File
No: SC/2/2002
Date
of Judgment: 2nd July 2004
SPECIAL IMMIGRATION APPEALS COMMISSION
Before
The Honourable Mr
Justice Ouseley
Mr G Warr
Mr J Mitchell
G
APPELLANT
and
SECRETARY OF STATE
FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT
RESPONDENT
FIRST OPEN
REVIEW JUDGEMENT
- This is the open determination
on the first review of the certificate issued by the Secretary of State
for the Home Department in the case of G under section 21(1) of the
Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001. His appeal, as with those of
seven others, was dismissed by the Commission in a determination handed
down on 29th October 2003. Section 26 (2)(a) requires that the
Commission hold a first review of the certificate as soon as is
reasonably practicable after the expiry of six months after the appeal was
finally determined.
- For the purpose of this review,
the SSHD sought and was granted an extension of time for putting in
written submissions as the person certified had put in no material as
required by Rule 24 of the SIAC Procedure Rules 2003 and he had tried
unsuccessfully at that stage to ascertain in the case of those persons
represented by Birnberg Pierce whether they were going to submit material
for him to reply to as envisaged by the Rules. Tyndallwoods who represented
C and D told the commission in a letter dated 28th April 2004 that they did not intend to participate in the review process on behalf of their
clients because the whole SIAC procedure was unfair. In the event no
material was received from any person certified either before the SSHD’s
material was submitted or after.
- We point out that the SSHD is
under an obligation, regardless of whether or not the person certified
puts in material, to put in material which satisfies the requirements of
rule 24(3) within the time limit, i.e. 14 days before the review is due to
commence. Whether or not that means that the person certified can then
reply to it by way of his main evidence, which we accept is not what the
Rules envisage, the obligation on the SSHD is clear.
- The material which the SSHD
must put in appears from Rule 24(3): it must give reason for the
continuation of the certificate, any fresh evidence upon which he relies
for its continuation, and confirmation that any previously given evidence
upon which he continues to rely remains true. This is a duty of continuing
scrutiny upon him.
- The SSHD filed updated generic
open and closed material and updated open and closed individual material
in the case of each person certified. He also provided written
submissions. As we have said we received nothing from any of the persons
certified.
- As the Rules envisage we
considered the reviews in each case on paper, reading or re-reading the
earlier open and closed generic and individual determinations and the
updated material. We are producing our decision in the form of an open and
closed generic judgment, which will be updates to the first generic
judgment and will form part of the overall individual judgment, and
individual open and closed judgments. This repeats the format adopted for
the appeals.
- We start our consideration of
the material on the basis that it is not our task, and could not be, to
consider whether or not the earlier judgments on the material before the
Commission were correct on the merits. We have to examine the new material
to see if it, together with the earlier material as analysed in the
judgments, shows there to be a continuing basis for maintaining the
certificate, or whether there is significant new material showing either
that those earlier conclusions were wrong or that circumstances have
changed so that now the certificate should not be maintained.
- The updated open generic
material, as we explain in the first review update to the open generic
judgment, continues to show that there is a direct terrorist threat to the
United Kingdom from a group or groups of largely North African Islamic
extremists, linked in various ways to Al Qa’eda.
- G was released on bail on 22 April 2004 on strict conditions, which amount to house arrest with further controls.
But in granting bail, the Commission did not revise its view as to the
strength of the grounds for believing that he was an international
terrorist and a threat to national security. The threat could be managed
proportionately in his case in view of his severe mental illness. That
however is no reason to cancel the Certificate. There might be
circumstances in which he breaches the terms of his bail or for other
reasons it was necessary to revoke it. The need for the certificate to
continue must depend on whether the terms of the statute and of the
derogation continue to be met.
- A number of his contacts remain
at large including some who are regarded as actively involved in terrorist
planning. There is nothing to suggest that his mental illness has
diminished his commitment to the extremist Islamic cause; he has the
experience and capacity to involve himself once more in extremist
activity. The bail restraints on him are essential; those are imposed
pursuant to his certification and the SIAC dismissal of his appeal against
it. The certificate is properly maintained.
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY
CHAIRMAN