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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> AA (Turkey) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 1536 (06 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/1536.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 1536 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No: HX/74298/2002]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BUXTON
and
LORD JUSTICE LAWS
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AA (TURKEY) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
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Mr J Clark (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
"You have claimed that you have been persecuted in Turkey because of your political opinion, Kurdish race and Alevi religion. You have stated that you have been arrested and detained on around eleven occasions since 1998 for periods not exceeding 24 hours. You have claimed that you have been beaten and subjected to falakah (beating on the soles of the feet). You have claimed to be a supporter of HADEP (People's Democracy Party) and while putting up posters for them you were stabbed in the chest by people who [you] have described as fascists and spent 3 days in hospital. You have stated that as a result of the attack you spent four days in hospital. You have claimed that you are shortly eligible for your military service and have avoided attending the required medical examination. You have stated that you do not wish to complete your impending military service."
"I accept that on the lower standard of proof he may have been detained on at least a few occasions by the authorities. However he was never detained for more than 24 hours and sometimes less. All that, of course, must be viewed against his own evidence about being questioned about slogans being written in the neighbourhood on walls. Such slogans were probably treated as graffiti. The appellant goes on to state that he regarded such slogans to be written as a legitimate expression of his political opinion and, as I have said before, he said in his statement: 'I never participated in any criminal activity for gain'. I find every possibility that some of those occasions when he was taken into detention had more to do with his writing of slogans than any other reason."
And then paragraph 21, the last two sentences:
"As I have said before that his admitted fly posting and what I can only call graffiti on behalf of HADEP was much more likely to have resulted in the detentions than any other reason. I find as a fact -- as indeed was conceded in argument -- that he was a low-level supporter of HADEP."
I should also read at this stage part of paragraph 28, last sentence:
"More to the point I am of the view that the main interest the authorities had of him was due to his activities which, although he may not have regarded them as a crime, were probably regarded by the authorities as such."
So the adjudicator was finding that the appellant had been detained because, effectively, he had been putting up posters or graffiti on behalf of HADEP of which he was a low level supporter.
"Of crucial significance, in my view, is that his last detention was in August 2000, the date he gives in interview, but his evidence as to that was broadly the same. He did not leave Turkey until about February 2001. If he had a well-founded fear of persecution by the authorities he would not have waited so long to leave Turkey. I accept that he told me that he could not leave until he had the necessary money for an agent, but I am of the view that the gap of several months in remaining in Turkey is not consistent with a general fear of persecution."
And then at paragraph 28, starting in the first sentence but omitting some words:
"…it seems to me that the appellant's involvement [I interpolate that as to say, in HADEP] was small, that his detentions are now sometime ago, and there was a significant gap between his last detention and his leaving the country. He was never charged with an offence, or required to report to the authorities, and there is no evidence he was monitored by the authorities nor did he come from one of the four named areas of Turkey. There is no reason why he should be viewed as a suspected separatist, and that he had no family connections with a prominent member of either the PKK or HADEP."
The adjudicator proceeded to decide, as I have indicated, that the appellant had no well-founded fear of persecution and was not at risk of ill-treatment contrary to Article 3, and so dismissed the appeal.
"4. The width of our jurisdiction was not, it must be confessed, appreciated by anyone when the appeal came before us, and we heard argument confined to whether the adjudicator had committed an error of law. But as we shall endeavour to explain below, the outcome would have been the same had we heard argument on fact as well as law."
"12. But where the adjudicator clearly went wrong was in thinking at paragraph 20 of his determination that 'some of those occasions when he was taken into detention had more to do with his writing of slogans than any other reason', and at paragraph 28 that 'the main interest that the authorities had of (sic) him was due to his activities which, although he may not have regarded them as a crime, were probably regarded by the authorities as such'. The adjudicator is referring here to the appellant's fly-posting and graffiti-writing which the appellant told him at the hearing were not activities which ought to be regarded as a crime.
There is no proper evidential basis for the adjudicator's finding that any of the detentions undergone by the appellant (nine or ten, according to the interview record) were due to his fly-posting or leafleting."
"17. The grounds of appeal settled by Miss Cronin, and advanced before us by Miss Hooper, take as their starting point that the appellant was detained, on at least a few occasions, as a low-level supporter of HADEP. We have found that on the appellant's own evidence, that was not the reason for his detentions. We are nevertheless urged to find that the treatment meted out to the appellant while in detention amounted to persecution".
"18. We find it unnecessary to reach a concluded view on the matter. While it is trite law (Demirkaya is cited) that past persecution is indicative of future risk, in the present case there is more than a real risk that the appellant will be detained on return. But it will not be as a suspected separatist, or for other political reasons. It will be as a draft-evader, and the condign punishment for that does not engage either Convention. Miss Hooper referred us to the 'country guidance' in IK [2004] UKIAT 312 and the check-list therein of potential risk factors for returning asylum seekers. But this is of little use in the present appeal. We know that the appellant is very likely to be detained as a draft-dodger. We know that he has no history of being detained as a HADEP supporter, or any sort of political profile. He therefore does not face treatment worse than that meted out to the average draft-dodger. The adjudicator was right to find that return to Turkey will not expose him to a real risk of treatment breaching either the Refugee or the Human Rights Convention."
"We know that the appellant is very likely to be detained as a draft-dodger. We know that he has no history of being detained as a HADEP supporter, or any sort of political profile."
"At paragraph 32, he [that is, the appellant] says: 'Were I sent back I would be imprisoned for my objection to military service and persecuted due to my political opinions and ethnic origins as before'".
Lord Justice Buxton:
Lord Justice Ward:
Order: Appeal allowed