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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Brown (Jamaica), R (on the applications of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] UKSC 8 (4 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2015/8.html Cite as: [2015] WLR 1060, [2015] INLR 493, [2015] WLR(D) 101, [2015] Imm AR 837, [2015] 3 All ER 317, [2015] 1 WLR 1060, [2015] UKSC 8 |
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Hilary Term
[2015] UKSC 8
On appeal from: [2013] EWCA Civ 666
R (on the application of Jamar Brown (Jamaica)) (Respondent) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Appellant)
before
Lady Hale, Deputy President
Lord Sumption
Lord Carnwath
Lord Hughes
Lord Toulson
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
Heard on 26 November 2014
Appellants James Eadie QC Matthew Barnes (Instructed byTreasury Solicitors) |
Respondent Stephen Knafler QC Paul Nettleship Raza Halim (Instructed by Sutovic and Hartigan Solicitors) |
|
Intervener (Liberty) Karon Monaghan QC Philip Dayle (Instructed by Liberty) |
LORD TOULSON: (with whom Lady Hale, Lord Sumption and Lord Carnwath agree)
Introduction
"My conclusion is that a state in which there is a serious risk of persecution for an entire section of the community, defined by sexual orientation and substantial in numbers, is not a state where in general there is no serious risk of persecution. As Lord Hope stated in HJ (Iran) v Secretary of State [2011] 1 AC 596 at para 11, the group is defined by 'the immutable characteristics of its members' orientation and sexuality'. It does not follow from the absence of risk to the much larger heterosexual community that in general there is no serious risk in section 94(5) terms where an entire section of the community of significant size and defined by its immutable characteristics, is at serious risk of systematic persecution."
Black LJ's judgment was to similar effect.
Legislative framework
"The Secretary of State may by order add a State, or part of a State, to the list in subsection (4) if satisfied that –
(a) there is in general in that State or part no serious risk of persecution of persons entitled to reside in that State or part, and
(b) removal to that State or part of persons entitled to reside there will not in general contravene the United Kingdom's obligations under the Human Rights Convention."
Facts
Case law
"… the challenge made by the applicants to the inclusion of Pakistan in the order was to its legality rather than to its rationality. However, the language defining the state of affairs that had to exist before a country could be designated was imprecise. Whether there was in general a serious risk of persecution was a question which might give rise to a genuine difference of opinion on the part of two rational observers of the same evidence. A judicial review of the Secretary of State's conclusion needed to have regard to that considerable margin of appreciation … If the applicants were to succeed in showing that the designation of Pakistan was illegal, they had to demonstrate that the evidence clearly established that there was a serious risk of persecution in Pakistan and that this was a state of affairs that was a general feature in that country. For a risk to be serious it would have to affect a significant number of the populace." (Original emphasis)
"… although certain minority groups [by which he included Ahmadis] may be subjected to acts of ill-treatment by members of the general populace, the Government of Pakistan does not itself engage in such acts and Pakistan is not regarded as a country where the State is in general unwilling or unable to offer effective protection to its citizens against such acts. For that reason it is considered to be a country where there is in general no serious risk of persecution either from the State itself or from members of the public, either acting with the State's sanction or encouragement, or against whose acts the State is in general unwilling or unable to protect."
"It is not, therefore, enough to demonstrate occasional breaches of human rights standards even where they amount to persecution. The persecution must be sufficiently systematic properly to be described as a 'general feature' in that country, and this in turn requires that it should affect a significant number of people."
One of the groups alleged to be at risk in that case was homosexuals. The Home Secretary's response was to point out that there were no reports of homosexuals being arrested on a widespread basis or of other legal action being taken against them, although they were likely to face some social hostility. As in Javed, there was no reference to the number of homosexuals in Gambia or their percentage as a proportion of the community.
Analysis
i) The natural meaning of section 94(5) was that it required the Home Secretary to reach a global judgment about the risk generally to those entitled to reside in the state (or relevant part of it) rather than the risk to any particular minority group.
ii) Any other construction would mean that the identification of any group, however small, as being at risk of persecution would prevent the possibility of designation of the state, and this would seriously undermine the scheme.
iii) Minority groups would still be properly protected under the statutory scheme, because designation did not necessarily result in an appeal being certified as clearly unfounded. The Home Secretary had still to consider under section 94(3) whether the appeal was clearly unfounded before issuing such a certificate. The present case was an example in point, because the Home Secretary decided not to issue such a certificate in the case of the respondent notwithstanding that Jamaica was a designated state.
iv) The purpose of the legislative scheme, properly understood, was not to take away the protection of a vulnerable minority, but to achieve administrative efficiency in relation to the vast majority while still affording proper protection for the minority.
v) It would be wrong to use the provisions of section 94(5A) to (5C), which enabled a state to be added to the list in relation to a particular description of person, as an aid to the construction of section 94(5), since subsections (5A) to (5C) were added by later amendment and therefore could not affect the meaning of section 94(5).
Postscript: Hansard
LORD HUGHES:
i) in subsection (a): "in general … no serious risk of persecution"
and
ii) in subsection (b): "(removal) … will not in general contravene the United Kingdom's obligations under the Human Rights Convention".