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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Gafaro, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2013] EWHC 3365 (Admin) (06 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2013/3365.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3365 (Admin) |
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CO/9801/2012 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a deputy judge of the High Court)
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The Queen (on the application of Zolfau Gafaro) |
Claimant |
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- and |
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The Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Defendant |
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Mr. N. Chapman (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 22 October 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Ms D Gill:
Introduction and the issues
i. the directions issued on 5 April 2012 for the claimant's removal on 17 April 2012 (the first claim) are unlawful because they rely upon the second refusal and the determination of Judge Dawson;ii. the directions issued on 14 September 2012 for his removal on 16 September 2012 (the second claim) are unlawful because they rely upon the first refusal.
The facts
"20. In view of the details given in paragraphs 15-17 above, it is accepted that your father may have been killed and you yourself injured and that the Taliban may have been responsible. However, again in view of the details given at paras 15-17 above, it is not accepted that this was a concerted attack on you or your family, but due to the indiscriminate attacks and violence that was occurring in the eastern parts of the country, which may not necessarily have been motivated by your religion. It is therefore concluded that you have not established a fear of return to Afghanistan because of your religion.21. Consideration has therefore been given to your return to Afghanistan."
"25. It is therefore concluded in view of the details given at paragraphs 22 24 that the situation in Kabul is stable and that this is supported by the New Assembly and the ISAF and that there are authorities that you could seek redress from if you felt that you were at risk in any respect and as such it is therefore concluded that you have not established a fear of return to Afghanistan."
"21. My conclusion from assessment of the Appellant's claim is that the difficulties he encountered and the death of his father arose out of general hostility by the Taliban. It would be too unsafe for the Appellant therefore to be returned to his home village and consequently I must examine the option of internal flight. The Appellant's own evidence suggests that he would not have any family to turn to in any event in his home village.22. The evidence before me does not establish that someone of Hazaras ethnicity and of the Appellant's age would be at risk by virtue of that ethnicity in Kabul. I take account of the reference in the COI Report to a demonstration by Hazaras in the capital on 22 July 2008 ending peacefully after five hours. In order to succeed under the Refugee Convention, the Appellant would need to demonstrate that by virtue of his ethnicity or religion, he would be at risk of persecution were he to be living in Kabul. He has not established that. The appellant does have some health difficulties but none is serious. It is significant that he believes he saw a doctor in relation to his stomach in 2008. I accept that he is currently receiving medication for depression and insomnia but the evidence does not establish that his condition is not one that cannot continue to be treated in this way by medication. His health therefore does not preclude the option of internal flight to Kabul. The Appellant will know no one there but he has shown considerable resourcefulness in making his way to the United Kingdom and will be returning armed with competence in the English language which will assist him in acquiring work. The Appellant has been able to keep regular contact with his sister and her husband and the evidence does not establish they would be unable to visit or join him in Kabul. The Appellant has given evidence that his brother is in prison in Iran. On the whole I have found the Appellant truthful but I am not persuaded to the lower standard that his brother is detained as such other than perhaps for being an illegal migrant. In due course I am satisfied his brother will be released and deported and there is no reason why he would be unable to join him in Kabul and provide him with companionship there.
24. My conclusions weighing up all the evidence before me are that although there remains the possibility that the Appellant could face a risk of persecution in his home area, the option of internal flight to Kabul is neither unreasonable nor unduly harsh. He is unable therefore to succeed under the Refugee Convention."
The legal principles in issue
"9. In Rashid the Secretary of State, in considering an asylum application, had omitted to have regard to a policy which would or might have benefited the applicant. Over a year later, the applicant's solicitors drew the omission to the attention of the Secretary of State but by the time the application was reconsidered by the Secretary of State the policy had ceased to exist because of a change of circumstances. On the applicant's claim for judicial review of the reiterated refusal on reconsideration, Davis J and thereafter the Court of Appeal held that the applicant had been a victim of unfairness such as to amount to an abuse of power. Pill LJ said (at paragraph 36):
"I agree that the degree of unfairness was such as to amount to an abuse of power requiring the intervention of the court. The persistence of the conduct [viz failure to have regard to the policy], and lack of explanation for it, contribute to that conclusion. This was far from a single error in an obscure field."
12. R (S) v Secretary of State for the Home Department ([2007] EWCA Civ 546) contains a rigorous analysis of Rashid by Carnwath LJ. There the application for asylum was made at a time when the applicant would have benefited from a policy which would have resulted in his being granted four years' exceptional leave to remain which ordinarily would have led eventually to a grant of indefinite leave to remain. In the event, his application was not considered for some four years because of an agreement between the Home Office and the Treasury to put a large number of claims on hold. By the time it was considered, the beneficial policy had been withdrawn. Carnwath LJ expressed reservation about the reasoning (but not the result) in Rashid on the ground that "it seeks to transform 'abuse of power' into a magic ingredient, able to achieve remedial results which other forms of illegality cannot match" (at paragraph 39) .
