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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> HS (Uganda), R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWCA Civ 94 (18 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/94.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 94 |
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ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(MR JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PITCHFORD
and
LADY JUSTICE RAFFERTY
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF HS (UGANDA) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondents |
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Ms Beatrice Collier (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pitchford:
"23. I find that the appellant is a national of Uganda. I find that he is approximately 27 years old. I accept no other aspect of his account. I find that he was never a member of the Forum for Democratic Change or the Reform Agenda. I find that he never campaigned for either party and was never politically active for either party or at all. I bear in mind the appellant's representative's submissions that concentration upon what the appellant did not know about the Forum for Democratic Change without mentioning what the appellant did in fact know is unfair to him and creates a misleading impressions of his credibility. The appellant's representatives did not condescend to particulars about what it was that the appellant in fact knew about the Forum for Democratic Change but in any event, the appellant's ignorance, mistakes and discrepancies were so critical that if the appellant did know some detail about the Forum for Democratic Change this would not lead me to conclude that this knowledge stemmed from actual involvement with this party as opposed to learning for the purposes of the asylum application.
24. It follows from the findings above that the appellant has never been detained as alleged. I find that he has not been detained, has not been interrogated, has not been accused of being a rebel and has never been maltreated or tortured on this account. I find that the appellant's account is entirely untrue. I do not know if he suffers PTSD or in fact any other medical condition. A letter from a GP stating that he 'probably' suffers PTSD does nothing to suggest that his account is true. Even if he does suffer PTSD, there are very many possible reasons why this medical condition may have been brought on. The appellant's account is not, in my view, one of them.
25. It follows from my findings above that the appellant is of no adverse interest to the authorities in Uganda. I find that the appellant has no well founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason (or indeed any other reason) were he to return to Uganda. For the same reason, I find that he is not at risk of maltreatment or death in Uganda pursuant to articles 2 or 3 of the ECHR. For the same reasons, I find that he is not entitled to humanitarian protection to the Qualification Regulations."
"7. [HS] was detained in Uganda from 2006-2008 for his involvement with a political party opposed to the government. Before this time, [HS] reports no health problems except for a beating meted out by soldiers at a political rally in 2001, during which he sustained scars to his buttocks.
8. When imprisoned 2006-2008 for alleged involvement with a 'rebel movement', [HS] underwent months of beatings and torture, including: kicks and punches; beatings with short batons; beatings with wire; tortured with a sharp implement grappling his chest; chilli was put in his eyes and nose, causing temporary blindness. He was placed in solitary confinement in the second place he was in prison. He had little light and was often given little to drink. He was, on occasion, given urine to drink. It is difficult for [HS] to give precise details as to how he was tortured as he was often blindfolded at these times. He clearly recalls, however, being forced to place his hands in a tank of water through which an electrical current passed, electrocuting him. He also had an electrode attached to his right ear and was repeatedly electrocuted with this. His head was also beaten."
Q3. "They detained me for such a long time and during that time they have tortured me."
Q25-27. [In Makindye Prison] "The morning following the beating I was moved to a single cell."
Q10. [In Makindye Prison] "They put me in a small cell and... with me were 18 other inmates. An officer came in and started kicking me and told me to tell the truth. He stripped me to my underwear. He hit me with a baton and I fell down and they stepped on me, pinned me down. I passed out. I was there until 4am in the morning."
Q11. "The next morning they moved me to another cell and issued me with a prison uniform. I was held in Makindye for 10 months."
Q33-37. [In the safe house] "There I met a man who took off the blindfold and started kicking me... They beat me up and on my head. They stabbed me with something I couldn't identify on my leg... They brought some very smelly liquid stuff and they forced me to drink it... He said he was going to be back the following morning and would torture me until I told him the truth, then he kicked me. They brought a bowl full of water and they told me to put my hands in. When I did that, I got an electric shock. The bowl was metallic. They brought electrodes and attached them to my ear lobe, right side, they sent an electric shock into my body. Up to now I have got an amplified sound in my head... I think they tortured me all day long."
