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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> RB (Credibility, Objective evidence) Uganda [2004] UKIAT 00339 (08 October 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00339.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 00339, [2004] UKIAT 339 |
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RB (Credibility – Objective evidence) Uganda [2004] UKIAT 00339
Date of hearing: 8 June 2004
Date Determination notified: 8 October 2004
RB | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"1. In relation to paragraph 24 of the Adjudicator's determination that the Adjudicator's finding in that paragraph that the appellant gave the impression of being a credible witness is inconsistent with his later finding that the appellant's account is not to be believed.
2. In relation to paragraph 25 that the Adjudicator was not entitled to make assertions with regard to a theoretical system in place for handling cheques for larger amounts than the limit in question (the passage in brackets not being relied on by Mr O'Ryan) and that this issue was never put to the appellant at the hearing and it was therefore both unreasonable and in contravention of the laws of natural justice.
3. In relation to paragraphs 26 and 28 of the determination that the Adjudicator misunderstood the appellant's account during his evidence the appellant's account being that the fraud did not reach as high as the Defence Minister but involved a group of people involved including the Commander Cashier who would misappropriate and split the funds. On that basis the Adjudicator was said to have erred in considering that the cheque could simply re-issued as four cheques for 500 million Tomans each available at the relevant time.
4. In relation to paragraph 29 that given that Uganda is a country where corruption and violence are endemic the Adjudicator's finding that the appellant should have contacted the police rather than taking the safer option and fleeing the country is perverse: the appellant had already spoken to his employers and the police before he was assaulted and matters had clearly already gone far beyond the fact of being unwilling to cash the cheques concerned.
5. In relation to paragraph 30 of the determination that the credibility finding as a whole is unsafe, the centrepiece of the appellant's story is plausible and internally consistent and consistent with the objective material.
6. The ground marked ground 3 in the grounds of appeal was not relied on at all at the hearing.
7. The appellant argues that in dismissing the appeal on the grounds of credibility the Adjudicator failed to consider adequately or at all the objective evidence and background material faced before him or to give due consideration adequately or at all to the appellant's rights under the European Convention on Human Rights in particular to breaches of Articles 2 and 3 and 6".
At page 45 of the appellant's bundle the April 2003 CIPU report stated:
"5.79 In an effort to tackle corruption and inefficiency in the army the Government raised the pay of soldiers by 5% - to discourage pilfering. The UPDF established a special pay unit to curb fraud and corrupt practices, and will be in charge of procurement of goods and supplies. President Museveni estimated that US $4.8 million was lost annually through fraud in salaries and food supplies by one division alone."
The Adjudicator should have read this passage and indeed the whole of the CIPU. The Tribunal pointed out that that passage did not appear in the April 2004 version of the CIPU report and could not therefore be regarded as current background evidence. Mr O'Ryan did not comment.
"The Secretary of State has carefully considered your claim, made in paragraph 6 of your statement, that you could not cash the cheque, purportedly from the Ministry of Defence, because it is prohibited by bank regulations to cash cheques for such a large sum of money. The Secretary of State is of the view that the Ministry of Defence would be aware of the Regulations surrounding it's account with the Central Bank. The Secretary of State therefore does not accept that the Ministry would have sent a cheque for more than four times the money which it was legally able to obtain. The Secretary of State considers that this indicates that your claims cannot be accepted."
This meant that the appellant was on notice of the matters referred to in paragraph 28 of the Adjudicator's determination and in particular that the Ugandan Ministry of Defence could be taken to be aware of the bank's procedures for the encashment of cheques. At paragraph 24 the Adjudicator merely said that the appellant had given the impression of being an implausible witness and then gone through the four facts showing why his account was not in fact credible. The individual aspects of this account did not add up and the Adjudicator was right not to accept the account. At paragraph 29 the Adjudicator considered that there had been no effort to report the abduction to the authorities or indeed to the government's bank which as the appellant was only doing his job seemed unusual. Overall the Adjudicator's finding of fact was one which he was entitled to make and he asked us to dismiss the appeal.
J A J C Gleeson
Vice President
8 June 2004