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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> LP (LTTE area, Tamils, Colombo, risk?) Sri Lanka CG [2007] UKAIT 00076 (08 August 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2007/00076.html Cite as: [2007] UKIAT 00076, [2007] UKAIT 76, [2007] UKAIT 00076 |
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LP (LTTE area – Tamils – Colombo – risk?) Sri Lanka CG [2007] UKAIT 00076
Date of hearing: 27 and 28 November 2006
Date Determination notified: 08 August 2007
LP |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
For the Appellant: Mr A. MacKenzie, Counsel instructed by Birnberg Peirce & Partners Solicitors, London.
For the Respondent: Miss J. Richards, Counsel instructed by the Treasury Solicitor
(1) Tamils are not per se at risk of serious harm from the Sri Lankan authorities in Colombo. A number of factors may increase the risk, including but not limited to: a previous record as a suspected or actual LTTE member; a previous criminal record and/or outstanding arrest warrant; bail jumping and/or escaping from custody; having signed a confession or similar document; having been asked by the security forces to become an informer; the presence of scarring; return from London or other centre of LTTE fundraising; illegal departure from Sri Lanka; lack of an ID card or other documentation; having made an asylum claim abroad; having relatives in the LTTE. In every case, those factors and the weight to be ascribed to them, individually and cumulatively, must be considered in the light of the facts of each case but they are not intended to be a check list.
(2) If a person is actively wanted by the police and/or named on a Watched or Wanted list held at Colombo airport, they may be at risk of detention at the airport.
(3) Otherwise, the majority of returning failed asylum seekers are processed relatively quickly and with no difficulty beyond some possible harassment.
(4) Tamils in Colombo are at increased risk of being stopped at checkpoints, in a cordon and search operation, or of being the subject of a raid on a Lodge where they are staying. In general, the risk again is no more than harassment and should not cause any lasting difficulty, but Tamils who have recently returned to Sri Lanka and have not yet renewed their Sri Lankan identity documents will be subject to more investigation and the factors listed above may then come into play.
(5) Returning Tamils should be able to establish the fact of their recent return during the short period necessary for new identity documents to be procured.
(6) A person who cannot establish that he is at real risk of persecution in his home area is not a refugee; but his appeal may succeed under article 3 of the ECHR, or he may be entitled to humanitarian protection if he can establish he would be at risk in the part of the country to which he will be returned.
(7) The weight to be given to expert evidence (individual or country) and country background evidence is dependent upon the quality of the raw data from which it is drawn and the quality of the filtering process to which that data has been subjected. Sources should be given whenever possible.
(8) The determinations about Sri Lanka listed in para 226 are replaced as country guidance by this determination. They continue to be reported cases.
Contents
(1) | Introduction and conclusions on first stage reconsideration setting out the material error of law. |
(2) | The issues. |
(3) | The appellant's case, including consideration of the appellant's evidence, statements of witnesses P M, and Ms K C and the reports of Doctors M Seear and Kanagararatnam. |
(4) | The role of the expert witness and our conclusions on "expert" evidence in country guidance determinations. |
(5) | The respondent's background evidence. |
(6) | The appellant's background evidence. |
(7) | Submissions on the appellant's case and the background evidence by Miss Richards for the respondent. |
(8) | Submissions on the appellant's case and the background evidence by Mr MacKenzie for the appellant. |
(9) | General conclusions on the background evidence and expert reports, as assessed, when set against the issues identified. |
(10) | Application of the general conclusions to the appellant's case and decision. |
(11) | Conclusions on the continuing applicability of Sri Lankan CG cases and deletion of several. |
(12) | Summary of findings. |
(13) | Appendix of documents considered. |
1. Introduction and Conclusions on First Stage Reconsideration Setting Out Material Error of Law
"Reasons for the Determination that there is an Error of Law in the Determination
The Home Office Presenting Officer accepted that the Immigration Judge did not appear to accept Dr Smith as an expert witness, save only in relation to arms, as per the final sentence of paragraph 33 of the determination. The Home Office Presenting Officer suggested that in all other respects, the Immigration Judge rejects Dr Smith's expertise and for that reason rejected his reports since it was un-sourced. I find that in not making a clear finding as to whether or not she did accept him to be an expert witness, the Immigration Judge erred in law. In any event, if the Judge did, as the respondent maintains, only accept his expertise in one area dealt with in his report, she should have clearly given her reasons for rejecting his claimed expertise in other areas dealt with by him in his report. Grounds one and two of the application were found to have been made out and in the circumstances it was thought by the representative to be unnecessary for me to go on to consider the remaining challenges to the determination."
2. The Issues
(a) General conclusions to be reached after full consideration of all the background evidence, case law and expert witnesses in relation to the twelve areas of potential risk, either separately or cumulatively, set out in paragraph 161.
(b) Based on our conclusions in relation to those risks, objectively (and to a limited extent only, subjectively), on the facts as found, does that evidence indicate a well-founded fear of persecution for one or more of the five Refugee Convention reasons, or is the appellant entitled to humanitarian protection within the provisions of the Refugee or Person in Need of International Protection (Qualification) Regulations (2006/2525) and/or Immigration Rules (Paras 339C – 339Q) and/or would there be a breach of either Article 3 or 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR) 1950 if this appellant were returned to Sri Lanka?
3. The Appellant's Case
"42. The appellant was not cross-examined by Mr Beaumont because the Home Office file containing details of the appellant's claim appears to have been mislaid by the Home Office. Consequently Mr Beaumont was unable to prepare for the hearing before me in any meaningful way. Nevertheless the refusal letter accepts the appellant may have been ill-treated whilst in detention. No issue was taken with his claim to have been released by payment of a sum of money at court by his uncle and no issue was taken with the claimed history with the LTTE. The issues for me to determine are whether in the light of this history there is any real risk of a breach of the Refugee Convention on return; whether there is a risk of a breach of his protected human rights on return, whether from the Sri Lankan authorities or from the LTTE from which he would not receive effective protection?"
