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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Limbuela, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] EWHC 219 (Admin) (04 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/219.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 219 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF WAYOKA LIMBUELA | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | (DEFENDANT) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MISS K GRANGE (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
"As part of the preparation of the various judicial reviews in relation to the above type of matter, I have contacted several charities to enquire about support. I have found that there are few charities able to assist asylum seekers with shelter. "
"If the client is unable to obtain an injunction then we are forced to evict the client after seven nights. This could mean that someone who cannot speak English, has no friends in the country and who has no working rights is on the streets with no method of supporting themselves. All that we can provide the client with is a list of charities that may be able to help them. However, with the exception of Shelter, none of these directly provide accommodation and tend to be more concerned with providing food, and to my knowledge we have never successfully managed to find any of our clients accommodation through Shelter. We can also help the clients to get in touch with refugee community organisations if there are any that are appropriate to their nationality. However, we do not know of any that can provide accommodation."
No doubt it was evidence along those lines which helped to persuade Eady J that it was appropriate to grant interim relief, and Jackson J that this claim was arguable.
"As regards the types of 'treatment' which fall within the scope of Article 3 of the Convention, the court's case law refers to 'ill-treatment' that attains a minimum level of severity and involves actual bodily injury or intense physical or mental suffering. Where treatment humiliates or debases an individual showing lack of respect for, or diminishing, his or her human dignity or arouses feelings of fear, anguish or inferiority capable of breaking an individual's moral and physical resistance, it may be characterised as degrading and also fall within the prohibition of Article 3. The suffering which flows from naturally occurring illness, physical or mental, may be covered by Article 3, where it is, or risks being, exacerbated by treatment, whether flowing from conditions of detention, expulsion or other measures, for which the authorities can be held responsible."
"It is not unlawful for the Secretary of State to decline to provide support unless and until it is clear that charitable support has not been provided and the individual is incapable of fending for himself."
"But what does that all amount to when it comes to dealing with any individual claimant? Mr Eadie submits that it is not enough for him to assert that he has no money, no friends and no accommodation, or the situation would become unworkable. A mass of claimants would be able to make such assertions. Before an asylum-seeker can present a realistic claim under Article 3 Mr Eadie submits that he must show that he has taken all available steps to help himself. His physical condition is likely to be important in considering whether he has reached the requisite degree of distress. Medical evidence in terms of a formal report may not be easy to obtain, and the evidence filed on behalf of the respondent clearly demonstrates that, but if the asylum-seeker has had more than a minor complaint he will be likely to have sought treatment from a general practitioner or a hospital, and evidence of such treatment should be available. Furthermore he should be able to demonstrate by independent evidence what steps he has taken to obtain food and shelter. As to T, it is accepted that his case has to be judged as at 24th April 2003, immediately before he was granted emergency relief. Up to then the history of his time in the United Kingdom does not indicate that he had reached a condition verging on that described in Pretty and the judge was wrong to decide otherwise. If he was vulnerable for reasons other than destitution, and that can perhaps be inferred, then he may have been eligible for relief under section 21 of the 1948 Act, but that avenue had not been explored. These were the submissions made on behalf of the Secretary of State.
15. Mr Knafler submitted that T was vulnerable, and indeed that any asylum-seeker who is homeless and without means is verging on the condition described in Pretty. Mr Knafler pointed out that it is the duty of the Secretary of State to prevent a breach of Article 3, not to act only after one has taken place, and that asylum-seekers who are looking for assistance will inevitably find it difficult to produce independent evidence to substantiate their assertions of distress. They are by definition strangers in a strange land. Often they do not speak English, and their contacts are few. The charities which try to help them are overwhelmed, and they have only limited access to medical help, even if they know how to seek it, so, Mr Knafler submits, the most that the Secretary of State can expect of anyone claiming assistance is his evidence that he, or his legal adviser if he has one, has contacted one relevant charity and followed up any advice he received and, secondly, has contacted and sought help from any friends or family he may have, but that nevertheless he is or is about to become without shelter and without means of support. Mr Knafler submits that the judge adopted the right approach in the present case, and that his decision in relation to T should stand.
