BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Bor, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] EWHC 1825 (Admin) (01 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/1825.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1825 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF BOR | Claimant | |
v | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss L Busch (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"When a human rights or asylum claim has been refused and any appeal relating to that claim is no longer pending, a decision maker will consider any further submissions and, if rejected, will then determine whether they amount to a fresh claim. These submissions will amount to a fresh claim if they are significantly different from the material that has previously been considered. The submissions will only be significantly different if the content -
(i) had not already been considered, and
(ii) taken together with previously considered material creates no realistic prospect of success notwithstanding its rejection."
"The issue in this application, therefore, is whether the defendant's view that the claimant's further submission, taken together with the previously considered material, did not create a realistic prospect of the claimant succeeding before an immigration judge was irrational/Wednesbury unreasonable bearing in mind the needs of anxious scrutiny (is the need to give proper weight to the issues and to consider the evidence in the round)."
"26 The appellant has given a consistent account throughout his claim and I do not agree with the respondent's argument that his claim was vague and lacking in substance. I accept that the appellant was detained on three occasions when he was living in Tunceli. The objective evidence would show that frequent round-ups of young men who were then detained for a period, tortured and released without charge were a fact of life in south-eastern Turkey during the 1990s. Clearly, from his own evidence the appellant was not a member or strong supporter of TIKKO or TKP (ML). He describes himself as a sympathiser but remains oblivious to the violent nature of these organisations. Although he demonstrated at interview reasonable knowledge of the organisation, he denied their violent background. It would appear that the authorities do not consider him to be a threat in view of the fact that he was always released without charge or conditions. Although the appellant said he was asked to become an informer no consequences appear to have followed from his refusal. In 1998 the appellant moved to Istanbul. He was again arrested because he took part in a demonstration. However after a period of detention and mistreatment he was released. Even though he appeared to have avoided military service at this point, he was only advised to report for his medical. He continued to demonstrate but was not detained again. He says that the authorities were looking for him and that his father was detained and questioned. He has indicated in his evidence that the authorities in Tunceli are still looking for him and do not believe that he is in the UK. On the basis that the authorities have shown no particular interest in him following detentions in the past, I find it highly unlikely that they would take this much interest in him over the past four years and I consider that the appellant is attempting to enhance his claim by stating that the authorities are still looking for him.
27 The appellant's account is supported by two witnesses who appear to be his cousins. Both have been granted refugee status and appear to be closely related to a known member of the PKK. Both say that the appellant suffered the same problems as them but their evidence is mostly as a result of hearsay and is not founded on direct knowledge. Apart from the fact that I am satisfied that the appellant has suffered past mistreatment because he is an Alevi Kurd who lived in an area of Turkey that supported the Kurdish armed struggle, the witnesses' evidence does not add much weight to the appellant's claim. An important question is how far this appellant is considered by the Turkish authorities to be suspected of separatist sympathies because of his family connections. From the evidence it would appear that this appellant has not shown any more than that he was a Kurd living in the wrong area of Turkey when he, along with other local young men, were subjected to regular round-ups and periods of detention and mistreatment because they were Kurds. I am not satisfied that this appellant would be seen as a member of a family where other members were PKK guerillas. There is no evidence from his past detentions that this has featured prominently in his arrest. He himself has never proclaimed PKK sympathies and there is nothing to link him to TIKKO in particular. He has said in evidence that he was not arrested distributing leaflets and that this part of his statement was incorrect. The appellant has a brother living in Istanbul who appears never to have suffered because of his family connections or his ethnicity whilst living in Istanbul.
28 Although the appellant has indicated in evidence that he fears further detention and mistreatment, in all his evidence his main reason for leaving Turkey appears to be his desire to avoid military service. Despite previous detentions it appears to be his call-up papers that really prompted his departure from Turkey. Although the appellant indicates discrimination in the armed services against Kurds, the background evidence would not appear to support any serious discrimination unless the person was perceived to be a suspected separatist or terrorist. There is no reason disclosed in the appellant's evidence to show that this would be the case as his detentions have never resulted in any case against him and, despite his claim to have been photographed and finger-printed, are not likely to have been recorded other than locally if at all. It is likely on return that the appellant will be found to be a draft evader and will be subject to prosecution and punishment as a draft evader. On the basis of my findings above, however, there would be no reason for the appellant to be suspected of any separatist or terrorist support or sympathies. He does not appear ever to have been connected with his PKK cousin, even though he said that his family were considered to be rebels. However, on the basis that this view was taken generally by the authorities, it is unlikely that the appellant would have been released from his detention without conditions if at all.