"On account of Mr P mental state and his torture/traumatic experiences in Sri Lanka I am of the opinion that Mr P suffers from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder."
An assessment of availability of treatment in Sri Lanka is also set out in the report. Because our conclusions in this matter have not extended to consideration of availability of psychiatric treatment in Sri Lanka for persons with traumatic disorders, details of the treatment available as recorded by Dr Kanagaratnam are not set out.
4. The Role of the Country Expert Witness
"2. The Secretary of State hopes that the Tribunal and the Appellants will be assisted by an indication of the Secretary of State's position regarding the role of expert reports relating to country conditions in appeals before this Tribunal.
3. The Secretary of State will submit that the role of a 'country expert' is different in a number of significant respects from that of most expert witnesses in ordinary civil litigation. In many areas of law the Court will be required to assess expert evidence in a field where specialist knowledge is required in order to interpret "raw data". So for example, a medical expert may be able to assist the Court in relation to the significance of test results, or by explaining diagnostic findings made on clinical examination of an individual. These are matters where the Court could not be expected to have the specialist knowledge required to interpret the underlying information. Even in these circumstances, an expert is required to consider all material facts, including those that might detract from his opinion.
4. The role of a 'country expert' in an appeal before the AIT is rather different. Here, the issue relates to conditions in a specified country or region. It is unlikely that any specialist knowledge is required in order to interpret the information. Rather the role of a 'country expert' is to assist with the provision of the 'raw data', in terms of providing comprehensive and balanced factual information relating to the issues the Tribunal must resolve. In this regard, it is important to bear in mind that the AIT is a specialist tribunal, which itself has a level of expertise. Whilst the AIT may be assisted by the opinion of a 'country expert', it is important that the Tribunal is provided with the factual material upon which that opinion is based, in order to conduct its own assessment of the conclusions to be drawn from it.
5. The Secretary of State respectfully submits that it is of central importance to the fair conduct of proceedings that the Tribunal should be able to assess whether a country expert is presenting a balanced picture and/or is exaggerating or presenting a partial or inaccurate account of the underlying information. In making that assessment, the Tribunal may be assisted by cross examination of the witness. It is difficult (if not impossible) to conduct a proper cross examination (or indeed for the Tribunal to conduct an assessment of the evidence) without access to the underlying information (as to the importance of considering the underlying evidence see for example the assessment of the expert evidence in the recent Sudan CG case (HGMO Sudan [2006] UKAIT 00062).
6. In particular, the Secretary of State will submit that:
(i) Where a country report relies upon information contained in a publicly available document, it should provide sufficient details to enable a copy of that document to be obtained;
(ii) Where the author of the report relies upon information contained in a document that is not publicly available, he should annexe a copy of any such document to the report (with redactions if necessary – see below);
(iii) Where the author of the report relies upon information provided orally, it is important that he provides a full account of what was said (including any notes of the conversation). As well as providing a full account of the contents of any discussion, the author should identify the source of the information (even if not by name). The Tribunal has power to take steps to protect the identity of sensitive sources, and if agreement cannot be reached as to the extent of the identification, the parties can seek directions.
The Secretary of State considers that this is a matter of some importance, particularly in country guidance cases: the Tribunal should endeavour to avoid the situation where it bases findings on an incomplete account of hearsay evidence from an unidentified primary source, that account having been provided by an expert witness whose interpretation of the conversation may be coloured by his own views.
7. With specific reference to the reports relied upon by the Appellants in the present appeals, the Secretary of State would wish to cross examine Dr. Smith. However, he is concerned that Dr. Smith's reports do not provide sufficient information as to the sources of the author's information to enable the Secretary of State to conduct a meaningful cross examination, or to assist the Tribunal to make a proper assessment of the weight to be accorded to Dr. Smith's opinions.
8. The Secretary of State would therefore invite the Tribunal to direct that the Appellants serve an indexed bundle containing the materials relied upon by Dr. Smith in compiling his reports, and indicating which sections of each document are relied upon. The Secretary of State's position regarding Dr. Smith's reports may need to be reviewed in the light of any such further disclosure."
In paragraph 5 of the paper there is reference to HGMO (Relocation to Khartoum) Sudan CG [2006] UKAIT 00062, paragraphs 161 to 170. The part of the decision relied upon has not been affected by the recent decision on that case by the Court of Appeal (AH & Ors (Sudan) [2007] EWCA Civ 297).
"It seems to me quite another matter when it is asserted that a valuer may give factual evidence of transactions of which he has no direct knowledge, whether per se or whether in the guise of giving reasons for his opinion as to value. It is one thing to say, "From my general experience of recent transactions comparable with this one, I think the proper rent should be £x": it is another thing to say, "Because I have been told by someone else that the premises next door have an area of x square feet and were recently let on such and such terms for £y a year, I say the rent of these premises should be £z a year". What he has been told about the premises next door may be inaccurate or misleading as to the area, the rent, the terms and much else besides. It makes it no better when the witness expresses his confidence in the reliability of his source of information. A transparently honest and careful witness cannot make information reliable if, instead of speaking of what he has seen and heard for himself, he is merely retailing what others have told him. The other party to the litigation is entitled to have a witness whom he can cross-examine on oath as to the reliability of the facts deposed to, and not merely as to the reliability of information which was given to him not on oath, and possibly in circumstances tending to inaccuracies and slips. Further, it is often difficult enough for the Courts to ascertain the true facts and witnesses giving direct evidence, without the added complication of attempts to evaluate a witnesses' opinion of the reliability, care and thoroughness of some informant who has supplied the witness with the facts that he is seeking to recount."
"It therefore seems to me that details of comparable transactions upon which a valuer intends to rely in his evidence must, if they are to be put before the Court, be confined to those details which have been, or will be, proved by admissible evidence, given either by the valuer himself or in some other way. I know of no special rule giving expert valuation witnesses a right to give hearsay evidence of fact, and… I can see no compelling reason of policy why they should be able to do this."
