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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> MN (Non-recognised adoptions: unlawful discrimination?) India [2007] UKAIT 00015 (12 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2007/00015.html Cite as: [2007] UKAIT 15, [2007] UKAIT 00015 |
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MN (Non-recognised adoptions: unlawful discrimination?) India [2007] UKAIT 00015
Date of hearing: 19 May 2006
Date Determination notified: 12 February 2007
MN |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
THE ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER, NEW DELHI | RESPONDENT |
The law and Immigration Rules distinguishing between (i) adoptions in those countries whose adoptions are recognised in the United Kingdom under the Adoption (Designation of Overseas Adoptions) Order 1973 and (ii) other adoptions have a sound objective basis and are not unlawfully discriminatory under the Race Relations Act 1976 (as amended) or Article 14.
"I am not satisfied that the adoption was in accordance with a decision taken by the competent administrative authority or court in the child's country of origin;
I am not satisfied that the child has lost or broken ties with her family or origin;
I am further not satisfied that the adoption was not one of convenience arranged to facilitate the child's admission to the United Kingdom."
"I am satisfied that [the appellant] has established the start of a family life with both the sponsor and with [his wife] but that to interfere with those rights in all the circumstances of this case would not be disproportionate. [The appellant] has not lived with her adoptive parents on a full-time basis and they have already demonstrated their willingness and ability to make arrangements for her care and education in India. There is nothing to prevent the adoptive parents from making a formal application to adopt [the appellant] in the United Kingdom by firstly having a home study report completed. If they choose to follow this path they are free to refer to the positive findings in this determination which has failed for technical reasons. On this basis I cannot find that [the appellant's] circumstances are 'truly exceptional'."
"(vii)will be adopted in the United Kingdom by his prospective parent or parents in accordance with the law relating to adoption in the United Kingdom, but the proposed adoption is not one of convenience to facilitate his admission to the United Kingdom."
"19.… The rules relating to adoption cannot be governed by considerations of immigration law. Indeed, the rules of adoption are no more part of immigration law than the rules of nature relating to the generation of children are part of immigration law. They are merely part of the background to the law of status.
…
21.Adoption appears to be regulated everywhere. The greater the effects of the adoption, the more likely the regulation is to be intense. In English law, as in many other countries, the legal consequences of adoption are very substantial, affecting status, marriage, succession and social security benefits. Any country asked to attribute legal consequences to a private arrangement is entitled to enquire into the process of their acquisition, simply because the arrangement is not a natural, but purely a legal process.
22.There is no jus gentium or natural law right to adopt or be adopted, and no jus gentium or natural law right to have the rights which in a particular state accrue from adoption. There can be no "human right" to enjoy in any particular state the consequences of adoption, unless the adoption is one recognised as such in that state.
23.[The] argument that the Immigration Rules and other provisions relating to immigration law should be read as if they permitted an Indian adoption to be recognised as an adoption for immigration purposes would not necessarily do applicants any favours, precisely because adoption is not a matter of immigration law and has effects which go well beyond immigration law. As the title of the Adoption (Designation of Overseas Adoptions) Order 1973 indicates, it is not legislation about immigration: it is legislation about adoption. If [the] arguments were to be accepted, and the appellant were to be granted a visa as the adopted child of the sponsors, she would have her visa, and would no doubt be granted admission: but that would not be sufficient to make her the adopted child of the sponsors. On arrival she would not be treated as their child, because India is not a designated country. Although she had obtained her visa, she would be the sponsors' child for no other purposes unless and until they adopted her in a form recognised in English law. The Immigration Rules cannot properly be segregated from the general law for the purpose of attack on their rules on adoption: on the contrary, the Immigration Rules are, so far as we can see, constructed in such a way as to be consistent with the rest of English and United Kingdom law on the effects of overseas adoptions. They need to be coherent, because otherwise the person might be treated as a child of the family for immigration law purposes but not otherwise; or vice versa. [It is asserted on the appellant's behalf] that there is no rational basis for treating India differently from the countries that are on the list of designated countries: he provided no arguments in support of that assertion. As we understand it, the position in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh is that adoption is regarded as a private arrangement between families, with no public effects or need for public scrutiny. In the absence of evidence we can take no firm view on the issue, but we incline to the view that, if that is so, it would be a proper reason for exclusion from designation.
24.It follows from what we have said above that nobody is entitled to say that an adoption is entitled to worldwide recognition in each individual state simply because it is an adoption recognised by the laws of some other state or the customs of some other culture. As the effects of adoption vary from state to state, there is nothing surprising, or wrong, or disproportionate, or irrational in saying that the legal requirements for adoption in the state in which the adoption is asserted must be met before the adoption will be recognised there. Nobody is entitled to say "I have adopted (or been adopted) according to my rules; therefore you are obliged to recognise the adoption as entirely valid under your rules". Unless an Indian adoption can be found to be subject to the same requirements and the same intentions, and to have the same effects as an adoption in the United Kingdom, there would appear to be no reason why it should be treated as though it were a United Kingdom adoption. And if it is not to be treated in general as a United Kingdom adoption, there is no reason why it should be treated as a United Kingdom adoption for the purposes of the Immigration Rules. The truth of the matter is that adoption means different things in different countries. The fact that the same word is used does not mean that the effects are, or ought to be, the same.
25.Paragraph 316A … is the complement to paragraph 310. … The limited leave obtained under that paragraph can mature into indefinite leave to remain under paragraph 311 in due course. The purpose of paragraph 316A is in part to make provision for claimants coming from countries whose adoptions are not recognised in the United Kingdom. Paragraph 316A enables such individuals to be brought to the United Kingdom with a view to being adopted according to United Kingdom law. The requirements are more onerous than those of paragraph 310 appear to be on their face: but there is no reason at all to suppose that the requirements for securing an adoption in a country whose adoptions are recognised by the United Kingdom are in substance more onerous than those for securing an adoption in the United Kingdom. Paragraph 316A was introduced on 2 October 2000, no doubt in the light of the coming into force of the Human Rights Act 1998 on that day; but it has subsequently been amended in order to comply with The Hague Convention on Protection of Children and Cooperation in Respect of Inter-Country Adoption, to which both the United Kingdom and India are parties.
26.If the effect of the Immigration Rules' incorporation of the Adoption (Designation of Overseas Adoptions) Order had been that a person from a country not designated in that Order had no access to adoption recognised in the United Kingdom (because an adoption in his own country would not have effect as such for any United Kingdom purpose) that would be a serious matter. … the Immigration Rules were described as "hopeless" in that they offered nothing to the claimants, who in that case were from Pakistan. The Immigration Rules have, however, been amended a number of times since the decision in Re J. One of the amendments is the introduction of paragraph 316A. It may well be that paragraph 310 taken on its own would offer the appellant nothing: but there is no reason to take it on its own. The Immigration Rules must be seen as a whole."
C M G OCKELTON
DEPUTY PRESIDENT
Date: