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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> GY (Eritrea, Failed asylum seeker) Eritrea [2004] UKIAT 00327 (30 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00327.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 00327, [2004] UKIAT 327 |
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GY (Eritrea-Failed asylum seeker) Eritrea [2004] UKIAT 00327
Date of hearing: 24 November 2004
Date Determination notified: 30 December 2004
GY | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"32. Considering the accounts of past events in the context of the country situation, and bearing in mind all of the foregoing, I cannot find the crux of Appellant's story (his claimed political involvement) to have been established to any acceptable standard. He has shown quite clearly that he is a person with a great facility to invent detailed stories and then to maintain them through thick and thin. That the second application was fraudulent and based on an entirely untruthful account of events, was only uncovered as a result of the fingerprint evidence. Faced with that irrefutable evidence, the Appellant had little choice but to admit the story had been fabricated.
33. His credibility has been completely undermined. There is no independent evidence before me to corroborate the truthfulness of the Appellant's earlier account. I am prepared to accept that the Appellant lived and worked as a businessman in Addis Ababa for several years just prior to coming to the UK. I am prepared to accept (on the basis of objective material concerning the Ethiopian authorities' policy of repatriation of ethnic Eritreans in 1999) that the Appellant's family was deported and that he fled here fearing that he too may be deported. I do not find it to have been established that the Appellant held any office for ELF or was anything more than an ordinary supporter who would be of no interest currently to the authorities in Eritrea.
34. I reach the above conclusion after anxious scrutiny of the objective material, most importantly the up-to-date UNHCR Position on Return of Rejected Asylum Seekers to Eritrea, of January 2004 and the IAT decisions in Eritrea CG [2002] UKIAT 05039 and in MA (Female draft evader) Eritrea CG [2004] UKIAT 00098. There is an uncertain position that faces many returnees to Eritrea currently, but the Appellant is not a draft-evader (indeed he is well above the age for military service) and has not established that he has any political connection of any significance."
"22. … In the first place, the problems relating to the Maltese returnees were clearly linked closely with the perception by the Eritrean authorities that they were draft evaders or omit deserters. The May 2004 AI Report refers to the Malta deportees as 'mostly army deserters or conscription evaders' (see p.23).
23. Secondly, even within the group of Maltese returnees, the authorities plainly differentiated on the basis of both sex and age: the May 2004 AI Report notes that women, children and those over the conscription age limit of forty years were released after some weeks in Adi Abeto prison.
24. Thirdly, whatever may have been the degree of adverse treatment meted out to the Maltese returnees in 2002 there have been no similar large scale incidents since. Particularly given that the UNHCR has clearly been monitoring the situation very closely, we consider this lack of repetition very significant. It is true there have been incidents involving returnees since, but these have been very few and in each case they have only involved a very small number of individuals. Furthermore, they have largely been confined to returnees with foreign citizenships. Thus at p.22 of the May 2004 AI Report there are references to five cases of difficulties facing Eritreans with foreign citizenships.
25. Fourthly, we find it important to take account of the precise wording of the UNHCR 'Position on the Return of Rejected Asylum Seekers to Eritrea' dated 20 January 2004. This letter does state that, in the light of the problems faced by the Maltese returnees 'it cannot be excluded that future deportees would face a similar risk'; and it goes on to recommend that 'states refrain from all forced returns of rejected asylum seekers to Eritrea and grant them complementary forms of protection instead'. However it falls short of stating that all returnees face a well-founded fear of persecution; it leaves that issue for assessment based on the individual needs of asylum seekers for international protection. Furthermore 'protection' is itself clearly viewed by UNHCR as a broader category than protection under the 1951 Convention or under Article 3 of the ECHR. In addition, the language of this position paper is that of mere possibility ('… it cannot be excluded that …'). It is not that of real possibility or real risk.
26. For reasons already given we do not think that the contents of the May 2004 AI Report justify a conclusion that returnees generally are at risk. We would note further that even in this report the position of Amnesty International is not unequivocally that all returnees are at risk. It does appear at pp.25-26 to suggest that anyone the authorities learnt was a failed asylum seeker would be at risk, but the formulation of the list of categories to be at risk is otherwise more limited."
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY
PRESIDENT