"Often those opinions are in letters or statements and the writer is not called to give evidence or be cross-examined. Some such experts are highly respected…and at the very least their evidence can be said to have been given in good faith and to be based on reliable sources. Others range from the generally reasonable to the unacceptable, and even venal. But all suffer from the difficulty that very rarely are they entirely objective in their approach and the sources relied on are frequently (and no doubt sometimes with good reason) unidentified. Many have fixed opinions about the regime in a particular country and would be inclined to accept anything which is detrimental to that regime. This means that more often than not the expert in question, even if he has the credentials which qualify him in that role, will be acting more as an advocate than an expert witness. While the principles which apply to expert witnesses called in High Court actions are not directly applicable, they give guidance when the weight to be attached to such evidence is considered. The most important are the need for independent assistance to the Adjudicator or Tribunal, the prohibition against assuming the role of an advocate and the need to specify the facts upon which an opinion is based: see National Justice Compania Naviera S.A. v. Prudential Assurance Co Limited ("the Ikarian Reefer") [1993] 2 Lloyds Rep.68 at 81-82 per Cresswell, J."
"It is in the nature of an expert that he does not need to refer to sources. He is the source. It may add force to his opinion to refer to his sources and he is only an expert if he satisfies the Court he has sound basis for his opinions".
"8A Expert evidence
8A.1 A party who instructs an expert must provide clear and precise instructions to the expert, together with all relevant information concerning the nature of the appellant's case, including the appellant's immigration history, the reasons why the appellant's claim or application has been refused by the respondent and copies of any relevant previous reports prepared in respect of the appellant.
8A.2 It is the duty of an expert to help the Tribunal on matters within the expert's own expertise. This duty is paramount and overrides any obligation to the person from whom the expert has received instructions or by whom the expert is paid.
8A.3 Expert evidence should be the independent product of the expert uninfluenced by the pressures of litigation.
8A.4 An expert should assist the Tribunal by providing objective, unbiased opinion on matters within his or her expertise, and should not assume the role of an advocate.
8A.5 An expert should consider all material facts, including those which might detract from his or her opinion.
8A.6 An expert should make it clear:-
(a) when a question or issue falls outside his or her expertise; and
(b) when the expert is not able to reach a definite opinion, for example because of insufficient information.
8A.7 If, after producing a report, an expert changes his or her view on any material matter, that change of view should be communicated to the parties without delay, and when appropriate to the Tribunal.
8A.8 An expert's report should be addressed to the Tribunal and not to the party from whom the expert has received instructions.
8A.9 An expert's report must:-
(a) give details of the expert's qualifications;
(b) give details of any literature or other material which the expert has relied on in making the report;
(c) contain a statement setting out the substance of all facts and instructions given to the expert which are material to the opinions expressed in the report or upon which those opinions are based;
(d) make clear which of the facts stated in report are within the expert's own knowledge;
(e) say who carried out any examination, measurement or other procedure which the expert has used for the report, give the qualifications of that person, and say whether or not the procedure has been carried out under the expert's supervision;
(f) where there is a range of opinion on the matters dealt with in the report –
(i) summarise the range of opinion, so far as reasonably practicable, and
(ii) give reasons for the expert's own opinion;
(g) contain a summary of the conclusions reached;
(h) if the expert is not able to give an opinion without qualification, state the qualification; and
(j) contain a statement that the expert understands his or her duty to the Tribunal, and has complied and will continue to comply with that duty.
8A.10 An expert's report must be verified by a Statement of Truth as well as containing the statements required in paragraph 8A.9(h) and (j).
8A.11 The form of the Statement of Truth is as follows:
'I confirm that insofar as the facts stated in my report are within my own knowledge I have made clear which they are and I believe them to be true, and that the opinions I have expressed represent my true and complete professional opinion'.
8A.12 The instructions referred to in paragraph 8A.9(c) are not protected by privilege but cross-examination of the expert on the contents of the instructions will not be allowed unless the Tribunal permits it (or unless the party who gave the instructions consents to it). Before it gives permission the Tribunal must be satisfied that there are reasonable grounds to consider that the statement in the report or the substance of the instructions is inaccurate or incomplete. If the Tribunal is so satisfied, it will allow the cross-examination where it appears to be in the interests of justice to do so."
"i This Country of Origin Information Report (COI Report) has been produced by Research, Development and Statistics (RDS), Home Office, for use by officials involved in the asylum/human rights determination process. The Report provides general background information about the issues most commonly raised in asylum/human rights claims made in the United Kingdom. The main body of the report includes information available up to 30 September 2006. The 'latest news' section contains further brief information on events and reports accessed from 1 October 2006 to 30 October 2006.
ii The Report is compiled wholly from material produced by a wide range of recognised external information sources and does not contain any Home Office opinion or policy. All information in the Report is attributed, throughout the text, to the original source material, which is made available to those working in the asylum/human rights determination process.
iii The Report aims to provide a brief summary of the source material identified, focusing on the main issues raised in asylum and human rights applications. It is not intended to be a detailed or comprehensive survey. For a more detailed account, the relevant source documents should be examined directly."
Mr Mackenzie also argued that the same is true of the British High Commission letters in this case. There, primary material was analysed before the letters were written. He said any criticism of Dr Smith is equally applicable to the letters written by the High Commission. He said one important question is always "who is doing the filtering?"
"…the material presented by the country expert must be verifiable as to the facts, and, so far as it consists in opinions, given a proper basis in either verifiable fact or the country expert's own relevant experience."
"…Judges are not expected to suspend judicial belief simply because the evidence is given by an expert. An expert is not in any special position and there is no presumption or belief in a doctor however distinguished he or she may be. It is, however, necessary for a Judge to give reasons for disagreeing with experts' conclusions or recommendations. …a Judge cannot substitute his views for the views of the experts without some evidence to support what it is he concludes."
Mr MacKenzie made the point that the Family Court, like this Tribunal, is also expert in its own jurisdiction and therefore it cannot be said that the experts in that jurisdiction are any different from this.
