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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> VS (Para 317(iii), no 3rd party support) Sri Lanka [2007] UKAIT 00069 (30 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2007/00069.html Cite as: [2007] UKAIT 69, [2007] UKAIT 00069 |
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VS (Para 317(iii), no 3rd party support) Sri Lanka [2007] UKAIT 00069
ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
Date of hearing: 26 June 2007
Date Determination notified: 27 July 2007
Before
Miss E Arfon-Jones DL, Deputy President of the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal
Between
VS | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
Third party support is not permitted under paragraph 317(iii) of the Immigration Rules. Where a sponsor is wholly dependent upon public funds and sends to the relative outside the UK money he has received from a third party he is a mere conduit for that money. That does not create a dependency on the sponsor within the Rules.
"This application was made in time and the grounds, and in particular the first ground in relation to the nature of dependency demonstrates that the Immigration Judge may have made a material error of law and a real possibility that the Tribunal would have decided the appeal differently on reconsideration."
(iii) is financially wholly or mainly dependent on the relative present and settled in the United Kingdom; "
"
- I am not satisfied that you are financially wholly or mainly dependant on your son in the UK
- I am not satisfied that you can and will be maintained and or accommodated adequately without recourse to (additional) public funds in accommodation which your son or occupies exclusively
- I am not satisfied that you have no other close relatives in your own country to whom you could turn for financial support.
- I am not satisfied that you are living outside the UK in the most exceptional compassionate circumstances and are mainly dependant financially on relatives settled in the UK."
"68. I consider that the wording of the Rule is clear. The appellant has to be dependent upon his son. The Rule is designed to facilitate entry, in certain circumstances, for those who are dependent on their relatives settled in the UK. It is not a Rule designed to facilitate entry to persons who happen to have a relative present and settled in the UK but who are dependent financially on some other person. For example it would not avail an applicant to show that he had a relative present and settled in the UK and that he was financially dependent upon some other person in his home country. Similarly it would not, in my judgment, avail him to show that he had a relative present and settled in the UK but he was financially dependent upon another party who also happened to be present and settled in the UK. The Rule requires that the relative present and settled in the UK is the person upon whom the applicant is dependent.
69. I am strengthened in this conclusion by the decision in AA Bangladesh [2005] UKAIT 00105.
70. Can it be said, in this case, that the appellant is wholly or mainly dependent upon his son? I regret that I do not think it can be so said. One must look at the reality of the situation. The reality is that the funds come from Mr Arunan. The sponsor is a mere conduit in this case.
71. It is said that because the provision of the funds depends upon the friendship between Mr Arunan and the son then, in reality, the provision is dependent upon the relationship between sponsor and appellant. That may be correct insofar as it goes. It may well be that the reason Mr Arunan provides support to the appellant is because of his friendship with his son. (Although the tenor of the evidence from Mr Arunan was that he was happy to provide the support because of the overall family connection). Whatever the reason for the provision of support, however, the fact remains that the support comes from Mr Arunan and not from the sponsor.
72. Thus I regret that I am not satisfied that the appellant meets the requirements of paragraph 317(3)."
"the ultimate question for the appellate immigration authority is whether the refusal of leave to enter or remain, in circumstances where the life of the family cannot reasonably be expected to be enjoyed elsewhere, taking full account of all considerations weighing in favour of the refusal, prejudices the family life of the applicant in a manner sufficiently serious to amount to a breach of the fundamental right protected by article 8."
Conclusion
"65. I am satisfied that, since 2005 the appellant has been in receipt of approximately £100 per month from the UK. The source of that money has been Mr Arunan. Mr Arunan has provided the money to the sponsor who has sent it to his father. I am entirely satisfied that the money from Mr Arunan was earmarked for the father. It was not money given to the sponsor to do with as he wished. It was for the father. As Mr Arunan said in his witness statement "I am helping him (the sponsor) financially providing £100 a month to support his father. I am happy to support (the appellant) and I am able to afford it."
66. I am satisfied that the appellant is wholly or mainly dependent on that money in Sri Lanka. Without it he could not survive. His pension is not sufficient to meet his accommodation costs and other living expenses. The amount of money from the UK is greater than the amount of his pension."
Decision
E ARFON-JONES DL
DEPUTY PRESIDENT
Date: