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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 >> EM, R (on the application of) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2018] EWCA Civ 1070 (15 May 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/1070.html Cite as: [2018] 1 WLR 4386, [2018] WLR 4386, [2018] WLR(D) 297, [2018] EWCA Civ 1070, [2018] 3 CMLR 33 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Mr Justice Haddon-Cave
CO/498/2016
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SHARP
and
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
____________________
The Queen on the application of EM |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
____________________
James Eadie QC and Gwion Lewis (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 25 April 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
SUMMARY
(1) What is the nature and scope of the State's obligation to provide assistance and support ('the support duty') to persons formally identified as potential victims of human trafficking ('PVoTs') arising from Articles 11(2) & (5) of Directive 211/36/EU, and from the published policy guidance of the Home Secretary ('the SSHD')?(2) Was the duty discharged in the case of the Claimant, EM, during a period in 2016 when she had been identified as a PVoT but was detained at an immigration removal centre ('IRC')?
A. The Claimant's accountB. The legal proceedings
C. Relevant Law and Policy
D. Current health provision for PVoTs
E. The assistance and support provided to the Claimant
F. Witness evidence
G. Submissions
H. Determination
I. Conclusion
A. THE CLAIMANT'S ACCOUNT
B. THE LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
C. RELEVANT LAW AND POLICY
- The Council of Europe Convention on Action Against Trafficking in Human Beings ('The Convention')
- Directive 2011/36/EU ('The Directive')
- Victims of Modern Slavery: Competent Authority Guidance ('The Home Office Guidance')
The Anti-Trafficking Convention
- Articles 5 and 6 require parties to take measures to prevent trafficking, to strengthen international co-ordination and to discourage the demand for trafficked persons.
- Article 10(1) requires State Parties to establish competent authorities, staffed by trained and qualified persons, to identify and help PVoTs.
- Article 10(2) provides that if the competent authorities of a State Party have reasonable grounds to believe that a person has been a victim of trafficking, that person shall not be removed from the party's territory until a process of identifying whether the person is a victim has been completed.
- Article 12 stipulates that in the meantime various forms of support should be provided:
"Article 12 – Assistance to Victims
1. Each Party shall adopt such legislative or other measures as may be necessary to assist victims in their physical, psychological and social recovery. Such assistance shall include at least:
a. standards of living capable of ensuring their subsistence, through such measures as: appropriate and secure accommodation, psychological and material assistance;
b. access to emergency medical treatment;
c. translation and interpretation services, when appropriate;
d. counselling and information, in particular as regards their legal rights and the services available to them, in a language that they can understand;
e. assistance to enable their rights and interests to be presented and considered at appropriate stages of criminal proceedings against offenders;
f. access to education for children.
2. Each Party shall take due account of the victim's safety and protection needs. […]"
- Article 13 provides for a reflection period of at least 30 days (the UK gives at least 45 days), during which time the person may not be removed:
Article 13 – Recovery and reflection period
1. Each party shall provide in its internal law a recovery and reflection period of at least 30 days, when there are reasonable grounds to believe that a person concerned is a victim. Such a period shall be sufficient for the person concerned to recover and escape the influence of traffickers and/or to take an informed decision on cooperating with the competent authorities. During this period it shall not be possible to enforce any expulsion order against him or her. This provision is without prejudice to the activities carried out by the competent authorities in all phases of the relevant national proceedings, and in particular when investigating and prosecuting the offences concerned. During this period, the Parties shall authorise the persons concerned to stay in their territory.
2. During this period, the persons referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article shall be entitled to the measures contained in Article 12, paragraphs 1 and 2.
3. …."
"160. Sub-paragraph d. provides that victims are to be given counselling and information, in particular as regards their legal rights and the services available to them, in a language that they understand. The information deals with matters such as availability of protection and assistance arrangements, the various options open to the victim, the risks they run, the requirements for legalising their presence in the Party's territory, the various possible forms of legal redress, how the criminal-law system operates (including the consequences of an investigation or trial, the length of a trial, witnesses' duties, the possibility of obtaining compensation from persons found guilty of offences or from other persons or entities, and the chances of a judgment's being properly enforced). The information and counselling should enable victims to evaluate their situation and make an informed choice from the various possibilities open to them."