"…He will also have learned much from many other sources, including much of which he could give no first-hand evidence. Textbooks, journals, reports of auctions and other dealings, and information obtained form his professional brethren and others, some related to particular transactions and some more general and indefinite, will all have contributed their share."
"[The appellant] will automatically have been placed on one of the two lists that are provided to immigration services at the airport by the security forces".
Yet on close examination it became apparent that there was no basis for saying that at all. As a result doubt has to be cast upon Dr Smith's ability to give expert opinion evidence impartially and objectively. In such a case, it becomes very difficult to put weight on un-sourced, unsupported assertions even if it is said that a particular person said a particular thing on a particular occasion. Dr Smith thus has not fully demonstrated that he has provided an objectively filtered impartial and independent view, based on evidence. The amount of reliance and weight that can be put upon his other assertions, which have not been expressly sourced, or fully quoted, or supported by primary evidence is, as a result, limited. In paragraph 134 he referred to an asylum seeker who was returned by the United Kingdom and killed by agents of the Sri Lankan government but failed to mention the long gap between the return and the death. There is, in our view of the evidence, no apparent link. At paragraph 132 there is reference to a returnee who committed suicide in the airport detention room which did not mention that at the time he was returning from a visit to Madras.
5. The Respondent's Background Evidence
The UN Committee Against Torture
The Canadian Immigration Refugee Board (IRB) Search Report of 5 August 2003
"Treatment of returnees and in particular the implementation of the Immigrants and Emigrants Act of 1988; whether Tamils are targeted under the Act". (2002-2003)
This report is over three years old. At the outset, states that current information on the treatment of refugees who have returned to Sri Lanka was scarce among the sources consulted by the IRB Directorate. The report provides information from an Immigration Official at the Canadian High Commission in Colombo that, to the best of their knowledge, allegations that returnees to Sri Lanka (deportees and failed asylum seekers) are tortured on return was a complete fabrication and that there was a well-established procedure for dealing with returnees, which had been discussed on several occasions with the Ministry of the Interior of Sri Lanka. The Official's report goes on to state:
"Although standard procedure is for deportees to be generally referred to the airport division of the Criminal Investigation Division (CID) for interview on return, in our experience there are no arbitrary detentions without due process, and certainly no torture. Returnees who do not have impending arrest warrants or active charges in Sri Lanka are simply released… . The Dutch have returned large numbers of failed asylum seekers on a special flight, no adverse results reported… . We liaise regularly with GOSL (the Government of Sri Lanka), authorities on removal cases from Canada, and have seen no evidence of extra-judicial ill-treatment."
"Some deportees are questioned for a short period and then allowed to leave the airport; others are not questioned at all." (23 May 2003).
The report also notes that the UNHCR had no knowledge of returning Tamils having been singled out for adverse treatment, whereas prior to the ceasefire agreement Tamil returnees were at times singled out for questioning upon return by investigative units such as the CID, but this was done under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) and not under the Immigrants and Emigrants Amendment Act. At the time of the reports the state of emergency had lapsed and had not been re-imposed. The same report notes that the UK IND stated that unless rejected asylum seekers were travelling on false documentation it was unlikely they would be prosecuted on return…"99% of cases brought against returnees…are discharged without charges being laid."
Country of Origin Information Service (COIS), Home Office UK, Reports of
September 2005, 31 October 2006 and 8 Feb 2007
"The CIA World Fact-book also noted that since the outbreak of the hostilities between the government and the armed Tamil separatists in mid-1980s, several hundred thousand Tamil civilians have fled the island and more than 200,000 Tamils have sought refuge in the west."
In the section of the report relating to Tamils we noted, at paragraph 20.04, that it is reported from the latest census, 2005, in the Colombo district there were 247,739 Sri Lankan Tamils, and 24,821 Indian Tamils out of a total population of 2,251,247. Sri Lankan Tamils accordingly make up over 10% of the population of Colombo. We were referred to a historical review of Sri Lanka set out in paragraph 3 of the October 2006 Report, in particular paragraphs 3.07 and 3.08. These paragraphs note that the height of the ethnic conflict between the LTTE and the Sri Lankan government was in the period 1999-2000 and the ceasefire agreement was signed in February 2002 between the government and the LTTE. That ceasefire agreement committed the government of Sri Lanka and the LTTE to accept on site monitoring of the implementation of the agreement by the Sri Lankan Monitoring Mission (SLMM).
- "Unlawful killings by government agents.
- High profile killings by unknown actors.
- Politically motivated killings by paramilitary forces in the LTTE.
- Disappearances.
- Arbitrary arrest and detention.
- Torture.
- Poor prison conditions.
- Denial of fair public trial.
- Government corruption and lack of transparency.
- Infringement of religious freedom.
- Infringement of freedom of movement.
- Discrimination against minorities."
"Torture and mistreatment by police continued to be a problem… the police continued to enjoy great impunity. While some cases of deaths in custody and torture have been investigated, no-one has been prosecuted or punished as yet."
Letters from British High Commission Colombo, Sri Lanka (BHC)
"The passenger is handed over to immigration who briefly interview them and then hand them to CID. In most cases a record is kept by both of the returnees' arrival and they are then allowed to proceed. Usually family are at the airport to meet them."
It goes on to state:
"In a few cases CID have detained people where there was an existing warrant for their arrest when they left Sri Lanka. DII (Directive of Internal Intelligence) may also have an interest in these individuals and keep records on them. There is no reason to think that they have information regarding asylum claims in the UK or elsewhere. There does not appear to be any involvement in the process by the Sri Lankan army."
"Generally violence between the LTTE and rival paramilitary groups has followed the trends in the graphs. The Karuna faction officially announced a ceasefire, although some of the violence in the east that took place after the Geneva talks appears to have been carried out by it".
"As we have reported earlier the vast majority are questioned for a short period of time to establish identity and possibly on security issues and then released. Normally only when there is an outstanding arrest warrant are individuals detained for longer periods."
"At the very least it appears to only take place when there is another reason to suspect the individual rather than a routine measure for immigration returnees."
