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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 >> AI (Statutory Review, evidence) Somalia [2005] UKIAT 00063 (9 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00063.html Cite as: [2005] UKAIT 00063, [2005] UKIAT 00063, [2005] UKIAT 63 |
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AI (Statutory Review – evidence) Somalia [2005] UKIAT 00063
Date of hearing: 7 December 2004
Date Determination notified: 9 March 2005
AI |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"I am not persuaded that two cross-clan marriages in this situation is particularly plausible, particularly as the appellant's grandmother would have known of the advantages of marrying into a majority clan and the security that would have been offered to her."
"Expert evidence could have been produced to assist on this vexed question of language which in particular here was complicated by intermarriage between clans but on my assessment of the facts I am not persuaded through the non-use of the Reer Hamar dialect that the appellant would be perceived as being a member of the Reer Hamar clan and identified as such. There would be family living in Somalia who are of the majority clan as the appellant's witness told me that she had had seven children and therefore there would be some family in Somalia."
"The objective material before me indicates that the Benadiri clans were particularly at risk and vulnerable during the early years of the civil war conflict and whilst she stated that it was not her choice but her elders' choice for her to remain living in Mogadishu I am not persuaded that the family would not have moved at a much earlier date if she had been of the Reer Hamar clan as she claims as they would have been at particular risk. Her account in this regard is therefore implausible."
"Because of this, and because the Reer Hamar are unarmed, their homes were repeatedly looted. The same sources estimated that more than 70% of the Reer Hamar population in Mogadishu fled the country during the civil war. In January 1999 the War-torn Societies Project (WSP) in Nairobi and other UN agencies informed the Danish Immigration Service that the Benadiri community was still facing serious human rights violations in Mogadishu, and that members of this community would probably never be able to return in safety to Mogadishu."
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY
PRESIDENT