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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> M v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Chad) [2004] UKIAT 00044 (16 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00044.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 44, [2004] UKIAT 00044 |
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APPEAL No. [2004] UKIAT 00044 M (Chad)
Date of hearing: 08 March 2004
Date Determination notified: 16 March 2004
M |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | RESPONDENT |
Mr N Ahmed (counsel instructed by Burton & Burton, Nottingham) for the appellant
Mr A Lawther for the respondent
This is an appeal from a decision of an adjudicator (Mrs M Gurung-Thapa), sitting at Birmingham on 15 April 2003, dismissing an asylum and human rights appeal by a citizen of Chad. Permission to appeal was given on the basis of allegations about the adjudicator's conduct of the hearing.
[The appellant] born 25/8/1977 at N'djamena (Chad) is a member of the Movement for Democracy and Justice in Chad [MJDC] and in consequence his life is under serious threat in his country.
a) (at pp 6 and 8 of the record of proceedings) what is said to be an over-confrontational challenge to his explanation of the different dates he had given for his leaving Chad;b) (also p 6) a too-wide ranging foray of the adjudicator's own on the details of the claimant's account of the route and times he took in doing so; and
c) (at p 9) a similar foray on the history of the claimant's father's involvement with the MDJC (referred to here as 'MJDT', using the French spelling of the country in the acronym).
42. Adjudicators are not limited to asking questions for clarification, and may intervene to move things along, and may also put questions to a witness, where a point which concerns them has not been dealt with, even where both sides are represented.43. They should not interrupt evidence in chief or cross-examination, except in the circumstances referred to at § 42, "… or for other reasons associated with the general control of the case or the court room". It is nearly always best to wait until after cross-examination and re-examination (where there is either) to see what is put before taking up inconsistencies; but adjudicators are not limited to points raised by the other party (either in the refusal letter or at the hearing), though they should not pursue a different case or theory altogether.
44. Questions by adjudicators should not be asked "… in any hostile manner or in a manner which suggests that the Adjudicator's mind has been made up." They should not be of a leading kind, or concealed traps, but direct and open-ended. Adjudicators should not take over conduct of the case; but the fact that questions they asked may help one side or the other does not make them unfair.
49. "It is important for the distinctions between cross-examination and evidence-in-chief to be remembered. In evidence in chief, the function of the advocate is to elicit the relevant information on which he relies. In cross-examination, one task of the advocate is to show how unreliable a witness is by showing how much he has forgotten and how little he is able to answer questions."
55. "It is important that a fair-minded observer would have been able to distinguish between an Adjudicator firmly in control of a case behaving fairly and properly in order to ascertain how the case related to the available evidence and somebody who is indicating hostility towards a party or predetermination through the timing and manner of intervention."
a) We accept Miss Allwood's annotations at pp 6 and 9 as showing that the line of questioning about dates was pursued by the adjudicator, not her. This is because the adjudicator herself confirms that at §§ 23 and 39. There is no such confirmation of the annotation at p 6, recording the adjudicator as asking, not as she records "Date escaped prison, asking you what date did you leave Chad", but "You just described day left prison. We are asking simple question, what date did you leave Chad". However we should not regard this question, even in that form, as objectionable in terms of K: the adjudicator was doing no more than bringing the claimant back to the point, and reassuring him that it was not a difficult one.b) Miss Allwood has only marked two questions on the claimant's departure route as asked by the adjudicator: "How long spend Lake Tchad?", and "Where stay in Lake Tchad?". However, even if Mr Ahmed is right (as he may well be) in suggesting that the following questions on that page were asked by the adjudicator, they were certainly not a foray of the adjudicator's own, since the point had already been raised by Miss Allwood at the bottom of p 5. If the adjudicator felt the account she had heard there needed clarification, she was entitled to pursue that while it was fresh in her mind, without waiting for the end of the evidence in chief; and there is nothing in the form of the questions to indicate any purpose other than clarification.
c) Again it is clear from the adjudicator's §§ 24-25 that she was pursuing the line of questioning about the claimant's father's involvement with the MDJT. That this was not a foray of her own is shown by her statement of the claimant's own case at § 32:
The MDJT is the main political party for the Gorane tribe [to] which he belongs. He joined the party in 1999 because of the influence of his father. It is customary for sons to join the party that their father's [sic] belonged to.This intervention, together with the one at p 8, took place at the end of the claimant's evidence in chief, which was an entirely appropriate point for it, there being no question of cross-examination or re-examination in the present case.
Appeal dismissed
John Freeman (chairman)