![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Humaidi v Secretary Of State For Home Department [2002] EWCA Civ 1512 (7 October 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/1512.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 1512 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
THE IMMIGRATION APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Strand London, WC2 Monday, 7 October 2002 |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
____________________
ESAM HUMAIDI | Applicant | |
-v- | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Defendant did not appear and was not represented.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Monday, 7 October 2002
"5. The Secretary of State notes that you have never attended rallies, demonstrations, you have never been arrested and that neither you nor any member of your family has ever been involved in any political activity or experienced any harassment, persecution or detention at the hands of the Yemeni authorities. The Secretary of State concludes that you have not demonstrated that you are likely to be of adverse interest to the authorities should you return to Yemen.
The Secretary of State considers the warrant for your arrest to be an example of prosecution not persecution ...
He is satisfied however that if there are any charges outstanding against you, and if they were to be proceeded with on your return, you could expect to receive a fair trial under an independent and properly constituted judiciary.
Further doubts as to your alleged fear of persecution can be drawn from the fact that you did not leave Yemen until October 1995. The Secretary of State holds the view that if your fear of persecution was genuine you would have left Yemen at the earliest opportunity and the fact that you did not casts doubt on your credibility."
"16. I did not find the Appellant to be a credible witness. His account about joining and leaving the army was vague particularly when cross-examined about how his father had enabled his release from the army. I also found his descriptions about the meetings, which he held to be vague. At one stage he was saying the meetings were attended by at least 35-40 people however, at other times he said the meetings were in his friend's house. Further he says he never spoke about religion however, he says when the two army officers visited him they said he had been speaking about religion. He also said that in his talks he never spoke about religion because it was far too dangerous, if he spoke about religion he would be killed. However it appears to me that (if what he is saying is that he believes so much in the anti-government anti-regime doctrine he has been speaking about that he cannot stop himself being outspoken about it) it does not follow that he can so easily control what he says about religion. In short it doesn't add up. I also note amongst the discrepancies between his written statement and his oral statements before me where at paragraph 12 he says that on his return home his father and mother pleaded with him to stop his political activities and addressing public meetings. He then says he told his parents this would be impossible and he reminded them about his uncle having killed himself for his beliefs. However, in his oral evidence today he says that when he returned, and told his parents about this threat, his father had accused him of being just like his uncle. Although this is perhaps a minor discrepancy it is significant when looking at the appellant's overall credibility."
"To whom it may concern
There are orders to arrest Isam Yahia Hammadi and deliver him to the authorities as soon as possible or to provide information with regard to his whereabouts. We appreciate the help of anyone who may provide information."
"I do not find such a warrant convincing. The Appellant has already said how his father was able both to get him in and out of the army and that he would send him documents which he should take to the authorities in the UK in order to seek asylum. If the document is authentic it is likely that his father was able to provide such a document. The document does not say why the Appellant should be apprehended. Of course this fits with the Appellant's story. If the appellant had come to the attention of the authorities he would have been detained either whilst he was speaking or very shortly after."
"The adjudicator noted that at one stage the appellant said the meetings he addressed were attended by at least 35-40 people whereas at other times he said the meetings were in his friend's house. He also noted that the appellant said quite different things about whether he had ever spoken about religion at these meetings. Mr Wahid [who was appearing for the appellant] said that the adjudicator's assessment of these two further matters as discrepancies rested on a misunderstanding of the appellant's evidence. We take a different view. If anything, the difference in the appellant's accounts of these two matters went further than even the adjudicator described them. The appellant's emphasis on meetings in a friend's house is difficult to square with the account he gave in his written statement which described mainly meetings held in public. And when asked at the hearing about religion, the appellant was adamant that he did not speak out against religion because that would have been fatal. Yet in his interview he said that in his speeches he was sometimes 'blasphemous' and had been talking to people about 'politics, religion'. And a statement submitted in support by Moneef Shaibani said that in his speeches 'Esam criticised both the political system and indeed the religious system in the Yemen.'"
"17. However, we do not think these flaws fundamentally undermine the adjudicator's determination. There are real difficulties with the arrest warrant as a reliable piece of evidence. One is that averted to in the adjudicator's last sentence of paragraph 23. If the authorities had considered the appellant to be a threat to their regime the time to have issued an arrest warrant was surely much earlier. On the appellant's own account he had spoken out against the government at numerous public meetings in 1994/5 - he gave the figure of over 80. We know from background country materials that public meetings of a political nature were likely to have been closely monitored. Yet he on his own account he was never arrested, detained or questioned save on one occasion at his friend's house when he said he was threatened by two people who were probably from the army. Instead the authorities are said to have delayed over eight months until after he left the country to issue this warrant (it is dated 22 January 1996). Whilst the fact that it does not mention charges shows nothing on its own, it also means that it does not show it was in respect of his claimed political troubles either. If the appellant had deserted from the army there might be a legitimate reason for an army warrant of arrest. Additionally the document was sent to him, he said, by his father, someone who on his own account had used bribes to obtain a false document from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to support the visa application. In such circumstances, it does not seem to us that the adjudicator can be faulted for declining to accept the arrest warrant as (in his words) 'convincing.'"
"On the appellant's own account he had spoken out against the government at numerous public meetings in 1994/5 - he gave the figure of over 80. We know from background country materials that publish meetings of a political nature were likely to have been closely monitored. Yet he on his own account he was never arrested, detained or questioned save on one occasion at his friend's house when he said he was threatened by two people who were probably from the army."
(Application refused; Community Legal Services funded assessment).