"Lists of failed asylum seekers could form part of this, although the areas covered by the cordon and search operations (normally a few blocks) would not yield very many. A big push took place in November and December 2005 which was said to culminate in "Operation Stranger's Night II". It also reports that in June here was public discussion about implementing police registration across the island as had been done in the past but nothing had come of that. Cordon and search operations were stated to still continue in mainly Tamil pockets in predominantly Sinhalese and Muslim areas."
"It is common practice to be released on bail without being charged. Reporting conditions are usually issued when bail is granted. Anyone flouting reporting conditions is liable to be served with a warrant for arrest.
As far as we have been able to establish Immigration Officers are notified only when a court decides to impound the suspect's passport or an arrest warrant is issued. This apart, there is no other mechanism to make sure Immigration Officers are aware of such instances. The other method which is rare and case specific is that the NIB (National Investigation Bureau) informing (sic) the Immigration Officers of individuals suspected of terrorist activity and those on the wanted list.
Without court sanction the Immigration Officers are powerless to put an individual in detention if they are otherwise satisfied they have the right to enter or live in Sri Lanka."
The BHC material included a copy of the Sri Lankan Bail Act and relevant parts of the Criminal Procedure Code relating to summonses, arrest warrants and other procedures.
"There seems to be a link between large scale cordon and search operations and the environment created by the ERs. We are not aware of the total number of arrests – many of whom are only detained briefly, but ICRC reports that about 900 people have been registered as detained for longer periods since September 2006 and have been visited by them.
Our assessment of the profile of the detainees is similar to that reported in the media. They are overwhelmingly male, Tamil (either Sri Lankan or Hill Tamil) and generally young. Most are detained because they are unable to produce ID, or unable to explain the reason for being in a particular area. Migrant and casual workers are therefore particularly vulnerable."
"There are three other hotspots of disappearance activity, Jaffna, Vavuniya and Batticaloa. A reliable NGO, who did not wish to be named, thought that 584 people had disappeared in Jaffna in 2006, and 165 in the first three months of this year. A senior Tamil MP thought that the country-wide figure was 900 since August 2006."
Reports on Removal/Voluntary Departures to Sri Lanka from the UK, 2005 and 2006
"I would also make clear that the circumstances of Mr J and Mr S's death, while tragic, occurred some considerable time after they departed the UK and were not related to their prior asylum claims or their subsequent returns."
Operational Guidance Note of SSHD (OGN)
6. The Appellant's Background Evidence
Dr Smith's Reports
"The appellant's previous stated status as a recorded LTTE suspect means that he is almost certainly to be of interest to the authorities and, as such, he will axiomatically have been placed on one of the two lists that are provided to the immigration services at the airport by the security forces. The first is a 'stop list', which the National Intelligence Bureau provides to ensure that those in which the authorities have an interest are detained on arrival. The second is a 'watch list", which alerts the authorities on the return of a person in which there is an interest and is used to trigger covert surveillance. If the appellant is on one of these lists, he will be extremely vulnerable on return either to arrest at the airport or following his arrival."
"After four petulant and unsatisfactory years, Sri Lanka's unstable peace process has finally disintegrated. At this juncture there appears to be no way back to either the peace talks or the ceasefire agreement (CFA). The Government of Sri Lanka and the LTTE have now joined battle, albeit tangentially and asymmetrically. Over a thousand lives mostly civilian, have been lost over the nine month period since the start of 2006 … over 200,000 people have been displaced. Disappearances in the north and the east are on the rise. Suicide bombers have mounted attacks in and around Colombo and there are well-founded fears that more is to come."
"73. It is clear without equivocation that Sri Lanka has returned to war. It may be a 'half war', primarily an insurgency and it may not develop into the scale of past engagements but it is a civil war nevertheless. In all likelihood, battle will be joined in fits and starts, with the LTTE moving its point of engagement from Jaffna, to Trincomalee, to Colombo and so on. It will follow classical insurgency lines of engaging the GoSL forces at the time and place of the LTTE choosing and, as such, can in theory, prolong the conflict for as long as it wishes. Given that the options made available through the peace process were clearly unacceptable to the LTTE and are likely to be even more unacceptable whilst Rajapakse holds power, recourse to war, 'half' or otherwise, would seem to be the only option for the LTTE.
74. This situation is likely to continue into the foreseeable future. Neither side is now disposed towards peace, if indeed it ever was (with the benefit of hindsight). Neither side can prevail over the other unless a major change in capability occurs to make the contest more uneven. Neither side is prepared to put forward options or adopt positions that might lead to a meaningful peace process. The international community appears to have lost a good deal of its ability to influence and cajole either side. Sri Lanka looks set to endure a long and costly civil war based upon attrition.
75. Apart from the obvious implications for the civilian population domiciled in or near the theatre of conflict, the LTTE will doubtless ensure that the conflict brings sustained discomfort and insecurity to the civilian population in the south where possible, Colombo especially. The fear of further LTTE infiltration and operations in the south will keep the security forces on high alert, as indeed they are at the moment. The security implications for ordinary citizens in the south may not be too onerous – suicide bombers tend to be extremely targeted and the LTTE will continue to eschew operations that risk collateral damage. However, both sides will become even more focussed than they are now on individuals they consider a potential threat or security risk. This will inevitably raise the level of vulnerability for returned asylum seekers in whom the security forces and associated paramilitary groups or the LTTE feel they have an adverse interest. For example, the security forces will be on a higher state of alert to seek out returning LTTE cadres, fundraisers and sympathisers. The LTTE will heighten its intelligence gathering operations in Colombo to ensure that its networks are not infiltrated and that operations can be carried out without compromise. Both sides can be expected to be ruthless in the pursuit of their objectives."
"The quality of the database is, in his opinion, fairly good. The records go back 10 - 15 years and the database is being chronologically extended all the time. It is my opinion the database that is available at the airport is derived, or possibly the same as, the centralised database maintained by the DII."
