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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 >> SK (Sri Lanka) v The Secretary of State for theHhome Department [2010] EWCA Civ 1586 (04 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/1586.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 1586 |
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ON APPEAL FROM ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL JUDGE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWARTH
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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SK (Sri Lanka) |
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
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Mr Vickram Sachdeva (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
"unclear whether the DIJ accepted or rejected the appellant's account of his claimed detention and release on bail in Colombo."
"2. The background to this appeal is that the appellant arrived in the United Kingdom on or about 3 September 2008. He obtained entry using a Malaysian passport to which he was not entitled. He applied for asylum the following day. The grounds on which he did so were that he stated that he was of Tamil ethnicity, and came from the Jaffna area in the north of Sri Lanka. He had been detained by the security forces there on 11 June 2007 on suspicion of assisting the LTTE [Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam]. He was ill-treated during his detention, but was released some five weeks later after he had identified the individual who had commissioned him to carry out graphic design work on behalf of the LTTE. He was required to sign on regularly as a condition of his release until May 2008. He was not required to do so after that date.
3. On 5 August 2009, he flew from Jaffna to Colombo. He was detained there whilst he was on his way to the police station to register as required by law. He was held for 10 days and ill-treated, but was then released on bail, subject to reporting and residence conditions. He left Sri Lanka with the assistance of a paid agent on 3 September 2008. He applied for asylum following his arrival in the United Kingdom on he basis that he would be at risk on return to Sri Lanka for two reasons, namely from the Sri Lankan authorities because he had 'jumped bail' and from the LTTE because they suspected him of having disclosed the identity of their member who had commissioned him to carry out graphic design work on their behalf."
"71. …There is a confirmation that he was released on bail subject to a residence and reporting condition contained in the letter of 3 December 2008 from Mr Purushotthamam. However he writes that on or about 5 September 2008 he received enquiries from the police about the Appellant. Mr Purushotthamam states that the Appellant had to report every Monday. He was released by magistrates on Monday 18 August 2008. At first hearing reply 150 [that is a reference, I understand, to either questionnaire or evidence] the Appellant stated he reported on two occasions: the two Mondays immediately following the grant of bail were 25 August and 1 September. Consequently on 5 September, the Appellant on his own evidence would not have been in breach of his reporting condition. I appreciate that Mr Purushotthamam in his letter of 3 December 2008 stated the police made enquiries of him on or about 5 September 2008. He gives no explanation for being uncertain as to the date or why he is unable to ascertain the precise date from his own records. In the absence of any further explanation, I find this leads me to give less weight than I would otherwise have done to the evidence of Mr Purushotthamam."
It is not clear from the DIJ's concluding paragraph in his first determination (paragraph 76) what he ultimately made of the appellant's claim to have jumped bail; and that, of course, is the point that was made by SIJ Waumsley.
"Further to your letter dated 21 December 2009 I confirm that on or about 15 September 2008 I had received enquiries from the police about his current whereabouts. It was mistakenly typed as 5 September 2008. I apologise for the error"
"23. The Appellant's account was that his uncle in Canada had been the contact with Mr Purushotthaman: see Mr Kathravelu's statement paragraph 2. The Appellant also claimed it was his uncle in Canada who had subsequently told him the authorities had searched the house of his aunt and her husband in Colombo as well as the homes his mother and his aunt in Uduvil: see first statement paragraph 87 and the original hearing replies 143-154 as well as paragraphs 20 and 21 of my original determination.
24. By the date of the reconsideration hearing there was still no evidence from the Appellant's uncle in Canada or indeed any other relative of his in Sri Lanka and no explanation for the absence of such evidence. There was no copy of any attendance note written by Mr Purushotthaman relating to the enquiries made 'on or about 15 September 2008'. There was certainly no suggestion from him that the authorities had subsequently again attended his offices enquiring about the Appellant. 15 September 2008 would be a Monday. It would have been the second occasion on which the Appellant would not have reported. There is still no copy of any attendance note or other evidence of basis of which Mr Purushotthaman confirms that enquiries were made on or about 15 September 2008 and there is no explanation for any absence of such information to support this statement in his letter of 15 January 2010.
