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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> WD (Lebanon, Palestinian, ANO, risk) Lebanon CG [2008] UKAIT 00047 (21 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2008/00047.html Cite as: [2008] UKAIT 00047, [2008] UKAIT 47 |
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WD (Lebanon – Palestinian – ANO – risk) Lebanon CG [2008] UKAIT 00047
Date of hearing: 6 & 7 March 2008
Date Determination notified: 21 May 2008
WD |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
The Abu Nidal Organisation ("ANO") exists now as no more than separate cells and individuals operating on their own, and hence is very unlikely to pose a real threat to an individual who has in the past been the object of its hostility.
"1. (repeats the above paragraph 1)
2. The appeal came before us on 24 November 2006. Mr P Richardson, instructed by Knight Solicitors, appeared on behalf of the appellant. Mr C Hearsum appeared on behalf of the Secretary of State.
3. We heard submissions from Mr Richardson and Mr Hearsum. It was agreed that all the issues that were argued as errors in the Adjudicator's determination were before us for consideration. In addition Mr Richardson argued, and Mr Hearsum did not disagree, that it was open to him to argue the issue of whether Fatah could be regarded as an agent of protection. Mr Richardson argued that a basis for this could be found in the broad challenge to the findings on risk on return in the original grounds, in that arguably, the finding on sufficiency of protection was related to that issue. Mr Hearsum agreed that there was a material error of law in that regard as well as with regard to the other matters contended for in the original grounds.
4. The grounds of appeal against the Adjudicator's determination contend firstly that the credibility findings are flawed. In this regard it is said that paragraph 11 of the Adjudicator's determination provided no reasoning for the conclusion that the appellant was not a courier for Fatah as he suggested. The point is made that there was an error in the refusal letter upon which the Adjudicator relied, at paragraph 11, wrongly stating the date of Abu Nidal's death as being August 2003 when in fact it was August 2002. In addition, the Adjudicator had not addressed his mind to the answers given by the appellant in his statement of 18 August 2004 at paragraphs 23 to 37 to the respondent's challenges to his credibility in the refusal letter.
5. The next ground concerns the failure by the Adjudicator to take account of the evidence of the appellant's wife, Mrs HW. Thirdly it is argued that the findings on risk on return at paragraph 11 do not deal with the essential issues in the case. It is argued that the objective evidence referred to by the Adjudicator was contradictory and it was unclear what objective evidence he was referring to in the relevant part of his determination and it was therefore impossible properly to analyse his approach to the appellant's case in the light of the objective evidence. The fourth ground comprises in effect a challenge to the IAT in KK [2004] UKIAT 00293. As is noted, the Adjudicator did not rely on this decision but decided the appeal in line with the guidance given in that decision. Reference is made to the fact that permission had been sought to appeal KK to the Court of Appeal and it was argued that the conclusion of the Adjudicator in stating that the systematic discrimination suffered by Palestinians in Lebanon did not cross the Article 3 or persecutory threshold was an error of law.
6. We agree that all of these matters identify errors of law in the Adjudicator's determination. The grounds are terse and coherent, and we see no particular benefit in paraphrasing them as they make the points contained within them perfectly clearly. The only comment we might make with regard to ground 4 is that subsequently the Court of Appeal refused to grant permission to appeal in the case of KK. That in no sense however precludes the issue being revisited given the fact that by the time this appeal is heard again the best part of three years will have elapsed between the consideration of the evidence in that regard in KK and that hearing and it may well be appropriate for the issues to be revisited. We also consider that an error of law was identified as agreed between the representatives and as noted above with regard to the issue of the ability of Fatah to protect the appellant against the Abu Nidal organisation as a matter of law. We make the further comment that it is in our view necessary or at the very least highly desirable for there to be expert evidence to deal with several of the issues that will arise on the stage two hearing of this appeal. Evidence is needed on the influence and reach of the Abu Nidal organisation and also of the ability of Fatah to protect against the Abu Nidal organisation. Also expert evidence is needed on the question of the extent to which Fatah has de facto control over parts of Lebanon which arguably is the relevant test in assessing whether as a matter of law it is able to afford protection to a person such as the appellant.
7. For the above reasons we conclude that the Adjudicator's determination is materially flawed and as a consequence there must be a full reconsideration in this case."
Discussion
Submissions
"(c) Present risk to the client. As noted above, the ANO is not known or considered to have engaged in assassination in Lebanon for a number of years. Its presence and capability are not ended, but they are significantly degraded. The ANO may have still had the presence and activity to be interested in the client and to seek to intimidate or actually harm him in 2004 as he states, but is much less likely to have the interest or capability now. There remains a residual risk: given the personalised nature of much of Palestinian factional politics and the absence of effective law enforcement, the client might be at risk of some form of retribution from ANO members who are based locally and know him personally and might carry on a vendetta if they happen to see him or hear he had returned."
Signed Date
Senior Immigration Judge Allen
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Refugee Resentment Simmers as Fighting Escalates
Jackson Allers, Electronic Lebanon 4.6.07
Fighting halts at second Palestinian camp in Lebanon
Reuters Foundation 4.6.07
Lebanon refugee camps breeding ground for extremism
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UNRWA appeals for $12.7 m as clamp clashes spread south
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Splinter Groups rise in Refugee Camps
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Jihadist groups fill a Palestinian power vacuum
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Rights group: End abuse of Palestinians fleeing refugee camp
Human Rights Watch 13.6.07
Palestinians in Lebanon stage pro-Fatah rally
iLoubnan-News 15.6.07
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Sophie McNeill, Electronic Lebanon 22.6.07
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Battles rage at Lebanon camp Nazih Siddiq Swissinfo July 12, 2007
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Lebanon army advances into camp. Reuters 15.7.07
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Abu Nidal Organisation (ANO) Site Institute
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Sherifa Shafie
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News Article on Fatah Revolutionary Council
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Fatah – Revolutionary Council (Abu Nidal Organisation) www.ict.org.il