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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Tozlukaya v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2005] EWHC 2863 (Admin) (06 October 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2005/2863.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2863 (Admin) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Mehmet Tozlukaya |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Defendant |
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Tim Eicke (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing dates : 6th & 9th September 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Andrew Nicol QC :
The evidence
'(41) She fears further persecution if she and her family go back to Turkey. I believe that if she does return she will become more depressed and the risk of suicide will increase.
(42) I have been asked to clarify my opinion of the suicide risk.
(43) Her depressed state and the risk of suicide is the result of her experiences in Turkey and also subsequent events. They include: having her asylum application in Germany refused, being in an uncertain situation in England, her unsuccessful appeal hearing in October 2003 and her two miscarriages.
(44) I think that the risk will be greatest when she feels that she has no hope of avoiding return even while she is still in this country. If she goes to Germany the risk will remain because she believes that she will not be allowed to stay there. In addition the uncertainty of her position will be prolonged and that will constitute a further stress. If she was made aware that her claim would be given substantive consideration it would give her a measure of hope and would reduce the suicide risk.
(45) I believe that there is a marked risk of suicide while she is in England and that will continue if she is removed to Germany.
(46) This opinion is based partly on what she told me but mainly on my observations of her behaviour and on the observations of nursing staff in the hospital where I carried out my assessment.'
'I believe that there is a serious risk of suicide, which will be greatest when she sees no hope of remaining in England and the risk will continue throughout the process of removal.
However, if she has appropriate treatment and close supervision the risk may be controlled. The act of removal will disrupt such support and treatment and will increase her feelings of hopelessness and desperation so that she will then be more likely to act in a suicidal manner.
From what she told me she believes that she will not receive what she feels is appropriate consideration in Germany and that prospect will increase the risk further.'
'(233) My opinion is that an attempt to remove Mrs Tozlukaya from this country could indeed trigger a suicide attempt. There are a number of reasons for this, but probably three stand out.
(234) The first reason is that she has a Depressive Disorder. This increases the risk of self-harm and suicide.
(235) She appears to believe that deportation to Germany would simply trigger a return to Turkey. Similarly, she seems to believe that return to Turkey would place her and her family at risk. If this is what she believes (and here the objective facts about Germany and Turkey matter less than what she actually believes) then she will inevitably see removal as an act associated with substantial threats both to herself and to her family. In my view, the perception of threat of this type is likely to be associated with an increase in her suicide risk.
(236) The final mechanism to consider relates to the fact that she has been detained and that during detention she was able to avoid removal. Now, as I have already indicated, my opinion is that she was suffering from a Major Depressive Disorder. However, she had also had the experience of learning that her behaviour can affect the decisions made by the authorities concerning removal. My opinion is that this process of learning will make it more likely that she will act in a disturbed way if she were to face detention and removal again. Such actions would not necessarily be consciously determined (they may be associated with dissociation), but it is more likely that there would be disturbance following these experiences. I would not wish to underestimate the importance of this process either. Even if behaviour is apparently related to the possibility of gain, it may still be dangerous and may still lead to completed suicide.
(237) To that degree, therefore, my opinion is that the experience of detention probably has heightened her risk of completed suicide. I would say that if she faced a future attempt to remove her from this country then the risk of deliberate self-harm of some sort would be very high. With regard to the risk of completed suicide, I would described this as being at least a moderate risk. By this I mean that it would be substantially elevated over the general population. It would not be as high as if she had, for example, a psychotic depression with delusions. I am not sure how much further I can go in terms of offering quantification. She would certainly present a significant risk.'
The nature of the Claimant's human rights claims
'No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment of punishment.'
'(1) Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his
home and his correspondence.
(2) There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the preservation of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.'
The power to certify and its effect
(1) In R(L) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2003] EWCA Civ 25, [2003] 1 WLR 1230 at 1245-6 [57] – [58] Lord Phillips MR had said that the threshold was that if the claim 'cannot on any legitimate view succeed' it was clearly unfounded.
