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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 >> SV (Passport Renewal) Sri Lanka [2003] UKIAT 00125 (31 October 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2003/00125.html Cite as: [2003] UKIAT 125, [2003] UKIAT 00125 |
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SV (Passport Renewal) Sri Lanka [2003] UKIAT 00125
Date of hearing: 13 October 2003
Date Determination notified: 31.10.03
Secretary of State for the Home Department | APPELLANT |
and | |
SV | RESPONDENT |
Miss C Bayati, of Counsel, instructed by M K Sri& Co, Solicitors, appeared on behalf of the Appellant.
Mr L Parker, a Senior Home Office Presenting Officer, appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
'This risk may be triggered by suspicions (on the part of the Security Forces) founded on various factual elements relating to the individual concerned, including the lack of identity documents, the lack of proper authorisation for residents and travel, the fact that the individual is a young Tamil from an "uncleared" area or the fact that the person has close family members who are or who have been involved with the LTTE.'
He asked us to note that the letter referred to:
'the fact that the person and the type has close family members who are who have been involved with the LTTE' .[the emphasis is ours]
'I find therefore that if the Appellant is returned to Sri Lanka, there is not a real risk that he (sic) will suffer a breach of his (sic) protected rights under Article 3. For the self same reason I find that there is not a real risk that she will suffer a breach of her protected rights under Article 8.'
(i) it is only the human rights of the Appellant that calls for consideration under section 65. This is because the Grounds of Appeal under Section 65 are restricted to the breaches of the human rights of the Appellant.
(ii) However, the impact of the removal of the Appellant's daughter is to be a factor to be taken into account in the balancing exercise. The human rights of the Appellant's daughter will only be relevant, if a breach of them impinges on the human rights of the Applicant.
(iii) We have noted AC relates to the right of family life under Article 8 and that Jack J made references to taking into account the impact of deportation on others with whom the deportee has a family relationship. In this appeal the Appellant and her daughter would (if removed) be removed together as a family unit.
'It was submitted that the applicant has established both a private and family life in the United Kingdom. She is 51 years of age and she has various medical problems for which she is receiving treatment. She has three children (two of whom have been in the United Kingdom since 1997) of 22, 20 and 18. The youngest, her daughter, is a dependant in this appeal. None of the children have ever lived in Sri Lanka and the Applicant herself has not lived there since 1978. The Applicant and her daughter have been in the United Kingdom since February 1998. She claimed asylum in May of that year. The Secretary of State for the Home Department took 3 years to decide her application for asylum and then a further 18 months for the appeal papers to be lodged at the IAA. All three children are in full-time education. The applicant owns her own house. They have many family members who are long settled in the UK although it is acknowledged that many of the family members are the Applicant's husband's family'.
Richard Chalkley
Vice President