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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> FB (Eritrea) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 1417 (04 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/1417.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 1417 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM & IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No: HX/19486/2004]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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FB (ERITREA) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
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THE RESPONDENT DID NOT APPEAR AND WAS NOT REPRESENTED.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
"It is not credible that the Appellant, had he received reliable information that the delegates' identities and exact travel arrangements were known to the authorities, would not have informed his cell leader and caused them to alter their plans, rather than let them enter a trap, where the entire staff of Immigration Officers and security services at the airport knew their identities and travel plans, and the government intended to follow them in Eritrea to discover their contacts there. The Appellant's failure to warn the ELF deliberately endangered the passengers and local ELF members, and it is not credible that the appellant would have allowed them to jeopardise themselves and others, including himself, by placing them under government surveillance.
78. It is not credible that the Appellant, who had no reason to shake hands with any passengers at all and had never previously done this, would approach the two passengers from Germany, and associate himself with them in such an obvious way, still in the airport just after they came through Immigration control…
79. [In relation to questioning before an alleged arrest on 23 May 1999] … It is not credible that the Appellant would not have taken precautions for his safety had this incident taken place.
80. … It is not credible that the Appellant and the witness would not have supported the account with reports in contemporary publications, which would have been a matter of great concern to the ELF and Eritrean community in Germany where the head office is now located, had they occurred.
81. It is not credible that the Appellant's father was killed by the authorities for his ELF membership…
82. [Referring to the alleged treatment in detention] … It is not credible that the authorities, had they wished to kill or imprison the Appellant permanently, would have sent him for treatment for abscesses or allowed him liberty in hospital and to return home.
83. … It is not credible that authorities, intent on persecuting the Appellant, would allow him 3½ months home leave to recuperate from the ill-treatment they had inflicted on him, nor that he would not have been required to return directly to continue military service. It is not credible that he was being watched.
84. … It is not credible that a person in fear of persecution, having already experienced torture, interrogation, threats of death or imprisonment for life, and whose connections with a proscribed organisation were known to the authorities, would have remained at home in those circumstances
85. It is not credible that the authorities would not have arrested the Appellant during the period from 30:10:99 to mid February 00 had they been interested in him or suspected him of political opposition through work for the ELF. It is not credible that the authorities would have failed to act to arrest the Appellant in the time it would have taken…"
Having set out the facts and made those findings on the subject of credibility and having reasoned them in that way, the tribunal concluded:
"86. … I am not satisfied even to the lower level of proof required of an Appellant that he could be considered a deserter or would be of interest to the authorities if returned.
89. The Appellant's entire account lacks credibility and cannot be accepted as probative of any of his assertions. On the evidence and following guidance of KA paragraph 113 on risk categories to Eritreans of military service age, I conclude the Appellant can be considered to have left Eritrea legally."
"The Appellant asserted that he would be at risk, if returned, as a deserter from military service. He lived for a considerable period at a known address where he had been seen twice by those who had previously arrested him, without being ordered to return to military service. I conclude that the Appellant was not of interest as a deserter, following the guidance of WA paragraph 64 to 69."
"Whilst it could have been more clearly expressed, at 88 the Immigration Judge appears to reason on the basis that even if the Appellant's account of having been arrested were true, which she does not accept, then he had been seen twice by those who had arrested him…"
"As the SIJ correctly pointed out in refusing PTA, that is an 'even if' finding."
I agree with that construction of the paragraph.
"A person who generally lacks credibility will not be assumed to have left illegally."
"A finding as to whether an Eritrean appellant has shown that it is reasonably likely that he or she left the country illegally, is therefore likely to remain crucial in deciding risk on return to that country (see paragraph 234 above). In making such a finding, judicial fact-finders will need to be aware of evidence that tends to show the numbers of those exiting Eritrea illegally appear to be substantially higher than those who do so legally and that distaste for what is effectively open-ended service at the behest of the state lies behind a good deal of the current emigration from Eritrea. Nevertheless, where a person has come to this country and given what the fact-finder concludes (according to the requisite standard of proof) to be an incredible account of his or her experiences, that person may well fail to show that he or she exited illegally."
Paragraph 234 provides:
"The significance of that point [that is in relation to 'a credible account of material particulars'] is worth emphasising. Persons who have been found by a judicial fact-finder not to be credible in any material respect may be hard-pressed to demonstrate that they left Eritrea illegally. If they did not exit illegally then the only alternative is that they left with the permission of the Eritrean authorities despite being of draft age. (see further paragraph 449 below)."
Order: Application refused.