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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Ob (Iraq) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 585 (15 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/585.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 585 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
Mr Turkington (Adjudicator)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE WALL
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OB (Iraq) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
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Miss Julie Anderson (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 7 June 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson:
Adjudicator's decision
"The CIPU report goes on to say at paragraph 6.115 that with Ba'ath Party membership a prerequisite for advancement in many fields in Saddam Hussein's Iraq, ordinary membership did not of itself imply support for the party's policies. Sources told the 2003 UK Danish fact finding mission that Iraqis differentiated between those who joined the party because it was necessary for them to get jobs, and others such as members of the security services who committed crimes against them. Only those former Ba'ath members who were known to have abused their position were being targeted for reprisals; these would mostly be former members of the intelligence services, the security services of Fedayeen Saddam, but according to one source, even in those categories only individuals known to have committed abuses would be targeted. This could, however, mean that relatively low ranking Ba'ath Party members could be at risk because they had operated at street level and were therefore known to the victims or their victims' families or associates."
"Whilst I have reservations about some parts of the Appellant's evidence I find that the Appellant is a Sunni Muslim from Tikrit. I accept the Appellant's evidence that he was a member of the Al-Ba'ath Party. I accept his evidence that he was an enforcer for the Al-Ba'ath Party. I have no reason to doubt that the Appellant during Year 12 of his studies was the President of the student committee. He was 19 years of age at that time. The Appellant claims that his work on behalf of the party would have been well known to those persons with whom he was dealing. The Appellant claimed that he was a lowly member of the party but, nevertheless, his connection was well known to people on the ground. I find the evidence in the CIPU report in the chapter entitled "Reprisals against Ba'ath Party members", at 6.115, that relatively low ranking Ba'ath Party members could be at risk because they had operated at street level and were therefore known to their victims or their victims families or associates to be apposite. The Appellant, in this case, operated at a lowly level. He claims to have made reports adverse to the situation of up to ten persons as part of his work. In his capacity as an enforcer, encouraging students to join the party, the Appellant will have become well known. His work was tainted with the persecutory nature of the Ba'ath Party insofar as the Appellant had, on occasions, up to ten occasions, cause to complain to his authorities about the activities of up to ten persons. There is no evidence as to what happened in relation to these people but the general nature of the Appellant's work was such that his connection to the Al-Ba'ath Party was established. Insofar as he was an active member of the Al-Ba'ath Party, albeit working at a lowly but public level, I find that the Appellant will be at risk of reprisals in the event of his being returned to Iraq."
The appeal by the Secretary of State
The first reconsideration decision
"4. At the hearing before us Miss Dassa, on behalf of the appellant, accepted that the Adjudicator had simply not dealt with internal relocation in any way whatsoever. In circumstances where the appellant's case relied upon an alleged risk of reprisals from erstwhile school children or possibly their respective families, it was incumbent upon the Adjudicator to consider the nature and extent of the risk that that might pose for the appellant. It was only after consideration had been given to that issue that the availability of internal relocation could be considered on the basis of both the findings of fact made and the appropriate objective evidence. In our judgment it was a plain error of law for the Adjudicator to omit any consideration of the issue of internal relocation.
5. We are also satisfied that the Adjudicator materially erred in law in failing to give any proper consideration to the nature and extent of the appellant's activities as a school student and to relate them to the objective evidence when considering whether or not such activities would or would not place the appellant at a real risk of persecution and/or inhuman and degrading treatment. We say that because the objective evidence disclosed that it is only those low level members of the Ba'ath Party who have been involved with the security or intelligence services who might be at risk or reprisals. The Adjudicator failed to observe that there was no evidence from the appellant to indicate that any of the people upon whom he may have filed a report to more senior people in the Ba'ath Party, knew that he had done so. Reprisals are taken by those who know that somebody else has done something which they consider deserving of such reprisals. In the absence of such evidence the Adjudicator could not reasonably conclude that the appellant would be at risk of such reprisals if he returned to Iraq generally or to his home area in Baghdad in particular.
6. The Adjudicator plainly considered the risks faced by former members of the Ba'ath Party generally and referred to aspects of the objective evidence which disclosed that Ba'ath Party members who had been involved in security and/or intelligence matters leading to others being targeted by the authorities, might well face reprisals. He failed to relate that objective evidence to the appellant's subjective circumstances and, in our judgment, that is what led him into error in the result at which he arrived."
The second reconsideration decision
"26. We make the following findings of fact:
(i) We accept that the Appellant was a member of the Baathist party and that he undertook some limited work for them recruiting others to join the party.
(ii) His activities started at school and continued until he was 19 and then ceased.
(iii) His work for the Baath party did not involve him in any activities which put others at risk.
(iv) At school and at University he was selected to play for the Iraqi national handball team. He attracted publicity. The team was involved in a tournament in Italy and his picture was in the paper on various occasions. He also appeared on TV.
(v) We accept that in 2003 his brothers and his father were murdered in separate incidents and that his car was damaged by gunfire.
13. Although we have made findings of fact in favour of the Appellant on some parts of his evidence we have treated his evidence with some care. The Appellant changed his evidence. Initially he said that his activities on behalf of the Baath party ceased in 1993. He then said that they were reduced and that they only ceased in 1997 after he graduated.