Q43. "They kept coming back every week. I was there until 10 November 2008."
Q105. "It was not on a daily basis, but it did not have a regular pattern. It was difficult to keep track of the number of days."
Q121. [On arrest in 2001] "They arrested myself and a colleague, took us and beat us badly. They beat my bottom so badly I got holes in my posterior."
Q124. "I found myself at home and I was bleeding badly."
Q178. "I am having problems with my eyes and eyesight."
Q186 "I also have stomach problems. When I go to toilet usually there is blood. I have problems sleeping... Mentally, I am very disturbed... My life is in serious problem. I am unhappy and my health is giving me a lot of problems. I didn't mention to you, but they crushed my private parts, but in order to sleep I had to put my leg in a certain position. I can't sleep with my legs together. I've got pain inside bum, but I don't know what the problem is."
- There was circular, indented, irregular scars, two to three centimetres, to both buttocks. While they could have been caused by an accidental fall onto a sharp object, their presence on both buttocks made accidental injury unlikely. They are, he said, "highly consistent with beating from [a] sharp object such as a machete."
- There were linear, asymmetrical and irregular scars to the right shoulder, two centimetres; dorsal aspect of the right foreman, ten centimetres; across left pectoralis muscle, just above the nipple line, three by one centimetre; palmar surface and radial border of the left arm, six centimetres; anterior aspect of the left thigh, five centimetres; anterior aspect of the left shin, twelve centimetres; and anterior aspect of the right thigh, four centimetres. They could have been accidental injuries, but "their location and overall number... make this pattern of scarring highly consistent with beatings and whippings with sharp instruments, such as wire or the sharper edges of batons or weapons." Strangely, Dr Bird comments that the appellant cannot confirm that these may have been possible causes because "he was blindfolded at the time", while at paragraph 8 of his report (to which I have already referred) he lists beatings with wire and batons as complaints made by the appellant.
- On the dorsal of the left foot were three two-centimetre ovoid scars, which could have been caused by a heavy sharp object accidentally falling on the foot, but in Dr Bird's view the "widespread and diverse scarring makes this highly consistent with beating with a heavy or sharp implement".
- On the right bicep was an eight millimetre circular scar, which in Dr Bird's view was typical of a cigarette burn.
- Returning to the three one-centimetre scars across the left pectoralis muscle, Dr Bird expressed the view that they were unlikely to be ritual or accidental and could be explained by the use of a "grapple or hook, which was stabbed into the left chest and pulled... such as large fishing hooks".
- Over the left anterior shin were seven four-centimetre areas of poorly healed patches of skin. These could have been the result of accidental trauma, but Dr Bird concluded that the scars were also consistent with an injury from a severe kicking.
"25. [HS's] suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, worrying epileptic symptoms, problems hearing, tinnitus, hip pain and pain walking, reduced range of movement in his hands, his widespread, irregular, asymmetrical scarring and his visual problems combined are typical of someone who has survived torture (see para 187, Istanbul Protocol 1959). He also has a chronic cough which, until proven otherwise, risks both his own health and everyone at Campsfield with infection from tuberculosis. The denial of [HS] his medication by UKBA during his transport to Campsfield is also of grave concern..."
"Dr Bird's report on its own cannot make [the appellant's] claim, which is full of mistakes and discrepancies, become credible."
"We are not persuaded that the submissions made, taken together with previously considered material create a realistic prospect of success. Accordingly, we are not prepared to reverse the decisions already made in your client's claim. As we have declined to reverse this decision on an earlier claim and have determined that the submissions do not amount to a fresh claim, there is no right of appeal against this decision from within the United Kingdom."