13. S and other authorities were further considered by Jackson LJ in SL (Vietnam) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] 1WLR 651. His synthesis of them (at paragraph 33) was:
"(i) A decision may be unlawful if it is reached in disregard of a relevant policy.
(ii) Past prejudice suffered in consequence of such a decision may be a relevant factor to take into account, even when that policy has ceased to be applicable."
SL was ultimately concerned with deportation rather than asylum although the "past prejudice" had taken the form of failure to have regard to a beneficial policy in the context of an asylum claim. The remedy was therefore directed at reconsideration of the decision to deport in the light of the need to correct injustice caused by the previous unlawful failure to apply the policy in relation to the asylum claim, albeit that asylum was no longer an issue.
16. The inference that I draw from the history prior to DS (Afghanistan) ([2011] EWCA Civ 304) is that the Secretary of State failed to discharge the duty in relation to unaccompanied minors from Afghanistan because she adopted the policy of granting them leave to remain until they reached the age of seventeen and a half, whereafter any further application would be considered on its merits. By that time, of course, the duty to endeavour to trace would be close to expiration because of the imminence of majority.
17. Having accepted that there was a systemic breach of the duty to endeavour to trace, I now have to consider whether that may trigger the Rashid/S principle. It is a complicated question and not simply a matter of the systemic breach entitling these appellants, without more ado, to the allowing of their appeals with remittal to the Secretary of State to consider grants of leave to remain, which is the primary relief sought. Nor does it admit of the simplistic analysis that the appellants were over 18 when their cases came before the FTT or the UT and, as a consequence and in accordance with the Ravichandran principle, the breach had become irrelevant to the requisite consideration of their cases by reference to the circumstances prevailing at the time of the hearings. When the Rashid/S principle applies, it modifies the strict application of Ravichandran.
18. At this point, it is appropriate to refer to what I may call "the eighteenth birthday point". Although the duty to endeavour to trace does not endure beyond the date when an applicant reaches that age, it cannot be the case that the assessment of risk on return is subject to such a bright line rule ."
"17. I consider that the essence of the matter amounts to this. Where it is said that past events would make it unfair for the case in hand to be decided on the conventional Ravichandran approach, a reasonable Secretary of State may have to consider whether she should take account of those events, and in light of them decide the case in such a way as to avoid conspicuous unfairness to the claimant.
18. This is, in my judgment, a Wednesbury issue ([1948] 1 KB 223): would it be so unfair to proceed without regard to the factors relied on that no reasonable Secretary of State would take such a course? This must be the nature of the question, since any more intrusive approach would involve the court to an extent in the direction of immigration policy, and that would be illegitimate. I conceive this approach to be in line in Rashid as it was understood in S [2007], and with Goldring LJ's conclusions in S [2009] [EWCA 142]. There is nothing in KA [2012] which tends to contradict it."
"ix) However, it is very clear that that error was not material. For the reasons I have given, any breach of that duty was immaterial in this case, because the steps that the Secretary of State ought to have taken would not have resulted in any information relevant to the Claimant's claims for leave, on the ground of asylum or otherwise; and, even if they had resulted in some information being forthcoming, that information would not have assisted the Claimant or possibly led to his claim for leave to remain being determined in any other way than it in fact was."
Discussion
The lawfulness of the first refusal and the removal directions issued on 14 September 2012 (the second claim)
"4.3 Minors claiming in their own right
4.3.1 Minors claiming in their own right who have not been granted asylum or HP can only be returned where they have family to return to or there are adequate reception, care and support arrangements. At the moment we do not have sufficient information to be satisfied that there are adequate reception, care and support arrangements in place.
4.3.2 Afghanistan acceded to the Convention on the Rights of the Child in 2002 and has strengthened legal provisions to protect children. However, in the current situation, characterized by weak rule of law and governance structures reports, child trafficking as well as child labour and forced recruitment, children continue to be exploited.76 Child abuse was endemic throughout the country during 2005. Abuses reportedly ranged from general neglect, physical abuses, abandonment, and confinement to work in order to pay off families' debts. Child trafficking was s widespread.77
4.3.3 Minors claiming in their own right without a family to return to, or where there are no adequate reception, care and support arrangements, should if they do not qualify for leave on any more favourable grounds be granted Discretionary Leave for a period of three years or until their 18th birthday, whichever is the shorter period."
The lawfulness of the removal directions issued in 5 April 2012 (the first claim)
Conclusion