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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Fateh-Saleh v The Regional Court of Lille, France [2015] EWHC 584 (Admin) (10 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/584.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 584 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
In the matter of an appeal against extradition
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ARSALAN FATEH-SALEH (aka ALI HAMAD SABIR) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE REGIONAL COURT OF LILLE, FRANCE |
Respondent |
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Florence Iveson (instructed by CPS Extradition Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 23 February 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Supperstone :
Introduction
Evidence before the District Judge
"As most, if not all, prisons in England now have access to a Mental Health Prison In-Reach Team it should be this team which takes the lead in putting in place an appropriate care plan and package of interventions to meet [the Appellant's] mental health needs."
"I understand that [the Appellant's] wife finds herself in difficult financial circumstances and, in consequence, is unlikely to be able to visit him or even maintain regular telephone contact with him if he is returned to France. If this is the case and [the Appellant] believes that he will lose contact with his family it is likely that he would see himself as having failed his family. This is likely to further exacerbate his mental health problems and place him at very serious risk of committing suicide."
"If [the Appellant's] risk of committing suicide is to be successfully managed it is important that his mental state is regularly monitored and assessed and his mental health problems are tackled appropriately, as noted above following the appropriate clinical guidelines with interventions carried out by competent practitioners."
"If [the Appellant] is returned to France it is likely that his sense of hopelessness and the belief that he has failed his family will become more pronounced. This hopelessness and sense of failure will be exacerbated by his loss of contact with his family. In this situation it is likely that his mental health problems will become more pronounced and there will be a very high risk that he will try to kill himself" (para 17.6.9).
Dr Rowland (at para 17.7.9) summarises this situation as creating "a very high risk that he will make a serious attempt to kill himself".
Further information provided by the Respondent
Legal Framework
Extradition Act 2003, s.25
"25. Physical or mental condition
(1) This section applies if at any time in the extradition hearing it appears to the judge that the condition in sub-section (2) is satisfied.
(2) The condition is that the physical or mental condition of the person in respect of whom the Part 1 warrant is issued is such that it would be unjust or oppressive to extradite him.
(3) The judge must—
(a) Order the person's discharge, or
(b) Adjourn the extradition hearing until it appears to him that the condition in sub-section (2) is no longer satisfied."
"8. In a recent suicide case, Turner v Government of the USA [2012] EWHC 2426 (Admin), Aikens LJ summarised the propositions which could be derived from these cases at paragraph 28:
'(1) The court has to form an overall judgment on the facts of the particular case.
(2) A high threshold has to be reached in order to satisfy the court that a requested person's physical or mental condition is such that it would be unjust or oppressive to extradite him.
(3) The court must assess the mental condition of the person threatened with extradition and determine if it is linked to a risk of a suicide attempt if the extradition order were to be made. There has to be a "substantial risk that [the Appellant] will commit suicide". The question is whether, on the evidence the risk of the appellant succeeding in committing suicide, whatever steps are taken is sufficiently great to result in a finding of oppression.
(4) The mental condition of the person must be such that it removes his capacity to resist the impulse to commit suicide, otherwise it will not be his mental condition but his own voluntary act which puts him at risk of dying and if that is the case there is no oppression in ordering extradition.
(5) On the evidence, is the risk that the person will succeed in committing suicide, whatever steps are taken, sufficiently great to result in a finding of oppression?
(6) Are there appropriate arrangements in place in the prison system of the country to which extradition is sought so that those authorities can cope properly with the person's mental condition and the risk of suicide?
(7) There is a public interest in giving effect to treaty obligations and this is an important factor to have in mind.'
9. We agree with counsel that this is a succinct and useful summary of the approach a court should adopt to s.25 and s.91 of the 2003 Act.
(c) The importance of preventative measures
10. The key issue, as is apparent from propositions (3), (5) and (6), will in almost every case be the measures that are in place to prevent any attempt at suicide by a requested person with a mental illness being successful. As Mr Watson correctly submitted on behalf of the respondent judicial authorities, it is helpful to examine the measures in relation to three stages:
(i) First, the position whilst the requested person is being held in custody in the United Kingdom is clear. As Jackson LJ observed in Mazurkiewicz at paragraph 45, a person does not escape a sentence of imprisonment in the UK simply by pointing to the high risk of suicide. The court relies on the Executive branch of the state to implement measures to care for the prisoner under the arrangements explained in R v Quazi [2010] EWCA Crim 2759, [2011] Crim LR 159.
