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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> SL (Article 14, Non-Jewish, Special needs) Israel [2005] UKIAT 00071 (15 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00071.html Cite as: [2005] UKIAT 71, [2005] UKAIT 00071, [2005] UKIAT 00071 |
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SL (Article 14 Non - Jewish -Special needs) Israel [2005] UKIAT 00071
Date of hearing: 23 November 2004
Date Determination notified: 15 March 2005
SL |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
Evidence
The grant of leave
The Adjudicator's determination
"31. I now turn to Article 8 of the Human Rights Convention. I entitled to take into account when considering the Article 8 position, not only the position of the appellant but also the position of her son, BL. The appellant does not have any family in the United Kingdom, she being separated from her husband. There is in my opinion no family life of the appellant that would be disturbed or affected, if she was returned to Israel. Further, whilst I note that the appellant's son, BL, has made progress whilst he has been in the United Kingdom educational system, I can see no reason, why this progress will be interfered with should he be returned to Israel.
He is of the age where I am satisfied that he would be able to adapt to a new language and in any event, there is within Israel I am convinced educational facilities to assist those that are not fluent in the Israeli language, Israel being well-used to immigration from person s from non-Israeli-speaking countries, indeed, such immigration being encouraged by the Israeli Government who have in pl facilities to enable those entering the country to become fluent in the language as soon as possible. The appellant's son, BL, is of an age where this adaptation would not present a difficulty to him. I am therefore not satisfied, having balanced all the requirements as to considering an Article 8 claim, that the appellant or her son, BL's Article 8 rights would be prejudiced by returning to Israel."
Submissions
BL's special needs
The appellant's mental health
Objective materials
Country Information and Policy Unit Report
"Residency restrictions affected family reunification. Palestinians who were abroad during the 1967 War, or who subsequently lost their residence permits, were not permitted to reside permanently with their families in the occupied territories. Foreign-born spouses and children of Palestinian residents experienced difficulty in obtaining residency. Palestinian spouses of Jerusalem residents must obtain a permit to reside there. Palestinians reported delays of several years or more before spouses were granted residency permits. The Government of Israel occasionally issued limited-duration permits, but renewing the permits could take up to 8 months, which resulted in many Palestinians falling out of status. Palestinians also reported extensive delays in registering newborn children with Israeli authorities. "
"The PA provides for compulsory education through the ninth grade. However, girls who married before the ninth grade left at the behest of husbands and, in rural areas and refugee camps, boys left school to help support their families.
Internal closures, checkpoints, and the separation barrier significantly impeded the ability of both students and teachers to reach educational facilities (see Sections 2.a. and 2.d.).
In areas under curfew, all classes were cancelled. UNRWA reported that more than 35,000 teacher workdays were lost in the 2002-03 academic year. Enrolment of students from Gaza at Birzeit University in the West Bank declined from 370 in 2000 to 39 at year's end.
Education and health care professionals judged that the violence produced lack of focus, nightmares, incontinence, and other behavioral problems. UNRWA reported that elementary school exam pass rates in Arabic, mathematics, and science declined dramatically between 2000-01 and 2003-04.
...The law provides that no one under 14 can work. Those between 15 and 18 can be employed under limited conditions (see Section 6.d.). There was no juvenile court system, but certain judges specialized in juvenile cases.
In 2001, the Israeli High Court ordered the construction of new infant care clinics in East Jerusalem. The Association for Civil Rights in Israel stated that six centers now existed in East Jerusalem and the surrounding areas and that there was sufficient coverage for the local East Jerusalem population. East Jerusalem schools remained under-funded and overcrowded, and many students were denied enrolment due to lack of space. In 2001, the Israeli High Court ordered the municipality to build 245 new classrooms within the next 4 years, but, at year's end, only 2 new classrooms were finished and 28 were under construction
International and domestic NGOs, including UNICEF, Save the Children, and Defense for Children International, promoted educational, medical, and cultural services for children, and other groups specialized in the needs of children with disabilities."
Conclusions on this appeal
General conclusions
Decision
J A J C Gleeson
Vice President
Date: 9 March 2005
Note 1 Dysthymia is a disorder with similar but longer-lasting and milder symptoms than clinical depression. By the standard psychiatric definition, this disorder lasts for at least two years, but is less disabling than major depression; for example, victims are usually able to go on working and do not need to be hospitalized.About three percent of the population will suffer from dysthymia at some time - a rate slightly lower than the rate of major depression. Like major depression, dysthymia occurs twice as often in women as it does in men. It is also more common among the poor and the unmarried. The symptoms usually appear in adolescence or young adulthood but in some cases do not emerge until middle age.
(National Mental Health Association of America website)
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