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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 >> CE (KK Confirmed, McDowall Report) Turkey [2004] UKIAT 00233 (20 August 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00233.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 233, [2004] UKIAT 00233 |
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CE (KK Confirmed – McDowall Report) Turkey [2004] UKIAT 00233
Date of hearing: 26 July 2004
Date Determination notified: 20 August 2004
CE | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"He is an Alevi Kurd from the Bingol area of Turkey. He was detained for a week and beaten on the soles of his feet on 1 May 1995 by the Turkish authorities. He was beaten again in June 1997 when Kurdish literature and music was found in his car. He was detained for four days on his second detention. He was detained for a third time on 10 August 1997 when he was questioned about his political activities and those of his friends. Two of his cousins [ ] and [ ] are separatists and members of the PKK. [ ] codenamed Zerdes is the man shown on the video asking to become area commander for Bingol. [ ] and [ ] lived next door to the Appellant at his village in Turkey where they were farmers. The Appellant fled his village in 1994 and went to Istanbul where he stayed. The Appellant sympathised with the aims and objectives of the PKK and upon arriving in the Untied Kingdom became involved with the PSK. The Appellant attends Kurdish cultural centres and events. When Abdullah Ocalan was detained in Turkey the Appellant demonstrated in London.The Appellant used to attend a Kurdish Centre in Istanbul and was asked by the police to become an informer against the PKK on behalf of the authorities. The Appellant refused to assist the authorities and believes if he is returned to Turkey he will be targeted by the Turkish government because of the activities of his cousins as active PKK members. The Appellant left Turkey and travelled to the United Kingdom by lorry clandestinely. He arrived in the United Kingdom on 14 November 1997.
In the year 2002 the Appellant's father received a letter from state security informing him that he is to be prosecuted for assisting the PKK. Because he is disabled he has not been in imprisoned but he fears for the future as he has provided food and shelter for the PKK."
"In evidence in chief the Appellant adopted his written statement and gave evidence as to the contents of the video. He said that he received the video about a month ago. He confirmed he had been in Istanbul for most of the time since 1994, although he occasionally went back to his village in the Bingol district. He told Ms Dickinson [the Presenting Officer] that he did national service beginning in 1995 for 19 months. He used to meet up with [ ] in Istanbul. He confirmed the date of his three detentions as he stated in his written statement and accepts that he was never charged nor brought before a court. He told Ms Dickinson that he assisted the PKK from 1992 to 1994 by giving them food and drink. He accepted that he only became interested in PSK activities in London. He has not been involved in PSK since opening his shop in Southport. He used to visit the PSK centre in London. Ms Dickinson asked the Appellant why he did not mention his father's involvement with the PUK in interview but only referred to that involvement in his statement. The Appellant said that he did not know why he did not mention it in his interview."
"The video purports to show events at the 1996 PKK conference. Apart from Abdullah Ocalan the faces of approximately twelve to fifteen supposed PKK activists are portrayed. I find that this video would have been closely guarded by the PKK. If it fell into the wrong hands, such as the Turkish government security service, all people portrayed would be at grave risk of torture or worse. I find that it is highly unlikely that such a video would be brought out of Turkey and handed over to the Appellant to assist the Appellant's asylum claim. The Appellant says he received the video about a month ago from a PKK guerrilla who smuggled it out of Turkey. By handing this video to the Appellant to assist his asylum claim this guerrilla would be taking a risk that all the men portrayed on the video might be exposed. This is not a risk which I believe the PKK would take to support one asylum claim. I have grave doubts as to the genuineness of the video and whether it truly portrays events which took place in 1996 at the PKK conference. I do not accept, on the basis of this video, that the Appellant's cousin was appointed commander of the Bingol district in Turkey by Abdullah Ocalan. I find that the video has been produced to convince me that the level of activity of the Appellant's cousins in the PKK was at a higher level then I am prepared to accept."
"The Appellant stayed in Turkey for three months after being asked to be an informer for the Turkish government. He was effectively hiding from the authorities. When he was detained on 10 August 1997 the Appellant was asked to help the government security forces. He agreed to do so. They thought he was going to assist. When he initially went into hiding they would not have been looking for him as he did not say that he would not co-operate. There would be no reason for the authorities to search for him initially. There would certainly be no need to keep him under surveillance. I find that if the Appellant had wanted to leave Turkey he could have done so immediately after his third detention or within a short period of it. A genuine refugee, in fear of his life, would leave Turkey immediately and not hang around for three months so that the authorities would realise he was not going to help him [sic] and begin to search for him."
"On 10 August 1997 the police took me from the café to the outskirts of the city and there I was questioned about the Kurdish youths activities, they wanted me to give them information about these things, about what kind of activities, associations involved with. I was also questioned if I had any friends involved in illegal activities and organisations and they wanted me to help them. If I helped them they will stop harassing them [sic] and be protected by the police."
A little later he said:
"If you accept our offer come to the police station and we will discuss the matter, tell you how these things operate. I thought about it for a long time, if I had accepted their offer I would have been a traitor to my country, to my friends, to my people and I will live with this…"
He said it took about a month for him to reach this decision.
"34. For the avoidance of doubt I find as follows:(i) The Appellant was a Kurd;ii) Two of the Appellant's reasonably close relatives were active in the PKK;
(iii) I do not accept that the Appellant's father was active in the PKK;
(iv) I do not accept the Appellant was being searched for by the authorities from August until November 1997;
(v) The Appellant's assistance of the PKK was low level in providing food and shelter;
(vi) I do not accept that a close relative of the Appellant was a commander in the Bingol area for the PKK.
(vii) I do not accept that the Appellant has made himself a target of the Turkish authorities by any activities he has engaged in in the United Kingdom."
"35 I find that any little interest the Turkish authorities might have had in the Appellant, will, by the passage of time, have now diminished to nothing. I do not accept that the Appellant was a target, in any way, of the Turkish authorities."
"The second man on the video, the Appellant says is [ ], who is the Appellant's nephew. [ ] has been granted asylum by the Home Office on 28 April 2003. In the video [ ] asks Abdullah Ocalan for the commandership of the Bingol area on behalf of the PKK."
"We feel that we are driven to the conclusion by all the material that we have heard some of which comes from sources entirely unconnected with the authorities in Turkey, that on arrival in Turkey a person will be screened by being checked on the GBTS. We have neither information, nor any reason to suppose, that any other means of checking up is used."
"The report continues "It should be mentioned that in addition to the GTBS Central Information System, the various security forces each have their own information systems…they include the registers of the police, the anti-terrorist department, the gendarmerie, Jitem, the military secret service etc. It is therefore perfectly possible for someone not to be listed on the central system but to be sought by the anti-terrorist unit."
At 5.57 it further states that:
"Neither can the absence of a data entry or current investigation or the lack of a passport ban be taken as evidence that an individual is not in danger. Despite the absence of entries in the central information system, the individual concerned might be listed on one of the other information systems. This must certainly be assumed in the case of individuals who have already been taken into custody by the police, gendarmerie or some other branch of the security forces in the past."
"My reasons for doubt and the relevant evidence are to some extent empirical and seem to be somewhat different from the qualifications now set out in [April 2004 CIPU]; they are set out below in order to indicate that much of one's approach to this issue must be based upon commonsense inferences drawn from what we really know about how the security forces operate in Turkey."
J BARNES
VICE PRESIDENT