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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> JN (Cameroon) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] EWCA Civ 241 (12 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/241.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 241 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No AA/04456/2007]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
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JN (CAMEROON) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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Ms C Patry-Hoskins (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson:
"He said he had heard that the practice of FGM had been introduced to his village in October 2006 when he was told that his female cousin had undergone circumcision. When the Appellant found out about this he told the people in the village to report it to the police but they had been afraid to do so. The Appellant had returned home and explained to his human rights organisation what was happening in his village. They would not believe his account without evidence and this is why the Appellant had returned to the village in order to take photographs which he did about ten or fourteen days after his earlier visit in October 2008."
"The Appellant confirmed that although the chief had been present at the circumcision where the Appellant had taken his photographs he did not react. He had been surprised that the soldiers had come to arrest him a few days after he had returned to Douala. He had been told at the police station that he had been accused by the chief of the village of planning some action with village people to kill the President Paul Biya and that the Appellant was teaching crime to the people. He said he thought the chief had done this because he had been frightened when he had come to take his photographs and that this might cause him problems."
"He said he had not given the photographs he took to his human rights organisation on his return home he had put them in a bedroom intending to wait for the next meeting of the human rights organisation but that the police came for them before he was able to do so."
"I disagree because the whole basis upon which the Appellant's claim rests is that it was his human rights activities which brought him into conflict with the chief in the first place. I consider that in assessing the overall credibility of the Appellant's account it is necessary to look at the credibility of his claim to have been a human rights activist. I do not accept that this claim becomes irrelevant just because the Appellant has conceded (paragraph 27 page 5 at the Appellant's second witness statement) that neither the chief or the authorities were aware of his involvement with the human rights organisation."
"61. However my most serious concern is not so much what the letter from ODH says as what it did not say. The Appellant's evidence is that he was sent by ODH to obtain evidence from his village. They were well aware of his concerns regarding FGM (paragraph 19 page 4 second witness statement Appellant's bundle) and in the third paragraph of their letter the ODH say that he was asked to obtain more evidence and in consequence of what he did he became a victim of the traditional ruler. The letter also states that most of the information they gathered regarding the Appellant is from relatives. If that were the case the ODH would without doubt have been aware of the circumstances of the Appellant's arrest and his imprisonment on false charges and that during his arrest his wife was raped by Government soldiers and his father killed with impunity. These are all serious human rights violations and matters about which any human rights organisation would be concerned. I would have expected ODH at the first opportunity to have raises the serious issues at the highest level. At the very least I would have expected to see some reference to these events in the ODH letter together with some indication as to what steps have been taken by them to verify and report the Appellant's claim.
62. According to the report of the Fact-Finding Mission to Cameroon dated January 2004 complaints of human rights abuses can be submitted to the National Commission for the Human Rights and Freedoms (NCHRF). At paragraph 4.9 of the report (page 126 Respondent's bundle) it is stated that the NCHRF provides an umbrella organisation over all the human rights groups within Cameroon and they cooperate with other human rights groups.
63. If ODH were aware of the Appellant's arrest and treatment of his family that is a clear example of persecution of a human rights activist and of his family. I question why they have not said this in their letter or given any information as to what action they have taken to report the incident. Had they done so it would have supported the Appellant's claim but their failure to do so casts significant doubt on the Appellant's claim that his wife was raped and his father was killed and also cast doubt upon his own detention.
64. I consider the fact that the letter is silent on these points casts serious doubt on the reliability of the information contained in the letter from ODH."
"I consider that what the Appellant had done in his village by photographing or filming a traditional method of circumcision, which is not illegal in Cameroon, could not form any basis on which to make the village chief think he might be a threat. The Appellant has acknowledged that he was not known to have been working for a human rights organisation and as the Appellant admits he was considered to be just a simple person from the village. He acknowledged that the chief was at the ceremony and saw him filming, yet he did not do anything. There has never been any suggestion in the Appellant's evidence that the chief was upset at the Appellant talking to people about their right to wages. If there was any such concern I question why the Appellant was not warned off whilst he was in the village. It seems to me to be completely irrational that the chief should wait until after the Appellant returned to Douala before making a complaint to the police that the Appellant was plotting to kill the president and encouraging young people in the village to commit crime. Not only were these accusations false they were absurdly false and once found to be so would reflect badly on the chief."
"69. The Appellant acknowledges that the chief had absolute power in his village but the Appellant was either unwilling or unable to say that he exercised any power or influence outside his home or tribal area. The fact that the Appellant describes the chief as a Government delegate does not persuade me that he would be in a position to influence the police in Douala to enable them to arrest the Appellant on dubious charges.
70. The report on the mission to Cameroon has the following to say tribes and chiefdoms:
'13.3 Dr Kamga of Nouveaux Droits de L'Home informed the delegation the human rights violations that occurred within tribes mainly occur in the north of Cameroon. Most of the human rights cases in Cameroon do not come directly from the Government. Lamidos have power over their subjects and the Government gives Lamidos freedom in return for the support of the village in the elections. Therefore the Government turns a blind eye to the human rights abuses.
