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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> TA (draft evasion, citizenship, evidence required) Eritrea [2005] UKAIT 00155 (6 October 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00155.html Cite as: [2005] UKIAT 00155, [2005] UKAIT 00155, [2005] UKAIT 155 |
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TA (draft evasion – citizenship – evidence required) Eritrea [2005] UKAIT 00155
Date of hearing: 30 September 2005
Date Determination notified: 6 October 2005
TA |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
Where an appellant has never lived in Eritrea but is of second-generation eritrean origin, evidence required that she is entitled to an Eritrean passport. Draft evasion requires citizenship during period of call-up age. Absent cogent evidence to the contrary, a claimant who has never lived in Eritrea cannot be considered to have evaded the draft.
"26. The appellant is 26 years of age. She was born and lived in Ethiopia until she left that country in March 1999. She has never lived in Eritrea or even visited the country. There are various references in the appellant's bundle to the fact that the appellant would be required to undertake military service in Eritrea and the consequences for her if she tried to evade military service or indeed deserted. There is nothing in the appellant's own evidence to suggest she is a conscientious objector or that she would not undertake her military service if so required. I have been asked to consider MA (Female Draft Evader) Eritrea CG [2004] UKIAT 00098.
However, in my opinion, the present case can be distinguished from MA because this appellant has never lived in Eritrea and therefore has never been served with call up papers. Thus the appellant cannot be seen as a draft evader or deserter and would not be subjected to the actions of the Military Police who it is reported in the CIPU report searched the country using road block, street sweeps and house to house searches to find deserters and draft evaders.
It is not clear from the objective material whether the age of conscription for women is 18 to 27 years of age or 18 to 40 years of age. It would seem that earlier CIPU reports have stated the age is 18 to 40 years whereas the current CIPU report April 2004 quotes the US Human Rights Report 2003 stating military service for women between the ages of 18 and 27 is compulsory. The appellant will be 27 years of age in five months time. It may well be that when she is removed to Eritrea she will be over the conscription age and therefore not required to do military service in any event. However, even if the appellant were required to undertake military service I am not satisfied that the conditions of her service, although harsh, would reach the very high threshold set for a breach of Article 3."
"90(3) …a decision should not be set aside for inadequate reasons unless the Immigration Judge fails to identify and record the appeals which were critical to the decision on the materials issues in such a way that the IAT was unable to understand why he reached that decision".
At paragraph 91, the decision makes it clear that the observations continued to apply to the AIT.
"Dear Ms Baghabani
Further to our conversation on the phone today, I can confirm that I have contacted Eritrean Embassy in London on 8/3/05 on behalf of the above clients [names and personal details blanked out] and enquired about the procedure for obtaining passport or travel documentation for these clients. I was informed that Eritrean Authority would not be able to issue travel documents for individuals born in Ethopia."
If that were right, then there would be no risk to this appellant, as she would not be returned to Eritrea at all if the Eritrean authorities were not prepared to accept her as a national of that country. The appellant has not tested that point by applying for citizenship or travel documents as yet.
"11. … It is well known that "perversity" represents a very high hurdle. In Miftari v SSHD [2005] EWCA Civ 481, the whole court agreed that the word meant what it said: it was a demanding concept. The majority of the court (Keene and Maurice Kay LJJ) said that it embraced decisions that were irrational or unreasonable in the Wednesbury sense (even if there was no wilful or conscious departure from the rational), but it also included a finding of fact that was wholly unsupported by the evidence, provided always that this was a finding as to a material matter.. "
" However, in my opinion, the present case can be distinguished from MA because this appellant has never lived in Eritrea and therefore has never been served with call up papers. "
We have no difficulty in understanding the distinction which the Immigration Judge drew between the appellant in MA (who had lived in Eritrea before coming to the United Kingdom) and this appellant (who had never lived in, or even visited, Eritrea). That is a valid distinction: this appellant is not, yet, an Eritrean citizen in any sense and has not yet acquired any liability to call-up. MA, on the other hand, had spent time in Eritrea and could be considered as having assumed her responsibility as a citizen of that state to undertake military service, which she had failed to do. That is the definition of a draft evader. In the present case, as a non-citizen, there is no evidence before us to suggest this appellant risks being perceived as a draft evader. There is no error of law in distinguishing MA on that basis.
Decision
Mrs J A J C Gleeson
Senior Immigration Judge
11 November 2005