Dr Smith also expresses the view based on a recent interview with a senior intelligence officer, off the record, that once details of a detainee have been entered into the database they remain there for life and that even if a detainee was released from a camp without charge the system would identify them on return. He also notes at paragraph 122 that, based on his own personal observations, the airport has a completely modernised arrivals section and electronic checks at immigration are very swift and efficient which suggest to him that the security system has been updated. As the appellant has been away from Sri Lanka for six years he would be returned on an emergency travel document which would have to be obtained from the Sri Lankan High Commission in London.
"During a recent interview with a lodge manager in Puttah, I was told that the LTTE do not monitor the lodge guest lists in the same way as the police, CID, military intelligence, the army and so on. On questioning as to why this is the case the lodge manager told me that the LTTE do not need to monitor guest lists as their intelligence capability is so robust even in Colombo that any stranger in the area will come to their immediate scrutiny."
Dr Smith's Oral Evidence
Roots and Dynamics of Tamil Organised Crime in London
Professor Goode's Report (Bundle B, 1 - 62 and Bundle C, 37 - 58) and Oral Evidence
Oral Evidence
"is detained for questioning on arrival, it would seem very probable because of the records likely to be held concerning him, and because his scarring may attract adverse attention, ill-treatment, possibly amounting to torture, is highly likely to occur."
He notes that the Prevention of Terrorism Act allows confessions to be made to the police with no magistrate present and the burden of proof that these were obtained coercively lies with the defendant. This, in his view, has led to the widespread use of torture. He also notes that PTA trials do not involve juries and depart in other ways from the normal Sri Lankan court procedures.
"despite Home Office assertions to the contrary that, visible scars may indeed still play a part in increasing risk on return. It seems clear that scarring is one factor among several which may serve to trigger adverse interest on the part of the authorities."
"It is clear that the two sides in the ethnic conflict are at war in all but name, and that the security situation throughout the country at present can only be described as desperate."
Dr Gunaratna's Report (Bundle C, 93 – 97)
"In Sri Lanka such records of detention, trial and even medical records are not properly catalogued and stored. Even if they were, they are difficult to obtain."
However, he goes on to state that like most government operational agencies worldwide the Sri Lankan authorities store information on LTTE members, supporters and suspected members and supporters. The CID and Department of Military Intelligence are the main custodians and users, as well as the police and military. The airport has a watch list and an alert list managed by a number of agencies. He states that although he has not been able to verify it, it is "very likely the Sri Lankan Government will have a record of Mr P K for two reasons, firstly because he has been arrested and secondly because he jumped bail." He also considers it very likely the government's records will state the appellant is either a member or a supporter of the LTTE.
The Report of Dr Basil Fernando (Bundle C, 98 – 101)
Dr Alan Keenan Report (Bundle C, 102 – 113)
"The message that the system has sent to the police and to the army has been clear: one is allowed to torture and detain suspects without evidence for as long as one likes without any legal liability or chance of punishment. Sri Lanka is now, sadly but predictably, reaping the harvest of extra-judicial violence from both State and non-State actors – that such practices have sown."
The Report of Dr Yolanda Foster (Bundle C, 114 – 125)
Numerous COI Reports (Bundle B, 1 - 331)
UNHCR Position Paper, December 2006
US Department of State Report 2006
Canadian IRB Report, 22 December 2006
The Hotham Mission Report.
7. The Respondent's Submissions on the Appellant's Case and Evidence
"Although standard procedure is for deportees to be routinely referred to the Airport Division of the Criminal Investigation Division (CID) for interview on return, in our experience there are no arbitrary detentions without due process, certainly no torture. Returnees who do not have pending arrest warrants or active charges in Sri Lanka are simply released … the Dutch have returned numbers of failed asylum seekers on a special flight with no adverse results … we liaise regularly with GOSL authorities on removal cases from Canada, and we see no evidence of extra-judicial ill-treatment."
The same report, she noted, recorded a senior UNHCR official, at that time, stating that some deportees were questioned for a short period, then allowed to leave the airport and others were not questioned at all.
"The role of scarring is extremely difficult to assess … anecdotal evidence is that it can play a part in rousing suspicion."
A later letter of August 2006 suggested that consideration of scarring did take place only when there was another reason to suspect an individual. She submitted that findings in earlier cases such as Jeyachandran [2002] UKIAT 01869 had correctly noted that "the fact that a person bears scars does not, by itself, engender an increased risk of suspicion of LTTE involvement, of arrest or detention longer than 48 – 72 hours."
"In Colombo, Tamils have been targeted while those with certain profiles are liable to suffer serious human rights transgressions. Therefore, UNHCR recommends that all asylum claims of individuals from Sri Lanka be examined carefully under fair and efficient refugee status determination procedures."
"Taken together they may cumulatively amount to a serious violation of human rights and therefore could be persecutory."
8. The Appellant's Submissions on the Appellant's Case and Evidence
"(i) Tamil ethnicity.
(ii) Previous record as a suspected or actual LTTE member or supporter.
(iii) Previous criminal record and/or outstanding arrest warrant.
(iv) Bail jumping and/or escaping from custody.
(v) Having signed a confession or similar document.
(vi) Having been asked by the security forces to become an informer.
(vii) The presence of scarring.
(viii) Returned from London or other centre of LTTE activity or fund-raising.
(ix) Illegal departure from Sri Lanka.
(x) Lack of ID card or other documentation.
(xi) Having made an asylum claim abroad.
