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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 >> PW (Tibetan, Failed asylum seeker, risk) China [2005] UKIAT 00051 (13 January 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00051.html Cite as: [2005] UKIAT 00051, [2005] UKIAT 51, [2005] UKAIT 00051 |
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PW (Tibetan – Failed asylum seeker – risk) China [2005] UKIAT 00051
Date of hearing: 4 November 2004
Date Determination notified: 13 January 2005
PW |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"It is claimed, on his behalf, that, in any event, as a returning failed asylum seeker he would be at risk of persecution. It was acknowledged on his behalf that there was no direct evidence that asylum seekers returning from the west, as opposed to from Nepal or surrounding countries, would be at risk of persecution. I was, however, referred to the Tribunal case of Sherpa. In that the Tribunal said, at paragraph 14 "Whilst we would normally agree with the Adjudicator that if the appellant has acted or been involved as she claimed, then there is a real risk of persecution and a risk of a breach of human rights, we do not, in this particular case, however, agree with his view that a finding to the contrary means that there is no risk for the appellant upon return. The overwhelming tenor of the objective evidence, from which we have quoted some small extracts, leads us to the view that as a person who has gone into self-imposed exile, whatever her activities may or may not have been before she left Tibet, there is nevertheless a reasonable likelihood that she would be questioned and detained upon return. This questioning and detention would not necessarily arise out of her possible activities prior to departure but arise out of the fact that she is returning from the west. The evidence would also indicate to us that such questioning and detention could lead to a reasonable likelihood of punishment, torture and inhuman and degrading treatment." I do not, unfortunately, know what background material was placed before the Tribunal. The US State Department Report, to which I was referred, does refer to reports of arbitrary detention of persons, particularly monks, returning to China from Nepal. I have not been able to find, nor has my attention been drawn, to any particular documentary evidence which suggests a likelihood of questioning and detention arising out of the fact that a person is returning from the west."
"It is extremely difficult to consider the fate of those returned to Tibet, due to the tight controls on information imposed by the Chinese authorities. However, Tibetan asylum seekers and refugees who are returned to China face at the least detention for interrogation where they are at serious risk of torture and ill-treatment."
Counsel said that that view reflects information in most of the reports contained in the appellant's bundle of documents. Counsel then took us through these reports.
"There is evidence of wilful deception of foreign governments as to sanctions against returned illegal migrants. Much touted policies of prison sentences and extensive re-education programmes are apparently mostly not implemented. Rather we have become aware of preferential economic policies and business loans made available to returnees by local governments. We are assured that children under sixteen returned to China would not be subject to incarceration under any circumstances."
"It is extremely difficult to discover the fate of those returned to Tibet, due to the tight controls on information imposed by the Chinese authorities. However, Tibetan asylum seekers and refugees who are returned to China face at the very least detention for interrogation, where they are at serious risk of torture and ill-treatment."
We would question how Amnesty International is able to draw this conclusion if they have had extreme difficulty discovering the fate of those returned to Tibet. The Secretary of State proposes to remove the appellant to China. We know that Tibet is a part China and that there are no direct flights to Tibet. The information contained in the Home Office China extended bulletin 5/2003 indicates that the Canadian fact finding mission to the Fijian province in January 2000 referred only to returnees from Japan and the US. The Japanese returnees were interviewed. Admittedly there was no information in that report that any of the returnees were Tibetan.
Miss K Eshun
Vice President