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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> KB (para: 320(7A): "false representations") Albania [2009] UKAIT 00043 (02 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2009/00043.html Cite as: [2009] UKAIT 43, [2009] UKAIT 00043 |
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KB (para: 320(7A): "false representations") Albania [2009] UKAIT 00043
Date of hearing: 8 September 2009
Date Determination notified: 02 October 2009
KB |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
THE ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER, TIRANA | RESPONDENT |
A genuine document may contain a false representation. If it does, refusal under para. 320(7A) is lawful.
"320…. The following grounds for the refusal of entry clearance or leave to enter apply:
Grounds on which entry clearance or leave to enter the United Kingdom is to be refused
….
(7A) Where false representations have been made or false documents have been submitted (whether or not material to the application, and whether or not to the applicant's knowledge) or material facts have not been disclosed, in relation to the application."
"At the time he made his application for asylum in the United Kingdom, he did not speak good English. He said his father had been working in Kosovo at the time and he came here from Kosovo where he had been helping his father. He says this is where the error arose from. He had then successfully claimed asylum in this country."
"15. It seems to me that paragraph 320 (7A) must be founded on allegation of a false representation, or a deliberate omission to disclose facts. Its effect is to impose a mandatory refusal on the application even if the misrepresentation was not material to the application. It follows that the decision-maker must be satisfied to a high standard that false representations have been made or, false documents or information have been submitted, or material facts have not been disclosed.
16. The appellant in this case did not, in my view, make any misrepresentation herself she gave her husband's date of birth, as she knew it, as 7th April 1978. The respondent's case is essentially that the sponsor's British passport is false. However there is no allegation that it is a forgery, and no dispute that it relates to the sponsor. Although a genuine document can be fraudulently obtained and could therefore fall within the ambit of the rule, it would require more by way of proof than a bare assertion, to establish that it had been fraudulently obtained. With respect to the passport in order to declare it fraudulently obtained, it would have to be shown that misrepresentations were made to the Home Office on application. The allegations on which the decision is based would have to be formulated in a much more specific and detailed manner taking into account assertions made by the sponsor in the past as well as any applications he has made. The implications here is that the sponsor fraudulently obtained, refugee status, indefinite leave to remain, naturalisation and a passport. Much more was needed to sustain this allegation. Moreover, if the intention is to impugn his immigration and national status in its entirety, this is far too serious to be done by implication, which, essentially, is the effect of adopted the criteria of paragraph 320 (7A). The implications of the use of paragraph 320 (7A) in this instance are that appellant could never succeed in her application where she adduces her marriage certificate and a copy of her husband's passport. This is, in effect, a permanent bar to her entry into the United Kingdom. Yet there has been no attempt to declare that the sponsor is not in fact settled in the United Kingdom for purposes of paragraph 281. It seems to me that where an allegation of such profound consequence in made it is necessary that the allegation should be fully supported by the evidence adduced by the respondent. "
C M G OCKELTON
DEPUTY PRESIDENT