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 >> MT, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2024] EWHC 640 (Admin) (22 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/640.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 640 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
THE KING on the application of MT |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Ms Sian Reeves (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 5th March 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Antony Dunne (sitting as a Judge of the High Court):
Introduction
Factual background and procedural history
Grounds of review and permission to apply for judicial review
"3. MT contends that IECA's decision is unlawful in that in finding that MT was not recruited for the purposes of exploitation, the IECA has confined her analysis to MT's work on the construction site. MT's case is that the unpaid work on the construction site made him vulnerable. His employers intended to exploit him by forcing him into drug dealing. The IECA discounts consideration of this because MT escaped before he was exploited. MT contends that this approach errs in law.".
"4. The SCA concluded, however, that the Claimant was not recruited for the purpose of exploitation. The SCA reason given for that conclusion was in essence that the Claimant chose to work until he was not paid, and then he decided to leave; and that he successfully resisted the employer's attempt to make him sell drugs (and never did so).
5. In my judgment it is arguable that this reasoning failed properly to grapple with the key question, i.e. the purpose of the employer, in the context of the factual background that had already been accepted as being true and the other findings about how the Claimant had been recruited and treated."
The Claimant's account
"You are [MT], a male national of Albania, born on 24.07.1995. You were looking for work in Shkoder, Albania. You were offered a job in construction and agreed to work 9-10 hours a day, for €20 a day. You started work in November 2021 and worked in construction for approximately for 5-6 months. You worked for as long as they asked you to and you finished around 6-7 and then were given permission to go back home. You would plaster and carry rocks around the site. You worked every day of the week and only received a 20-minute break per day. Often, you were forced to work an extra 1-2 hours at the end of the day before being allowed to go home. You used your own tools as you were not provided with any tools. You asked for your money every month and your employer would make excuses, telling you, you would be paid next month. You continued to work for your employer as you thought you would eventually be paid. You were informed there were others who did not receive their salary. You were not given any food to eat or any money to buy food and brought your own food to work from home. You were beaten once when you asked for money, and your employer attempted to make you sell drugs, but you refused and decided to leave. Your employer threatened you to come back and told you, if you did not return you would owe €15,000. You chose not to return to work. Your employer threatened you and then you decided to leave Albania."
"19. It had been such a long time since I had any money, I still had not given any money to my mother and I did not know what to do. I was scared because I did not know what was going to happen and what they would do to me. I was so frightened that they would find and beat me again.
20. My employer began to continuously call me and threaten me. I was told that if I did not agree to sell the drugs, I owed him 15,000€. He told me it was pointless and I had nowhere to go.
21. Consequently, I changed my telephone number so that he could not contact me anymore. Despite this, he discovered my new number and continued to harass and threaten me. I was told that I could not escape him and anywhere he went, he would be able to find me.
22. Due to the threats that I was receiving, I knew I had to flee Albania. Albania is the kind of country where everyone knows your business, and you have to register to do anything, so I knew that if I tried to go to a different part of the country, he would find me. He had already traced my phone number. I was terrified for my life. I was also scared that they would harm my family as they harmed me, especially as I was living with my mother in Albania."
The Negative reasonable grounds decision of the IECA on 14th September 2022
"The Reasonable Grounds decision applies the standard of proof 'I suspect but cannot prove'. This means that to accept your account, it needs to be suspected that your version of events occurred as claimed and that these events constitute modern slavery (human trafficking and or slavery, servitude and forced / compulsory labour).
Careful consideration has been given to the assessment of the available information in your case. Looking at the available sources of information [as listed earlier in the decision], it is recognised that you have been broadly consistent in your account and there are not considered to be any significant credibility concerns with your account.
Whilst your account is accepted applying the standard of proof 'I suspect but cannot prove', the consideration below explains why the events are not deemed to constitute modern slavery (human trafficking and or slavery, servitude and forced / compulsory labour).
