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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Special Immigrations Appeals Commission >> Z v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] UKSIAC 37/2005 (14 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/SIAC/2007/37_2005.html Cite as: [2007] UKSIAC 37/2005 |
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Appeal No: SC/37/2005
Date of Hearing: 18-23 April 2007
Date of Judgment: 14 May 2007
SPECIAL IMMIGRATION APPEALS COMMISSSION
Before:
THE HONOURABLE MR MITTING (Chairman)
SPECIAL IMMIGRATION JUDGE BATISTE
MR M G TAYLOR CBE
Between:
'Z'
APPELLANT
and
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT
RESPONDENT
For the Appellant: Mr H Southey Instructed by Birnberg Peirce & Partners
For the Respondent: Ms L Giovannetti Instructed by Treasury Solicitors for the Secretary of State
Special Advocates: Mr A Goddard QC and Mr M Goudie Instructed by Treasury Solicitors Special Advocates Support Office
National Security
"self confessed member of GIA. Believed to provide logistical support for members of various proscribed organisations. Conviction on deception charges relating to credit cards and sentenced to 3 years imprisonment. Released 2001. Certified under ATCSA but went to ground and so never detained under those provisions. Detained."
This note is an accurate, if incomplete and understated, statement of 'Z's activities. These are more fully described in the closed judgment.
Safety on Return
"Should the above named person be arrested in order that his status may be assessed, he will enjoy the following rights, assurances and guarantees as provided by the Constitution and the national laws currently enforced concerning human rights:
(a) the right to appear before a court so that the court may decide on the legality of his arrest or detention and the right to be informed of the charges against him and to
be assisted by a lawyer of his choice and to have immediate contact with that lawyer;
(b) free legal aid shall be granted to him automatically;
(c) he may be placed in custody only by the competent judicial authorities;
(d) he will be presumed to be innocent until his guilt has been established by due legal process;
(e) the right to notify a relative of his arrest or detention;
(f) the right to be examined by a doctor;
(g) the right to appear before a court so that the court may decide on the legality of his arrest or detention;
(j) his human dignity will be respected under all circumstances;
(k) since the above named person is of Algerian nationality, he may not be extradited to another country in accordance with Article 698 of the Code of Criminal Procedure;
(l) with regard to the Charter for Peace and National Reconciliation it should be pointed out that the above named person may benefit from the application of that Charter if he satisfies the conditions required by law and complies with them."
MR JUSTICE MITTING
ADDENDUM
On 2nd May 2007 SIAC received, by fax, a letter from Sihali's solicitors Tyndallwoods, enclosing a witness statement by Natalia Garcia of the same date, which exhibited 2 letters said to be in the handwriting of Q, a former client of Ms Garcia. All advocates for the 4 appellants in whose cases judgment has been handed down today submit that SIAC should take the letters into account in reaching its judgments.
The Secretary of State also submitted, by letter from the Treasury Solicitor dated 2nd May 2007, further notes of discussions between a British Embassy official and Q's sister Djazia on 23rd April 2007; and between a British Embassy official and Maitre Tahri (one of H's lawyers) on 26th April 2007. Ms Garcia states that she recognises Q's handwriting and that the 2 letters are from him. We have no reason to doubt that they are.
The first is to Ouseley J and reads:
"Dear Sir Osliy. To SIAC court my name [Q] former long lartin detainee I rhite you this wourd to let you no that my life here in Algeria in danger first I was torture betaine humilition in police station.
Second here in Serkadji prison life here like slave. Algerian otority thay give a garanty but thay brook the agreement. So Mr judj Osly stop deportation to Algeria in end I wont let you no that eneythink happen to ….. here in Algeria Britich otority responssable for life
Thank you
Detainee Q."
The second letter is to Miss Garcia and adds nothing relevant to the first. The first letter is dated 10th April 2007. Miss Garcia states that both letters were received by fax at her office on 23rd April 2007 at about 12.30pm from Q's sister. This is consistent with the fax imprints on each page which bear that date and are timed between 12.11pm and 12.17pm. Miss Garcia does not explain why it took until 2nd May 2007 to refer them to SIAC. She states that she is not at liberty to provide full details of the provenance of the first letter because of "serious concerns for the safety of third parties".
She also refers to statements made to her by Djazia about the circumstances in which Q is now being held in Serkadji prison: in a dormitory with 25 others; and that he is required to take a sleeping pill each night, against his will. This information is entirely consistent with what the British Embassy official records Djazia as having told him on 23rd April 2007. It does not alter the view which all four panels of SIAC which have considered these cases have formed about the "prison conditions" issue under Article 3.
Q's claim in the first letter can be broken down into 3:
1. He has been tortured, beaten and humiliated "in police station" (which we take to be a reference to DRS custody in Antar barracks).
2. His life in Serkadji prison is like that of a slave.
3. The Algerian authorities have broken a guarantee in respect of him.
(i) is inconsistent with the description of him by one of his lawyers, Mrs Daoudi, as being "generally in decent health"; with her statement that what he complained of was hearing the sounds of apparent ill-treatment of others, not harm to himself; with Djazia's statement to a British Embassy official on 12th March 2007, that following a family visit on 10th March 2007, he was well, but not happy about his detention; and with her statement to a British Embassy official on 23rd April 2007 that he had not been mistreated (otherwise than being removed to a dormitory in Serkadji prison and made to take sleeping pills at night). This allegation is also entirely unspecific and made very late in the day. While the possibility that he was ill-treated cannot wholly be dismissed it is no more than a mere possibility. This new allegation does not persuade us that there exists a real possibility that any of the 4 appellants with whose cases we are concerned will be tortured or ill-treated on return. Put in the language used by the Strasburg Court, this material does not give rise to substantial grounds for believing that there is a real risk that they would be subjected to treatment which would infringe Article 3 if it were to occur in a Convention state.
(ii) Adds nothing to the "prison conditions" issue already considered.
(iii) Cannot refer to any assurance given to the British Government in relation to Q, because none was given. It must refer to the promises said to have been given at the Algerian Embassy orally to individuals. We have already dealt with this issue in the judgment in U. This adds nothing to it.