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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> MH (Iraq) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 852 (05 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/852.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 852 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No: HX/0911/2004]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LAWS
and
MR JUSTICE BLACKBURNE
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MH (Iraq) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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Mr A Payne (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
"22. However, my task is to assess whether the Appellant's subjective fear is objectively well founded. If what he says is true, and judging by the objective evidence there is a reasonable likelihood that is, then it would not be safe for him to return to Southern Iraq since it is reasonably likely that he would be the subject of revenge attacks. As things stand today in Iraq I do not think that the authorities in Basra would be able to provide a sufficiency of protection for him due to the overall difficult security situation. Consequently, I conclude that it is reasonably likely that if the Appellant returned to his home area he would have a well founded fear of persecution in the form of reprisal attacks against him. In the current situation I do not believe that the authorities would be in a position to protect him, let alone provide sufficient protection.
"23. However, the Appellant does have an internal flight alternative. Mrs Prince was unable to refer me to any objective evidence which suggests that significant number of Iraqis from the South have gravitated towards Baghdad. From my perusal of the objective evidence such is not an identifiable trend. The Appellant would be returned to Baghdad and, indeed, can go to a more Northern city in an Arab area. I have not been advised of any health difficulties and consequently he appears to be a fit and healthy young man. Accordingly, I do not think that it would be unreasonably harsh to expect him to go and live in another part of Iraq away from his home area. If he did this I do not think it reasonably likely that he would be tracked down by those who are apparently seeking revenge against him."
"The appeal will therefore proceed on the basis of the Adjudicator's finding at paragraph 22 of his determination, that the appellant has a well founded fear in his home area because of his activities on behalf of Saddam's regime. The issues to be considered will be whether those activities come within the ambit of Article 1F of the Refugee Convention and whether they render it unsafe for him to relocate to a different part of Iraq."
"57. The people who suffered direct harm at the hands of the appellant would appear on the evidence to be people who were in the south where the appellant is not to be returned and where it is common ground that he will be at risk. Otherwise he claims to be at risk from people who as prisoners he transported to various parts of Iraq including Baghdad and on account of his name being on lists. I have not had any evidence put before me as to the nature of such lists or the likelihood that persons such as the appellant would have their name on any list. In effect, I am invited to surmise that from the fact that he would have signed and receipted various documents in connection with the transport of prisoners that his name would remain to be found now although he left the country in 2002.
"58. I do not consider that the appellant faces a real risk of being identified for any of these reasons. It is not doubt possible that a person who was ill-treated in the south might encounter him in Baghdad or in a more specifically Sunni area in the centre of Iraq. It is possible that a person whom he transported as a prisoner would identify him in the same way. In this regard, however, it is perhaps relevant to note there is no indication that he ever ill-treated any of the prisoners indeed he was involved in their journeys being broken up to enable them to have food and drink. Nevertheless I accept there might be some degree of hostility towards him on account of having been involved in their transport. The degree of likelihood in that regard, however, does not to my mind equate to a real risk. It is a matter of chance and possibility falling short of a real risk. Although I have found that he was involved in the commission of serious offences in the south, he was involved at a low level as a conscripted volunteer for a number of years at the base where he carried out his activities. As I say, I have been shown no evidence to indicate that such a person's name would be found on any lists now. No doubt it is the case as quoted to me from the country report that there is targeting by Islamist militias who dominate the ISF and also on the part of other or the same Shi'ite Muslim assassins towards members of the former regime. But I do not consider that the likelihood of the appellant being identified in any of the ways I have considered as being such a person is such as to cross the threshold of needing to show a real risk or degree of likelihood in that regard. In the context of the internal relocation test set out in Januzi I do not consider that it would be unduly harsh to expect the appellant to relocate to Baghdad or elsewhere in central Iraq where there are clearly Sunni enclaves. Although his tribe is from the south, it is of clear relevance that he belongs to the dominant religious group in the Sunni areas of Iraq. No doubt there would be gossip or questions about him as set out in Dr Seddon's report. Iraq is a tribal country and tribal groups are historically unwelcoming to others. But that does not, to my mind, equate to the kind of factors set out in paragraph 20 in Januzi. There is no indication that the appellant as a person not belonging to any of the tribes in the Sunni parts of Iraq would be placed ipso facto in conditions of severe hardship or unable to sustain a relatively normal life at the minimum subsistence level only. The evidence does not indicate that he would face economic destitution or existence below at least an adequate level of subsistence. He is, as has been pointed out, a young man of thirty four who is in good health. His family is a wealthy one, and although the evidence is unclear as to their present whereabouts, it is the evidence that they have not experienced any reprisals on account of his past activities and it can reasonably be surmised as a minor aspect of the overall assessment of undue harshness that they might be in a position to be reunited with him and to provide him with assistance accordingly.
"59. In coming to these conclusions I do not seek to minimise the extreme difficulties faced by people in Iraq generally at the moment. But to my mind (and bearing in mind that there is no contention in this case that conditions there generally are such as to breach the Article 3 threshold for a returnee) I do not consider that the appellant's position would be materially different from that of any other Iraqi save to the extent that there is a slight risk, as I have described, of him being identified by a person with whom he has come into contact as a consequence of his past activities. There is no indication that he would need any particular documentation in order to make his way from Baghdad to a predominantly Sunni area. The evidence does not show that he would need any kind of passport or formal documentation, although there are risks in travel between population centres as mentioned in paragraph 6.378 of the Country Report and the restrictions on freedom of movement mentioned, for example, at paragraph 6.75, again I do not consider that these are matters such as to make the appellant's relocation unduly harsh. Mr Durance properly accepted that essentially the same arguments fall to be made in the context of Article 3 as in the context of undue harshness, and accordingly in concluding that the appellant's claim does not succeed under the Refugee Convention I conclude, for essentially the same reasons, that his claim does not succeed under Article 3 either."
"The objective evidence before the SIJ demonstrates on the lower standard of proof that:
(i) Former Ba'ath party members are systematically targeted irrespective of their level of association;
(ii) Such targeting emanates from inter alia the ISF forces;
(iii) The ISF forces have inherited the previous Ministry of Interior departments (for whom the Claimant had worked between 1990 and 2002)
(iv) There are hit lists which have been drawn up of former Ba'ath party members, in particular those members who were security personnel;
(v) Principal targets are Sunni members who committed abuses;
(vi) Low-ranking members are targeted;
(vii) The Claimant would have to present himself to the Ministry of the Interior (ISF) for documentation, thus alerting the very group identified with acts of assassination with his details."
"No doubt it is the case as quoted to me from the country report that there is targeting by Islamist militias who dominate the ISF and also on the part of other or the same Shi'ite Muslim assassins towards members of a former regime. But I do not consider that the likelihood of the appellant being identified in any of the ways I have considered as being such a person is such as to cross the threshold of needing to show a real risk or degree of likelihood in that regard."
It is plain that the SIJ has applied the right test there expressly and indeed in his determination.
Lord Justice Mummery:
Mr Justice Blackburne:
Order: Appeal dismissed. The cost order against the Appellant is not to be enforced without leave of the Court, and there be a detailed assessment of the Appellant publicly funded costs under the Community Legal Services Order.