CONSIDERATION
HUMAN TRAFFICKING
In order for a Reasonable Grounds decision to be made, the facts of your case have been considered in line with the definition of trafficking above. The following is noted:
Incident 1: Construction work in Albania 2021
Action – part 'a'
In order to be considered to meet part 'a' you must have been subjected to an act of transportation/recruitment/transfer/harbouring/receipt. You said you were looking for work in Albania to support your family. You worked in construction site in Shkoder, Albanian, you agreed to work 9-10 hours a day for €20 a day. It is, therefore, considered that you were subjected to an act of recruitment.
Means - part 'b'
In order to be considered a victim of trafficking you must have been transported / recruited / transferred / harboured / received: "by means of threat or use of force or other form of coercion/of abduction/of fraud/of deception/of abuse of power/of a position of vulnerability/of giving or receiving payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person". You said you worked for as long as they asked you and you finished around 6-7 and were allowed to go back home. You were not paid for the work during your time in construction. You were subjected to beating when you asked for your salary and received threats to return to work. You decided not to return to work, subsequently you employer called you and threatened you of €15,000 debt.
It is, therefore, considered that you experienced a threat or use of force and deception
Purpose – part 'c'
In applying part 'c' consideration must be given to whether you were recruited/transported/transferred/harboured/received for the purpose of exploitation.
The description of forced labour is contained in the decision annex attached to this letter.
You said you were offered a job in construction and agreed to work 9-10 hours a day for €20 a day. You worked for 5-6 months and were not paid for the time you worked. When you asked for your salary every month and your employer would tell you, you would be paid next month. You chose to continue work for your employer because you hoped that you would eventually be paid.
After 6 months you went to your employer to ask for your money, you were subjected to beating when you asked for your money, and your employer attempted you to sell drugs, but you refused and decided to leave. You then began to receive threats from your employer to return to work or you would have €15,000 debt.
It is noted that you employer informed you that you would be paid for the work which you undertook. However, when you asked to be paid your employer informed you that his money was tied up but, you would be paid. There were others who worked with you who were also not being paid, you were not alone in this situation.
You made the conscious choice to continue working due to economic necessity as you have asserted you needed to work due to your home situation. You continued working in the hope of payment and made the choice to not return to work after you were beaten when asking for payment. It is therefore considered that you voluntarily remained working for your employer out of economic necessity and when you realised that you would receive no payment you left the employment.
Furthermore, you were not compelled to work, and you were not under any form of menace of penalty and could have left the job at any time. After you had finished your work at the end of the day you were allowed to go home. However, you choose to continue to work for the company as you were under the illusion that you would be paid end of each month as promised, and this was not the case.
Additionally, you state that your employer attempted to make you sell drugs, but you refused and decided to leave. It is clear to note that you did not sell drugs as when you were asked to sell drugs, you were not willing to do so and therefore you left the employment, changed your number, and then subsequently left the country to seek out employment abroad.
It is, therefore, considered that you were not subjected to forced labour or forced criminality, nor was there an intention to subject you to this.
CONSIDERATION: SLAVERY, SERVITUDE AND FORCED OR COMPULSORY LABOUR
As you do not meet the three constituent elements of trafficking above, it is also considered that you do not meet the two constituent parts of the definition of slavery, servitude and forced or compulsory labour.
SUMMARY
As you have not met either of the above, it is not necessary to consider whether you require a period of recovery and reflection as per the Competent Authority guidance.
DECISION
Taken cumulatively, there are not considered to be reasonable grounds to believe that you were trafficked within Albania and that you are a victim of modern slavery (human trafficking and or slavery, servitude, or forced/compulsory labour).
Consequently, a negative Reasonable Grounds decision has been made."
"viii) It is considered that the intention of the employer was not to groom your client, but to recruit him in order to offer construction work that he chose to enter into and continue doing over a period of time. The employer then changed the work on offer to that of selling drugs; it is not considered that the period of construction work was designed to groom your client for the role of selling drugs because of the level of freedom afforded to the (sic,) him to attend work voluntarily due to his economic necessity."
