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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Islam, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2019] EWHC 2169 (Admin) (07 August 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/2169.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2169 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of Abdullah Muhammad Rafiqul Islam |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
David Blundell (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 26 June 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE PEPPERALL :
THE FACTS
"As the Secretary of State, I hereby give notice in accordance with section 40(5) of the British Nationality Act 1981 that I intend to have an order made to deprive you, Ashraf Mahmud Islam, of your British citizenship under section 40(2) of the Act. This is because it would be conducive to the public good to do so.
The reason for the decision is that it is assessed that you are a British/Bangladeshi dual national who has travelled to Syria and is aligned with ISIL. It is assessed that your return to the UK would present a risk to the national security of the United Kingdom.
In accord with section 40(4) of the British Nationality Act 1981, I am satisfied that such an order will not make you stateless.
Further, I certify that pursuant to section 40A(2) of the British Nationality Act 1981, my decision has been taken in part reliance on information which, in my opinion, should not be made public in the interest of national security and because disclosure would be contrary to the public interest.
I am also giving you notice of your right of appeal against the decision to make a deprivation order, under section 2B of the Special Immigration Appeals Commission Act 1997. Under rule 8(1)(b)(ii) of the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (Procedure) Rules 2003 (as amended) any notice of appeal must be given to the Commission no later than 28 days after you have been served with the notice. I attach an appeal form in case you wish to exercise this right.
The order under section 40(2) of the British Nationality Act 1981 depriving you of your British citizenship will be made after you have been served with this notice. I will endeavour to ensure a copy is served on you."
"Please do whatever you can and contact whoever you can to help. It's been four months for me here and no one knows what's happening."
JUDICIAL REVIEW
17.1 The core complaint remains the deprivation decision and the Secretary of State's alleged failure to implement a "proper policy" in relation to the deprivation of citizenship of British nationals who are overseas and at real risk of treatment in breach of their human rights.
17.2 Complaint is also made that the Home Office served the notice in Bangladesh. It is argued that the Home Secretary had no power to issue the decision while Ashraf was not in the United Kingdom. The father argues that maintaining the deprivation decision while Ashraf is detained overseas by a non-state armed group is unreasonable, arbitrary and disproportionate. He also complains that the Secretary of State failed to take all reasonable steps to bring the deprivation decision to Ashraf's attention in order that he could appeal to SIAC.
17.3 Further, the father complains about the Home Secretary's failure to facilitate or take proper steps to return Ashraf to the United Kingdom.
"6) An order directing the [Home Secretary], his servants or agents (including the Foreign Office) to locate and facilitate the Claimant's son's return or admission to the UK on the basis that he is a British/Union citizen and/or for the purposes [of] allowing him to present his appeal to SIAC.
7) An order directing the [Home Secretary], his servants or agents (including through the Foreign Office) to take all reasonable steps to arrange communication contact between the Claimant, the Claimant's solicitors and his son."
PRELIMINARY MATTERS
19.1 Standing: It disputes Mr Islam's standing to challenge the deprivation decision. It argues that any claim should be made by Ashraf and not his father.
19.2 Time: This being a challenge to a decision made on 17 July 2017, the Home Secretary contends that it is obviously out of time.
19.3 Alternative remedy: Further, the Home Secretary argues that Ashraf has an alternative remedy, namely an appeal against the deprivation decision to SIAC.
STANDING
21.1 The deprivation decision:
a) This was a decision directly in respect of Ashraf Islam. He is the obvious claimant.
b) The father is not, however, a "meddlesome busybody" (to use the expression coined by Sir John Donaldson MR in R v. Monopolies & Mergers Commission, ex parte Argyll Group plc [1986] 1 WLR 763, at 773), but a loving father who is very deeply affected by the issues that he seeks to litigate. While it would be open to the court at a final hearing of this claim to deny Mr Islam any relief on the basis that he lacked standing, I do not consider that it would be appropriate to shut him out from arguing these serious issues purely on the basis of standing at the permission stage.
21.2 The policy grounds: Mr Islam's claim is, however, somewhat broader. In my judgment, he plainly has a proper interest in challenging the alleged policy of inaction in repatriating British ISIL suspects.
TIME
22.1 First, the claim also seeks to challenge the continuing failure to take any steps to repatriate Ashraf and the continuing lack of consular assistance. Such claim is not out of time.
