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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> MS (Afghanistan) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2013] EWCA Civ 7 (22 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/7.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 7 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER
UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE McKEE
AA/10404/2010
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
and
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
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MS (Afghanistan) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
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Mr D Blundell (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : Wednesday 17th October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix :
The essential facts
"The terrorist once again commenced their barbaric action
[AS, the brother] a brave and prominent officer of Logar province, was killed in front of his family in his home by Al Qaeda terrorists. Our reporter added that his wife and children were screaming and trying to rescue him, but the brutal terrorists and enemies of humanity did not have any mercy on him.
[MS] brother of late [AS], who was also an active and powerful officer of National Security and has suppressed the terrorists, told to our reporter that this action of our country's enemies will not discourage us and I will carry on further drastic activities to eliminate them."
MS's appeal proceedings
"he had a friend who provided a genuine newspaper article in support of his claim but his claim was refused because the Home Office had said and the court had accepted that the newspaper was a forged document even though they knew that the article was genuine."
"29. The Home Office has accepted that the Appellant worked for the Afghan Government and for the American Security Services as claimed by him and supported by documentary evidence submitted by him. It has also accepted that his family were attacked and his brother killed. However, it does not accept that the attack was necessarily carried out by the Taliban or that the Appellant himself suffered an attack some 2˝ weeks after the attack on his family. I also do not believe that the Appellant has given an honest account of events following the attack on his family that prompted his flight to the UK…I do not believe his account of having been personally attacked some 2˝ weeks or so after the attack on his family. Whilst the Home Office has accepted that the Appellant attended the Afghanistan Human Rights Organisation in Kabul, I am not satisfied that the contents of the letter from them stating that he was at risk from the Taliban can be regarded as reliable or independent evidence of the events alleged by the Appellant, bearing in mind the prevalence of false documentation as well as the fact that they would have relied on what the Appellant told them."
"12. Over the last 18 months the ability of the insurgents to pursue individuals like [MS] in Kabul or the other cities of the north has increased dramatically. Hizb-i-Islami in particular have a presence in Kabul, with young activists operating at the university for example, but it cannot at present be said that they are very active in Kabul. The Taliban on the other hand seem to rely more on ad hoc infiltration and carry out occasional terrorist attacks in Kabul against high profile targets; clearly their human resources in Kabul are limited and they use them sparingly. Over the last several months non-lethal attacks and harassment against Afghans working for NATO or Coalition have begun being reported even in Kabul; it is not clear whether these are carried out by Taliban or simply by unorganised Afghans who are hostile to foreign presence. ISAF and Coalition interpreters seem to have been the main target so far and I have not seen any report yet of attacks on intelligence officers in Kabul itself, but the level of activity of the insurgents in Kabul has been steadily growing and they can be expected to expand their targeting in the future.
13. It should also be considered that Logar province is located very close to Kabul and many Logaris live in Kabul; as a result information about the whereabouts of [MS] is likely to spread particularly fast."
"13. It is true that Logar is one of the main sources of insurgent infiltration into Kabul and that therefore there a[re] quite a few Taliban or Hizb-i Islami members from Logar in Kabul. [MS] at this point would not be a priority target for them, because he is no longer in service, but he could turn into an opportunity target if they became aware of his whereabouts. Because the population of Kabul tends to cluster on a regional and ethnic basis, the chances of [MS] running into some Taliban/Hizbis from Logar are not so remote. At that point, he would become a target because the assumption would be that given his past in the intelligence he would be very much opposed to the Taliban and pass on information about their activities to the government.
14. The fact that [MS's] brother also worked for the intelligence service does not modify [MS's] situation significantly; because of his past [MS] is already certainly considered a very hostile element. This does not mean that they would actively seek him in areas not under their own control, but certainly they would consider him as a major liability if he was to present in an area where they operate. The relatives of people working for the government are targets but people who actually worked for the government and particularly the intelligence have priority. The fact that the whole family can be considered pro-government cannot make the position worse than this: if the Taliban came across [MS] they would not hesitate to execute him anyway."
It was Dr Guistozzi's second report ("Dr Guistozzi's report") that was relied upon in the new appeal before IJ Mace.
"Whilst the respondent has not proved any allegation that this document is a forgery, having considered all of the evidence in the round, I do not place reliance on it."
She then concluded:
"98. For all the reasons that I have given above, having considered all of the evidence before me as a whole, and reminding myself of the standard of proof, I do not find that the evidence before me causes me to depart from the findings made by the Immigration Judge in 2008. I am not satisfied, even to the low standard required, that the appellant has shown that he has been identified or was at risk from the Taliban or other insurgents, or that he is now at such risk. I am not satisfied that there is any current adverse interest in him that would cause him to be at a real risk or reasonable degree of likelihood of suffering persecution. For the same reasons I do not find that he would suffer serious harm, or treatment contrary to Articles 2 and 3."