(ii) Second, when the requested person is being transferred to the requesting state, arrangements are made by the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) with the authorities of the requesting state to ensure that during the transfer proper arrangements are in place to prevent suicide in appropriate cases. As Collins J helpfully mentioned in Griffin at paragraph 52, steps should ordinarily be taken in such cases to ensure that no attempt is made at suicide and proper preventative measures are in place. Medical records should be sent with the requested person and delivered to those who will have custody during transfer and in subsequent detention.
(iii) Third, when the requested person is received by the requesting state in the custodial institution in which he is to be held, it will ordinarily be presumed that the receiving state within the European Union will discharge its responsibilities to prevent the requested person committing suicide, in the absence of strong evidence to the contrary: see the authorities set out at paragraphs 3-7 of Krolick and others v Several Judicial Authorities of Poland [2012] EWHC 2357 (Admin) and paragraphs 10-11 of Rot. In the absence of evidence to the necessary standard that calls into question the ability of the receiving state to discharge its responsibilities or a specific matter that gives cause for concern, it should not be necessary to require any assurances from requesting states within the European Union. It will therefore ordinarily be sufficient to rely on the presumption.
It is therefore only in a very rare case that a requested person will be likely to establish that measures to prevent a substantial risk of suicide will not be effective."
"19. That reference was not designed to subvert the principle identified in the same subparagraph that a presumption operates that an EU state will discharge its responsibilities to prevent suicide in the absence of strong evidence, by enabling an appellant to raise 'concerns' and then set off on a quest for information and assurances. A specific matter will not give cause for concern unless it has a strong evidential foundation. It is clear from the final sentence of paragraph 10 of the Judgment that an appellant has to establish that a substantial suicide risk will not be appropriately guarded against. The appellant has come nowhere near doing so in this appeal."
Burnett LJ continued:
"22. … there is no basis for being concerned that in a general sense the Spanish authorities are unable to provide appropriate care for a prisoner with a diagnosis of psychiatric illness who is at risk of suicide. This court is familiar, in the context of extradition cases and others involving removal, with detailed reports from Human Rights organisations, the EU, the European Council, the US State Department, the Foreign Office, the United Nations (and others) which explore conditions of detention in countries across the globe. One aspect which invariably features in such reports is healthcare, including the care of those with psychiatric illness. There is no hint in this appeal of any problem in Spain. The Spanish authorities could have relied upon the presumption that their facilities are adequate to cope with the sort of problem which the appellant's detention will present."
Article 8 ECHR
"The reality is that only if some quite exceptionally compelling feature, or combination of features, is present that interference with family life consequent upon extradition will be other than proportionate to the objective that extradition serves… Instead of saying that interference with article 8 rights can only outweigh the importance of extradition in exceptional circumstances it is more accurate and more helpful, to say that the consequences of interference with article 8 rights must be exceptionally serious before this can outweigh the importance of extradition."
"We can … draw the following conclusions from Norris: (1) There may be a closer analogy between extradition and the domestic criminal process than between extradition and deportation or expulsion, but the court has still to examine carefully the way in which it will interfere with family life. (2) There is no test of exceptionality in either context. (3) The question is always whether the interference with the private and family lives of the extraditee and other members of his family is outweighed by the public interest in extradition. (4) There is a constant and weighty public interest in extradition: that people accused of crimes should be brought to trial; that people convicted of crimes should serve their sentences; that the United Kingdom should honour its treaty obligations to other countries; and that there should be no 'safe havens' to which either can flee in the belief that they will not be sent back. (5) That public interest will always carry great weight, but the weight to be attached to it in the particular case does vary according to the nature and seriousness of the crime or crimes involved. (6) The delay since the crimes were committed may both diminish the weight to be attached to the public interest and increase the impact upon private and family life. (7) Hence it is likely that the public interest in extradition will outweigh the article 8 rights of the family unless the consequences of the interference with family life will be exceptionally severe."
