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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Ameer, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] EWHC 1660 (Admin) (19 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/1660.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1660 (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 | ||
MUSAD HASSANI AMEER | Claimant | |
v | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant |
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Charles Banner (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"In 1999 he was again called up for military service even though he showed his Somali ID which was subsequently destroyed. Conditions in the training camp were poor and he bought his release. In 2001 the Eritrean government warned that it would deport all residents without permanent residence permits, and he was open to call-up once more, so his family paid for him to leave for Kenya on 23rd July 2001. He spent 3 months there with an agent who kept postponing his departure. He left for the UK on 16th October 2001 although he was not aware of his destination."
"I did not find the appellant a credible witness. Firstly, he is an Arabic speaker who cannot converse in Somali..."
"Even if the appellant is Somali, which is not accepted, there are vague and inconsistent aspects to his claim..."
"As with much of the appellant's evidence at the long, and at times rambling, hearing, there is confusion over the precise reason for his departure from Eritrea. According to his statement, the reason for his departure to Kenya appears to be further concern about call-up. However, if he was at risk of being called up, so were his sisters, as one of the most unpopular aspects of Eritrean call-up was the non-exemption of Muslim women. Yet they stayed, even if at least one of them had the opportunity to leave with her husband..."
"If half Somali as claimed, the appellant could therefore have avoided any technical threat of deportation and regularised his position in a country where he has real ties of descent, family and property. He has not claimed that his sisters were threatened with deportation either because they are Somali or because they too failed to do their military service. It would therefore appear likely that the appellant did not want to claim Eritrean citizenship because he did not want to be called up. There has been no evidence that he declined to claim it because he wanted to be free to return to Somali as a citizen..."
"21. As military service is a legal requirement, the appellant therefore by his own evidence fears the consequences of draft evasion, and not persecution on any Convention grounds. His avenue to claim that he should not be called up twice is blocked because he has already escaped by a combination of bribery and claiming that he is a Somali. However, he does not face deportation as a Somali from Eritrea to a war zone, either because he is not one or because he has legal eligibility to become an Eritrean citizen. He does not face persecution in Eritrea for being the product of a mixed marriage, even if his father was Somali. He also is unlikely to face the call-up or any consequences given the prospective demobilisation. The war which he claims to have feared also ended a year before he left Eritrea.
22... Given these findings, I conclude that the appellant has not established a well-founded fear of persecution for his ethnicity and that there is not a real risk that he would face serious harm... if he were returned to Eritrea at this time."
"1. A person who is reasonably likely to have left Eritrea illegally will in general be at real risk on return if he or she is of draft age, even if the evidence shows that he or she has completed active national service... By leaving illegally while still subject to national service (which liability in general continues until the person ceases to be of daft age) that person is reasonably likely to be regarded by the authorities of Eritrea as a deserter and subjected to punishment which is persecutory and amounts to serious harm and ill-treatment.
2. Illegal exit continues to be a key factor in assessing risk on return. A person who fails to show that he or she left Eritrea illegally will not in general be at real risk, even if of draft age and whether or not the authorities are aware that he or she has unsuccessfully claimed asylum in the United Kingdom."
"First, has the Secretary of State asked himself the correct question? The question is not whether the Secretary of State himself thinks that the new claim is a good one or should succeed, but whether there is a realistic prospect of an adjudicator, applying the rule of anxious scrutiny, thinking that the applicant will be exposed to a real risk of persecution on return... Second, in addressing that question, both in respect of the evaluation of the facts and in respect of the legal conclusions to be drawn from those facts, has the Secretary of State satisfied the requirement of anxious scrutiny? If the court cannot be satisfied that the answer to both of those questions is in the affirmative it will have to grant an application for review of the Secretary of State's decision."
"... only imposes a somewhat modest test that the application has to meet before it becomes a fresh claim. First, the question is whether there is a realistic prospect of success in an application before an adjudicator, but not more than that. Second... the adjudicator himself does not have to achieve certainty, but only to think that there is a real risk of the applicant being persecuted on return. Third, and importantly, since asylum is in issue the consideration of all the decision-makers, the Secretary of State, the adjudicator and the court, must be informed by the anxious scrutiny of the material that is axiomatic in decisions that if made incorrectly may lead to the applicant's exposure to persecution."
"A case which is clearly unfounded is one with no prospect of success. A case which has no realistic prospect of success is not quite in that category; it is a case with no more than a fanciful prospect of success. 'Realistic prospect of success' means only more than a fanciful such prospect. [Counsel on behalf of the Secretary of State] accepted this interpretation."
"The central question is this: was it reasonable (in the Wednesbury sense) for the Secretary of State to conclude that, based on the representations the claimant had put forward, there was no realistic prospect of [a] tribunal holding that the claimant had discharged the burden of proving that he left Eritrea illegally?"
"First, there is no doubt that the availability of exit visas from Eritrea is closely controlled, and therefore large numbers of citizens who leave the country are obliged to do so illegally. Second, the AIT accepted the evidence of an expert... that it was unlikely that a male of military service age would be able to obtain a visa unless he came within one of a number of limited categories... [None of those categories seem to conceivably embrace or apply to this claimant]."
"11. The burden of showing that he has a well-founded fear of persecution falls on the applicant, but the standard that he has to meet is not a demanding one... Persons who have left Eritrea illegally are in significant danger of Convention persecution on their return. The question in any particular case is therefore whether there is a reasonable degree of likelihood that the applicant did leave Eritrea illegally.
12. That question raises particular difficulties when... an applicant relies, or is obliged to rely, on evidence as to the general incidence of illegal exit rather than upon an account of his own actual exit..."
"... each case must be considered and assessed in the light of the appellant's individual circumstances. It may be, for example, that a person who is of eligible draft age, at least if he or she is still relatively young, will not need to establish very much more. However, we think that in all cases something more must be shown... Persons who fail to give a credible account of material particulars relating to their history and circumstances cannot easily show that they would be at risk solely because they are of eligible draft age."
"Third, the observation in Ariaya and Sammy and in MA that a person who has not given a credible account of his own history cannot easily show that he would be at risk as a draft evader or because of illegal exit is, with respect, a robust assessment of practical likelihood, but it is not expressed as, and cannot be, any sort of rule of law or even rule of thumb. In every case it is still necessary to consider, despite the failure of the applicant to help himself by giving a true or any account of his own experiences, whether there is a reasonable likelihood of persecution on return."
"In 2001 the government of Eritrea issued a statement that anyone who does not have permanent residence in the country must leave. If not, they should participate in the war. My family paid for me to leave Eritrea. I could not return to Somalia as I feared the same persecution as before.
I travelled to Kenya on 23rd July 2001 by plane. I remained in Kenya for 3 months with an agent who kept putting off when he would arrange for me to leave to a safe country..."
"My family had used a smuggler to smuggle me out."
He was asked who paid the agent and he said it was the son of his aunt who lives in Cairo.
Over the page he was asked whether he could have stayed in Kenya. He said:
"I couldn't live there, because the smuggler just ordered us not to leave the house where we were staying at that time. He said, if anyone leaves the house, we will be killed."
He was asked:
"Did you use a false passport to enter the UK?"
and answered:
"I don't know. The smuggler gave me a passport."
"Even if the appellant is Somali, which is not accepted, there are vague and inconsistent aspects to his claim. It should be noted that the appellant declined to adopt the interview statements of 8th November and 20th December 2001, on the basis that they had not been read back to him; he had no representative present; and he was coerced into initialling each line of the second interview. His evidence therefore consisted of his statement of 2nd March 2003 and that given at the hearing."