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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> B, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWHC 2528 (Admin) (23 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2007/2528.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 2528 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF B | Claimant | |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant |
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Miss Susan Chan (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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"Although he claims in the witness statement that he has a partner with whom he has established a relationship, there is no statement from that partner only former partners and none of the former partners attended the hearing. There is a letter from [Mr S] which says that they have a relationship but do not live together and had decided their relationship was best when they had separate flats. There is no suggestion of a committed relationship here that would be interrupted if he were to return to Algeria."
So that was the situation as found by the adjudicator at that time, that time being November 2003.
"The Home Office Country Information and Policy Unit of 27 October 2003 includes a report by the Dutch Immigration Service. At paragraph 3.4.5 of the report the only reference to homosexuals is as follows: ... 'although homosexual acts should be punished with two months to two years imprisonment according to the Criminal Code there is no actual prosecution of homosexuals in Algeria' ... That quote is from a UNHCR report. 3.4.5 continues ... 'homosexuality is tolerated in the Algerian society especially in the cities as long as it is not expressed very explicitly in public through behaviour and clothes. In the big cities, especially in Algiers, various meeting places for homosexuals can be found. People who openly admit their homosexual nature can experience bullying and intimidation by their social environment or members of the security forces'."
The adjudicator went on to comment that that is little more than the situation in this country. That, with respect, is a somewhat strange observation.
"The various articles in the appellant's bundle refer to the punishments for homosexuals that are prescribed by law but there is no objective evidence of such punishment being carried out, particularly in Algeria. The article by Peter Tatchell is said to document the growing threat of Islamic fundamentalism but again is a very general article with no specific information relating to prosecution of homosexuals in Algeria. The only specific document is that relating to the case of a gay Algerian granted asylum in France in January 1997. However the individual concerned was a political activist, had founded an AIDS organisation and an organisation to promote human rights. His application for asylum was supported by several French AIDS and gay organisations suggesting that he had a particularly high profile. I find this distinguishes his position from that of the appellant's.
The other document relied on is the Internet News Article of 11 August 1997. However this refers to a pledge by the GIA to kill a variety of people who they consider offend Islamic principles including 'immodest or debauched women', those who use alcohol or drugs and those who do not pray. There is no evidence that the appellant cannot go about his business discreetly as he is doing here."
"19. We are not satisfied that the adjudicator's assessment of the risk to the appellant on return shows any error of law. She has found in paragraph 31 with regard to the risk of the GIA that 'there is no evidence that the appellant cannot go about his business discreetly as he is doing here'. In the context she is clearly referring to his homosexuality as she is considering the risk to him as a homosexual from the GIA.
20. That being so the submission in the grounds of appeal that she is assessing the risk on the basis that he can alter his behaviour cannot stand. She has simply found that he behaves discreetly in the UK and so is reasonably likely to behave in the same way on return. He will not be at risk because homosexuality is tolerated as long as it is not expressed very explicitly in public through behaviour or clothes."
"He has no experience of living in a community in which his behavioural characteristics, that are distinctively feminine, would have to be masked. If he were to live in a society that has an institutionalised prejudicial hatred of homosexuality, comparable to racism, he would be at extreme risk within that society. He has none of the life skills that one would expect to have developed if his homosexuality had emerged in a repressive society. Survival in such a society requires highly developed skill sets that are honed during one's development over a period of many years. People living in these societies are condemned to a life in the shadows and the constant fear of being discovered. The claimant does not possess the necessary skill sets to live in such a society and it is extremely improbable that at this stage of his adulthood life that he would be able to develop such skills."
"You have not submitted any further objective evidence documenting the persecution of homosexuals in Algeria. Rather you have submitted as new evidence a statement made by your client and photographs of your client's participation in the 2004 and 2005 Gay Pride marches with his partner. Your client states in paragraph 32 to 34 'I am not a discreet gay Muslim man. In summer, I enjoy sunbathing topless in Soho Square and on Hampstead Heath, and relaxed gay pavement cafe lifestyle that exists in London ...' It is noted that the evidence you have submitted on behalf of the applicant all dates from after the dismissal of your client's asylum appeal in 2003. It is considered that your client has gone out of his way to express his homosexuality in public in an attempt to further his asylum and human rights claim in light of the adjudicator's findings and your client's activities are purely intended to frustrate his removal from the United Kingdom. In any event it is not considered that participation in these marches adds anything to your client's claim. It is still open to your client to practise his homosexuality in Algeria albeit discreetly."
"It is still open to your client to practise homosexuality in Algeria albeit discreetly."
"Consideration has also been given to the letter from [Mr S] dated 6 March in which he states that he and [the claimant] are in a relationship and have been living together since 2001."
"There is no evidence to suggest that they are living together and in a stable and continuous relationship."
"5(1) In deciding whether a person is a refugee an act of persecution must be:
(a) sufficiently serious by its nature or repetition as to constitute a severe violation of a basic human right, in particular a right from which derogation cannot be made under Article 15 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms; or
(b) an accumulation of various measures, including a violation of a human right which is sufficiently severe as to affect an individual in a similar manner as specified in (a)."