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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> MS (Turkey GBTS Info at Borders) Turkey [2004] UKIAT 00192 (13 July 2004) URL: https://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00192.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 192, [2004] UKIAT 00192 |
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APPEAL No. MS (Turkey GBTS Info at Borders) Turkey [2004] UKIAT 00192
Date of hearing: 13 May 2004
Date Determination notified: 13 July 2004
MS | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"Information and details of those individuals who have been issued with arrest and search warrants by the approved legal departments are recorded on this system. These records are not erased from the system until the individual is captured, arrested detained. Should the individual be captured then the records from this system will be erased.
Arrest, Detention and Search Warrants are only issued by the judicial departments such as the Public Prosecutors Office or by the Judges Offices. In principle, the arresting parties such as the security forces must inform the judicial departments no later than 24 hours after the warrant has been executed. After notification, the matter will be passed on to the judiciary for procedure to follow. If a citizen is formally arrested but not charged, he too may have his details recorded on this system. For instance, this may be where a warrant has been issued but the individual has not been detained. (For example, a person detained on remand will have his details recorded on the GBT).
If an individual is taken into custody by the Anti-Terror Branch, or alternatively, the Security Forces, the individuals details will not be recorded on to the GBT system. If he has a record then this is erased as the individual has been detained.
However, in some cases we are aware, depending on the nature of the offence/crime, even if details are erased from the system the security forces will have separate records/files. In daily language this is known as "a tab record". "Fis Kaydi" (Informal records kept by the Security Forces and Anti-Terror Branch). These records do not cause a problem for the individual as such, however should the individual be taken into custody for another offence, the security forces will refer to this record and prepare a file in respect of previous incidents to file with the judiciary.
There is no compulsory legal system whereby decisions of arrests, detentions and searches are provided to the municipal/registration offices.
However, in practice, this is not the case: the decision-making bodies are known to advise the Nufus registration departments, whereby notes are attached to the individuals' files. If, thus, a person who is wanted applies for a copy of his Nufus registration, the registration office will immediately contact the decision-making bodies. If an individual's GBT record is erased, then the record is also erased from the Nufus registration record.
The computer system at the airport does contain the GBT records – at times, not all of these GBT records are contained. But, it should be noted that the records contained in their computers are the records contained in the GBT."
"The consequence is that we are guessing including the governments cited as sources in the TCA, as to the true number who are mistreated either on re-entry or later."
"Where the person detained is alleged to have been politically active or is otherwise perceived as an opponent of the state, it is practice for their detentions to be recorded on the GBT".
"6.101 The German immigration authorities reported in July 1999 that in general rejected asylum seekers returning to Turkey do not risk persecution. A rejected asylum seeker returning voluntarily can pass through entry control unhindered, provided that he/she is in possession of a valid Turkish travel document. The fact that the returnee is a failed asylum seeker does not lead to different treatment. The Turkish authorities are well aware of the fact that many Turkish nationals apply for asylum only for the purpose of getting temporary authorisation to remain in Germany.
6.102 A Senior Official at the Visa Dept, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told the IND fact-Finding mission to Turkey in March 2001 that for the past five to ten years Turkey had not denied passports to undocumented would-be returnees, although it had denied them in the 1980s. He said that the Turkish government now recognised that the overwhelming majority of Turkish nationals who had applied for asylum overseas had done so purely for economic reasons. They were of no interest to the Turkish government, and would not be imprisoned on return. The airport police might question them about, for example, the loss and destruction of their passports, but this would be a low-level investigation. The subjects would quickly be released, almost certainly without charge, and allowed to go about their daily life without hindrance."
6.103 Turkey does not at present accept the removal to Turkey of Turks using EU letters (which are standard formal travel/identity documents adopted by the General Secretariat of the Council of the EU in its recommendation of 30 November 1994) and Turks who are without passports are therefore returned on one way emergency travel documents which issued by the Turkish Consul General in London.
6.104 A returnee without a valid Turkish travel document is likely to be given an in-depth questioning by the Turkish border police, and this is to be distinguished from the routine identity check on arrival. The German authorities stated in July 1999 that, as a rule, the questions refer to personal data, date of and reasons for departing Turkey, possible criminal record in Germany and contacts with illegal Turkish organisations. In some cases further inquiries will be made via other offices (e.g. prosecutor's officer, registrar's office at the last Turkish residence of the returnee) in order to find out if the returnees is liable to prosecution for a criminal offence. These enquiries can take from several hours to several days, during which time the returnee will be kept in custody…. Ill-treatment could not be ruled out in cases where returnees are suspected separatists.
6.105 Amnesty International in Germany stated in February 1999, in relation to returns from Germany, that the Turkish authorities are more likely to be suspicious in cases where a person returning to Turkey is not carrying any valid personal documents in accordance with regulations or is carrying documents indicating asylum proceedings abroad."
" Undocumented (i.e. travelling on an EU letter or similar) "
The report clearly distinguishes such a person from a returnee travelling on a valid Turkish travel document who will pass into Turkey as set out in para. 6.101 and 6.102.
His Honour Judge N Ainley
Vice President