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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> A v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Eritrea) [2003] UKIAT 00063 (05 September 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2003/00063.html Cite as: [2003] UKIAT 63, [2003] UKIAT 00063 |
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Heard at Field House
[2003] UKIAT 00063 A (Eritrea)
On 29 July 2003
Date Determination notified:
5th September 2003
Between
APPELLANT
RESPONDENT
Representation
The appellant was represented before us today by Mr A Hutton, Home Office Presenting Officer.
The respondent was represented by Mrs G Fama of Counsel, instructed by White Ryland
"You have applied for asylum in the United Kingdom but your application has been refused for the reasons stated in the reasons for refusal letter attached. It has been decided, however, that because of the particular circumstances of your case you should be granted exceptional leave to enter the United Kingdom. The Secretary of State therefore grants you leave to enter until 26 March 2003."
The form went on to state that the respondent had a right of appeal under Section 69(3) of the Immigration & Asylum Act 1999 and it appears that a one-stop notice under Section 77 of the same Act was served with that notice of refusal to grant asylum. The respondent appealed against that decision and the grounds of appeal are as follows:
"The decision of the Secretary of State is contrary to UK's obligations under the Geneva Convention and is otherwise unreasonable. I also state that my removal from UK to Eritrea would be in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights."
It was accepted, both by the Secretary of State and by the Adjudicator before whom the appeal came, that the respondent had lived all her life in Ethiopia, although of mixed Ethiopian and Eritrean ethnicity. It was further found by the Adjudicator that the appellant's 18th birthday would in fact be on 5 April 2005 because she had been born on 5 April 1987 and not in 1985 as the Secretary of State had previously thought. This had arisen because of confusion in the transposition of dates, as we understand it, between the Ethiopian and the western calendars.
"It is submitted that the Adjudicator has erred in law by allowing this appeal under Article 3 and 8 when the appellant had been granted leave to remain. The Adjudicator has erred in law in allowing the appeal under Articles 3 and 8 when there are no current directions to remove the appellant to Ethiopia or Eritrea and the appellant is effectively appealing against the decision to grant her limited leave rather than indefinite leave."
"In our view leave should not have been granted since at that time (3 September 2002) the appellant still had limited leave to remain which was not due to expire until 18 November 2002. Whilst by virtue of the Court of Appeal judgment in Saad, Diriye and Osorio [2002] INLR34 the claimant was entitled to have his asylum grounds of appeal determined on the hypothetical basis of whether he would face a real risk of persecution as at the date of hearing, the same considerations cannot apply in an appeal based on human rights grounds. In any asylum-related appeal based on human rights grounds there is no link to a status recognised at international law or indeed to any status established by UK domestic law. Furthermore, while Strasbourg has identified the proper test as being, like that under the Refugee Convention, one of current risk to be assessed as at the date of hearing, the obverse side of this recognition is that the risk has to be shown to be an imminent one. A risk cannot be imminent if the appellant has available a further effective remedy, see Vijayanathan and Pushparajah v France [1992] 15EHRR62. In the instant case, since it remained open to the appellant as at the date of hearing before the Adjudicator to have applied for an extension of limited leave to remain and to have appealed if refused, there was just such an effective remedy available."
That, in our view, correctly identifies the legal principles which are applicable in the present case. We should add, however, that the Tribunal in P then continued at paragraph 7 as follows:
"However leave was granted and we are required to decide the appeal on the basis of the situation at the date of hearing. That is critical in this case because by the time of the hearing before us (4 February 2003) the appellant no longer had limited leave to remain and so was at imminent risk of removal. We are informed that the appellant had not been granted any extension of his exceptional leave to remain. It would appear that ELR was granted because the appellant was a minor and was not renewed once he reached 18 on 18 November 2002."
"The person who (a) has been refused leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom on the basis of a claim for asylum made by him but (b) has been granted (whether before or after the decision to refuse leave) limited leave to enter or remain, may, if that limited leave will not expire within 28 days of his being notified of the decision, appeal to an Adjudicator against the refusal on the ground that requiring him to leave the United Kingdom after the time limited by that leave would be contrary to the Convention."
"A person who alleges that an authority has, in taking any decision under the Immigration Acts relating to that person's entitlement to enter or remain in the United Kingdom, racially discriminated against him or acted in breach of his human rights, may appeal to an Adjudicator against the decision, unless he has grounds for bringing an appeal against the decision under the Special Immigration Appeals Commission Act 1997."
"Subject to Section 72(2) the appellant is to be treated as also appealing on any additional grounds (a) which he may have for appealing against the refusal, variation decision or directions in question under any other provision of this Act, and (b) which he is not prevented (by any provision of Section 76) from relying on."
J Barnes
Vice President