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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 >> CI B (Link to Mobutu) Democratic Republic of Congo [2004] UKIAT 00072 (22 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00072.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 00072, [2004] UKIAT 72 |
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CI-B (Link to Mobutu) Democratic Republic of Congo CG [2004] UKIAT 00072 (22 April 2004)
Date of hearing: 12 March 2004
Date Determination notified: 22 April 2004
CI-B | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"In the Appellant's bundle at pages B13 and B14 is a letter allegedly from her maternal Aunt telling her not to return and enclosing a video, photographs and other documents and stating that there was no news of her children. The letter is dated 15th February 2003. The Appellant stated in evidence that shortly after receiving the letter she telephoned her aunt and was told not to keep calling and as a result she does not know where her aunt is now. I find that the latter part of her account has been fabricated to embellish her claim of the risks she faces on return to DRC."
"Amnesty International knows of many people who have fled from persecution by the RCD Rwandese or other forces in the East and have thought that it w0uld be safer for them to go to Kinshasa and have been subsequently arrested and detained in Kinshasa on suspicion of being in alliance with the armed opposition in the East. So many people dare not go to the other side".
"It would be possible that the children of such a soldier, be it a high ranking officer or a private, would be targeted by the new authorities due to the fact that their father held the respective position during the Mobutu regime. Sometimes people are abused without any justification at all. On the other hand, even a civilian, linked to someone who is in a powerful position, may have been responsible for abuses for which he may be held reliable or be subjected to reprisals".
"… as is customary with all country positions issued by the UK Branch Office of UNHCR, the latest position on the DRC was drafted on the basis of information that was sourced directly from 0ur field office in the DRC and cleared by our Headquarters in Geneva. Such procedures are followed throughout UNHCR in order to ensure the consistency of positions issued by our offices around the world".
"First hand accounts and reports from local human rights NGOs, suggests that certain individuals who are deported (regardless of whether they sought asylum abroad), or even repatriated voluntarily, may face serious problems following possible interrogation conducted by security services upon arrival in Kinshasa. Should the authorities in Kinshasa discover that a deportee has a political or military profile, or sought asylum abroad owing to a political or military background, such a person may be at risk of arbitrary detention and ill-treatment".
"A large number of persons closely associated with the Mobutu regime have now returned to the DRC". "Persons who were closely associated with the MPR during the Mobutu regime were not at risk of persecution by the security forces and can therefore return to the country if they are abroad."
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY
PRESIDENT