(2) In R (Yogathas) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2002] UKHL 36, [2003] 1 AC 920 at 934 [34] Lord Hope had said that the manifestly unfounded test would be satisfied only if the claim was 'so clearly without substance that the appeal would be bound to fail.'
(3) Lord Justice Auld himself said that the 'The question is a narrow one and the threshold for certification is high.'
(4) He endorsed the views of Dyson LJ in R (Razgar) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2003] EWCA Civ 840 [2003] Imm AR 529 at 569 [111] who had said 'The Secretary of State cannot lawfully issue such a certificate unless the claim is bound to fail before an adjudicator. It is not sufficient that he considers that the claim is likely to fail on appeal or even that it is very likely to fail.' [emphasis by Lord Justice Dyson].
Article 3 and risk of suicide on removal
'[85] This appellant is a person who is suffering from depression and has on two occasions taken overdoses of medication which have required her to be admitted to hospital. There is uncontroverted evidence that, if she is returned to France, there is a real risk that she may try to commit suicide and that this risk is likely to subsist until she realises that the French authorities do not intend to send her back to the Ivory Coast (assuming this to be the case). We agree with the judge that the issue was the degree of risk that there would be an increased likelihood of suicide. If it was arguable on the evidence that there was a real risk or a significantly increased risk that, if she were removed to France, the appellant would commit suicide, then in our view her claim based on Article 3 could not be certified as manifestly unfounded.
[86] The evidence did not disclose that the appellant was a suicide risk except in the context of her possible removal to France. The main question, therefore, (as the judge recognised) was whether the possibility that the risk could be minimised by protective measures such as detention and warning the French authorities of her tendency was such as to render unarguable what would otherwise clearly be an arguable claim. The judge decided that, in view of the comparatively short-term nature of the enhanced risk of suicide and the effect of the precautionary measures that could and should be taken, the claim failed. If he had focussed on the question of whether the claim was arguable, he ought in our view to have decided that it was. There was no evidence as to what precautions would be taken to minimise the risk of suicide and, in particular, what measures the French authorities would take and for how long; and how effective they would be.'
Accordingly Ms Soumahoro's appeal was allowed.
'[26] First, the test requires an assessment to be made of the severity of the treatment which it is said that the applicant would suffer if removed. This must attain a minimum level of severity. The court has said on a number of occasions that the assessment of its severity depends on all the circumstances of the case. But the ill-treatment 'must necessarily be serious' such that it is 'an affront to fundamental humanitarian principles to remove an individual to a country where he is at risk of serious ill-treatment' – see Ullah paras [38-39].
[27] Secondly, a causal link must be shown to exist between the act or threatened act of removal or expulsion and the inhuman treatment relied on as violating the applicant's article 3 rights. Thus in Soering at para [91], the court said:
'In so far as any liability under the Convention is or may be incurred, it is liability incurred by the extraditing Contracting state by reason of its having taken action which has as a direct consequence the exposure of an individual to proscribed ill-treatment.' (emphasis added)
See also para [108] of Vilvarajah where the court said that the examination of the article 3 issue 'must focus on the foreseeable consequences of the removal of the applicants to Sri Lanka…'
[28] Thirdly, in the context of a foreign case, the article 3 threshold is particularly high simply because it is a foreign case. And it is even higher where the alleged inhuman treatment is not the direct or indirect responsibility of the public authorities of the receiving state, but results from some naturally occurring illness, whether physical or mental. This is made clear in para [49] of D[3] and para [40] of Bensaid[4].
[29] Fourthly, an article 3 claim can in principle succeed in a suicide case (para [37] of Bensaid).
[30] Fifthly, in deciding whether there is a real risk of a breach of article 3 in a suicide case, a question of importance is whether the applicant's fear of ill-treatment in the receiving state upon which the risk of suicide is said to be based is objectively well-founded. If the fear is not well-founded, that will tend to weigh against there being a real risk that the removal will be in breach article 3.