"In this context the relevant 'question' is whether the extradition of the requested person would be disproportionate to the interference it would have with his (and, if relevant, his family's) article 8 rights. If, as we believe, the correct approach on appeal is one of review, then we think this court should not interfere simply because it takes a different view overall to the value-judgment that the District Judge has made or even the weight that he has attached to one or more individual factors which he took into account in reaching that overall value-judgment. In our judgment, generally speaking and in cases where no question of 'fresh evidence' arises on an appeal on 'proportionality', a successful challenge can only be mounted if it is demonstrated, on review, that the judge below: (i) misapplied the well-established legal principles, or (ii) made a relevant finding of fact that no reasonable judge could have reached on the evidence, which had a material effect on the value-judgment, or (iii) failed to take into account a relevant fact or factor, or took into account an irrelevant fact or factor, or (iv) reached a conclusion overall that was irrational or perverse."
Decision of the District Judge
In relation to s.25 of the 2003 Act
1. "I have no reason to doubt the evidence of the requested person that he has made attempts to take his own life whilst in custody in France or indeed whilst in prison on remand in England".
2. "It is also plain to me that after each of these unsuccessful attempts he has received good, prompt and proper care by those overseeing his detention so that his attempts have been thwarted and he has recovered".
3. "I am … satisfied that these severe but nonetheless fairly common medical problems are easily and effectively treated and that France can provide a standard of medical care that will at least mirror that which the requested person might expect to receive in England. I am quite satisfied that if there is required any continuing investigation or treatment that there will be provision for that found within France and within the French Prison system relying on the mutual trust between signatory states to provide proper medical care and attention which underlies the functioning of the European framework decision.
4. "It is clear here that the threat of suicide is not at the level envisaged in Wolkowicz in that his mental illness does not operate so as to remove his capacity to resist the impulse to suicide. There is a substantial risk of attempt at suicide, but not such a risk as can not be properly managed by a prison system alert to the risk and so not so great as to sanction a finding of oppression.
5. "… I do however direct that on his surrender to the French authorities that a copy of the psychologist's report and a copy of this judgment are made available to the French authorities together with any ACCT document and any other details of his mental health which the Prison service are able to provide."
6. "I rely on the ability of the English prison system until his surrender to France and then on the French prison system to take appropriate steps should his mental health deteriorate to the condition in which he loses the impulse to resist suicide. At present I do not find that he has lost the impulse to resist suicide".
Article 8 ECHR
i) The Appellant is a 34-year-old man who has suffered poor health. The judge accepted Dr Rowland's report and conclusions in relation to his mental health and the risk of suicide.
ii) Commenting on the principles set out in Wolkowicz, in so far as they affect the balance in the article 8 proportionality test, the judge stated:
"the risk of suicide does not meet the threshold that his mental health is such that his capacity to resist the impulse to suicide is removed. … it is sadly a fairly common mental illness which is often managed well by medication. The reality is that his episodes of self harm with intent to take his own life have been dealt with whilst in detention both in France and in the UK. … I place great faith in the mutual trust and respect which this country must have in France, a founding member of the Council of Europe to be appraised of the high risk of suicide and to take appropriate steps to prevent any such attempt."
iii) "It is inevitable that both the requested person and his family will suffer from disruption to their family life for a period of time if the requested person is extradited to France".
iv) He accepted the evidence of Ms Boswell that she does not want her or her children to remain separated from the Appellant. Further he accepted her evidence that she felt she would struggle with the children and struggle financially if the Appellant was to be extradited.
v) However the judge concluded that
"Nonetheless she is able to care for and provide for herself and her children in England. This is not one of those cases in which it can properly be said that the interference with family life will be exceptionally severe. The circumstances of the family are not such as would or should displace the treaty obligations of the United Kingdom and the weighty public interest in extradition and for serious offences such as these."
vi) The offences in respect of which the request is made "are now of some age but they are not insignificant. They involve organised criminal activity in human smuggling and so have to be categorised as serious offending, leading to a seven-year term of imprisonment." In his addendum the judge added that the "people smuggling… offence… is now made the more serious by the revelation that the two earlier convictions and terms of imprisonment in France were for like offending. That weighs very heavily in the balance under article 8 against the requested person".
vii) As for the Appellant's argument that he would find it more difficult to make an asylum claim in the UK from France once extradited there and he will be unable to re-enter the UK, the judge noted that he failed to pursue his initial claim for asylum in the UK in 1998, and added:
"Those who seek to defy immigration control and entry requirements to sovereign states by clinging to the axles of lorries which carry them over borders and particularly where they transgress repeatedly in that way as the requested person has cannot later claim that their immigration claims are hampered by the proper operation of law."
Discussion
Section 25 of the 2003 Act
Article 8 ECHR
Conclusion