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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 >> KH (Sudan) & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] EWCA Civ 887 (30 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/887.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 887, [2009] Imm AR 139 |
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C5/2007/1734, C5/2007/2097, C5/2006/0541 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM The Asylum and Immigration Tribunal
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
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KH (Sudan) QA (Sudan) BK (Sudan) AA (Sudan) KA (Sudan) |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
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Mr C Jacobs (instructed by Messrs White Ryland) for the Appellants in QA, BK, AK and KA
Ms L Giovanetti and Mr R Dunlop (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 10th-13th June, 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
"our firm view is that asylum claims or Article 3 claims submitted by non-Arab Darfuris faced with return to Khartoum should be considered on their individual merits."
"As part of the assessment of the application for international protection, Member States may determine that an applicant is not in need of international protection if in a part of a country of origin there is no well-founded fear of being persecuted or no real risk of suffering serious harm and that the applicant can reasonably be expected to stay in that part of the country."
Lord Justice Moses :
KH (SUDAN)
"There will nevertheless, be limited categories of Darfuri returnees who will be at risk on return to Khartoum. Each case will need to be considered on its own individual merits, taking account of all relevant circumstances, considered individually and cumulatively."
"(i) The fact that a person of non-Arab Darfuri origin is from one of the villages or areas of Darfur which are 'hotspots' or 'rebel strongholds' or whose village has been raided by the Janjaweed and/or Government forces would not in itself give rise to a risk of persecutory harm, although it would be a significant factor when assessing risk on return, if for example, he was from one of the villages from which the current rebel leaderships come or if he has spent some time recently in Chad."
"We consider that the Sudanese authorities can be taken to be aware of the wide geographical sweep of the Janjaweed and governmental operations aimed at non-Arab Darfuris in Darfur. In the Tribunal's view it is not possible, therefore, to infer that a person whose village was attacked by the Janjaweed would, for that reason alone, be regarded on return to Khartoum as a member or active supporter of a rebel movement.
However, we do think, although not constituting a risk factor in itself, that the finding of a reasonable likelihood that a non-Arab Darfuri originates from a village known to be closely associated with the current rebel leadership is a relevant consideration when examining the individual merits of a claim; there is evidence that the rebel leadership's origins are known. Hence where an immigration judge is presented with credible and specific evidence regarding the history of the particular place from which a person claims to emanate, this consideration will be relevant."
"Clearly the appellant is within a risk category to the extent that he comes from a targeted village, Korma, in Darfur, but a risk factor which does not give rise to a need protection per se, rather than whose individual circumstances must be considered. The Tribunal clearly considers that a connection between the targeted village and rebel leadership is significant. There is no such connection in this case. The appellant's evidence is devoid of this in respect of Korma as is the background evidence. Indeed the appellant has not been found credible and the only point in his favour is his Bargo/Korma origin. However, there is no reason that he should be linked with the rebels and, as such, there is no reason that he should be targeted upon being removed to Khartoum."
That report details an attack in which seventy-two people were killed and many more injured between 4-8 July 2006 in the villages around Korma town. It says:-
"The Korma attacks are also significant because:-
- The attackers were members of the SLA faction led by Minni Minawi, known as SLA (MM) who were reportedly supported by the Sudan Armed Forces and the Janjaweed, travelling in more than twenty armed vehicles. Some of the vehicles were said to come from Al-Fasher, the government-controlled capital of North Darfur state. The SLA (MM) faction is a signatory, with the Sudan government, to the Darfur peace agreement of May 2006. In recent weeks the SLA (MM) has attacked the bases, such as the Korma area, in North Darfur of other SLA factions (Abdel Wahed and Group of 19) that have refused to sign the agreement…" (my emphasis)
QA (SUDAN)
Procedural History
"13. We do not consider that given this guidance the appellant demonstrates that he would be at risk on return to Khartoum as a failed asylum seeker, as a returning young apparently healthy adult who may or not may not face military service, and whose father was a member of an organisation formally in opposition to the government. Nor is the appellant at risk because of the location of the villages where had suffered in the past – the hotspots argument – for the reasons given in HGMO in §§ 267-270; we have not been taken to 'credible and specific evidence' concerning the various locations. Counsel accepted that the appellant had been residing with a friend of his father in Khartoum and so it cannot be assumed that the appellant would necessarily end up in the camps. We bear in mind that the passage of time (sic) and that his father's friend may not be where he was. However, even if the appellant did have to resort to the camps or the squatter areas, that would not entitle him to argue that relocation would be unduly harsh, applying the Tribunal's reasoning set out above. We are not satisfied that the appellant could be described as an activist by virtue of the prior involvement of his deceased father in the SFDA – see § 271 of HGMO.
14. Taking all the points advanced on the appellant's behalf in the round as we were enjoined to do, we do not find that for the appellant conditions, though undoubtedly tough and difficult, would be unduly harsh in Khartoum and accordingly we hold that reclocation to Khartoum would be reasonable for him."
The Impact on the Appellant if he returns to Khartoum
"It cannot be assumed that the appellant would necessarily end up in the camps." (my emphasis)
The Tribunal was required to consider not whether he would be bound to end up in a camp but rather whether it was likely he would do so. Four years have now passed since he last resided with a friend of his father in Khartoum. There is no basis for concluding that it is likely his friend is still in Khartoum let alone that it is possible for this young appellant to find him. Accordingly, the harshness of requiring him to return to Khartoum must be considered in the context of his having to live in a camp or squatter area.
BK (SUDAN)
"…unless those activities are reasonably likely to be regarded by the Sudanese Government as being significantly harmful to its interests." (299 and 309(8)(iv))
"If he were a prominent political figure or even a rising young star then perhaps an effort at identification might be made, but he cannot be regarded as of such significance. There are no prior records concerning him."
AA (SUDAN)
"The appellant is a resourceful man who worked in Sudan prior to leaving. He was able to save money and to leave some of it in his friend's home in Al Takal. It would appear that 4,000 Sudanese Pounds are still with Musa. There is no evidence before me to suggest that the appellant could not now engage the assistance of his friend Musa upon his arrival in Khartoum. The appellant still has colleagues in Sudan, one of whom he contacted shortly after his arrival in the UK."
KA (SUDAN)
"The appellant maintained at the hearing that he could be identified as from the Barti tribe due to his accent, hair and tribal markings. I had no evidence before to identify whether the appellant spoke a form of Arabic or any other language that would show him to be from Darfur. The appellant has very short dark hair and a moustache. The appellant showed me two very small round marks and one very small linear mark on his right cheek. They were hardly noticeable. I had nothing before me to identify them as tribal markings rather than the result of normal skin pigmentation, acne scars or other causes. I do not accept that the appellant's appearance shows him to be from Darfur. Rather, he is relatively pale-skinned and has markedly Semitic rather than Negroid features." (§ 15)
This finding was challenged on the basis that the appellant's ethnicity was not raised in the Secretary of State's refusal letter, nor at a preliminary case management hearing.
"On the ethnicity point he (counsel for the appellant) had no submissions, particularly in the light of the decision of the Court of Appeal in Hamid and Others v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2005] EWCA Civ 1219 which indicated that even if the appellant were a Barti, ethnicity would not prevent an internal relocation option." (§ 3)