[31] Sixthly, a further question of considerable relevance is whether the removing and/or receiving state has effective mechanisms to reduce the risk of suicide. If there are effective mechanisms, that too will weigh heavily against an applicant's claim that removal will violate his or her article 3 rights.'
The parties submissions in relation to Article 3
(1) It could not be said that Mrs Tozlukaya's position was of such an exceptional nature that removal would amount to an affront to fundamental humanitarian principles.
(2) The measures which would be in place to protect her in Germany mean that there would not be a significantly increased risk of suicide there. Germany had sufficiently effective treatment and procedures to reduce the risk that she would commit suicide. Even Dr Hajioff accepted that the risk was manageable and controllable.
(3) While there may indeed be a risk that Germany would remove the Claimant and his family to Turkey, the Court should assume that it would not do so if this would violate the family's Article 3 rights. There was therefore no objective justification to the fears of ill-treatment.
Article 3: conclusions
'Although suicide is a form of self-harm and is to be distinguished from harm inflicted by others, if the real risk of it is a foreseeable consequence of a removal decision, then that may well be enough to establish serious harm under both Conventions. Under the Human Rights Convention we would accept in principle that if the evidence in a case establishes that a removal decision will expose a person to a real risk upon return of committing suicide, then a decision requiring him to return would give rise to a violation of Article 3 and 8.'
This passage is quoted by the Court of Appeal in J at para 12 and I do not think that anything in that judgment disagrees with that opinion.
(1) Dr Hajioff considered that the during transit with such close care as the Secretary of State's evidence described 'the risk of her actually harming herself will be low.' He thought that with appropriate treatment in Germany, the risk of suicide would gradually diminish. However, it was a further condition of this improvement that she began to feel safe and secure in Germany. In my view there must be very real doubt as to whether that condition would be fulfilled. Germany has once rejected the family's claim for asylum and, although it has said that it will look at the application again, there must be a real prospect that the same decision will be made.
(2) Dr Turner's report of 10th June 2005 likewise thought that the possibility of deportation would be a barrier to recovery. He also thought that, while there was evidence of a serious approach to consider her needs in the circumstances of her removal, the actual procedures were still insufficiently detailed for him to give an opinion as to its appropriateness. Notwithstanding the material from the Home Office which he had seen earlier, his report on 24th June 2005 said that the risk of suicide following removal to Germany would be higher than at present.
(3) Ms Citron's letter of 23rd June 2005 expressed a similar view, namely that any treatment in Germany was unlikely to be sufficient to ensure that Mrs Tozlukaya did not pose a severe risk of suicide in future given the threat of removal to Turkey.
'In reaching our conclusions we have to take careful account of Mr Cox's submissions based on Kurtoli and Soumahoro. However, not only were these cases concerned essentially with arguability of a claim as opposed to its merits, but both decisions were fact-specific and fact-sensitive.'
I have already referred to Soumahoro. R (Kurtoli) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2003] EWHC 2744 (Admin) was a case where Silber J. had quashed a certificate in relation to a Serb from Kosovo whom the Secretary of State proposed to return to Germany in circumstances which would have greatly increased the possibility of her committing suicide.
The parties' submissions in relation to Article 8
'For a number of years, it has been the practice of the Immigration and Nationality Directorate not to pursue the enforcement action against people who have children under 18 living with them who have spent 10 years or more in this country save in very exceptional circumstances.
We have concluded that 10 years is too long a period. Children who have been in this country for several years will be reasonably settled here and may, therefore, find it difficult to adjust to life abroad. In future, the enforced removal or deportation will not normally be appropriate where thee are minor dependent children in the family who have been living in the UK continuously for 7 or more years. In most cases the ties established by children over this period will outweigh other considerations and it is right and fair that the family should be allowed stay here. However each case will be considered on its individual merits.'