The determination of UTJ McKee
"16. That does not mean a de novo hearing, of course. The re-making of the decision is confined to re-assessing the risk on return in the light of the Hewad Daily article. Mr Chelvan did not call the appellant to give any further evidence…
17. In my judgment, it is not necessary to determine whether the appellant was genuinely interviewed by a keen news-hound after the death of his brother, or whether he arranged for an article describing him as an arch-enemy of Al Qaeda to be printed in a newspaper shortly before he left Afghanistan to seek asylum. The question is whether this article will put the appellant at risk on return to Afghanistan at the present time, nearly six years later. The answer to that question, on the evidence available to me, is clearly not.
18…It is simply not reasonably likely that this fleeting reference to the appellant six years ago in a newspaper with a tiny circulation will have increased by even a tiny degree the level of risk from the Taliban or Hizb-e Islami which may be faced by the appellant on his return at the present time. Lawrence & Co in their latest bundle have put forward country background information about the continuing insecurity of Logar Province, but the appellant can reasonably be expected to relocate to Kabul without undue hardship. In Dr Guistozzi's opinion the appellant will not be a "priority target" for the insurgents, as he is no longer working for the security forces, although he could be an "opportunity target" if they came across him and know his antecedents. But it is clear that the Taliban are concentrating their efforts in Kabul on high-profile targets which will generate publicity, not on low-level former security personnel who have not been on active service for years. The evidence does not establish a real risk to the appellant on return to Kabul."
The submissions on appeal
"10. It is not difficult to track people down in Afghanistan, although it might take some time. Neighbours and landlords will check people's backgrounds, because everyone thinks in terms of security, and so they want to check the newcomer's background in their home area. Further, messages are sent across the country via chains of communications based on personal contacts, and it would be natural to investigate where someone was from in order to see what role they could play in such a network."
Mr Chelvan submitted that that passage was accepted by the tribunal in that case at para [67].
"130. As to the position in Kabul, it was accepted on behalf of the appellant that the Taliban would not actively be seeking to track him down within Kabul city, rather it is a chance encounter with the Taliban that he fears, and which Dr Guistozzi regards as a real risk.
131…We also take into account his evidence that tracking down someone from the provinces in Kabul is not difficult; and although the Taliban would not be proactively seeking him, it would not be easy for him to settle away from the southern and south-eastern parts of the city which are Pashtun dominated. The north is dominated by Tajiks, the west by Hazaras 'heavily hostile to Pashtuns', and the central areas are very expensive so that the appellant is highly unlikely to be able to afford to live there.
132. Similarly Dr Shearer identified a 'tangible', 'real, genuine, worrying' risk to the appellant as a young male related to 'perceived traitors'. He considered that the risk exists both in the appellant's home area, and, were he to relocate, within Pashtun communities where his identity and family history would be 'probed…discussed and almost certainly discovered' as familial lineages and the webs of interlocking reciprocal obligations are Pashtun mechanisms of survival.
133. We are further satisfied that the appellant would be at real risk of persecution as an unattached child from his particular home area who has lost all contact with his family, so that family protection will not be available to him…"
Mr Chelvan therefore argued that, if in those two cases, both of them country guidance cases, on the basis of such evidence, the asylum claimants succeeded in demonstrating a real risk of persecution in Kabul, the same should apply to the present case of MS, so much so that it was perverse of UTJ McKee to decide otherwise.
Discussion
"In the light of our conclusions described above we consider that relocation to Kabul is a viable option in general terms for homosexuals. Obviously though individual factors in any specific case will have to be taken into account."
"67. The question then arises of internal relocation to Kabul. As simply a practising homosexual who would wish to keep his life private, we would not consider, in light of our general findings, that he could not safely relocate. However we have to take into account the prospect that his history will catch up with him and that his demonstrated willingness to take risks could expose him to public outrage even in a big city like Kabul. We have had regard to the quoted passage in the COIR from a previous paper by Dr Guistozzi concerning the practice of neighbours and landlords checking out a newcomer's background. In this case, on its very particular and exceptional facts as established by the Adjudicator, we consider that there is a real risk that his past notoriety would catch up with him in Kabul, with similar consequences to those he would face were he to return to Jalalabad. In those circumstances, we find, albeit marginally, that he does not have a viable relocation option and is entitled to asylum" (emphasis added).
Conclusion
Lord Justice Moore-Bick :
Lord Justice Lewison :