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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 >> AC (Deportation, Article 8, Appellant) Turkey [2004] UKIAT 00122 (02 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00122.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 122, [2004] UKIAT 00122, [2004] Imm AR 573 |
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APPEAL No. AC (Deportation, Article 8, Appellant) Turkey [2004] UKIAT 00122
Date of hearing: 24 March 2004
Date Determination notified: 2 June 2004
AC | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
The Adjudicator's determination
"5. I found the appellant wholly credible in her feelings for [S], and was able to indicate my decision at the close of proceedings. All the evidence points to a nugatory risk of the appellant re-offending. Her offence was very grave, as reflected in the sentence, but it was a crime passionel, which the appellant has greatly regretted ever since. It is truly a 'one-off'. The effect upon the appellant of deportation at this point would be devastating. The hostility of her ex-husband would ensure that she would never see her daughter unless she could return to Britain, and that she could not do for at least the first three years, and perhaps for several years longer. Revocation of a deportation order is not automatic after three years. There is a very real risk that deportation would prevent any contact between mother and daughter during the formative years of [S]'s life. I must take her human rights into account, as well as her mother's, in coming to my decision. As Dr Storey puts it in Met Sula [2002] UKIAT 00295, 'in the context of an appeal brought by an appellant with family dependants, the decision made on the appellant's appeal must not amount to an act which is incompatible with the human rights of any relevant members of his family'.
6. The mother-child relationship is the most fundamental of all human relationships. If the appellant were simply being removed, she might hope to get entry clearance under paragraph 246 of HC 395, to return and exercise her rights under the Contact Order which she has been granted. But deportation precludes that. In these compassionate circumstances, deportation is clearly a disproportionate interference with the family life of the appellant and her daughter. The appeal is therefore allowed on human rights grounds."
The Tribunal's preliminary ruling
"For those reasons, which we have set out at much too great length, we conclude that [S] has, as such, no interest in presenting her human rights in this appeal. It follows that, when this appeal is determined on the merits, we should be concerned, of course, with the circumstances of the family as a whole, but not by looking at [S's] right not to have her mother removed, if she is said to have such a right, but to look at the mother's rights. We shall be concerned to decide whether it is right to say that the mother's removal infringes the mother's human rights as a whole – including any right to be with [S].
No doubt when the appeal is heard, on which we shall give directions shortly, there will be evidence about the daughter's position and the mother's relationship with the daughter as it was at the date of the decision. We emphasise that we are not seeking to exclude evidence of such matters, but in a case where it is not suggested that the removal of the mother is, of itself, something which is necessarily inhibited by the daughter's position, the daughter's own human rights do not fall to be taken into account at all."
The Judicial Review
"Section 65 makes plain that an appeal under it is on the ground of a breach of the appellant's human rights and that this is the question to be examined and that this is the ground on which the appeal may be allowed. The appeal is not concerned with the human rights of others. To that the proviso must be added that the human rights of others may impinge on the human rights of the appellant. It would therefore be more complete to say that appeals under section 65 are directly concerned only with the human rights of the appellant, but may become concerned with the human rights of others in so far as they impinge on the human rights of the appellant."
"The consequences for a mother of losing contact with her child will be quite different to the consequences for the child of losing her mother. That is in part because one is a child of a particular age and development whereas the other is an adult. It is also because the relationship of child to mother is not the same as that of mother to child. There will be those differences even where the relationship is equally strong on either side. But it may not be equally strong. Thus it is possible that a mother might be relatively indifferent to her child, while the child very much needs its mother." He continued: "If a child will be distressed, perhaps harmed, by its separation from its mother, the impact of that on the mother is something to be taken account of in considering the mother's position. In that way the child's position has its impact on the mother's position."
"I conclude that the Tribunal was right in deciding that it was not primarily concerned with the human rights of S. The grounds of appeal under section 65 are restricted to breaches of the human rights of the appellant. The human rights of another person will only be relevant if a breach of them impinges on the human rights of the appellant. I also conclude that the Tribunal was wrong if, as I think that it did, it concluded that in considering the rights of the appellant, AC, under Article 8 it should take no account of the impact of the proposed deportation on S. On an appeal under 65 the adjudicator and the Tribunal should take account of the impact of the proposed deportation on the family life of any person with whom the appellant has established a family life."
The relevance of rights of those who are not appellants
The further material
The framework of the decision
The assessment of the offence and the Claimant
"There is also very little evidence for psychopathic personality traits such as cold, callous and disregarding attitudes to others, superficial emotions, lack of remorse or failure to accept responsibility for her actions. Clearly she may be lying about her entry into the country and the offence, but there is no suggestion that lying and manipulation are pervasive traits.
Denial of offence behaviour is not considered to be a significant predictor of future violence risk, unless it is associated with pervasive psychopathic trains, as described above. Thus denial – or distortions in the offence account – is absent from all well established predication tools."
"Ms [C] provides a detailed, measured and vivid account which lends plausibility. It is possible that the level of physical struggle was greater than she described or recalled. However, I fully accept that she may be presenting a well rehearsed lie."
Article 8
Conclusions
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY
PRESIDENT