13.4 Dr Kamga added that human rights violations within tribes are more prevalent in the north…'
71. I accept that chiefs do have power within their own villages but the objective evidence clearly shows that human rights violations mainly occur in the north of the Cameroon within chiefs own tribal areas. Mr Nicholson relied on the Operational Guidance Note on the Cameroon (paragraph 3.9.8 page 32 Appellant's bundle) in support of his submission that chiefs are all powerful in the Cameroon. However the paragraph clearly relates to the power of chiefs in the north and extreme north provinces where chiefs are permitted by Government to detain people in their own private prisons. The Appellant village is not in the north it is in the west province and there is no suggestion anywhere in the objective material that chiefs in the west province exercise such power. Further in neither report does it suggest that an individual chief's influence extends beyond his tribal area."
"I found that the Appellant's account of his treatment in prison does not reflect the seriousness of the charges he claims he was facing. The Appellant was held for approximately 28 days seven of which he was held in police cells and 21 in Newbell Prison. During that time there is no evidence he was ill-treated or that he suffered any kind of physical harm. He was not charged with any offence. It is not credible that if he was accused of plotting to kill the president and inciting the young people in his village to crime that he was not interrogated in depth. His evidence is that in effect he was not interrogated at all. All that he was told was what he was accused of which he denied. This account is not consistent with the objective evidence as to how the authorities treat prisoners in Newbell Prison. The USSD Report for the year 2006 (page 37 Appellant's bundle) comments as follows:
'In Douala's Newbell Prison and other non-maximum security penal detention centres prison guards inflicted beatings and prisoners were reportedly chained or at times flogged in their cells. Authorities administered beatings in temporary holding cells within police of gendarme facilities.
Two forms of physical abuse commonly reported by male detainees were the bastonnade where authorities beat the victim on the souls of the feet and the balancoire during which authorities hung victims from a rod with their hands tied behind their backs and beat them, often on the genitals.
Security forces reportedly continued to subject prisoners and detainees to degrading treatment including stripping them, confining them in severely overcrowded cells, denying them access to toilets or other sanitation facilities and beating detainees to extract confessions or information about alleged criminals. Pre-trial detainees reported that they were sometimes required, under threat of abuse, to pay 'cell fees' a bribe paid to prison guards to prevent further abuse.'"
"Whilst I acknowledge that there is corruption in the Cameroon and this is widely reported in the objective material, I do not believe that the appellant's uncle would have been able to find anyone willing, even for a large bribe, to face the possibility of being charged with helping someone accused of plotting to kill the president, to escape."
"77. I have taken into account the documents produced by the Appellant in support of his claim that his father is dead and his wife has been repaid. In considering these documents I have applied the principles set out in Tanveer Ahmed [2002] UKIAT 00439. These principles are:
(i) In asylum and human rights cases it is for an individual claimant to show that a document on which he seeks to rely can be relied on.
(ii) The decision-maker should consider whether a document is one on which reliance should be properly be placed after looking at all the evidence in the round.
78. These are the principles which I have applied and I have considered all the evidence in the round. With the exception of the documents I am satisfied that all the other evidence which I have referred to above points to the fact that the Appellant's claim is not genuine and that he has fabricated his account to fear persecution in the Cameroon. In addition to this as I have already observed there is widespread corruption in the Cameroon and again I quote from the USSD Report (page 50 Appellant's bundle) as follows:
'Corruption remained a [serious] problem in all branches of Government. The public perception was that judicial and administrative officials were open to bribes in almost all situations. According to a transparency international survey published in December 2005 an average household paid $205 (113, 000 cfa francs) each year in bribes, or more than 20% of the average person's annual income, the average annual income per person was approximately $80 (44,000 cfa francs).'
79. After considering all the evidence in the round I am satisfied that the weight of the evidence is against the Appellant's claim and accordingly I do not attach any weight to the documents produced by the Appellant in support."
"It seems to me to be completely irrational that the chief would wait until after the Appellant returned to Douala before making a complaint to the police that the Appellant was plotting to kill the president and encouraging young people in the village to commit crime. Not only were these accusations false they were absurdly false and once found to be so would reflect badly on the chief."
"Later that night after the reception hosted by the MDCA Douala branch, the pastor on his way home was attacked by some unknown people. He was beaten and discovered later by innocent passer-bys who took him to the hospital. He later died of his injuries.
The people were later arrested after one of them surrendered to the gendarmes and had confessed that they had been ordered by the chief to exact punishment on Pastor John Ayuk for defying him. The chief has never been arrested. He has never even been questioned. The chief is a staunch member of the CPDM Central Committee and thus one of the untouchable people of the current regime."
"…the chief of the Appellant's village was both powerful and untouchable and the Appellant's account that this brought the village into conflict with the Appellant and his human rights organisation is plausible." [See paragraph 45 of the immigration judge's determination]
Lord Justice Longmore:
Lord Justice Sedley:
Order: Application granted; appeal dismissed