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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 >> D v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Ethiopia) [2003] UKIAT 00170 (11 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2003/00170.html Cite as: [2003] UKIAT 170, [2003] UKIAT 00170 |
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APPEAL No. [2003] UKIAT 00170 D (Ethiopia)
Date of hearing: 28 November 2003
Date Determination notified: 11 December 2003
APPELLANT | |
and | |
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | RESPONDENT |
This is an appeal by a citizen of Ethiopia against the decision of an adjudicator, Miss S I Bayne, sitting at Epsom, on 3 January, dismissing her appeal against refusal of leave to enter. The sole issue on which leave to appeal was granted on human rights grounds only related to the appellant's medical condition. The adjudicator dealt with that as follows:
39. I have carefully considered the medical evidence in this case in so far as her claim under Articles 3 and 8 of the ECHR are concerned. It is clear that the appellant's sustained injury to her eye on 12 July 2002 she was extremely vague as to how this injury was sustained but it has nevertheless resulted in the need for a Cornea graft which requires on-going treatment and close monitoring. I take account of the view of Mr Duguid that the appellant should not be repatriated until she had been monitored for a 6 month period.
40. I have considered the objective evidence with regard to the medical service in Ethiopia and I have taken into account the letter from the Ethiopian Health Support Association. The nature of this particular association was not explained to me but in any event, I find the contents of this letter do little more than substantiate the contents to the objective evidence. It is clear that medical facilities in Ethiopia are limited and it is clear that it is difficult to get proper treatment for many medical conditions. However, no reasons were given for the confusion of the EHSA but treatment is especially poor in the case of eye problems and I give little weight to this particular assertion.
41. I received no evidence to satisfy me to the requisite standard that the appellant's medical problems are of such severity that repatriation to Ethiopia would result in treatment such as to amount to an infringement of her rights under Article 3 of the ECHR. There is no evidence that she is likely to loose her eyesight. In fact the initial operation upon her eye was successful and although treatment is poorer in Ethiopia than in the UK there is no evidence to show that it is impossible to get treatment and as result her claim under Article 3 of the ECHR fails.
42. For the same reasons I find that there is no real risk of the appellant's right to physical and moral integrity under Article 8 of the ECHR being breached. In any event, the decision to refuse to grant leave to the appellant was made in the course of the lawful implementation of the United Kingdom Immigration Control and in these circumstances is not disproportionate.
The appellant first presented to the Western Eye Hospital on 12 July 2002 with a history of traumatic injury to the left eye apparently sustained while performing some DIY tasks. She was noted to have a full fitness corneal laceration on the right with evidence of Iris prolapse through the wound. We paused to note that the injury was to the appellant's right eye and not her left. She had primary wound repair performed on the same day. Her vision only improved to 1/60 Snellen in the ensuing few weeks and she required right pupilloplasty performed under general anaesthetic on 24 October 2002 after which her acuity improved to 6/36 Snellen.
Despite this efforts and despite the efforts of the therapeutic contact lens she was noted to still have a slight leak of aqueous fluid through her wound on 22 November 23002 and she underwent reparative full-thickness corneal graft on 4 December 2002, performed under general anaesthetic. She requires re-suturing after the graft on 17 November 2002. Since this time she has achieved a best vision of 1/6 improving to 6/36 Snellen through a pinhole. This is likely due to an irregular astigmatism induced by her initial injury and the subsequent grafting.
She has no evidence of any retinal pathology at present, and her eye is now stabilizing. She continues to use anti-glaucomatous and anti-inflammatory medication, once daily in the right eye, and she is due to be seen in early December 2003 in the eye clinic. In terms of improving her visual acuity in the future, she would, at the very least, require a rigid gas permeable contact lens to be fitted, and, indeed, may require further surgery in order to improve the vision. It is unlikely that her vision in the right eye will ever be as good as the left in the future.
[Diagram or picture not reproduced in HTML version - see original .rtf file to view diagram or picture]
John Freeman
(chairman)