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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 >> TM (Views of ECO-Weight Attached) Paskistan [2005] UKIAT 00044 (27 January 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00044.html Cite as: [2005] UKIAT 00044, [2005] UKIAT 44, [2005] UKAIT 00044 |
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TM (Views of ECO-Weight Attached) Paskistan [2005] UKIAT 00044
Date of hearing: 23 December 2004
Date Determination notified: 27 January 2005
Entry Clearance Officer – Kiev | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"I am not satisfied that you will be able to follow your proposed course of study, I am not satisfied that you intend to follow your proposed course of study, I am not satisfied that you intend to leave the United Kingdom on completion of your studies."
"At 17c, the Adjudicator has said how the e mails showed a level of proficiency with the English language, however, he had failed to consider the Tribunals conclusions in the case of Ahmad IAT AR 254 that 'it might as a rule be a commendable course for adjudicators to follow in considering findings by entry clearance officers when they have seen and heard applicants which the Adjudicator has not'. The ECO contends that the adjudicator has placed little weight to the findings of the ECO who witnessed first hand the appellant at interview, and as such his findings are perverse and flawed."
"The respondent was not satisfied that the respondent had the ability to follow the course of study [the second reference to the respondent is clearly a mistake for an intended reference to the then appellant who is now the current respondent before us] because the English language proficiency certificates produced showed a decline in his overall English ability between May 2001 and June 2002, and the respondent had difficulty communicating with the appellant at interview. However, Ms Maciel [who then appeared for the respondent] submitted at the hearing before me that the appellant's English Test Report Forms at Annex G of the respondent's bundle showed a decline in only one of the four test areas, namely writing, and that the appellant's evidence in his letter at Annex H of the respondent's bundle was that he could not perform well because his uncle had died the day before the test; that although the appellant's proposed course was a technical course, it was not a degree course; that his course at Gujrat Institute of Technology from 1997 to 2000 had been conducted in English, and that his English had been good, as confirmed by the letter dated 26 July 2002 at Annex F of the respondent's bundle; that so far as the interview was concerned the appellant had given relatively long answers to many of the questions, rather than merely giving one-word answers, and that showed a level of proficiency with the language, even if the interviewing officer had had to repeat some of the questions; and that the appellant's e-mails with Bromley College themselves showed a level of proficiency with the English language which indicated that he would have the ability to follow the course. I accept those submissions, which, again, I find persuasive on a balance of probabilities."
"Applicant asked to be interviewed today in English, however it should be noted that each question required rephrasing in three or four different ways and very slow enunciation before he could understand. I am quite certain that would not be able to follow lectures in the UK of a specialised nature."
Given that clear and strong reference from the Entry Clearance Officer it was his submission that the Adjudicator had not properly applied the case law by giving adequate weight to what the Entry Clearance Officer had said. He pointed out that in an earlier application when he was interviewed in Urdu on 11 September 2001 the appellant himself accepted that his English was weak. Although there was an English language course available as a pre-course to the technical course he intended to study, the date of the application made by the respondent for entry clearance was such that he had effectively prevented himself from being able to undertake that course and would have to go straight into the main course which he sought to follow. All those factors should have been reflected by the Adjudicator in his submission and those factors would lead properly to the view that the Adjudicator had erred in law in failing to provide adequate weight to the comment of the Entry Clearance Officer.
J Barnes
Vice President