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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> A v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Afghanistan) [2003] UKIAT 00165 (08 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2003/00165.html Cite as: [2003] UKIAT 00165, [2003] UKIAT 165 |
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Heard at Field House [2003] UKIAT 00165 A (Afghanistan)
On 27 November 2003
Written 1 December 2003
Date Determination Notified: 08 December 2003
Before
Appellant
Respondent
This determination contains assessments of an Adjudicator's discretion to refuse an adjournment request to obtain medical evidence, of the Tribunal's discretion to accept fresh evidence, and of the inter-relationship of the recent decisions of the Court of Appeal in N and Djali concerning freestanding health claims under Articles 3 and 8.
"Mr Hawkin did make an application during the hearing for an adjournment to enable such a report to be prepared. I rejected the application on the grounds that the alleged condition had been referred to in the statement of Hassan Ahmadzi dated 17 April 2003, sufficient time for a report to have been obtained or an application to adjourn to have been made prior to the hearing [on 2 May 2003].
(1) Subject to any provision of these Rules or of any other enactment, an Adjudicator or the Tribunal may adjourn the hearing of any appeal or application.
(2) An Adjudicator or the Tribunal must not adjourn the hearing on the application of a party, unless satisfied that the appeal or application cannot otherwise be justly determined
(3) where a party applies for an adjournment of a hearing, he must
(b) show good reason why an adjournment is necessary.
38. I am bound to declare, with great respect, that as a matter of principle I have much difficulty with the case of D. The contrast between the relative well-being accorded in a signatory state to a very sick person who for a while, even a long while, is accommodated there, and the scarcities and grave hardships which (without any violation of international law) he drew would face if he were returned home, is to my mind - even if the contrast is very great - an extremely fragile basis upon which to erect a legal duty upon the state to confirm or extend the right to remain in its territory, a duty unsupported by any decision or policy adopted by the democratic arm, executive or legislature of the state's government. The elaboration of the immigration policy, with all that implies for the constituency of persons for whom within its territory a civilised state will undertake many social obligations, is a paradigm of the responsibility of elected government. One readily understands that such a responsibility may be qualified by a supervening legal obligation arising under ECHR where a person in question claims to be protected from torture or other mistreatment in his home country in violation of the Article 3 standards, especially if it would be meted out to him at the hands of the state. But a claim to be protected from the harsh effects of a want of resources, albeit made harsher by its contrast with facilities available in the host country, is to my mind is something else altogether. The idea of the "living instrument", which is a well accepted characterisation of the ECHR (and some other international texts dealing with rights) no doubt gives the Convention a necessary elastic quality, so that its application is never too distant from the spirit of the times. I have difficulty in seeing that it should stretch so far as to impose on the signatory states forms of obligation wholly different in kind from anything contemplated in the scope of their agreement.
39. In the circumstances it is with respect no surprise that (as it appears to me) since D was decided the Strasbourg Court has effectively being at pains, in decisions I have cited, to avoid any extension of the exceptional category of case, which D represents.
40. But I am no less clear that D should be very strictly confined. I do not say that its confinement is to deathbed cases; that would be a coarse rule and an unwise one: there may be other instances, which press with equal force. That said, in light of the considerations I have described I would hold that the application of Article 3 where the complaint in essence is of want of resources in the Applicant's home country (in contrast to what has been available to him in the country from which he is to be removed) is only justified where the humanitarian appeal of the case is so powerful that it could not been reasonably resisted by the authorities of a civilised state.
42. I should acknowledge that there exists a line of cases concerning Article 8 rights said to arise whether person in question claims that his mental health will be compromised or damaged if he is returned by the Secretary of State. The position has recently been examined by this Court in Razgar and there are also material passages in Bensaid. We have not heard extended argument upon this appeal as to the scope of Article 8 in such circumstances. While I apprehend with respect that nothing I have said here is inconsistent with the Court's reasoning in Razgar, it may be that the position regarding Article 8 will want some further scrutiny if my view of this case were to prevail.
22. We suggest that, in order to determine whether an Article 8 claim is capable of being engaged in the light of the territoriality principle, the claim should be considered in the following way. First, the claimant's case in relation to his private life in the deporting state should be examined. In a case where the essence of the claim is that expulsion will interfere with his private life by harming his mental health, this will include consideration of what he says about his mental health in the deporting country, the treatment he receives there and any relevant support that he says he that he enjoys there. Secondly, it will be necessary to look at what he says he is likely to happen to his mental health in the receiving country, what treatment he can expect to receive there, and what support he can expect to enjoy. The third step is to determine whether, on the claimant's case, serious harm to his mental health will be caused or materially contributed to by the difference between the treatment and support that he is enjoying in the deporting country and that which will be available to him in the receiving country. If so, then the territoriality principle is not infringed, and the claim is capable of being engaged.
23. The degree of harm must be sufficiently serious to engage Article 8. There must be a sufficiently adverse effect on physical and mental integrity, and not merely on health.
25. Even if a removal case engages the Article 8 (1), there is Article 8 (2) to consider. As already noted, at paragraph 48 of the judgment in Bensaid, the ECHR said that even if the dislocation caused to the Applicant by removal was considered by itself as affecting the claimant's private life the interference was justified under Article 8 (2)….. In Ullah, it was said that, where the European Court of Human Rights finds that removal engages the Convention, the Court will "often treat the right to control immigration as one that outweighs, or trumps, the Convention right."
41. When it comes to deciding how much weight to give to the policy of maintaining an effective immigration policy, the Adjudicator should pay very careful deference to the view of the Secretary of State as to the importance of maintaining such a policy. There is obviously a conceptual deference between (a) deciding whether the decision of the Secretary of State was within the range of reasonable responses, and (b) deciding whether the decision was proportionate (paying deference to the Secretary of State so far as is possible). We hold that the correct approach is (a) in all cases except where this is impossible because the factual basis of the decision of the Secretary of State has been substantially undermined by the findings of the Adjudicator. Where (a) is impossible, then the correct approach is (b). But we doubt whether in practice the application of the two approaches will often lead to different outcomes."
"There appears to be one line of cases with regard to Article 3 claims and another with regard to Article 8. For my part I have some difficulty in understanding why a different and less stringent approach should be taken to claims based on mental health than say claims by those suffering AIDS or other physical ailments."
I have had the advantage of reading in draft the judgments to be handed down today in N, the case of an AIDS sufferer. That case and others like it fall for consideration only under Article 3 and will succeed only in the most extreme and exceptional circumstances. It would seem to be very odd if a markedly more generous approach were brought to bear in respect of those suffering mentally rather than physically. I would echo what Laws LJ says in paragraph 42 of his judgement in N as to possible need for further scrutiny, beyond that in Razgar, of the true position regarding Article 8.
Spencer Batiste
Vice-President