(xii) Having relatives in the LTTE."
and/or serious ill-treatment if returned because on the accepted evidence, he is a Tamil who had admitted helping the LTTE, has been charged with offences connected with the LTTE, has scars consistent with torture and has jumped bail after being pressurised to become a police informer. After addressing us on the role of country experts and CG cases discussed elsewhere in this determination, Mr MacKenzie asked us to note that the consistent position of the Tribunal over the past years has been that the ceasefire removed fears of persecution on return to Sri Lanka, other than "exceptional" cases. Those exceptional cases included individuals suspected of assisting the LTTE such as TJ (Risks – return) Sri Lanka CG [2002] UKIAT 01869 (also called Jeyachandran) and it has always been the case that persons suspected of assisting the LTTE were at risk, as was accepted by the Court of Appeal in Selvaratnam [2003] EWCA Civ 121. The appellant however, now submits that the risk categories that were then identified have now widened. The deteriorating situation over the past twelve to eighteen months in Sri Lanka, since the introduction of the Emergency Regulations in August 2005 and continuing major violations of the ceasefire, as noted in the background reports supplied, including the detailed analysis of Dr Smith showed that:
"(i) The ceasefire has effectively ended with both the government and the LTTE in open fighting and many insurgent attacks by the LTTE being reported,
(ii) the security forces remain in a high state of alert for possible actions by the LTTE,
(iii) there are regular and persistent reports of torture and mistreatment by the security forces, with apparent impunity,
(iv) the LTTE remains active in persecuting its actual or perceived opponents."
"In the context of a bitter ethnic conflict where both sides display strong totalitarian tendencies, and given the understandable and overriding concern with security, in a country which until recently had the highest level of suicide bomb attacks of any country in the world, there is ample reason for keeping official records regarding previous suspicions against individuals, even if those individuals escaped or were released" (paragraph 37).
Mr MacKenzie noted that Dr Gunaratna also noted the record keeping and the COIS report of the Home Office delegation undertaken in March 2002 stated that computerised records in the south of the country were kept including computerised records at the airport.
"The appellant's previous status as a recorded LTTE suspect means that, he [will] almost certainly be of interest to the authorities and, as such he will axiomatically have been placed on one of the two lists that are provided to the immigration services at the airport by the security forces. The first is a 'Stop list', which the National Intelligence Bureau provides to ensure that those in which the authorities have an interest are detained on arrival. The second is a 'Watch list', which alerts the authorities to the return of a person in which there is an interest and is used to trigger covert surveillance. If the appellant is on one of those lists, he will be extremely vulnerable on return both to arrest at the airport or following his arrival."
Dr Gunaratna and the BHC letter of 24 August 2006 agreed that there was an IT system at the airport and this is confirmed in the COIR.
"Carrying a national identity card has become a must".
In this appellant's case the original reason for his arrest had been his failure to have an ID card and this indicated that it was one of the factors that authorities would assume thereby that he was with the LTTE.
"The government's respect for the human rights of its citizens declined due in part to the breakdown of the CFA".
"In relation to returning asylum seekers the [Sri Lankan monitoring mission] stated, 'if a person has had any affiliation in the past and returns they will face danger'. This was mentioned in relation to both perceived connections with the LTTE, thus concerns about being targeted by the police and armed forces, and also affiliations to certain parties or individuals which may make a person a target of the LTTE."
"The team were told by multiple sources that the National Intelligence Bureau has records dating back ten years and earlier with a national computer database being used for the past two years. People with previous incidents of arrest or questioning are likely to [be] arrested and under the state of emergency and level of conflict may face further human rights violations such as torture. One group stated: 'They will know people's history'. Another stated, 'the NIB will have a record of past interrogations, and can cause further charges if [a person is] returned.'"
"All lodges and boarding houses will be routinely monitored and checked by special police teams once a week, according to the new security plan."
"How a person has left Sri Lanka will impact on their return experience – they could be charged under immigration law … if he is a Tamil chances are he will be immediately detained, suspected – (particularly) if he used fake documents or bribed – in Sri Lanka you can be charged for leaving the country on a fake passport."
The Tamil Net reports and Hotham report also noted an apparent increase in the detention of persons who were unable to produce ID cards or prove their identity and, he said, a disturbing issue was the recently introduced requirement of the Residence Permit list. These newly introduced registration requirements state that each member of a household must be registered with the police. "Originally this was introduced and implemented for Tamils only but has now been made the householders registration requirement for all citizens. After speaking to many groups and individuals about this requirement, it would seem that only Tamils and some Muslims are being forced to comply."
9. Conclusions on the Background Evidence, and Expert Reports When Set Against the Issues Identified
(a) There are approximately 250,000 Sri Lankan Tamils in the Colombo district out of a total population of 2.25 million approximately. Thus Sri Lankan Tamils make up over 10% of the population.
(b) 200,000 Tamils are stated to have sought refuge in the West.
(c) From the respondent we were advised that some 750 (presumably predominantly Sri Lankan Tamils) Sri Lankans have made enforced or voluntary returns to Sri Lanka over the period 1 April 2005 – 30 June 2006.
(d) There were reports of two returnees having been killed. (The situation regarding the circumstances of these are opaque at best from the evidence that came before us).
(e) BHC in its letter of 10 April 2007 speaks of a report of 84 disappearances in Colombo, 80 of these being Tamil.
We realise that ascertaining an accurate mathematical percentage of risk of detention against the other figures is simply not possible. However, what these figures do demonstrate is that even if the whole 750 persons returned from UK are added to the Tamil population in Colombo, or are considered as part of the approximate 10% population of Sri Lankan Tamils, the number of disappearances or abductions in Colombo (80) is a very small percentage. We realise there may be differences in timing and that there may be some unreported disappearances, abductions or detentions. Even so, these figures do show that in analysing the reports from the experts a strong note of caution must be injected, as the best figures available show insignificant, or remote risk, percentages when set against the Tamil population of Colombo. The figures certainly do not indicate a picture of anything beyond a small or remote level of detention and/or maltreatment, risks for the generality of Sri Lankan Tamils in Colombo. We consider that this must be the starting point of our consideration against which we can set the opinions of the expert and other reports." The statistics and the totality of the evidence we considered all serve to emphasise that the specific profiles of individual claimant's need to be considered and there is not a situation of real risk to large swathes of the Tamil population in Colombo or to returning failed asylum seekers.
"But it is the Secretary of State who is likely to have the most comprehensive knowledge of the conditions in foreign countries, not least through diplomatic and consular channels, and if decisions with enhanced status of country guidance cases are to be made about those countries it might seem appropriate for the Secretary of State directly to contribute that knowledge."