The Directive
"Assistance and support for victims of trafficking in human beings[1. Assistance and support in connection with criminal proceedings.]
2. Member States shall take the necessary measures to ensure that a person is provided with assistance and support as soon as the competent authorities have a reasonable-grounds indication for believing that the person might have been subjected to any of the offences referred to in Article 2 and 3.
[3.] …
4. Member States shall take the necessary measures to establish mechanisms aimed at the early identification of, assistance to and support for victims, in cooperation with relevant support organisations.
5. The assistance and support mechanisms referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 shall be provided on a consensual and informed basis, and shall include at least standards of living capable of ensuring victims' subsistence through measures such as the provision of appropriate and safe accommodation and material assistance, as well as necessary medical treatment including psychological assistance, counselling and information, and translation and interpretation services where appropriate.
6. The information referred to in paragraph 5 shall cover, where relevant, information on a reflection and recovery period pursuant to Directive 2004/81/EC […]
7. Member States shall attend to victims with special needs, where those needs derive, in particular, from whether they are pregnant, their health, a disability, a mental or psychological disorder they have, or a serious form of psychological, physical or sexual violence they have suffered."
"It is necessary for victims of trafficking in human beings to be able to exercise their rights effectively. Therefore, assistance and support should be available to them before, during and for an appropriate time after criminal proceedings. Member States should provide for resources to support victim assistance, support and protection. The assistance provided should include at least a minimum set of measures that are necessary to enable the victim to recover and escape from their traffickers. The practical implementation of such measures should, on the basis of an individual assessment carried out in accordance with national procedures, take into account the circumstances, cultural context and needs of the person concerned. A person should be provided with assistance and support as soon as there is a reasonable-grounds indication for believing that he or she might have been trafficked and irrespective of his or her willingness to act as a witness. In cases where the victim does not reside lawfully in the Member State concerned, assistance and support should be provided unconditionally at least during the reflection period."
This recital does not constitute a rule, but may cast light on the interpretation to be given to Article 11: Galdikas at [40].
The Home Office Guidance
Potential victims who are not housed in specialist accommodation (including those housed by asylum support) must still be offered outreach support to make sure their entitlements are met under Article 12 of [the Convention]. …"
26. In order to resolve the outstanding matters, there are two important preliminary matters to stress. First, the Defendants have discretion as to how the provisions in the Directive are to be implemented in order to reach the result to be achieved. Article 288 of TFEU states that:
"A directive shall be binding, as to the result to be achieved, upon each Member State to which it is addressed, but shall leave to the national authorities the choice of form and methods."
27. So my task when considering whether the Defendants have complied with the Directive is to determine if the Defendants have achieved the result sought to be achieved and not to decide if the result could be achieved by another preferable manner.