25. At the time the Appellant sought reconsideration he knew that this would have been an issue as clearly described in paragraph 71 of his original determination. There was no explanation for his absence of the letter of 21 December 2009 from the Appellant's solicitors to Mr Purushotthaman or why the letter was sent so close to the reconsideration hearing, bearing in mind that the error of law hearing before SIJ Waumsley was 9 November 2009. In all the circumstances I find that Mr Purushotthaman has not fully and properly addressed the issue of the date that he received enquiries from the police in September 2008. The Appellant has till not supplied any evidence from his uncle in Canada despite his claim to be in touch with him on a regular basis and is without an explanation for the absence of such evidence: see paragraph 21 of my original determination.
26. There was no evidence to support the Appellant's claim that the authorities have searched the house of the Appellant's aunt and her husband in Colombo and no explanation advanced for the absence of any such evidence.
27. The Appellant claimed he had been detained in Colombo and interrogated about bomb plots. Rather I find he was detained and arrested for lack of an identity document or residence document. He said that it was not until he was being interrogated in detention that he was accused of involvement in bomb plots. If the authorities had genuine reason to suspect him of involvement in such activities, I do not find it plausible that he would have been released after ten days on bail and that having 'jumped bail' the authorities should only make enquiries of his lawyer on one occasion. I do not accept that further enquiries were made of his other relatives in Colombo and Uduvil in the absence of any evidence, other than the Appellant's mere assertion, or an explanation for lack of evidence. The Appellant may have been interrogated about involvement in bomb plots but he has not shown that there is any reason to think he was interrogated on the basis of any suspicion. There was no suggestion that such questions about bomb plots were other than the common practice of the authorities in Colombo to suggest to any young male Tamil arrested without sufficient identity documentation that they were involved in bomb plots. The actions or rather lack of action on the part of the authorities subsequent to the Appellant 'jumping bail' points to a lack on interest in the Appellant. It follows that in the light of the explanation I have given in relation to my original determination and in the light of my other findings given in this reconsideration, this appeal must fail."
"213. We noted in particular the comments made by Professor Goode that the appellant's account here is an unusual one. It is unusual that it has been shown that the appellant was granted bail by a court in Colombo. We agree with the logic that those who have been released after going to court and released from custody on formal bail are reasonably likely, on the evidence, to be not only recorded on the police records as bail jumpers but obviously on the court records as well. Thus we would indentify those in the situation such as this appellant who have been found to have been to court in Colombo, and subsequently released on former bail, as having a profile that could place them at a higher level of risk of being identified from police computers at the airport. Their treatment thereafter will of course depend upon the basis that they were detained in the first place. It is important to note that we did not have before us any information as to the treatment of bail jumpers from the ordinary criminal justice system, and there may be many of them, when they again come to the attention of the authorities, be they Tamil or Singhalese. We had no evidence that Tamil bail jumpers are treated differently from Singhalese ones. Clearly punishment for jumping bail will not make someone a refugee. As we have said, the risk of detention and maltreatment will depend on the profile of the individual applicant."
"The appellant claimed he had been detained in Colombo and interrogated about bomb plots. Rather I find he was detained and arrested for lack of an identity document or residence document."
"The appellant said that on the way to the police station on 8 August 2008 he was arrested when he could not produce a pass. He was detained and ill treated."
"However, on your way there you were arrested and asked to show your pass to prove you had registered in Colombo."
Then at 7(n):
"You were unable to show any pass and so were detained for ten days."
"The desire for refinement is a valid one, especially when the risk factors run into double figures, but it seems to us that it can be achieved without any subdivision. We see an intrinsic danger in differentiating between 'risk factors' and 'background factors' if the former are then elevated to de facto risk categories, which they are not. The wisdom we derive from the ECtHR's analysis of the LP approach is that treats each factor as furnishing a point of focus for considering related indicators and also allows for adjustment in respect of each in the light of new evidence (in LP and in NA some factors were considered to be merely contributory, others as more significant)."
Lord Justice Carnwath:
Lord Justice Patten:
Order: Appeal dismissed