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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> NP (Sri Lanka) v The Secretary Of State For The Home Department [2015] EWCA Civ 975 (24 June 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/975.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 975 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER)
(UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE MARTIN)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FULFORD
____________________
NP (SRI LANKA) | Applicant/Claimant | |
-v- | ||
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Respondent/Defendant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss C Patry (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
"When Counsel for the Applicant commenced submissions addressing in the first instance the credibility issues raised in the reasons for refusal letter, the UT[J] intervened and pointed to the documentary evidence and the fact that the SSHD had not challenged it [grounds paragraph 3]. She stated that the documentary evidence was strong, extensive and emanated from various sources, and made it clear that she did not want to hear submissions on the general credibility of the Applicant's account. As a result, Counsel was prevented from addressing her on the general credibility issues raised in the refusal letter, and following the UT[J]'s comments on the documentary evidence she focused on the documentary evidence, and the facts that the evidence established.
...
It is submitted that the UT's approach was procedurally unfair ... Despite [the UT judge's] position being made clear to the SSHD at the hearing, the Applicant's Counsel nevertheless attempted to pursue and address all issues in the SSHD's submissions and in the reasons for refusal letter on the credibility of the Applicant's account. However, the UT intervened again pointing out the significance of the documentary evidence and that this really was at the centre of the case. She prevented Counsel from making submissions on the general credibility matters raised in the refusal letter.
Having made clear in open Court her position the UT rejected the Applicant's account on the basis of inconsistencies and implausibilities and concluded that the documentary evidence, despite a lack of assistance from the SSHD, could not be relied upon having regard to the otherwise incredible."
"The account of the course of the hearing before the UT given by the applicant in his grounds ... if correct, gives me cause for concern that there may have been a material procedural irregularity, leading to a possible error of law.
In the circumstances, I think it is desirable for there to be an oral hearing of this permission application attended by the respondent. If there is disagreement about the course of the hearing below there may have to be directions for the obtaining of a transcript ..."
"Did the Upper Tribunal materially err in law in its approach to consideration of the documentary evidence and its impact on credibility?"
"26. ... He remained in detention for two years. He was not tortured every day but five or six times a month when the officers got drunk. Sometimes he would be hung upside down and beaten either with hands or rifles and he was kicked. Once he was left hanging by one leg for a day and a half and since then has had back problems. Other times he was hung upside down and chillies were burned close to his nose. Another time a pen was put into his left ear and hit with a diary causing his ear to bleed and resulting in deafness. On four or five occasions barbed wire in a steel pipe was inserted into his rectum and he was forced to clean the toilet with his tongue. He was also sexually abused many times by the Army officers when drunk."
"I find it extraordinary that if, as he claimed, a pen was inserted into the Appellant's ear and then hit with a diary it did not cause catastrophic damage to the ear if not worse. It is not credible that the result would simply be a 'dull eardrum'."
"A person who attempted to blast bombs in proximity to Colombo having obtained money from the LTTE was taken to custody by the security forces while transporting explosives.
Mr Nuwara Paksha Pedige Nimal Jayalal, a prawn businessman in Puttalam was taken into custody by the Dankotuwa police While transporting explosives in his vehicle numbered 48 SRI 9381. A senior police officer said that he was kept in protective custody for further inquiries."
"34. ... there are other problems with that document. The document purports to be a notification to the recipient, in this case the Department of Immigration and Emigration that the Appellant has been released on bail subject to certain conditions, one of which is that he must not leave the country. It is said that copies of the documents have also been sent to an Employment Bureau, the International Airport and to the Appellant. It indicates that the Appellant was required to hand over copies of his passport and national identity card to the court. That is a direct contradiction to his evidence to me in July when he said quite clearly that his original passport was retained by the court but only a copy taken of his identity card and the original given back to him because it was needed to travel within Sri Lanka. That explanation given in July made sense. It would make sense when foreign travel is prohibited to keep a person's passport. The new ... translation however indicates that the original passport was not retained by the court. I had been given no credible explanation for this discrepancy."
"44. The Secretary of State disputes his claim to own a prawn farm and grocery store. With regard to the prawn farm the Appellant has produced an invoice from one of his suppliers and he has produced a vehicle registration document in relation to a motor-vehicle. I am prepared to accept that the Appellant, or at least his family, run a prawn farm in Sri Lanka.
45. The Appellant also produced an original newspaper article and a translation of that article and a letter from the deputy general manager of the newspaper confirming the newspaper article to be genuine. Those documents have not been challenged by the Secretary of State save in the most general terms. The Appellant has produced a letter from his brother and a translation confirming his claim and his involvement in securing his release.
...
49. I have not been assisted by the Secretary of State in this case. Documents have come in on a 'piecemeal' basis. However, the originals of a number of documents have been available since July, in particular the original newspaper article and yet the Secretary of State has done nothing to check the veracity of any of the documents and indeed on her behalf Mr Nath has challenged documents only in the most general terms. It is difficult therefore for me to make a finding that the documents are unreliable. However, the Appellant's claim of mistreatment is so severe that it is simply not credible that if a government minister was a major factor in his release that he would not know his name and it is not credible that the Appellant, would not know with certainty, given the grave nature of the charges whether he had pleaded not guilty, been acquitted or simply been released on bail. It is also not credible that a person detained on terrorism charges and who had been named in a newspaper would have been released at all, even with a bribe as he would be too high profile - particularly as a Sinhalese aiding the LTTE.
50. Although I have been given no reason by the Secretary of State to doubt the documents I do so because they cannot be reliable if the claim is incredible as I have found it to be for the reasons I have given."
"35. In almost all cases it would be an error to concentrate on whether a document is a forgery. In most cases where forgery is alleged it will be of no great importance whether this is or is not made out to the required higher civil standard. In all cases where there is a material document it should be assessed in the same way as any other piece of evidence. A document should not be viewed in isolation. The decision maker should look at the evidence as a whole or in the round (which is the same thing).
36. There is no obligation on the Home Office to make detailed enquiries about documents produced by individual claimants. Doubtless there are cost and logistical difficulties in the light of the number of documents submitted by many asylum claimants. In the absence of a particular reason on the facts of an individual case a decision by the Home Office not to make inquiries, produce in-country evidence relating to a particular document or scientific evidence should not give rise to any presumption in favour of an individual claimant or against the Home Office."