their care. The lack of medicine, food, access to clean water and shelter has resulted in a serious health crisis, which international agencies are attempting to address. |
para 6.50 CIPU Report |
Conditions in Monrovia itself remain poor. There is a lack of medical supplies, food, and adequate sanitation, and these factors have made the provision of health care difficult. Many thousands have been displaced by the recent fighting, and have no access to adequate shelter, they are either living rough, or seeking refuge in schools, churches or other temporary shelters. |
para 6.51 CIPU Report |
This refers to the looting of the port of Monrovia in early August 2003 by rebels withdrawing from the city and Liberians desperate to obtain food. The loss of supplies has made distribution of aid much harder for NGOs operating within the city. Peacekeepers have attempted to restore order to the port area, so as to permit the arrival of aid by sea. |
para 6.54 CIPU Report |
Conditions in Monrovia have improved, but the provision of basic services remains poor. |
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
Although the capital Monrovia enjoys an uneasy calm after the devastating events of June and July attacks on the civilian population by former government forces and the two armed opposition groups ........ are continuing in Bong, Nimba and Grand Bassa counties. "
"It is clear the presence of United Nations troops offers protection to the civilian population in a few areas where they are currently deployed"
.......... Amnesty International said "what is needed urgently is swift deployment of additional forces with adequate logistical support beyond Monrovia and the main route to Gbarnga".
40. The Court accepts the seriousness of the applicant's medical condition. Having regard however to the high threshold set by Article 3, particularly where the case does not concern the direct responsibility of the Contracting State for the infliction of harm, the Court does not find that there is a sufficiently real risk that the applicant's removal in these circumstances would be contrary to the standard of Article 3. It does not disclose the exceptional circumstances of the D. case (cited above) where the applicant was in the final stages of a terminal illness, AIDS, and had no prospect of medical care or family support on expulsion to St. Kitts.
Decision
The appeal is DISMISSED.
Ms. D. K. GILL
Vice President
Date: 25th April 2004