[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> S v Secretary of State for the Home Department (South Africa) [2004] UKIAT 00018 (29 January 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00018.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 18, [2004] UKIAT 00018 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
APPEAL No. [2004] UKIAT 00018 S (South Africa)
Date of hearing: 20 January 2004
Date Determination notified: 29 January 2004
S |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | RESPONDENT |
"It is said since the Adjudicator dealt with this matter, the claimant has been diagnosed as being HIV positive and the disease is at an advanced stage. While I do not rate the chances of success as very high, I deem it appropriate to grant leave at least."
"In view of his intelligence and motivation he is on quite a complicated antiretroviral regime, however, I think this is necessary due to the advanced stage of his HIV disease. He was commenced on therapy on 5 September 2002. Since then I have seen Donald on a weekly basis in view of his poor health and he has made a very satisfactory improvement. His weight was increased to 66kgs. His cough is less marked and he feels generally better. However, Donald remains still very significantly immunocompromised. Without antiretroviral medication I suspect his life span to be at the maximum two years. Donald still requires quite considerable medical input into his condition which I believe he would not get in South Africa and on compassionate grounds I would strongly support his application to remain in the UK."
"Approximately forty million people are living with HIV in the world and ninety four per cent live in developing countries, twenty eight million Africans have HIV but only thirty thousand Africans receive any antiretroviral medication and very few receive triple therapy which Donald is taking. Less than four per cent of people who need antiretroviral medication in the developing world can access it".
"Since attending the clinic Mr Soko has done very well indeed on a combination of Efavirenz Tenofovir and Lamivudine. His immune system has improved and his CD4 count has climbed to 243 with suppressed viral load. He remains compliant with his therapy".
"Although some antiretroviral therapies are available in South Africa they often do not offer triple therapy which is the standard in the UK and the Westernised World and often not Mr Soko's present regime. South Africa has made some antiretrovirals available but I believe a years treatment costs in the range of $US 1,000 per year. One of the medications available is Combivir which I believe is offered at 90 cents per day. However, Combivir is a combination of Lamivudine and Zidovudine, which Mr Soko previously received but had to stop in view of quite disabling paraesthesia of his feet and therefore this medication would not be suitable for Mr Soko in the future".
"South Africa is ahead of most countries in sub-Saharan Africa in the treatment of HIV victims…"
"On the other hand, that factor combined with other considerations such as the assumption of responsibility by the member state, the advanced state of the illness and the lack of any family support in the receiving country, may combine, as a matter of degree, to bring the Article into force. As Sir Christopher Staughton said in K v Secretary of State [2000] Imm AR 11 (para 11) there is no absolute rule:
'The question is whether it would be 'inhuman or degrading treatment' to expel the applicant, and to answer this question one has to weigh up all the circumstances of the case, as was done in the case of D and decide whether that test is fulfilled'."
"The Government in South Africa has decided to give victims of HIV free treatment. It is expected this will begin before the end of the year".
"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 own 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 in reason be resisted by the authorities of a civilised State. This does not, I acknowledge, amount to a sharp legal test; there are no sharp legal tests in this area. I intend only to emphasise that an Article 3 case of this kind must be based on facts which are not only exceptional, but extreme; extreme, that is judged in the context of cases all or many of which (like this one) demand one's sympathy on pressing grounds. On its facts, D was such a case. I consider that any broader view distorts the bands between the demands of the general interest of the community, whose service is conspicuously the duty of elected government, and the requirements of the protection of the individual's fundamental rights. It is a balance inherent in the whole of the Convention."
N H Goldstein
Vice President