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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> ND (Afghanistan) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2006] EWCA Civ 1363 (04 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1363.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1363 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM & IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No. AS/12635/2004]
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
LORD JUSTICE NEUBERGER
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ND (Afghanistan) | CLAIMANT/APPELLANT | |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
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MS NEENAN (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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"i) The Appellant is a Pashtun from Markala who kept a plumbers shop which had been patronised by the Taliban when they were in power. When the Taliban were overthrown it was believed that the Appellant and his brother remained supporters of the Taliban and kept weapons for them.
"(ii) On 21 January 2004 four soldiers came into the Appellant's house in his absence and searched for weapons. They blindfolded his brother and took him to the plumbers shop. They demanded that the Appellant show them where the weapons were kept.
"(iii) He said he had nothing but they search[ed] the shop and still they could find nothing. They then tied the Appellant's hands and blindfolded him and put a gun to his head. He was threatened with being beaten up until he told them where the guns were.
"(iv) Both he and his brother were detained and beaten by the soldiers. On 30 January 2004 the Appellant was released because his cousin paid 1000 Afghani rupees as a bribe.
"(v) On 18 February 2004 soldiers again attacked his house, his mother was injured, and a fight began in which the soldiers' leader Akhter Jaan had been killed.
"(vi) The Appellant escaped through the back door to a village called Newelykars. There he visited a cousin called Nehmatullahs and requested somebody visit his home to check on the situation. This was how he knew that Akhter Jaan had been killed, [and] he also discovered his mother was injured.
"(vii) He then realised his life was in danger and decided to leave Afghanistan …
"(ix) While he was detained the Appellant was beaten badly on his back and buttocks repeatedly every night. He was released not only on the strength of the bribe but also by promising to disclose where firearms were kept within 25 days. This hastened his idea to depart.
"(x) He had visited a hospital for pain from his injuries which had been exacerbated by hot wax being dropped onto it."
"The Appellant was specifically asked … what injuries he had sustained when he was detained by the authorities and mentioned being beaten by a stick, said that wax was dropped on his back and that he was tortured by needles. The later account given to the GP [in a later interview] simply did not emerge in answer to this question i.e. that by day he was hung by the wrists and hung upside down by the ankles for four to five hours a night with a rubber ligature tied around his penis so that he could not pass urine. I find it very surprising that in a claim for asylum that both the initial SEF statement [I interpose to explain that that is a statement given to the Secretary of State in connection with his application for asylum] and answers to questions on interview should fail to disclose this treatment. It must be said that there is some evidence of trauma to the scrotum sac and penis as disclosed by the GP but whether that was caused by the method described or on that occasion or by deliberate assault is not confirmed by the medical evidence."
"From any commonsense standpoint [the appellant] had not told the truth about the alleged torture. That has grown from an unpleasant detention to being hung by his ankles upside down during the night and hung by his wrists during the day, his bladder bursting because his penis and testicles are tied up with rubber. This kind of torture leads to death over a period of days, yet the Appellant failed to mention it until he saw a doctor. But yet I have in mind that the doctor, although not a forensic specialist examiner, has found the scars consistent with the torture and abuse: marks on the ankles, marks on the scrotum and penis, scars to the shoulder and scars to the back and head."
"The Appellant's original story is scarcely plausible that a year's old association with the Taliban in selling them water pipes would lead to vicious assaults by the authorities."
A little later he said this in the same context:
"I do not accept that the armed forces would attack the Appellant's house with gunfire in the middle of the night because he was associated with the Taliban by trading with them in water pipes and he is suspected of hiding their guns, and this two years after the fall of the Taliban."
"I find from the evidence that the Appellant has been caught up in warlike activity which has been so common in Afghanistan. I find however that his credit is seriously impugned and I do not accept that he was tortured in the way he describes or by the people he claims. If he and his brother were attacked during the night with the ferocity claimed and returned fire to the local police killing a local commander it seems to me beyond doubt [that] the Appellant and his brothers were in possession of guns. It may be that the Appellant and his brother are criminals, it may be that they are dissident members of a local gang, I do not make any finding and cannot make any finding as to what the Appellant was up to- when and if he was tortured, by whom or for what purpose- but it is absolutely clear to me that his account of alleged persecution is riddled with half-truths and lies."
"With regard to the medical evidence, the Adjudicator accepted that the Appellant had scars on various parts of his body. However, we find that the Adjudicator failed to take account of Dr Hiley's conclusions [ie the conclusion of the GP referred to earlier] that the scars in the Appellant's penile area were highly consistent with the injury described as that of being bound tightly and that the scars were unlikely to have been caused by accidental injury. That was a clear error of law. Whilst the medical evidence supports that part of the Appellant's story, the decision as to who caused those injuries was a decision that only the Adjudicator could make."
"In the circumstances, it was perfectly reasonable for the Adjudicator to find that the Appellant's story had grown hugely with the passage of time and for him to impugn the Appellant's credibility [and] disbelieve that he was tortured by the people he claimed tortured him."
"The adjudicator's dismissal of the possibility that 'a year long association with the Taliban in selling them water pipes would lead to vicious assaults by the authorities' as 'scarcely plausible'."
"… became embarrassed and apologised when talking about the genital assault he [had] received."
And that the appellant would become significantly distressed "… if questioned in a court environment …", and might become "… unable to give the information required …". Mr Omere also referred to the fact that there are many reports and guidelines as to the embarrassment and reticence of those who have suffered sexual violence, and that the adjudicator had made no reference to that. He says that the failure of the adjudicator to take those factors into account when deciding to reject the appellant's evidence as being unreliable because he had not referred to the assault on his genitals before his interview with the doctor is therefore flawed, and susceptible to attack as a matter of law.
"A mistake of fact giving rise to unfairness is a separate head of challenge in an appeal on a point of law …"
-- albeit subject to certain conditions which do not arise in the present case.
Order: Appeal dismissed.