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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> MA (Risk, Jaaji Clan Benadiri) Somalia [2002] UKIAT 04084 (30 August 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2002/04084.html Cite as: [2002] UKIAT 04084, [2002] UKIAT 4084 |
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MA (Risk-Jaaji Clan-Benadiri) Somalia [2002] UKIAT 04084
HX61897-2000
Date of hearing: 20 August 2002
Date Determination notified: 30 August 2002
MA | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"The appellant is a citizen of Somalia. He is a member of the minority Jaaji clan. He was captured and detained in 1991 in the mistaken belief that he was a member of the Hawiye clan. His release was secured by his employers. On returning to his home in Mogadishu two harrowing events took place. First, two of his brothers were murdered in front of him by armed gunmen. Second, his wife and two sisters were raped while lay unconscious on the floor. Their attackers were also armed gunmen. The appellant was captured and detained in September 1992. After 1 month he was able to escape and resolved upon flight. He left Somalia for Ethiopia."
"I find that the appellant does not have a well-founded fear of persecution for the Convention reason of race if he was removed to Somalia on or after 5 May 2001. Earlier in this determination I made findings of fact. The appellant's account of event was credible and truthful. Nevertheless, the important issue in this appeal concerns the motives of those who persecute the appellant and indeed his brothers, wife and sisters. Depending on their motives for the attacks and actions in question, the appellant is either a victim of the incidents of civil war or a member of a group which is the victim of persecution. If the appellant is merely a victim of the incidents of civil war he is not a refugee within the Convention…"
" I find that the appellant is just such a person. He is a member of a minority clan which has decided that because it is powerless to defend itself it should not try to defend itself. The Jaaji clan and its members are victims of civil war. Mr Toal sought to distinguish Adan (page 15 of the record of proceedings) by stating that the appellant and his father had not been involved in the fighting and indeed the Jaaji clan also had not been involved in the fighting. This submission was reinforced by paragraph 13 of his written submissions which made the same point. I do not consider that Mr Toal's submission is well-founded. Indeed I rely on the passage of the Immigration Appeal Tribunal in Adan quoted with approval by Lord Lloyd at page 349 of his judgment. The appellant is just one of many victims of civil war in Somalia. The fact that he has not participated in the war and the fact that his clan, the Jaaji clan, have not participated in the war, does not provide for him a differential impact at the time envisaged by Lord Lloyd. At 33 I note in passing that Professor James C Hathaway in "The Law of Refugee Status" stated that:
"…The Convention today remains firmly anchored in the notion of elevating only a sub-set of those at risk of war and violent conflict to the status of refugee."
34. Professor Hathaway admitted of two important exceptions. I consider one only. The exception comprised those persons who may be differentially at risk where the civil war or violence is directed at a particular social sub-group. Professor Hathaway mentioned a Canadian Immigration Appeal Board decision of Tekeste Kifletsion [1980] which concerned a civil war against a minority race inside a country verging on genocide. The claimed refugee status in those circumstances did arise. However, that is not the position here. The appellant is not a member of the clan which other clans which to exterminate. He is a victim of civil war. A highly unpleasant adjunct to civil war is that individuals, often armed and extremely dangerous, seek to exploit matters for their own benefit. The appellant and his family tragically been victims of their activities. I find that the appellant is a victim of civil war and not a victim of persecution."
"Second, even within the context of generalised violence or war, there may exist a risk of serious harm specific to persons defined by a particular form of civil or political status. While early Canadian decisions prefer simply to adopt an absolutely dismissive view of claims derived from situation of conflict, the decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in Zahirdeen Rajudeen v Minister of Employment and Immigration marked a watershed in the approach to this issue. This case involved a Sri Lankan Tamil whose need for protection from Sinhalese thugs had been ignored by the authorities. The Immigration Appeal Board dismissed the claim as nothing more than a reflection of the generalised violence in Sri Lanka. The Federal Court, however, found that the harm faced by the claimant was in fact due to the unwillingness of authorities to protect him because of his race and religion:
"The applicant was not mistreated because of civil unrest in Sri Lanka but because he was a Tamil and Muslim."
This decision underscores the particular importance of enquiring into all of the circumstances of a claimant coming from an area which suffers from generalised violence in order to discern whether or not the risk faced by a particular individual or group is in fact rooted in civil or political status, in which case refugee status may follow.
Thus, while the general proposition is that the victims of war and violence are not by virtue of that fact allowing refugees, it is nonetheless possible for persons coming from a strike-torn state to establish a claim to refugee status. This is so where the violence is not simply generalised, but is rather directed toward a group defined by civil war or political status; or, if the war or conflict is non-specific in impact, where the claimant's fear can be traced to specific forms of disfranchisement within the society of origin."
"As before the civil war, Mogadishu, as the capital city, has a population containing people from virtually all clans and ethnic groups in Somalia, although the majority is Hawiye clan-family members. After Barre's overthrow, reprisals were exacted on members of his Marehan clan, with many leaving the city, but some of Marehan have returned and generally do not face persecution. Members of the minority population, such as the Reer Hamar, the original Benadiri population of Mogadishu (known in Somali as Hamar) living in the Hamar Weyne and Shingani districts, and Bantu, found themselves particularly exposed at times of heavy fighting. As with Somalia as a whole, an individual in Mogadishu will be most secure in an area in which his or her clan is able to afford them protection. Members of small clans and minority groups are, inevitably, at more risk, although some minority groups, such as the low caste Midgan, Tomal, Yubir, Ayle, Jaaji and Yhar, who may risk harassment by Somali clans in rural areas, do not necessarily find themselves facing particular human rights or security problems in Mogadishu."
J Barnes
Vice President