28. Second, as I have explained, the Claimants are seeking to challenge various aspects of the Defendants' policy on the basis that it is vitiated by a justiciable public law error. The fall-back position of the Claimants is that the support regime creates an unacceptable risk of unfairness and so should be quashed. The threshold that has to be reached before making quashing orders was considered by the Court of Appeal in R (Tabbakh) v Staffordshire Probation Trust [2014] 1 WLR 4620 at paragraphs 38 and 45, when it observed that a policy could only be struck down if it was "inherently unfair". That case also established that if a policy is not in itself "inherently unfair", then in the words of Richards LJ, giving the only reasoned judgement of the Court of Appeal at paragraph 38, "the correct target of challenge is not the guidance but any individual decisions alleged to have been made in breach of the requirements of procedural fairness". Lord Dyson M.R. followed this approach in Lord Chancellor v Detention Action [2015] 1 WLR 5341 at paragraph 27, where he explained when giving the only reasoned judgement of the Court of Appeal that:
"I would accept Mr. Eadie's summary of the general principles that can be derived from these authorities: (i) in considering whether a system is fair, one must look at the full run of cases that go through the system; (ii) a successful challenge to a system on grounds of unfairness must show more than the possibility of aberrant decisions and unfairness in individual cases; (iii) a system will only be unlawful on grounds of unfairness if the unfairness is inherent in the system itself; (iv) the threshold of showing unfairness is a high one; (v) the core question is whether the system has the capacity to react appropriately to ensure fairness (in particular where the challenge is directed to the tightness of time limits, whether there is sufficient flexibility in the system to avoid unfairness); and (vi) whether the irreducible minimum of fairness is respected by the system and therefore lawful is ultimately a matter for the courts. I would enter a note of caution in relation to (iv). I accept that in most contexts the threshold of showing inherent unfairness is a high one. But this should not be taken to dilute the importance of the principle that only the highest standards of fairness will suffice in the context of asylum appeals."
D. CURRENT HEALTH PROVISION FOR PVoTs
Those not in detention
Those detained at IRCs
(1) Accommodation, catering facilities, leisure and recreation facilities, religious arrangements, education classes, opportunities for paid work, and access to social and legal visits.(2) Health screening of all detainees on arrival, and thereafter healthcare provision equivalent to the primary community healthcare services provided to the general public.
(3) A range of psychological services according to need.
(4) The right to legal advice. Libraries in immigration removal centres contain a range of reference materials and resources. Detainees are entitled to keep a mobile phone. Weekly legal surgeries are held.
(5) Telephone interpretation is available to help staff speak to detainees.
E. THE ASSISTANCE AND SUPPORT PROVIDED TO THE CLAIMANT
22 September 2015 | Detained |
23 September | Health screening assessment by nurse |
23 September | First health assessment by nurse |
29 October | Hibiscus (a charity which has officers based at Yarl's Wood IRC providing advice to non-EU detainees) advises Home Office officials at the IRC that C "spoke to them and it transpired that she had been trafficked". Home Office official: "I called [C] for an interview and asked about her claim. [C] has stated that she mentioned to have been trafficked when she was in prison in 2008, but nothing was done about it. She then wrote a statement and passed it to her solicitor… about a month ago but again her solicitor did not do anything to progress it further. [C]'s husband has now found a new solicitor who will be coming to see her on Monday." [The SSHD contends that this was the first time that C had spoken of being trafficked.] |
12 November | Detention review refers to trafficking. |
16 November | Nurse notes social and personal history, including trafficking, and reports C to the mental health and well-being team because she was complaining of stress and depression. |
20 November | Doctor reviews personal history, receives a very detailed account of trafficking, and prescribes anti-depressants. |
25 November | Referral to mental illness team to create Mental Health Care Plan. |
26 November | C seen by nurse at clinic. |
26 November | C's then solicitors write to Home Office (Criminal Casework Directorate) stating that she had been subjected to human trafficking. |
28 November | Doctor makes Rule 35 report expressing concern that C may have been a victim of torture. |
1 December | Healthcare staff speak to C because she had not been attending the dining room to eat. |
2 December | Doctor prescribes anti-depressants |
3 December | Nurse conducts mental health review |
3 December | Detention review refers again to Hibiscus' concerns about trafficking and reiterates that no formal referral to NRM yet made |
