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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> FN (Zimbabwe) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] EWCA Civ 255 (16 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/255.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 255 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
The Asylum and Immigration Tribunal
Insert Lower Court NC Number Here
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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FN (Zimbabwe) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
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No-one attended on behalf of the Respondent
Hearing date: 8th October 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall:
The background
The applicant's case
The argument
1. Those at risk on return to Zimbabwe on account of imputed political opinion are no longer restricted to those who are perceived to be members or supporters of the MDC but include anyone who is unable to demonstrate support for or loyalty to the regime or Zanu-PF. To that extent the country guidance in HS is no longer to be followed. But a bare assertion that such is the case will not suffice, especially in the case of an appellant who has been found not credible in his account of experiences in Zimbabwe.
2. There is clear evidence that teachers in Zimbabwe have, once again, become targets for persecution. As many teachers have fled to avoid retribution, the fact of being a teacher or having been a teacher in the past again is capable of raising an enhanced risk, whether or not a person was a polling officer, because when encountered it will not be known what a particular teacher did or did not do in another area.
3. It is the CIO, and not the undisciplined militias, that remain responsible for monitoring returns to Harare airport. In respect of those returning to the airport there is no evidence that the state authorities have abandoned any attempt to distinguish between those actively involved in support of the MDC or otherwise of adverse interest and those who simply have not demonstrated positive support for or loyalty to Zanu-PF. There is no reason to depart from the assessment made in HS of those who would be identified at the airport of being of sufficient interest to merit further interrogation and so to be at real risk of harm such as to infringe either Convention.
4. Although a power sharing agreement has been signed between Mr Mugabe on behalf of Zanu-PF and Mr Tsvangirai on behalf of the MDC, the evidence presented does not demonstrate that the agreement as such has removed the real risk of serious harm we have identified for anyone now returned to Zimbabwe who is not able to demonstrate allegiance to or association with the Zimbabwean regime.
5. General country conditions and living conditions for many Zimbabwean nationals have continued to deteriorate since the summer of 2007. Some may be subjected to a complete deprivation of the basic necessities of life, for example access to food aid, shelter and safe water, the cumulative effect of which is capable of enabling a claim to succeed under article 3 of the ECHR. But that will not always be the case and each claim must be determined upon its own facts.
(emphasis supplied)
227. The means by which loyalty to the regime may be demonstrated will vary depending upon who is demanding it. Production of a Zanu-PF card is likely to suffice where an individual is confronted with such a demand, for example at a road block. But even that may not protect the holder from serious harm in rural areas where the adverse interest is in the community as a whole because the area is one in which the MDC made inroads in the Zanu-PF vote at the March 2008 elections.
228. People living in high density urban areas will face the same risk from marauding gangs of militias or War Veterans as do those living in the rural areas, save that the latter are possibly at greater risk if their area has been designated as a no go area by the militias.
229. The evidence suggests that those living in the more affluent low density urban areas or suburbs are likely to avoid such difficulties, the relative security of their homes and their personal security arrangements being sufficient to keep out speculative visits. Many of those with the means to occupy such residences are in general likely to be associated with the regime and so not a target on the basis of doubted loyalty. Others may enjoy such a lifestyle as a result of a more circumspect relationship with the regime falling short of actual association, but which is, nevertheless, such as to give the appearance of loyalty.
Miss Bayati's written advocate's statement filed pursuant to CPR Part 52 PD 4.14A
230. It remains the position, in our judgement, that a person returning to his home area from the United Kingdom as a failed asylum seeker will not generally be at risk on that account alone, although in some cases that may in fact be sufficient to give rise to a real risk. Each case will turn on its own facts and the particular circumstances of the individual are to be assessed as a whole. If such a person (and as we explain below there may be a not insignificant number) is in fact associated with the regime or is otherwise a person who would be returning to a milieu where loyalty to the regime is assumed, he will not be at any real risk simply because he has spent time in the United Kingdom and sought to extend his stay by making a false asylum claim.
231. But, apart from in those circumstances, having made an unsuccessful asylum claim in the United Kingdom will make it very difficult for the returnee to demonstrate the loyalty to the regime and the ruling party necessary to avoid the risk of serious harm at the hands of the War Veterans or militias that are likely to be encountered either on the way to the home area or after having returned there. This is because, even if such a person is not returning to one of the areas where risk arises simply from being resident there, he will be unable to demonstrate that he voted for Zanu-PF and so he may be assumed to be a supporter of the opposition, that being sufficient to give rise to a real risk of being subjected to ill-treatment such as to infringe article 3.
Discussion
Issue 1: Did the SIJ make material errors of law in her assessment of the applicant's evidence in relation to Operation Murambatsvina?
Issue 2: Did the SIJ misdirect herself in law in her approach to the documentary evidence submitted by the applicant?
Ms Phelan (counsel then appearing for the applicant) suggested that the Tribunal in Tanveer Ahmed was not referred to the judgment in Khawaja and appeared to suggest that I should not follow the guidance in Tanveer Ahmed (to the effect that one should focus on the question whether the contents of documents are reliable as opposed to whether they are genuine), and that I should make a finding that the MDC case is either genuine or fraudulent. I reject this. Tanveer Ahmed was decided in 2002. It is inconceivable that the panel in Tanveer Ahmed, chaired by Collins J, the then President of the (IAT) was unaware of the judgment in Khawaja, delivered in 1983. There is nothing in the reasoning of the Tribunal in Tanveer Ahmed which is inconsistent with the judgment in Khawaja. Furthermore, Tanveer Ahmed is a starred decision, and therefore binding on me. Accordingly, I decline to make any finding as to whether the MDC card the applicant submitted is a genuine card. I focus my attention instead on the question whether the contents of the document are reliable and I decide this point on the evidence as a whole.
1. 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.
2. The decision maker should consider whether a document is one on which reliance should properly be placed after looking at all the evidence in the round.
3. Only very rarely will there be the need to make an allegation of forgery, or evidence strong enough to support it. The allegation should not be made without such evidence. Failure to establish the allegation on the balance of probabilities to the higher civil standard does not show that a document is reliable. The decision maker still needs to apply principles 1 and 2.
The applicant's Issue 3: did the SIJ err in law in her approach to and findings on whether the applicant would be able to demonstrate loyalty to the ruling regime?
….. But a bare assertion that such is the case will not suffice, especially in the case of an appellant who has been found not credible in his account of experiences in Zimbabwe.
The difficulty in this case is that, notwithstanding the facts that the (applicant) and her advisers were plainly fully aware of the guidance in RN (Zimbabwe), she was not asked whether she would be able to demonstrate loyalty to the ruling regime. As the Tribunal said, the burden of proof is upon the (applicant). Since I do not have any direct evidence from the (applicant) as to whether she would be able to demonstrate loyalty to the regime (with the result that I cannot assess whether her evidence about this is truthful or not) I have to reach a finding by assessing the other evidence before me. That other evidence includes the fact that she had not given a credible account of any difficulties in Bulawayo.
(The applicant's) descriptions of the problems her sister and mother have experienced did not include anything to suggest that they had had problems from the "war veterans", "youth militia" or "green bombers" and Zanu-PF supporters. I take into account the fact that (the applicant) has not given any credible evidence that she suffered any difficulties during Operation Murambatsvina.
Conclusion