BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> JA (Ethnic Palestinian, Iraq, Objective Evidence) Palestine [2005] UKIAT 00045 (27 January 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00045.html Cite as: [2005] UKIAT 45, [2005] UKIAT 00045, [2005] UKAIT 00045 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
JA (Ethnic Palestinian- Iraq- Objective Evidence) Palestine [2005] UKIAT 00045
IMMIGRATION APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Date of hearing: 7 January 2005
Date Determination notified: 27 January 2005
Before
Between
JA | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
"10. I have considered the letters from UNCHR in the bundle and that produced at the hearing but regrettably there is very little up to date background evidence before me. I have read the expert's report of Ibrahim Al-Marashi. I accept that third country nationals in Iraq are viewed with suspicion by many Iraqis due to their perceived affiliation with the former regime. In particular Palestinian refugees have been targeted in the aftermath of the war. I accept that Palestinian families have been evicted, mainly by landlords, who were compelled by Saddam Hussein to let Palestinians houses at artificially low rents, and who are now unhappy with the lease terms imposed by the former regime and who are demanding huge rent increases or that the Palestinians leave the properties. I accept that evictions have in some instances been violent, and that they continue. I accept that third country nationals such as Palestinians are being forced out of their homes and jobs by Iraqis who consider them to be supporters of the former regime because they received favourable treatment under Saddam Hussein.
11. It is apparent from the article produced to me at page 66 of the appellant's bundle that some Palestinians have been forced to live in refugee camps, where conditions are poor."
"17. As to whether the appellant would face persecution in post-Saddam Hussein Iraq from non-state agents, taking account of the background situation as I have accepted it to be, and having considered the views of UNCHR, I find that the present conditions in Iraq, although they may be uncomfortable, pose no real risk of treatment amounting to persecution to this appellant. Accordingly I find that there is no current real risk of persecution by the state or by citizens opposed to the Saddam Hussein regime.
18. The appellant has submitted that his rights under Article 3 of the Human Rights Convention are engaged and in order to succeed in his claim under Article 3, the appellant must show that there is a real risk that return will expose him to inhuman or degrading treatment. In assessing this it is appropriate to take into account all the circumstances, including any particular impact that there may be on the appellant himself. Such treatment as the appellant is reasonably likely to face needs to cross a high threshold. For the reasons set out above I find that the appellant would be of no interest to the authorities were he returned. It appears from the background evidence before me that there is no real risk of inhuman or degrading treatment under the Human Rights Convention because of the present circumstances, even were the appellant to be removed from his home and forced to live in a refugee camp."
"1. It is submitted that the Adjudicator's finding that there is no risk to the appellant from citizens opposed to the Saddam Hussein regime is perverse and materially flawed and unsustainable for the following reasons:
1.1 The Adjudicator fails to consider the issue against the background evidence and the expert opinion, which she accepts in paragraph 10, as clearly showing that Palestinians were being targeted since the end of the war in Iraq.
1.1.1 In paragraph 10 of her determination, the Adjudicator states unequivocally her acceptance of the background evidence detailing the targeting of Palestinians, particularly because of the perception that Palestinians were supporters of the Saddam Hussein regime. All this background evidence supports the appellant's claim to be at risk if returned to Iraq, and it is submitted that if the Adjudicator had considered the claim against this evidence, she ought to have concluded that the appellant would be at risk in Iraq.
1.1.2 It is further submitted that there is no foundation in the Adjudicator's assertion that there was no up-to-date evidence before her as she had the UNCHR position paper and the expert opinion both dated 18 March 2004 (and the hearing was on 22 March 2004), other reports were dated from September 2003 to February and March 2004.
1.2 The Adjudicator's finding is unreasoned and this gives the appellant no indication as to the basis upon which the Adjudicator reaches this finding. The lack of reasons is particularly important if one considers the Adjudicator's acceptance of the appellant's account as well as the objective evidence, but then proceeds to make a finding that is not supported by the accepted evidence."
Ground 2 simply then seeks to rely on the same points in relation to the human rights claim under Article 3.
"The most immediate protection concern held by UNCHR and the refugee community relates to the physical protection of refugees. Physical threats to "foreigners" including the refugee population increased dramatically in the aftermath of the regime change. The threats came in the form of leaflets distributed among the local population asking foreigners to leave the country in one year's time. Refugees were also in many instances subjected to physical threats on an ad hoc basis. The perception that the refugee population was closely associated with the previous regime was basically the motive behind these threats. The Iraqi press also voiced criticism against Palestinian refugees in particular.
The ex-Iraqi regime issued provisions relating to Palestinian refugees on an ad hoc basis. With the absence of a national authority willing and capable of providing Palestinian refugees with needed safeguards a gap in the protection of this group might be foreseen. It is against this background that the UNCHR launched a registration exercise in July 2003 aimed at collecting credible information on Palestinian refugees in Iraq a prerequisite for ensuring protection.
In addition to this the refugee population in Iraq is in immediate need of material assistance. Despite the fact that Palestinian refugees are allowed to work the worsening economic situation together with the decreased employment opportunities had impacted sharply on their chance to have sustainable jobs and left many of them in a critical situation.
In conclusion the refugee population in Iraq is in a precarious situation in the aftermath of the regime change with the absence of a national party willing and capable of providing the needed protection and assistance".
"As the recent US led war ended Palestinians in Iraq were left particularly vulnerable given their uncertain status and the fall of a government that provided them housing concessions. More than 1,000 families in Baghdad have been expelled or threatened with expulsion and that number grows daily. Landlords who no longer receive subsidies from the government for renting to Palestinians are forcing them out of their homes. On 20 April 2003 a new Palestinian refugee camp was established not in Palestine or Jordan but in Baghdad. The majority of those expelled now live in the Al-Awda camp. The camp is full of danger an unexploded bomb lies buried in the middle too deep (the military says) to be removed. As residents bake in the midday sun in the tents provided by the United Nationals Refugee Agency (UNCHR) they must deal with minimal electricity and inadequate water and sewage. Community leaders have petitioned the occupation coalition provision authority to identify a building that they could rehabilitate to house the growing number of refugees but with no success. … Dr Al Awawdeh and Dr Mohammod Abed Al Wahid, Director of the Palestinian Office in Iraq, are working tirelessly to find new housing for the displaced."
"After examining the present situation in Iraq it is my opinion that due the poor security conditions (sic) in post-Saddam Iraq, I cannot guarantee that Mr Abozuhruh can safely return to Iraq without suffering from reprisals by Iraqis for the mere fact that he is Palestinian. I believe that he will be discriminated there on the basis of his race."
J Barnes
Vice President