Legal and Policy framework
(a) The definition of modern slavery
"the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation. Exploitation shall include, at a minimum, the exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs;"
"4. In the definition, trafficking in human beings consists in a combination of three basic components, each to be found in a list given in the definition: –the action of: "recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons"; –by means of: "the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person"; –for the purpose of exploitation, which includes "at a minimum, the exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs".
75. Trafficking in human beings is a combination of these constituents and not the constituents taken in isolation. For instance, "harbouring" of persons (action) involving the "threat or use of force" (means) for "forced labour" (purpose) is conduct that is to be treated as trafficking in human beings. Similarly, recruitment of persons (action) by deceit (means) for exploitation of prostitution (purpose).
76. For there to be trafficking in human beings ingredients from each of the three categories (action, means, purpose) must be present together…
78. The actions the Convention is concerned with are "recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons". The definition endeavours to encompass the whole sequence of actions that leads to exploitation of the victim."
"87 Under the definition, it is not necessary that someone has been exploited for there to be trafficking in human beings. It is enough that they have been subjected to one of the actions referred to in the definition and by one of the means specified "for the purpose of" exploitation. Trafficking in human beings is consequently present before the victim's actual exploitation."
"Trafficked for the 'purpose of exploitation' – what if someone hasn't yet been exploited?
2.23. Under the Convention on action Against Trafficking in Human Beings (ECAT), a person is a 'victim' even if they haven't been exploited yet, for example because a police raid takes place before the exploitation happens.
2.24. This is because, under the definition of trafficking, trafficking occurs once certain acts are carried out for the purpose of exploitation. So, it is the purpose which is key, rather than whether or not exploitation has actually occurred. Even if the UK authorities intervene and prevent exploitation taking place in the UK, victims may have experienced serious trauma in their home country or on the way to the UK and may still be in need of support."
"The correct principles were that:
(1) any act of exploitation must be closely linked to the other acts which make up the elements of the trafficking definition;
(2) an application of the definition of trafficking which allows experiences which are disparate in time to be shoehorned together into a trafficking case risks broadening the definition of trafficking until it is rendered hopelessly broad;
(3) where the line is to be drawn is a question of fact and degree to be decided in each case."
"342. In our view only limited general guidance can be given on the nexus issue. The concept of "purpose" must be applied as a matter of ordinary language and common sense, having regard to what may reasonably be supposed to be the intended scope of ECAT: in that regard there is real force in Mr Irwin's second principle, though we should not be taken to be endorsing its precise wording. Taking that approach to a case involving FGM (or, more accurately, taking a child away to be subjected to FGM), we accept Mr Irwin's submission that it is necessary to assess the degree of the connection between the performing of the FGM and the intention (if proved) to force the child into marriage in any particular case. It is easy enough at either extreme. If, say, the intended husband had said that he wanted to marry the child in question but that she must undergo FGM first, it would be a natural use of language, and in accordance with the aims of ECAT, to describe the FGM (or, rather, any associated taking away) as being for the purpose of the forced marriage (which, as already established, constitutes exploitation). At the other extreme, if the evidence were only that in a particular culture (1) girls were routinely taken away and subjected to FGM at a young age in order to render them marriageable and (2) girls and women are generally given no choice about who they have to marry, we do not think that that it would be natural to describe the FGM, or the taking away, as being done for the purpose of exploitation. In between those two extremes there will be a wide variety of circumstances, and it would not be appropriate for us to offer guidance divorced from the particular facts found. The distinction between the two cases could be characterised in terms of the degree of proximacy (the judge's term) or closeness (Mr Irwin's) of the act to the intended exploitation; but we are wary of introducing glosses of this kind which may distract decision-makers from the language of article 4 (a) itself. We certainly think that it is dangerous to substitute a test of "immediacy": the distance of time between the act and any possible future exploitation will be relevant to an assessment of whether the one is done for the purpose of the other, but it cannot be the touchstone."
(b) The process of identifying victims of modern slavery
"14.50. The test that competent authority staff must apply is whether the statement:
'I suspect but cannot prove' the person is a victim of modern slavery (human trafficking or slavery, servitude, or forced or compulsory labour)'
• is true; or
• whether a reasonable person having regard to the information in the mind of the decision maker, would think there are Reasonable Grounds to believe the individual is a victim of modern slavery (human trafficking or slavery, servitude or forced or compulsory labour."
