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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Alam v. Secretary State Home Department [2003] ScotCS 110 (8 April 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2003/110.html Cite as: [2003] ScotCS 110 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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P989/01
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OPINION OF LORD BONOMY in the Petition of MOHAMMED KHORSHEJUL ALAM Petitioner; against SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT Respondent; for Judicial Review of Decisions of a Special Adjudicator dated 16 July 2001
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Petitioner: Devlin; Drummond Miller, W.S.
Respondent: Drummond; H. MacDiarmid
8 April 2003
"[48] The appellant has failed to establish that he has a history of harassment or ill-treatment amounting to persecution for a Convention reason. He has failed to establish that he is currently of interest to the Bangladesh Authorities. He has therefore failed to establish that there is a reasonable degree of likelihood that he would be persecuted for a Convention reason if returned to his own country."
The Adjudicator's reasons for coming to that conclusion are contained in the preceding section, "Assessment of the Appellant's Account", in paragraphs 42 to 47 of the determination.
"[44] The claim before me at its highest, showed that the appellant had a subjective fear of ill-treatment based on a number of uncertain events, namely if he were detained by the police, the Organising Secretary of the local Awami League was advised and choosing to act on the information, chose to gain access to him, having gained access the Awami League members chose to ill-treat him, and the police officers chose to turn a blind eye to any wrongdoing by the Awami League members."
That paragraph is not elegantly expressed. It is clear from the context, however, that the Adjudicator was recording what the petitioner feared might happen to him if he were to be detained. She is there expressing what the petitioner's case amounts to at its highest; that is what he believed might happen, but had not actually happened on any occasion.
"[46] The appellant's evidence about his activities and the beliefs of his party is scanty given the objective evidence contained in the Country reports and set out in paras 33-38 above. He failed to mention the halal or general strikes by the BNP. He failed to mention the December 1999 marches by opposition activists in the Chittagong and created instead the picture of a party losing supporters due to successful intimidation by the Awami League. I accept the respondent's submission that his lack of detail is not consistent with his assertion that he was an activist of interest to the Awami League and through them to the police.
[47] Taking into account the contents of the statement lodged, the oral evidence and the Asylum Interview Record I was not satisfied that the appellant was a credible witness. I accepted that he was a member of the BNP. Because the appellant demonstrated such a limited grasp of the political concepts of the party both in his oral evidence and at the Asylum Interview, I could not regard as credible his assertions that he had been an active Organising Secretary since 1995."
What the Adjudicator was plainly seeking was some evidence indicating a basis for concluding that the petitioner could be the subject of persecution were he to return to Bangladesh. She reviewed the material before her for some evidence that the petitioner had done something that so agitated his opponents that they wished to take physical measures against him. It was made plain by the respondent in the original decision letter that his claim to be an activist of interest to the Awami League was in issue. Having said at his asylum interview that he organised meetings, distributed work among members, like hiring a car and asking people to recruit members and inviting them for meetings, he added nothing in his evidence before the Adjudicator. His evidence was confined to "organising" meetings, albeit contrary to the wishes of his counterpart in the Awami League Party. He was able to specify no differences between the policies of the two parties. He made no mention of specific activities of the BNP that he was involved in and which would be likely to cause the Awami League to seek him out and take action against him. In these circumstances the Adjudicator was entitled, in my opinion, to conclude that the petitioner lacked the detailed knowledge that would be expected of any activist who would be of interest to an opponent intent on persecution. She had a substantial basis for doing so, and did not proceed on the fragile basis envisaged in Kananakaran at 469-470. The Adjudicator was, therefore, entitled to hold and be in no real doubt that the petitioner's evidence was not consistent with the claim that he was an activist of interest to an opponent intent upon persecution.