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United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> KS (Minority Clans, Bajuni, ability to speak Kibajuni) Somalia CG [2004] UKIAT 00271 (24 September 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00271.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 00271, [2004] UKAIT 00271, [2004] UKIAT 271 |
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KS (Minority Clans - Bajuni - ability to speak Kibajuni ) Somalia CG [2004] UKIAT 00271
Date of hearing: 11 May 2004
Date Determination notified: 24 September 2004
KS | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
Introduction
The Secretary of State's decision
The Adjudicator's findings
The grounds of appeal
The appellant's oral evidence
The expert evidence of Mr Brian Allen
The submissions
The background situation in Somalia
The UNHCR position paper January 2004
The current Home Office position
"As you will be aware Somali asylum applications as with asylum applications from all other nationalities are considered individually and on the merits of the particular case. This includes asylum applications from members of minority groups being considered on a case by case basis. Although we accept that based on the available country information bona fide members of the Bajuni and Benadiri minority groups are likely to be able to establish a need for international protection, it does not follow that all asylum applicants who base their claim in membership of the Bajuni or Benadiri will automatically be granted refugee status. A decision will be made on the individual circumstances of each case."
The position of the Bajuni
Discussion
"from this complex background it is clear that the risks faced particular clans or sub-clans can only be broad generalisations. The Tribunal in Hanaf appears to have proceeded on the basis that the Tunni are a subgroup of the Brava clan without reference to their linkage with the Digil. In the light of the complex clan structure in Somalia and the intermixing of the groups leading to what the minorities report describes as process of federation, in our view it is impossible to say that membership alone of the Tunni clan is sufficient without more show a well founded fear of persecution on return.
Each appeal must be considered on it own merits. Clan membership will normally be an important consideration but must be taken into account with the appellant's own history and profile."
(i) membership of a clan where the background evidence does not support a conclusion that there is generally a risk of persecution arising from membership of that clan even though on the particular facts of the case an individual claimant may be able to establish a claim on the basis of his own particular background and profile, and
(ii) membership of a minority clan where membership generally does give rise to real risk subject to the particular circumstances of the claimant. In such a case, while each claim must be individually considered, the claim will normally depend on whether in fact the claimant is genuinely a member of that minority clan.
"The term shall also apply to every person who, owing to external aggression, occupation, foreign domination or events seriously disturbing public order in either part or the whole of his country of origin or nationality is compelled to leave his place of habitual residence in order to seek refuge in another place outside his country of origin or nationality."
"Mr Buckley refers us to the Tribunal determination in Suleiman [2002] UKIAT 00416 where this issue was considered comprehensively by that Tribunal. The relevant part of the determination for the purposes of this appeal can be found in paragraph 14 where, having considered this issue of whether a Bajuni would speak Kibajuni or Swahili, the Tribunal commented as follows: "While there may be young Bajuni who have grown up in refugee camps in Kenya speaking Swahili that is not this asylum seeker's history. We shall decide what view will be taken of her case when we have dealt with all the evidence; but we think Adjudicators should approach any (appeal) involving someone who claims to be a Bajuni resident of Somalia but who cannot speak Kibajuni let alone Somali with great caution."
The Tribunal were not saying that an appeal could not succeed if a claimant only spoke Swahili. It was sounding a note of warning that such cases should be considered with great caution. It is clear that the Adjudicator in this appeal was well aware of the language issue. It was for him to decide what weight to attach to the fact that the claimant could not speak Kibajuni but spoke Swahili. He heard an explanation and it appears from his determination that he accepted that explanation. He found as a fact that the claimant had only been eight or nine years old when he left Somalia and also that he had lived in a village near the border. It was for the Adjudicator to decide what weight to attach to that explanation as to why the claimant did not speak Kibajuni."
"What is needed therefore in cases in which claims to be Somali nationals and Bajuni clan identity are made is first of all:
(i) an assessment which examines at least three different factors:
(a) knowledge of Kibajuni;
(b) knowledge of Somali depending on the person's personal history;
(c) knowledge of matters to do with life in Somali for Bajuni (geography, customs, occupations etc.).
But what is also needed is
(ii) an assessment which does not treat any one of these three factors as decisive: as the Tribunal noted in Omar It is even possible albeit unusual that a person who does not speak Kibajuni or Somali could be a Bajuni."
Conclusions
Decision
H J E LATTER
VICE PRESIDENT
Approved for electronic distribution