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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> KM (Sudan) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] EWCA Civ 204 (13 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/204.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 204 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM & IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No: AS/05957/2005]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
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KM (SUDAN) |
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 Sharland (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tuckey:
"28. On the totality of the evidence and applying the lower standard of proof I find that the appellant is not a member of an African tribe such as the Falata or that if she is she does not come from the Darfur area and has never lived there at any material time. I also find that she has never been the wife of an SLA activist and that she herself has not at any material time been a supporter of the SLA… The appellant is not and was not at any material time of interest to the Sudanese authorities."
The judge gave a number of reasons for this conclusion, which Mr Jafar attacks on this appeal, for which a senior immigration judge was persuaded to give permission.
"20: The basis on which the applicant is claiming asylum? DUE TO HUSBAND'S INVOLVEMENT -- POLITICAL
21: If political, which groups/parties involved? [And the interpreter has recorded] 'EQUALITY + JUSTICE'"
And then after that the letters GRP, which is accepted as an abbreviation for group. There is then something crossed out.
"The Justice and Equality Movement is a Darfurian-based rebel movement which is said by the COIS glossary to have emerged in 2001. The JEM was involved in the armed rebellion alongside the SLA. The appellant subsequently claimed that her husband was at all material times a member of the SLA and when asked by the [Home Office Presenting Officer] to explain the answer given in screening she said that she had said that he belonged to the SLA and that he had been fighting for equality and justice. According to the COIS report the SLA was fighting for greater political and economic rights for the African inhabitants of Darfur. The JEM was fighting against the marginalisation of the Darfurian tribes. The fact that their aims appear similar may be the reason why the groups are said to have joined forces in January 2006 but when the appellant gave her answer in her screening interview she had not been asked to give the aims of either her husband or of the movement of which she claimed he was a member. She had been asked to name the movement and she named what turned out to be the wrong one. It may be argued that I must accept her explanation because she has not given the precise name of the JEM but has instead transposed the names "Equality and Justice" but she has also used the word "group" and I find that she was answering the question put to her but that her knowledge of political activities in Darfur was too weak to be able to name the JEM accurately."
"I find however that her story is so totally inconsistent with the objective evidence of what was actually going on in the region from which she claims she originates and where she claimed she lived that it cannot be true."
He relies on seven points where objective evidence is relied to test the appellant's evidence and the immigration judge concludes that her evidence is inconsistent with that objective evidence.
"(i) the army moved into western Darfur in January 2004 causing hundreds and thousands of refugees to flee to Chad;
(ii) in her asylum interview the Appellant referred to a series of attacks from the beginning of 2003 during which houses were burned and the inhabitants attacked and killed;
(iii) the Appellant had not mentioned an attack in July 2004 in her asylum interview;
(iv) in 3 different places in her interview the Appellant gave dates that were one year earlier than those given in her statement;
(v) the Appellant's explanation for the inconsistencies was implausible.
(vi) the COIS report shows that the armed rebellion began in 2003 and that the government responded with 'ethnic cleansing'."
"To return to the objective material, by March 2004 the Janjaweed militia were carrying out systematic killings of African villagers in Darfur. By April a 45-day ceasefire had been signed. The ceasefire did not hold but I find that the matters complained of by the appellant as having happened in July 2004 were far more likely to have happened in or before April 2004 and that after that date the inhabitants of her village would either have fled to Chad or been killed. The reports state that the devastation left the villagers without food or water and it is not credible that the appellant returned to a village in the Darfur region and had her home rebuilt so that by August 2004 it was capable of being visited by the Janjaweed in search of her husband… The appellant's solicitors have included in their bundle an Amnesty International report dated November 2003. The manner in which the villagers and the little infrastructure which existed within them were destroyed and emptied of their inhabitants leaves the reader in no doubt that it would have been impossible for the villagers to return and it would also have been unthinkable because not only was there nothing to which they could return but there was also the frightening prospect that the Janjaweed might return at any point to complete the destruction. I find that the appellant's claim that her village was destroyed only in July 2004 and that the surviving villagers returned to rebuild their homes is not consistent with the history of events set out in the Amnesty International report."
"The appellant claims…she spent four days in the back of a lorry travelling to Khartoum. The Secretary of State considers that the appellant would not have been able to travel by lorry to Khartoum without being discovered at one of the numerous roadblocks through which the appellant acknowledges they passed on the way. Although Mr Jafar has pointed out correctly that there is no evidence of the nature and number of those roadblocks I find it implausible that she negotiated each one without being discovered."
LORD JUSTICE RIX:
LORD JUSTICE JACOB:
Order: Appeal dismissed.