The parties submissions
The Claimant
(a) The IECA's reason for discounting the attempt to sell drugs is on the basis that the exploitation had not yet happened. The Claimant submits that this approach is unlawful, in reliance on paragraph 87 of the ECAT Explanatory Report and the MSA guidance because the definition of "purpose of exploitation" does not require exploitation to have taken place and that trafficking in human beings is consequently present before the victim's actual exploitation.
(b) The Defendant's claim that the sentence in its decision letter "that you were not subjected to forced labour or forced criminality, nor was there an intention to subject you to this" refers to the intention to subject the Claimant to forced criminality is irrational. This interpretation is said to be inconsistent with the previous statement in the decision letter "You were beaten once when you asked for money, and your employer attempted to make you sell drugs" because the plain meaning of this sentence is that the employer intended to subject the Claimant to forced Criminality. In oral submissions the Claimant said that the act of recruitment was a continuing one and therefore the attempt to force the Claimant to supply drugs was contemporaneous with the act of recruitment. The employer must therefore have had the intention to force the Claimant into criminality and exploit him at the same time as he was recruited.
(c) The Defendant's reliance upon the reasoning set out in the PAP response dated 19 December 2022 referred to in paragraph 13 above wants of reason. It is submitted, the employer did not 'change the work on offer'. Instead, when the Claimant tried to leave, and/or tried to ask for the money he was due, the Employer threatened to force him into criminality. He intended to force him into criminality, but was thwarted by the Claimant's escape. The threat of drug dealing was enforced by the menace of a penalty. While the unpaid work was essential to understanding the context and background to the alleged exploitation, it was the threat of forced criminality which the Claimant contends makes out the "for the purposes of exploitation" element of the definition.
(d) The Defendant's reference to the case of MN & IXU and the nexus issue should be disregarded. First it is claimed there was no reference to the "nexus" issue in the decision letter. Second, the recruitment, deprivation of his wages, and intention to force him into criminality were all part of a continuing chain of events for the purposes of exploiting him.
The Defendant
(a) First, that the IECA has "confined her analysis to MT's work on the construction site".
(b) Second, it is said that the IECA has discounted consideration of his employer's intention to exploit him by forcing him into selling drugs because the Claimant escaped before he was exploited. The Claimant contends that this is an error of law because the component elements of trafficking may be present before actual exploitation, by reference to §87 of the Explanatory Report to ECAT.
"It is, therefore, considered that you were not subjected to forced labour or forced criminality, nor was there an intention to subject you to this."
Discussion and conclusions
The Defendant unlawfully discounted the attempt to force the Claimant to supply drugs (Paragraph 28(a))
"Furthermore, you were not compelled to work, and you were not under any form of menace of penalty and could have left the job at any time. After you had finished your work at the end of the day you were allowed to go home. However, you choose to continue to work for the company as you were under the illusion that you would be paid end of each month as promised, and this was not the case.
Additionally, you state that your employer attempted to make you sell drugs, but you refused and decided to leave. It is clear to note that you did not sell drugs as when you were asked to sell drugs, you were not willing to do so and therefore you left the employment, changed your number, and then subsequently left the country to seek out employment abroad."
"It is, therefore, considered that you were not subjected to forced labour or forced criminality, nor was there an intention to subject you to this." (my emphasis)
The Defendant could not rationally reach the conclusion there was no intention to exploit the Claimant (Paragraphs 28(b), (c) and (d))
"The concept of "purpose" must be applied as a matter of ordinary language and common sense, having regard to what may reasonably be supposed to be the intended scope of ECAT"
and
"We certainly think that it is dangerous to substitute a test of "immediacy": the distance of time between the act and any possible future exploitation will be relevant to an assessment of whether the one is done for the purpose of the other, but it cannot be the touchstone"
I have not applied any test of "immediacy" or "nexus" in reaching my conclusions.
Conclusion