Conclusions on Article 8
'the fact that this claimant has been in this country for a long time is not of assistance. Her asylum application was refused on third country ground seven years ago and, as in R (Sopa) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] EWHC 904 Admin para 17, the Secretary of State was entitled to take into account the fact that since then she has been well aware that he was of the view that she had no right to be in the UK and that she would be returned to Greece as soon as it was legally possible to do so.'
(1) Mr Eicke is correct that the Rules and legislation envisage that where another EC country accepts responsibility under the Dublin Convention (or, now, the Dublin II Regulation) the person concerned will normally be removed to that country. However, both the Convention and the Regulation recognise that on humanitarian or other grounds a state to which an asylum application had been made could consider it substantively even though it was not required to do so in accordance with the hierarchy of criteria in the Convention or Regulation – see articles 9 and 3(4) of the Convention and articles 15 and 3(2) of the Regulation.
(2) That alone would not be sufficient to make a difference, but whereas the executive's policy in Huang was to be found exclusively in the Immigration Rules and the claimants in that case could only invoke the Secretary of State's residual discretion to give leave to enter or remain, here the executive has grafted on to the rules a published policy. The policy does not give a right (or even something akin to a right) to leave to enter or remain if certain conditions are fulfilled, but it does recognise that 'in most cases the ties established by children over [the period of 7 years] will outweigh other considerations and it is right and fair that the family should be allowed stay here.'
(3) The 'ties established by children' over a lengthy period of years is one aspect of their 'private lives' to which Article 8(1) refers and, in view of the policy, it would certainly be arguable that the Tribunal could conclude that the children did have 'private lives' in the UK which would be disrupted by removal.
(4) Whether or not it would be correct to analyse the policy in terms of a formal presumption in favour of a grant of leave, it is a fair to observe that, once there has been 7 years residence, the policy tilts in favour of the grant of leave. After that time 'removal will not normally be appropriate.' Indeed, the purpose of Mr O'Brien's statement seems to have been to reduce the qualifying period under the previous policy. Formerly, once that qualifying period had passed, leave would be granted 'save in very exceptional circumstances'. It is not obvious that there was intended to be any change in that regard.
(5) In this case, the Secretary of State was entitled to refer to the fact that he had taken an early decision to remove the Claimant and his wife under the Dublin Convention and that there have been proceedings to challenge this decision which in total have occupied a lengthy period of time. However, of that time some 22 months passed waiting for the resolution of an important general point in other lead cases, about 2 years were spent on appeals which the Claimant was entitled to pursue and the present application for judicial review was launched over a year ago. Although the Tribunal might need to investigate why Mrs Tozlukaya's mental health difficulties were not raised earlier than June 2004, this is not a procedural history of such manifest abuse that the family was bound to be excluded from the benefit of the policy.
(6) The policy is not part of the Immigration Rules and the Tribunal cannot therefore (as such) allow the appeal because it would have exercised the discretion under the policy differently, but in my judgment when it comes to deciding whether removal would be disproportionate under Article 8, the Tribunal will be entitled to take account of the Secretary of State's policy and that it calls for an individualised decision with something of a bias in favour of the claimant. This is a very different situation from Huang or Razgar. It was because the claimants in those cases could find no succour in the Rules or any comparable policy that Lord Justice Laws considered that their cases would have to be truly exceptional for removal to be disproportionate.
Overall conclusion
Note 1 The Convention Determining the State Responsible for Examining Applications for Asylum Lodged with One of the Member States of the EC - Dublin 15th June 1990. Since 1st September 2003 the Convention has been replaced by Council Regulation 343/2003/EC (‘Dublin II Regulation’) although for applications, such as those submitted in this case, before that date the responsible member state is still determined by the criteria in the Convention – see Dublin II Regulation Article 29 [Back] Note 2 I take this date from Dr Turner’s review of the nursing records. Dr Keith gives the date as 23rd July. [Back]