16. As we have already said, we are not prepared to attempt to lay down any simple test which can be applied in every case. The reality is that each case has to be judged in relation to all the circumstances which are relevant to it. They include factors such as those which have been canvassed before us, but we do consider that a comparison of the facts of S and T may be of assistance to those who have to decide where the line is to be drawn if the obligations imposed by the Convention are to be met.
"This does not mean that other cases have to reach the same or a similar degree of severity in order to engage Article 3."
"Are you in good general health?
A: No, my lower abdomen hurts."
" ... hostels that we are aware of tend to exclude asylum seekers on the grounds of funding and also clients have no means of travel to leave the Croydon area."
"I have dealt with the three cases under Article 3 by reference to their individual facts and the law as I understand it to be. However, it has been emphasised by both counsel that these are test cases and, in the circumstances, it is appropriate that I should say a little more. It is not inevitable that anyone refused asylum support will be able to rely on Article 3. For one thing, they may have access to private or charitable funds or support such that Article 3 will simply not arise. Some are more resilient or resourceful than others. However, when a person without such access is refused asylum support and must wait for a protracted but indefinite period of time for the determination of his asylum application it will often happen that, denied access to employment and other benefits, he will soon be reduced to a state of destitution (not in the section 95 sense). Without accommodation, food or the means to obtain them, he will have little alternative but to beg or resort to crime. Many, like the claimants in the present case, will have little choice but to beg and sleep rough. In those circumstances and with uncertainty as to the duration of their predicament, the humiliation and diminution of their human dignity with the consequences referred to in Pretty will often follow within a short period of time. If their asylum applications were determined expeditiously, the problem might be easy to contain. However, many are not dealt with expeditiously. By their asylum applications they are brought into a relationship with our public authorities. Our public authorities are obliged to respect their human rights. No one should be surprised if, within a short period of time, the demands of Article 3 require the relief of damage to human dignity which is caused by (to repeat the words of Lord Justice Simon Brown) 'a life so destitute that ... no civilised nation can tolerate it'. I do not suppose that any reasonable person, including the Secretary of State, views the alternative with equanimity."
"Thus, it seems to me, that being destitute for weeks will not necessarily verge on a breach of Article 3. This is because of the obligation on an applicant to establish, so that it is clear, that charitable support has not been provided and that the individual is incapable of fending for himself. By way of example, the claimant in this case is apparently a fit and healthy man of 20. If, despite being homeless, namely having no night shelter or accommodation, he can obtain food from charities during the day, or other sources, and has some access to washing and sanitary facilities in the course of the day, it is possible that he could live for an extended period of time under such conditions without severe adverse consequences reducing his condition to the Pretty level. Against that it can be said prolonged and severe conditions of cold could affect a fit man of 20 years if he is sleeping rough.
13. Within the concept of fending for himself falls the assistance or support which he might be able to obtain from friends, whether new or old, and family, as well as simply 'fending for himself'. For the legislation contemplates that from such efforts a palliative measure may ensue which will prevent the seriousness of his condition sinking to the Pretty level. It follows that these factors must be eliminated by evidence, or covered in as much detail as makes the position clear."
"In his helpful and realistic submissions Mr Berry's case was founded upon the following proposition: if no other avenues are available, then common sense dictates that someone already on the streets with no income, if not now suffering to the required degree, it is clear will within a short period of time be suffering to the required degree.
21. I am unable to accept the breadth or generality of that submission. I reject also that it is a result which arises from the application of common sense. In this particular area, as I have been anxious to emphasise, it seems to me the application of common sense will not assist, because what is needed is a result which arises from detailed consideration of evidence, not the application of broad concepts."
"Since I adopted an approach which differs from that applied by Newman J in Zardasht, I have thought it right to enable the Court of Appeal to say which is correct. Thus permission is granted not because I think that the result is likely to be different, but because the correct approach is important."