10 December | Nurse conducts well-being session |
11 December | Nurse examines C for dizzy spells and records that she felt depressed |
15 December | Doctor makes second Rule 35 report expressing concern that C was a victim of torture |
21 December | C signs NRM referral form, referral made |
21 December | C seen by clinician |
24 December | Nurse conducts mental health review |
29 December | Nurse conducts mental health review |
3 January 2016 | Doctor advises continue with anti-depressants |
6 January | SSHD makes positive reasonable grounds decision: 45-day reflection period begins |
6 January | Mental health nurse conducts mental health review of C (first of 6 during reflection period, others being on 12, 14, 26 January; 9, 16 February). ACDT initiated. [Assessment Care in Detention and Teamwork: the Prison Service model of self-harm reduction.] |
12 January | Home Office wrote to C's solicitors refusing their request for C to be granted temporary admission. Re trafficking claim: "… we have arranged for your client to be interviewed regarding this application and it is not considered an unreasonable period of time to maintain her detention during this period due to her previous immigration history" |
21 January | Doctor reviews C, continues anti-depressants |
21 January | Home Office officials undertake asylum screening interview of C |
22 January | SSHD writes to C's solicitors refusing their request that C be granted temporary admission, stating: "There are healthcare facilities available at Yarlswood IRC and [C's] health and welfare are monitored, including her eating habits. There are no indications that her care is not being adequately managed at Yarlswood IRC." |
29 January | Healthcare support worker conducts psychological wellbeing assessment |
31 January | C seen by healthcare staff as refusing food |
2 February | Doctor reviews C |
3 February | Detention review: "It is considered [C's] detention while her PVoT application is fully considered is appropriate on grounds of public order due to her criminal offence and her history of absconding for a five year period and record of working illegally in the UK." |
20 February | 45-day reflection period ends |
29 February | Nurse conducts mental health review |
2 March | Doctor reviews C, changes anti-depressant |
7 March | Nurse conducts mental health review |
8 March | C interviewed for asylum claim |
10 March | Health care support worker conducts psychological wellbeing assessment |
1 April | SSHD makes negative 'conclusive grounds' decision |
4 April | Nurse conducts mental health review |
5 April | Doctor assesses C |
19 April | Nurse conducts mental health review |
26 April | Doctor assesses C |
27 April | C seen by psychiatrist and mental health nurse |
By 5 May | C interviewed by Dr Chisholm |
12 May | Doctor reviews C |
18 May | Mental health nurse reviews C |
23 May | Mental health nurse reviews C |
25 May | C seen by psychiatrist and mental health nurse |
7 June | Doctor reviews C |
8 June | Mental health nurse reviews C |
15 June | C seen by psychiatrist and senior nurse |
21 June | Doctor reviews C |
23 June | Doctor reviews C |
29 June | Mental health nurse reviews C |
8 July | Health care support worker conducts psychological wellbeing assessment |
12 July | Doctor reviews C |
26 July | C transferred from Yarl's Wood to Colnbrook IRC |
27 July | Doctor reviews C, decides to refer her to psychiatric team |
9 August | C released from detention |
F. WITNESS EVIDENCE
G. SUBMISSIONS
The Claimant
(1) The SSHD fails to give effect to her Guidance to refer all those in receipt of a favourable reasonable grounds decision to the SA. Alternatively, if the Guidance is to be read as excluding SA support for those in immigration detention, the Guidance is flawed in that it fails to address how the duty of assistance and support is to be discharged in respect of such persons.(2) The SSHD's system for discharging the duty of assistance and support is inherently flawed and gives rise to an unacceptable risk that the duty will not be discharged in respect of persons in immigration detention with positive reasonable grounds decisions.
(3) The duty of assistance and support owed to the Claimant was breached in that her needs for physical, psychological and social recovery were not adequately assessed or provided for during her recovery and reflection period.
The SSHD
- "standards of living capable of ensuring victims' subsistence";
- "appropriate and safe accommodation and material assistance"
- "necessary medical treatment including psychological assistance"
- "counselling and information"
- "translation and interpretation services where appropriate"
All of these are provided within the detention estate.
H. DETERMINATION
What is the nature and scope of the support duty?
- appropriate and safe accommodation
- material assistance
- necessary medical treatment including psychological assistance, counselling and information, and
- translation and interpretation services.
Was the duty discharged in the Claimant's case?
I. CONCLUSION
Sharp LJ:
Arden LJ