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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 >> BM (Iraq) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] EWCA Civ 899 (01 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/899.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 899 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No: AA/08751/2006]]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SIR ANDREW MORRITT CVO)
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN DBE
and
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
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BM (IRAQ) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
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Mr P Patel ( instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson:
"The appellant left Iraq at the age of 16 and claimed to have poor Arabic skills and a lack of local knowledge." (paragraph 1)
"From the letters that his statements produced the appellant would appear to have no close family members remaining in Iraq. It was also evidence that he came from an extremely wealthy family which local people will recall. (paragraph 3)
"Due to his lack of local knowledge and language skills the appellant will be treated with great suspicion by local people if they failed to identify his family name. It could result in his detention by the security forces for interrogation on the basis that he was a spy from another Shia group or a Sunni group or US or British forces." (paragraph 4 and 11)
"He would also be at risk of attracting the attention of any number of kidnapping gangs who operated all over Baghdad for profit. His outside connections and poor Arabic would make people immediately aware that he may have relatively wealthy connections outside Iraq who would have to pay a large ransom to secure his release." (paragraph 12)
"His brother had been released recently by kidnappers for a very large sum. This may have been due to local knowledge of the family wealth and would cause a precedent to be set for the value of kidnapping members of the appellant's family and lead to a very high ransom being set" (paragraph 13)
"The appellant's brother, who now calls himself Jal Makai, has made two statements. In those statements he said that he was kidnapped by persons unknown in 2003 and then, in the later statement, in 2004. He does not explain why he has changed the dates of his story and when the Home Office approached the British Embassy in Baghdad for corroboration the Embassy said they were unable to help. It has been open throughout to the appellant's solicitors to make their own enquiries of the British Embassy. Jal Makai, instead of giving evidence in support of his statements, has chosen to go to Dubai. He does not explain why he changes the year in which he says he was kidnapped. We do not believe what he says in his statements."
"This appellant is no more at risk than anyone else. Were we to find that this appellant was at risk of Article 3 ill-treatment, that would be to say that any inhabitant of Iraq was at such risk. If it was the case that any inhabitant of Iraq who was fortunate enough to leave would be at risk of Article 3 ill-treatment if returned, then we should not flinch from such a wide ranging conclusion, but we have considered the objective evidence with care and we do not consider that that is the case. Article 3 has a high threshold. We do not find that the appellant has established that there is a real risk that he, who is not credible, and who cannot be distinguished in any significant way from any other inhabitant of Iraq, would face torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. He would live in a violent disordered country on the verge of civil war but, harsh though it is, that is not enough to engage Article 3."
"While the report is unsigned, we accept it to be her opinion and that she does have some qualifications as a journalist to express an opinion. She said that it appears the appellant has no close family members remaining in Iraq. That is not the case. Various family members have travelled back and forth in and out of Iraq in recent times and his mother still owns a house in Baghdad. He would therefore have up-to-date information about Iraq and how to live and behave there. The appellant we accept comes from the Al-Karada area of Baghdad which Ms Guest told us is patrolled by Shia Muslim groups. The appellant is himself Shia. The appellant from the knowledge of his family would know about these groups. He has family to support him in Iraq and, inasmuch as Ms Guest's opinion is based upon what the appellant had said, we find it to be of very little weight, the appellant, his sister Ban and his brother Jal not being credible."
"through making a finding based on no evidence with regard to the appellant's use of Arabic and failing to take into account the mother's evidence that the family was wealthy."
- They failed to deal with the point made by Ms Guest that the appellant's outside connections and poor Arabic would make people immediately aware that he might have relatively wealthy connections, thereby putting him at risk of being kidnapped; and
- They failed to give proper reasons for rejecting his evidence that his Arabic was rusty.
The Senior Immigration Judge said at paragraph 17 that it appeared that Ms Guest had been influenced by the fact that the appellant's brother had been recently kidnapped but the extent of that influence was not clear. The AIT's rejection of the brother's evidence called into question the weight that could be attached to the Guest report.
"19. In making his submissions to me, Mr Naumann [the solicitor then representing the appellant] accepted that his challenge was really one of the panel not having given sufficient weight to the report. That, with respect, is simply not justified. The report itself failed to comply with AIT Practice Directions. It was not even signed by the author. The weight to be attached to the report was entirely a matter for the panel. They have explained that they have taken it into account, but have noted that Ms Guest has reported that the appellant has no close family members remaining in Iraq. That is not, in fact, the case.
20. I accept that Ms Guest was relying on false information provided by the appellant and offered her opinion in good faith. Nonetheless it is true, as the Tribunal pointed out, that various family members of the appellant had travelled back and forth, in and out of Iraq in recent times and the appellant's mother does still own a home in Baghdad. The Tribunal were perfectly entitled, in as much as Ms Guest's opinion was based on what the appellant had said, to attach very little weight to it. I have concluded for all these reasons that the Tribunal did not err in its treatment of this report. The decision of the panel will stand."
"45…Various family members have travelled back and forth in and out of Iraq in recent times and his mother still owns a house in Baghdad. He would therefore have up-to-date information about Iraq and how to live and behave there… [The appellant]… has family to support him in Iraq and, inasmuch as Ms Guest's opinion is based upon what the appellant had said, we find it to be of very little weight"
Lady Justice Arden:
Sir Andrew Morritt:
Order: Appeal dismissed