Tamil Ethnicity
Previous Record as a Suspected or Actual LTTE Member or Supporter
Previous Criminal Record and/or Arrest Warrant
Bail Jumping and/or Escape from Custody
Signing a Confession or Similar Document
Refusing requests by Security Force to Become an Informer
Presence of Scarring
Return from London or Other Centre of LTTE Activity or Fund-Raising
Illegal Departure from Sri Lanka
Lack of ID Card or Other Documentation
Having Made an Asylum Claim Abroad
Having Relatives in the LTTE
Internal Flight and State Protection
Risk Profiles for Tamils
10. Application of the Objective Findings to the Appellant's case and Decision
His fear of the LTTE was only in respect of being forcibly recruited whilst he was living in the north of the country. In the circumstances we have not gone on to assess that risk. We find however, that given his profile, as regards the LTTE, then if he were able to locate himself in Colombo there is nothing in that profile that would suggest a real risk to him of serious harm at the hands of the LTTE.
11. Conclusions on the continuing applicability of Sri Lankan CG Cases
YP (Maintenance – detention records) Sri Lanka CG [2003] UKIAT 00145.
JP (Maintenance – detention records) Sri Lanka CG [2003] UKIAT 00142.
SV (Passport renewal) Sri Lanka CG [2003] UKIAT 00125.
VK (Risk – release – escapes – LTTE) Sri Lanka CG [2003] UKIAT 00096,
TK (Ceasefire – negotiations) Sri Lanka CG [2003] UKIAT 00026.
VS (Risk – LTTE – escape) Sri Lanka CG [2003] UKIAT 00003.
AE FE (PTSD – Internal relocation) Sri Lanka CG [2002] UKIAT 05237.
DA (Risk – return – reporting restrictions) Sri Lanka CG [2002] UKIAT 04279,
PR IS (Risk – conviction – fine paid – release) Sri Lanka CG [2002] UKIAT 04230.
TJ (Risk – returns) Sri Lanka CG [2002] UKIAT 01869.
B (Detailed appraisal) Sri Lanka CG [2002] UKIAT 01547.
PT (Medical report – analysis) Sri Lanka CG [2002] UKIAT 01336.
PT (Risk – bribery – release) Sri Lanka CG [2002] UKIAT 03444. Although this case concerned the position in mid-2002, paragraphs 28 and 29 of the determination (which deal with scarring) are not inconsistent with the evidence that was before us and paragraphs 19 to 27 (which deal with the issue of bribery) remain consistent with the evidence we have heard, the submissions made and contains what continues to be a common sense approach to the issue of bribery-related releases.
PS (LTTE – Internal flight – sufficiency of protection) Sri Lanka CG [2004] UKIAT 00297. This case dealt with the risk from the LTTE in Colombo. This is not an issue with which we have been engaged, except in passing, and the issue will be reconsidered shortly. The decision contains some useful observations about risk from the LTTE in Colombo which must, of course, be considered in the light of current evidence and developing conditions, until such time as a replacement country guidance case is published.
12. Summary of Conclusions
"(i) Tamil ethnicity.
(ii) Previous record as a suspected or actual LTTE member or supporter.
(iii) Previous criminal record and/or outstanding arrest warrant.
(iv) Bail jumping and/or escaping from custody.
(v) Having signed a confession or similar document.
(vi) Having been asked by the security forces to become an informer.
(vii) The presence of scarring.
(viii) Returned from London or other centre of LTTE activity or fund-raising.
(ix) Illegal departure from Sri Lanka.
(x) Lack of ID card or other documentation.
(xi) Having made an asylum claim abroad.
(xii) Having relatives in the LTTE."
Conclusion
The appellant's appeal is dismissed on asylum grounds.
The appeal is allowed on human rights grounds.
The appellant is entitled to humanitarian protection as a person in need of international protection.
Signed Date:
Senior Immigration Judge Mather
Documents considered
Submitted by the Appellant
Expert reports:
Dr Smith's Report: 22 September 2005
Dr Smith's Supplementary Report: 5 October 2006
Professor A Good's Report: 3 October 2006
Dr Gunaratna – expert witness report: 6 October 2006
Report by Dr Yolande Foster: 8 October 2006
Dr Smith & Detective Inspector Hibberd's report on Tamil Organised Crime in London: June 2004
Other materials:
UNHCR Position Paper (excerpts only): April 2004
UNHCR Position Paper: December 2006
Hotham Mission Field Trip Report: October 2006
Canadian Immigration and Refugee Board Report: 22 December 2006
Tamilnet web page 05 February 2007
Tamilnet web page 09 March 2007
Tamilnet web page 18 March 2007
Tamilnet web page 21 March 2007
Tamilnet web page 26 March 2007
Tamilnet web page 13 March 2007
BBC News web report 27 November 2006 "Tamil Statehood is only option"
Amnesty International Public Statement 1 December 2006
BBC News web Report: 6 December 2006
Sri Lankan Government Website article: 6 December 2006
Asian Human Rights Commission statement 2 February 2007
Yahoo News Canada web article: 6 March 2007
South Asia Intelligence Review web article:12 March 2007
Human Rights Watch Information Bulletin 13 March 2007
Christian Today web article: 22 March 2007
BBC News web report: 26 March 2007
US State Department Report: March 2007
Human Rights Watch Article: 29 March 2007
Submitted by the Respondent
Canadian Immigration and Refugee Board Report: 5 August 2003
Respondent's Figures on Removals & Returns to Sri Lanka: 2005 & 2006
Letter from the Minister of State to Harry Cohen MP:17 November 2006
COI Report on Sri Lanka: October 2006
COI Report Sri Lanka: February 2007
Operational Guidance Note Sri Lanka 9th March 2007
British High Commission Letter 26 September 2005
British High Commission Letter 13 Feb 2006
British High Commission Letter 4 April 2006
British High Commission Letter 24 August 2006
British High Commission Letter 22 November 2006 with Sri Lanka Bail Act 1997
British High Commission letter on emergency regulations: 10 April 2007