29 In summary, therefore, whilst I find that the appellant has suffered past persecution as a result of his detention and mistreatment, the authorities do not have any ongoing interest in the appellant either by virtue of his political views or his ethnicity, particularly if the appellant remains in Istanbul. Should he return to the Tunceli area, however, there is a real risk that he would suffer similar persecution as in the past due to the continuing presence of the security forces in the area and the heightened tensions following the war in Iraq. As far as risk on return to Istanbul is concerned whilst the appellant is an Alevi Kurd and may suffer discrimination and harassment, I do not consider that the authorities have any interest in him for his political views or because he is a supporter of TIKKO. It is unlikely that his past detentions have been recorded or would show up on the GBTS database. He would be picked up as a draft evader and may be detained and passed to the military authorities because of this or released and ordered to report but I do not find that anything else would be recorded on the GBTS. Any punishment he received would not bring the appellant within the 1951 Convention."
"This appeal comes before the court by permission of Kay LJ. He was much influenced by the fact that, some ten months after an adjudicator had dismissed Mr Otshudi's appeal, another adjudicator, on almost identical evidence, had allowed his brother's appeal. For reasons to which I shall shortly come, this cannot furnish a ground of legal challenge ..... "
Neither counsel has disagreed with that position.
"It is an illustration, if an alarming one, of the fact that two conscientious decision-makers can come to opposite or divergent conclusions on the same evidence."
"16 Fearing further arrest by the authorities and ill-treatment under interrogation for his political sympathies and support, the appellant contacted an agent and with money provided by the appellant's father, secured a passport and made personal application, and interview, at the British Consulate to obtain a visitor's visa."
He then left Turkey and travelled to the United Kingdom.
"24 I further find that, since his arrival in the United Kingdom, he has taken an active part in political demonstrations against the Turkish state outside the Turkish Embassy and that he has been observed and photographed by Embassy staff and that this evidence was not challenged by the respondent's representative."
That is not the position for this claimant.
"Apart from the fact that I am satisfied that the defendant has suffered past mistreatment because he is an Alevi Kurd who lived in an area of Turkey that supported the Kurdish armed struggle, the witnesses' evidence does not add much weight to the appellant's claim."
"All of his uncle's brothers had been accepted as refugees in the UK. If he now returned to Turkey he would be persecuted because of his political activities by the police, gendarmerie and special police. They labeled him and his family as separatists and terrorists. His mother's cousin, Ali Balut, was involved in the armed struggle and another cousin, Yeter Guzel, had been imprisoned as a member of TIKKO. Her brother, Murat, was a TIKKO guerilla. Another cousin, Gumut Balut, was a PKK guerilla. He is a son of the appellant's maternal uncle, Davut Balut. Ali Balut was Yilmaz Balut's brother."
"27 An important question is how far this appellant is considered by the Turkish authorities to be suspected of separatist sympathies because of his family connections. From the evidence it would appear that this appellant has not shown any more than that he was a Kurd living in the wrong area of Turkey when he, along with other local young men, were subjected to regular round-ups and periods of detention and mistreatment because they were Kurds. I am not satisfied that this appellant would be seen as a member of a family where other members were PKK guerillas. There is no evidence from his past detentions that this has featured prominently in his arrests. He himself has never proclaimed PKK sympathies and there is nothing to link him to TIKKO ..... "
"28 ..... On the basis of my findings above, however, there would be no reason for the appellant to be suspected of any separatist or terrorist support or sympathies. He does not appear ever to have been connected with his PKK cousin, even though he said that his family were considered to be rebels .....
29 ..... Should he return to the Tunceli area, however, there is a risk that he would suffer similar persecution as in the past due to the continuing presence of the security forces in the area and the heightened tensions following the war in Iraq. As far as risk on return to Istanbul is concerned whilst the appellant is an Alevi Kurd and may suffer discrimination and harassment, I do not consider that the authorities have any interest in him for his political views or because he is a supporter of TIKKO ..... "
" ..... when assessing the viability of internal relocation, on the basis that an individual's material history will in broad terms become known to the authorities at the airport and in his new area when he settles, either through registration with the local Mukhtar or if he comes to the attention for any reason of the police there. The issue is whether that record would be reasonably likely to lead to persecution outside his home area."
It is right that the adjudicator did not ask herself that question. But in my judgment she did decide that this claimant would not be seen as from a family of PKK members. She concluded that he did not have links to other political organisations. He had not been arrested for distributing leaflets. She concluded that there was no reason to suspect him of terrorist sympathies.