"On this basis I would unhesitatingly follow TK because (1) it was identified specifically to address this issue which seems to have been no more than a secondary issue in KH (Afghanistan); (2) I agree with Laws LJ that a careful analysis of ZT does not provide authority for the proposition that anything other than Wednesbury is the correct test for review in Rule 353 cases; and (3) to the extent that Longmore LJ in KH (Afghanistan) reached the contrary conclusion, he did so on the basis that "it is now clear from ZT (Kosovo). I simply and respectfully disagree that ZT bears that reading.
16. Thirdly, to have a differential approach as between Rule 353 and section 94 cases is not illogical. In Rule 353 cases the applicant has already had full recourse to the immigration appellate system. Rule 353 is in the form of an extra-statutory
concession. In section 94 cases, the Secretary of State is empowered to deny the applicant access to the immigration appellate system at the outset. A more protective approach to review in that situation is understandable. For my part, I would also consider an assimilation of the tests to be justifiable but, on the authorities, I consider that we are bound to continue to apply WM and TK in Rule 353 cases.."
"The evidence relating to the claimant's scars and other medical conditions was obtained only after two sets of removal directions had been set. The scars were not relied on at all by the claimant as evidence that he had been tortured at the hearing before the immigration judge. This is not a case where they were relied upon then and have now been supported by evidence as to genesis."
"28. I consider Mr Serugo-Lugo's submissions to be fatally undermined because the claimant in this claim asserts that he has a well-founded fear of persecution on the ground of his political opinion. In my judgment, nothing in Dr Bird's evidence comes near to upsetting the findings of the immigration judge that the harm to which the claimant may have come in Uganda was not the result of such a persecution on such a ground. Dr Bird's evidence goes to how consistent the claimant's injuries (particularly his scarring) are, and how typical that scarring is of non-accidental injuries and of those who have survived torture. That is in accordance with the Istanbul Protocol and the approach advocated in SA; indeed, this long after the event, no expert could go further. However, in my judgment, his evidence cannot undermine the findings of the immigration judge that the claimant was not a member of the Forum and was not politically active in Uganda when he was there. These findings were based upon her assessment of the claimant's evidence concerning, for example, the dates Dr Besigye came to and left Uganda. The basis of those findings is not undermined in any way by the sort of evidence that Dr Bird has provided."
"... It is said that the appellant probably has PTSD and that he was screened for this with a positive result. It is said that people with PTSD suffer memory disturbances and find it difficult to concentrate [...] I do not consider that this evidence is such as to reasonably lead me to conclude that the very significant discrepancies in the appellant's account could result from his medical condition. The discrepancies were not minor or relating to detailed events such as specific dates. They related to important events, involving years by reference to specific traumatic events in the appellant's life, themselves lasting years. Further, the account is simply incredible and implausible in a number of respects and depends upon documentary evidence which I do not consider to be at all believable."
"24. It follows from the findings above that the appellant has never been detained as alleged. I find that he has not been detained, has not been interrogated, has not been accused of being a rebel and has never been maltreated or tortured on this account. I find that the appellant's account is entirely untrue. I do not know if he suffers PTSD or in fact any other medical condition. A letter from the GP stated that he 'probably' suffers PTSD does nothing to suggest that his account is true. Even if he does suffer PTSD, there are very many possible reasons why this medical condition may have been brought on. The appellant's account is not, in my view, one of them."
"As already determined by the immigration judge, there could be many reasons for [the appellant's] medical condition and Dr Bird's report on its own cannot make [the appellant's] claim, which is full of mistakes and discrepancies, become credible."
That was also the view taken by the learned judge. The medical evidence was incapable by itself of undermining the immigration judge's analysis and rejection of the appellant's underlying account.
"Given the significant inconsistencies and errors in his account on critical issues, as outlined by the immigration judge, the medical opinion that his scars are consistent with non-accidental injury, and even torture, pales to such an extent that I am satisfied that there is no such realistic prospect."
Subject to the application to adduce fresh evidence, therefore, I would dismiss the appeal.
Lady Justice Rafferty:
Master of the Rolls:
Order: Appeal dismissed. Application refused.