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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> BR (Iraq) v Secretary of State for the Home Departement [2006] EWCA Civ 1766 (21 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1766.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1766 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No. HX/07334/2004]
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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BR (Iraq) | CLAIMANT/APPELLANT | |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTEMENT | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
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THE RESPONDENT DID NOT APPEAR AND WAS NOT REPRESENTED.
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Crown Copyright ©
"The [applicant] based his claim for asylum on the political opinion which the regime led by President Saddam Hussein would impute to him. The security forces had persecuted [him] and his close family members on their perception that his brother, Nazim, was opposed to the regime. The [applicant] also based his claim for asylum on that political opinion which Kurdish elements would impute to him. On account of his father's actions in attempting to recruit Kurds to the Ba'ath Party and on account of his actions in bringing about the forcible expulsion of Kurds to the Northern part of the country, the Kurdish population of Iraq would develop a political or politicised perception of [him] and would regard [him] with hostility. At the hearing [before the tribunal] the [applicant] did not express a fear of that regime led by President Saddam Hussein. However, he certainly advanced a claim that he would be at risk of serious harm and ill-treatment from members of the Kurdish communities of Iraq if he was returned to his country."
He had come under pressure to join the Ba'ath Party, which he did in March 1989. From 1992 he was put under increasing pressure to recruit Kurdish students at the medical college where he was studying, with a view to qualifying as a doctor into the Ba'ath Party. The applicant and his family decided under pressure in January 1999 to become Arabs. The applicant's brother had come under pressure from the authorities. His difficulty with the authorities became worse towards the end of 1999 when he refused to spy against Kurdish activists and students at the university, and he left Iraq in fear of his life. The authorities were determined to find him and they visited his family home on many occasions looking for his brother and on two occasions they assaulted the applicant and his father.
"Summarising the account which Nazim gave, he, the [applicant] and his father had been forced to join the Ba'ath party. His father had provided information to the authorities about the Kurdish parties in the north. Certainly, the [applicant's] father gave information to the authorities about Kurds who were then deported and it was well-known in their area that the family were members of the Ba'ath Party. Ramzan said that he graduated from the Fedaeen Saddam in 1998. In 1999 he was told by a Ba'ath Party representative that as he had not completed his military training he would be required to spy on other Kurdish students. A few days later his father told him he had received a letter from the General Security Office in which an intention to arrest him, Ramzan, had been expressed. Ramzan resolved to leave his country believing it would not be safe for him to seek refuge in Kurdistan. [He] left Iraq pursuant to arrangements made by an agent and arrived in the United Kingdom in February 2000…he had been granted exceptional leave to remain … on the 1 June 2000."
He expressed the belief that the applicant would be at serious risk of ill treatment if returned to Iraq, and he expressed the belief that the applicant would be targeted in revenge for the family's connection with the Ba'ath Party.
"As the hearing progressed it became plain that the [applicant] had given seriously inconsistent evidence insofar as his claim to have been-ill treated by the Iraqi security forces were concerned."
A little later:
"That Ramzan was not a credible witness [and had]…not give[n] a credible account of events."
"In arriving at such findings of fact and concluding that the appellant's credibility was severely damaged we have indeed borne in mind Mr Bazini's submission that the SEF should not be taken into account as a source of evidence from which to draw when considering the issue of credibility. We have certainly borne in mind that the appellant did not refer to or adopt the SEF when giving evidence. That was certainly the appellant's right."
Then dealing with Dr Fatah's report:
"… Dr Fatah's report and his suggestion that the appellant was at risk from Kurdish elements was predicated upon his acceptance of the appellant's evidence which had been furnished to him in the first instance in order that he might prepare that report which was presented to the Adjudicator."
A little later:
"We have not accepted the appellant's claims of fact. We are not prepared to regard Dr Fatah's conclusions as generating a claim that the appellant is a person at risk from any element in Iraq, a proposition which an assessment of the evidence as a whole tended to refute."
They concluded:
"… that the appellant and Nazim Ramzan were not credible witnesses and that neither gave a credible account of events. Indeed, we are driven to conclude that the appellant's claim for asylum and the facts on which that claim were based were no more than a fabrication devised in order to secure his entry into the United Kingdom and in time to prolong his stay."
"Professionals. For example academics, teachers, journalists, artists, doctors and medical personnel due to suspected co-operation with or perceived support of the US-led Coalition Forces suspected association with the former regime, as well as for the wealth they are perceived to have."
There is no suggestion that there will be any suspected co-operation or support on the part of the applicant for the coalition forces or with the former regime. That leaves him potentially vulnerable in relation to the wealth that he may be perceived to have. Ms Braganza says that this point was specifically taken on the applicant's behalf before the tribunal and that it was incumbent upon the tribunal to deal specifically with it.
Order: Application refused.