22.2 Secondly, on the unusual facts of this case, I should not refuse permission purely on the basis of time even if this claim were limited to a challenge to the deprivation decision:
a) While, like Elisabeth Laing J, I infer that Mr Islam knew of the deprivation decision by the end of July 2017, he did not at that stage have any information as to his son's whereabouts. He had last heard from him two years earlier and no doubt feared that he had been killed.
b) The father next heard from Ashraf in May 2018. Upon doing so and receiving his son's plea for assistance through the Red Cross, Mr Islam brought appeal proceedings in SIAC. It is difficult to criticise that decision when the Home Secretary's own case is that judicial review is inappropriate because of the availability of an alternative remedy through SIAC.
c) These proceedings were brought promptly upon SIAC's decision that it could not consider an appeal pursued by Mr Islam upon behalf of his son.
ALTERNATIVE REMEDY
THE SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
"The Claimant's substantive arguments have no merit. But for the reasons set out above [namely the arguments of standing, time and alternative remedy], the Secretary of State does not further respond to them here."
THE DEPRIVATION DECISION
The statutory framework
"The Secretary of State may by order deprive a person of a citizenship status if the Secretary of State is satisfied that deprivation is conducive to the public good."
"depriving in the public interest on the grounds of involvement in terrorism, espionage, serious organised crime, war crimes or unacceptable behaviours"
"(4) The Secretary of State may not make an order under subsection (2) if he is satisfied that the order would make a person stateless.
(4A) But that does not prevent the Secretary of State from making an order under subsection (2) to deprive a person of a citizenship status if–
(a) the citizenship status results from the person's naturalisation,
(b) the Secretary of State is satisfied that the deprivation is conducive to the public good because the person, while having citizenship status, has conducted him or herself in a manner which is seriously prejudicial to the vital interests of the United Kingdom, any of the Islands or any British overseas territory, and
(c) the Secretary of State has reasonable grounds for believing that the person is able, under the law of a country or territory outside the United Kingdom, to become a national of such a country or territory.
(5) Before making an order under this section in respect of a person the Secretary of State must give the person written notice specifying –
(a) that the Secretary of State has decided to make an order, and
(b) the reasons for the order, and
(c) the person's right of appeal under section 40A(1) or under section 2B of the Special Immigration Appeals Commission Act 1997.
Conducive to the public good
"A State Party may not provide in its internal law for the loss of its nationality ex lege or at the initiative of the State Party except in the following cases:
(a) voluntary acquisition of another nationality;
(b) acquisition of the nationality of the State Party by means of fraudulent conduct, false information or concealment of any relevant fact attributable to the applicant;
(c) voluntary service in a foreign military force;
(d) conduct seriously prejudicial to the vital interests of the State Party;
(e) lack of a genuine link between the State Party and a national habitually residing abroad;
(f) where it is established during the minority of a child that the preconditions laid down by internal law which led to the ex lege acquisition of the nationality of the State Party are no longer fulfilled;
(g) adoption of a child if the child acquires or possesses the foreign nationality of one or both of the adopting parents."
Statelessness
Territorial limits of s.40
"(1) Where it is proposed to make an order under section 40 of the Act depriving a person of a citizenship status, the notice required by section 40(5) of the Act to be given to the person may be – …
(f) Sent by post, whether or not delivery or receipt is recorded; …
(3) Where the notice is sent under any one or more of paragraphs (1)(c) to (g), it must be sent –
(a) to the address for correspondence provided by the person's representative; or
(b) where no such address has been provided, the person's last known address or the address of their representative.
(4) Where –
(a) the person's whereabouts are not known; and
(b) either –
(i) no address has been provided for correspondence and the Secretary of State does not know of any address which the person has used in the past; or
(ii) the address provided to the Secretary of State is defective, false or no longer in use by the person; and
(c) no representative appears to be acting for the person or the address provided in respect of that representative is defective, false or no longer used by the representative,
the notice shall be deemed to have been given when the Secretary of State enters a record of the above circumstances and places the notice or a copy of it on the person's file.
(5) A notice required to be given by section 40(5) of the Act is, unless the contrary is proved, deemed to have been given – …
(e) where the notice is sent by post from or to a place outside the United Kingdom, on the twenty-eighth day after the day on which it is sent; …"
36.1 Notice of a proposed deprivation decision can be sent by post: reg. 10(1)(f).
36.2 Where notice is sent by post, it must be sent to the person's last-known address unless the person or his representative has provided an alternative address for correspondence: reg. 10(3).
36.3 Since it is the father's own case that Ashraf's last-known address was at the family home in Dhaka and there is no evidence that an alternative address was provided, the Home Secretary was therefore required to send her decision to Dhaka.
39.1 The construction point is hopeless. Regulation 10(5)(e) clearly envisages that notice can be given to a citizen while he or she is overseas.
39.2 There is nothing in s.41, under which the regulations were made, or otherwise in the 1981 Act to prevent notice from being served on a citizen who is overseas.