14. We have read the passages cited to us by Mr Tranter from the CIPU and take them into account. In particular we note from paragraph 6.545 that according to a report in the Washington Post in February 2005 the Baath party had a membership of between 1 and 2.5 million. We also note from paragraph 6.549 that some low ranking officials of the Baath party have been killed or attacked and the example is given of a known brutal torturer.
15. We do not consider the Appellant can be properly described as an official of the Baath party. He was, when at school, someone who would recruit for the party. His activities were therefore at a very low level and occurred at least 13 years ago.
16. We are not persuaded that the fact that the Appellant's family is Sunni Arab from Tikrit adds anything to the risk assessment.
17. We accept that the Appellant was a well known sportsman in the early 90s. We accept that his photograph will have appeared in the press. However, we do not find that his fame all those years ago exposes him to additional risk now. We note from the Appellant's witness statement in paragraph 9 that the Appellant did not appear on TV many times because Uday Hussain was more keen on football and this would have attracted more coverage. We also take into account that the photographs we have seen show the Appellant as he was in the early and mid 90s. Since then he has put on weight and his appearance is more mature. He is not likely to be as readily identifiable from his photographs now as he would have been at the time they were taken.
18. We do not overlook the fact that his brothers and his father have been murdered. However, the Appellant himself said that this was random violence and thus he contradicted his earlier evidence that his family was targeted after the fall of the regime. While we accept that his car was damaged by gunfire we do not accept that he was personally targeted.
27. We therefore find that the Appellant does not have a well founded fear of persecution in Baghdad. Thus it is not necessary for us to consider the issue of internal relocation.
28. It follows that the Appellant's asylum claim fails. It also follows from our finding that the Appellant is not at risk of persecution that his claim that his human rights will be contravened by his removal to Iraq also fails."
The grounds of appeal to this court
Appeal against the first reconsideration decision
"prima facie take place on the basis of the findings of fact and the conclusions of the original tribunal, save and in so far as they have been infected by the identified error or errors of law. If they have not been infected by any error of law, the tribunal should only revisit them if there is new evidence or material which should be received in the interests of justice and which could affect those findings and conclusions or if there are other exceptional circumstances which justify reopening them.": per Latham LJ in DK(Serbia) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2006] EWCA Civ 1747, [2007] 2 All ER 483, para 25.
Appeal against the second reconsideration decision
"My main role at that time was to ensure that as many people as possible were recruited from the colleges to join the party. The government placed a lot of emphasis on recruiting young people into party membership and we were the people through whom they achieved this aim. On occasions, we were not successful with recruitment and were expected to report those who persistently refused to join. We did not do this lightly but I would usually visit these sorts of people on several occasions to persuade them to rethink their position highlighting to them the advantage of joining. If however everything failed, we would report them. I was reluctant to report because there were serious consequences for those who refused in this way but it was my duty to report if everything failed and I did so on about 10 occasions….."
"First, there must have been a mistake as to an existing fact, including a mistake as to the availability of evidence on a particular matter. Secondly, the fact or evidence must have been "established", in the sense that it was uncontentious and objectively verifiable. Thirdly, the appellant (or his advisers) must not have been responsible for the mistake. Fourthly, the mistake must have played a material (not necessarily decisive) part in the Tribunal's reasoning."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Wall:
"43. I would add this on the procedural aspect of the case. Had the tribunal been right in its critique of the first determination in relation to Rule 317, it should have included in its order a direction that the immigration judge who was to continue the reconsideration should do so on the basis that the facts found by Mr Ince were to stand save insofar as the issue to be reconsidered required their significance to be re-evaluated.
44. The reason why it is important to be rigorous about this is that reopening a concluded decision by definition deprives a party of a favourable judgment and renders uncertain something which was certain. If a discrete element of the first determination is faulty, it is that alone which needs to be reconsidered. It seems to me wrong in principle for an entire edifice of reasoning to be dismantled if the defect in it can be remedied by limited intervention, and correspondingly right in principle for the AIT to be cautious and explicit about what it remits for redetermination."
"(4) During Year 12, I became the president of the Student Committee. My main job was to encourage other fellow students to join and to attend meetings of Al-Ba'ath party or its organisation such as Youth, Student or Women organisation. There were times that I had to force students to join Al-Ba'ath party if they refused I had to prepare a report
(5) This party ordered me to enforce people to attend the A'-Ba'ath Militia as Al-Quds Army and other Army Organisations. I was obliged to enforce people to join, and this is the main reason I have faced persecution (my emphasis)."
"I am also claiming asylum based on actual and imputed political opinion, ethnicity and membership of a social group. Those people whom I reported for refusing to join the Ba'Ath party must have been punished in one way or another. I do not know the extent of the punishments they faced. However, it is well known that those who were seen as opposing Saddam were punished quite severely. If my reports resulted in anything like this, and it might have done, then those people if still alive or members of their families and their tribes will remain after me until they kill me. I am therefore at risk of revenge killing by those persons who will want to kill me because they believe that I was at least indirectly responsible for the death of members of their family, or their torture. Tribal laws in Iraq mean that the members of the family of any person who has been killed as a result of the actions of Saddam Hussein and his government will feel an obligation to kill someone from the family of any of the persons that they hold responsible for these acts. In my case, my sports career and political profile at the relevant time means that I would be recognised as such a person even now in Baghdad. (my emphasis)"
Lord Justice Mummery: