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United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> ME (Failed Asylum Seeker, Danian) Sudan [2002] UKIAT 00997 (05 April 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2002/00997.html Cite as: [2002] UKIAT 997, [2002] UKIAT 00997 |
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ME (Failed Asylum Seeker, Danian) Sudan [2002] UKIAT 00997
HX25996-2001
Date of hearing: 27 February 2002
Date Determination notified: 05 April 2002
ME | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
'For all these reasons I do not accept the Tribunal's conclusion that a refugee sur place who has acted in bad faith falls outwith the Geneva Convention and can be deported to his home country, notwithstanding that he has a genuine and well-founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason and there is a real risk that such persecution may take place. Although his credibility is likely to be low and his claim must be rigorously scrutinised, he is still entitled to the protection of the Convention, and this country is not entitled to disregard the provisions of the Convention by which it is bound, if it should turn out that he does indeed qualify for protection against refoulement at the time his application is considered.'
'I wish to end this judgement by saying that nothing in it should be read as giving any kind of green light to bogus asylum seekers. If the UNHCR guidance is followed in the vast majority of cases of the type I have been considered, the claim for asylum will be peremptorily dismissed without any real difficulty. It is only what Lee J describes as an extraordinary case that a genuine entitlement to protection from refoulement may arise, and in such a case the calim should be tested on the principal basis that I have set out in this judgment. It should not be rejected peremptorily on a basis that appears to have o sound foundation in international law.'
(a) The appellant had no political activity in the Sudan
(b) Her claim to have been persecuted in that country has been dismissed by the adjudicator as lacking in credibility. This finding has not been seriously challenged before us.
(c) The appellant arrived in this country two years after her husband's appeal against refusal of asylum had been dismissed and leave to appeal to the Tribunal had been refused.
(d) Her husband had been found to be lacking in credibility.
(e) Her husband has remained in this country since 1994 notwithstanding lack of proper immigration status and did not give evidence at the appellant's appeal.
'Accordingly, even if the applicant has created a claim to refugee status by resorting to opportunistic post-flight activities, it would not be right to deprive him of international protection and return him/her to his country of origin if it is established that the consequences of such return may result in such persecution for one of the reasons enumerated in the 1951 Convention. The following paragraph, when dealing with the right of that letter refers to "opportunistic actions" stated "for this reason the UNHCR would not object to a more stringent evaluation of the well-foundedness of a person's fear of persecution in cases involving opportunistic claims."
In this connection it should be borne in mind that opportunistic post-flight activities would not necessarily create a real risk of persecution in the claimant's home country, either because they will not come to the attention of the authorities of their country or because of the opportunistic nature of such activities will be apparent at all, including to those authorities.'