39.3 There is no doubt that, however undesirable it might be to have former ISIL combatants and supporters return to the United Kingdom, the Home Secretary's power to deprive such persons of their British citizenship is limited by the overarching principle in both domestic and international law that, save where s.40(4A) applies, no one can thereby be rendered stateless. Thus, the safety valve of s.40(4) prevents the power from being exercised so as to render a citizen stateless. If there are grounds for arguing that Ashraf will be rendered stateless then, as I have already observed, that is a matter that SIAC will consider on any appeal that he brings against the deprivation decision.
39.4 Syria has not attempted to deport Ashraf, still less has the United Kingdom refused to accept Syria's right to deport him to the UK. If Syria seeks to deport Ashraf and Bangladesh will not take him, then, arguably, the UK may have to take him. That point has not, however, arisen.
39.5 The possibility that Syria might in due course seek to deport Ashraf and the further possibility that Bangladesh might refuse to take him do not lead to the conclusion that regulation 10 is ultra vires. As I have already observed, the United Kingdom will have to deal with that situation if it arises but it does not render unlawful the exercise of the Home Secretary's powers under s.40(2) while Ashraf was overseas.
Discrimination
LACK OF ACTION TO REPATRIATE ASHRAF
42.1 that he can face justice in the United Kingdom;
42.2 to protect him from breaches of his human rights; and
42.3 in order effectively to challenge the deprivation decision.
"British nationals detained abroad are subject to local jurisdiction wherever they commit their crimes. We respect the right of other countries to decide their own sentencing guidelines in accordance with their laws, customs and culture – just as we would ask them to do for us."
Unsurprisingly, it is not alleged that such policy is unlawful.
47.1 There is no appeal currently before SIAC.
47.2 Ashraf has not sought, and is not currently in a position to seek, to enter the United Kingdom. Consequently, the Home Secretary has not refused leave to enter in order to allow Ashraf to prosecute any such appeal.
In any event, as the Court of Appeal demonstrated in R (W2) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department [2017] EWCA Civ 2146; [2018] 1 WLR 2380, an appeal to SIAC pursuant to s.2 of the Special Immigration Appeals Commission Act 1997 against the refusal of such leave provides an effective alternative remedy. It is not therefore a matter for this court.
MR ISLAM'S ARTICLE 8 CLAIM
"136. Even if the ECHR contemplates a parent's claim based on the treatment of the child outside the jurisdiction of the ECHR, the parent must show the existence of 'special factors'. Those must give the suffering a dimension and character distinct from the emotional stress which is inevitably caused to relatives of the victim of a serious human rights violation.
137. In our view such factors are absent in this case. First, Mr El Sheikh is an adult, not a child, who had left the family home long before the events in question. Secondly, he chose to leave his home in order to engage in jihad. He chose to put his life at risk in one of the most violent conflicts in recent history. Thirdly, the claimant has had only limited contact with her son since 2012. The circumstances could scarcely be further removed from those in cases like Mayeka where the child was five years old and was detained and deported alone by the contracting state.
138. The claim based on article 3 has no foundation.
139. In our view, the case fares no better under article 8. The claimant and her son have been apart since 2012 entirely as a result of his actions. His life has been in peril as a result of his own actions. The claimant argues that because the concept of private life includes both 'a person's physical and psychological integrity', her suffering breaches her article 8 rights. The prospect of her son's prosecution, possible conviction and execution in the US causes her psychological suffering.
140. The claimant cannot make good any claim that her son's treatment violates the ECHR. She must rely upon a positive obligation on the state to refrain from taking measures which cause her intense distress. Yet there is no 'direct and immediate link' between the measures and the claimant's private and/or family life (Botta v. Italy [1998] 26 EHRR at [33]-[35]). As Sir James submits, here there are various causes for the claimant's distress, most noticeably the voluntary actions of her son. We reject the suggestion that the failure to secure assurances, when the alternative would leave Mr El Sheikh with an uncertain future in Syria or propel him to Guantanamo Bay, constitutes such a direct and immediate link for the purposes of article 8."
52.1 Ashraf is in detention in Syria and at risk of trial in the Middle East and the possible imposition of the death penalty entirely because of his own actions in travelling to Syria and engaging in jihad.
52.2 He has no viable claim pursuant to the ECHR.
52.3 The only action taken by the Home Secretary in this case has been to deprive Ashraf of his British citizenship. He is not in peril in Syria because of that decision but because he is being held on suspicion of involvement in the ISIL insurgency.
52.4 There are no special factors that gives rise to an arguable breach of Mr Islam's Article 8 rights.
CONCLUSION