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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Aksu, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2006] EWHC 1382 (Admin) (22 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2006/1382.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1382 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF AKSU | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | (DEFENDANT) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR A PAYNE (instructed by TREASURY SOLICITORS) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
"1. Further to your client's judicial review application this is a supplementary letter to clarify issues regarding the refusal of your client's business application under the ECAA
2. Your client practised fraud in entering the United Kingdom by virtue of the fact that, when he arrived in the United Kingdom on 6 August 1999, without documentation he sought entry on the grounds of asylum and at interview denied that having made any other asylum applications. It subsequently transpired, however, that not only had your client made a previous application in Germany on 13 January 1997, but that this application had been considered and refused by the German authorities and on 22 July 1999 your client had exhausted his appeal rights in Germany. It is clear therefore that the representations your client made to secure entry to the UK were false.
3. The Secretary of the State is of the view that your client's fraudulent representations used in attempting to secure entry to UK prohibits him from obtaining benefits under the ECAA.
4. Despite the Secretary of State's primary position your client's business applications has also been considered under the 1973 rules. You are referred to [the] letter of 25th February 2006 in this regard."
"20. The Claimant plainly falls within the definition of a person who has sought to procure entry into the UK and/or thereafter resided in the UK illegally due to false representations. It is clear that these representations that he made to secure entry in the UK were wholly false. Contrary to the account he provided in his screening interview he had been residing in Germany since 1997 and had previously claimed asylum in Germany.
21. Consequently, the Claimant's claim for asylum, which was the basis upon which he secured temporary admission to the UK, had already been considered and rejected by the German authorities. Indeed, the Claimant and his family appear to have been given the opportunity of making two separate claims for asylum, both of which attracted rights of appeal and both of which were rejected by the German authorities
22. The Claimant's position is therefore to be contrasted with asylum seekers who, whilst having a genuine subjective fear of persecution, have their claims dismissed on the grounds that their fear is not/no longer objectively well-founded.
23. In these circumstances where, by virtue of manifestly false representations, the Claimant has resided in the UK unlawfully for many years, there is no good reason why he should derive any additional benefit from his fraudulent behaviour. The Defendant was therefore perfectly entitled to rely on the exception identified in the R (Veli Tum) and refuse his application under the current HC 395 Rules on the grounds that he lacked the requisite entry clearance."
There is no dispute that the claimant is not entitled to succeed under the current HC 395 rules.
"Our client, according to you, is supposed to have entered the UK via fraud being that he arrived in the UK on 6 August 1999 without documentation and sought entry on the grounds of asylum and the subsequent discovery that he had made another application in Germany on 13 January 1997 despite denying same in the asylum interview.
We state categorically that our client's entry to the UK was not fraudulent because he notified immigration authorities on entry that he had claimed asylum in Germany.
We, therefore, request the Secretary of State to rescind his view that our client entered the UK fraudulently thereby allowing him to obtain all the benefits he is entitled to under the ECAA."
It was clearly intended that this letter would be referred to in the judicial review proceedings. Hence it was that the claim was repeated in the claimant's skeleton argument, dated 19th May. Paragraphs 18 to 20 of that skeleton argument said this:
"18. There is no evidence to substantiate the Defendant's allegation of a prior denial of a claim of asylum in Germany. The detail grounds simply repeat the allegation originally made in the acknowledgment of service chronology with no evidence to found this, cogent or otherwise.
19. The Claimant has denied the Defendant's allegation by way of a letter to the Defendant dated 11th April 2006, stating instead of his informing of a prior claim in Germany upon entry.
20. No copy of the interview has ever been served by the Defendant upon the Claimant or his representatives."
1. A copy of the Dublin Screening Interview with the claimant;
2. A letter dated 9th February 2000 from the German authorities, accepting responsibility for the claimant's asylum claim; and
3. A standard form for determining the State responsible for examining an application for asylum in respect of both the claimant and his wife.
"2. I came to the UK on 6th August 1999 from Turkey with my wife and my newly born daughter. My daughter was born on 13th July 1999 in Germany.
3. I left Germany on or about 22nd July 1999 to Turkey. I also have two other sons who are living in Turkey, then. On arrival we noted that the political situation in Turkey is still the same hence we decided to come to UK and claimed asylum on arrival.
4. We came to the UK by lorry. There were approximately 20 of us in the said lorry. On arrival at Dover, all of us were asked to line up and asked to sign a form. I now learned this form is [the Dublin Screening Interview].
5. I remember that there was few questions were put to me while the Officer was completing the form. I was very tired and ill of travelling of such a journey with our newborn baby. My daughter was very ill as well. The Officer was very sympathetic of our situation and conducted the interview very quickly. Thereafter our picture was taken and my family and we were asked to go.
6. I did not understand the meaning of 'Residency' until it was explained to me by my solicitors. I was [under] the impression that residency means one has a permanent residency in a country. This is the reason my answer was no. I also did not understand the meaning of EU as well, then. However, the questions asked were very short and it was not explained to me in detail or read back to me before I signed them. I now learned that these questions are very important, hence they should have been explained to me in detail to avoid confusion and misunderstanding.
7. I now learned from the Defendant's case that I attempted to conceal the information that I claimed asylum in Germany and entered the UK fraudulently. I confirm that I did claim asylum in Germany. However, I did not claim asylum on my route to the UK. This was my understanding the first question the Officer asked then ie whether I have claimed asylum on my way to the UK.
8. In the circumstances, I disagree that I entered the UK fraudulently by concealing the information that I claimed asylum in Germany."
"The claimant is under a duty to disclose all material facts. These include all material facts known to the claimant and those he would have known had he made the appropriate enquiries prior to applying for permission... Nondisclosure is a sufficient for refusing the remedies sought or refusing permission."
"The judgment of the ECJ in Kondova's case does refer to a person 'who gets round the relevant national controls by a false representation... and to a person who 'was residing illegally' within the territory of the host Member State 'by reason of false representations'. That, however, simply reflects the factual scenario before the ECJ. To restrict the principle in the way [counsel for the applicant] suggests is not in our judgment consistent with the policy behind a bar based on fraud. The passage from paragraph 76 of the judgment in Kondova's case quoted in paragraph 15 above gives an indication of what the ECJ had in mind. The passage suggests the rationale of the fraud bar is that the system of prior national controls largely rests on the correctness of the representations made to immigration by those applying for visas and for entry. If this is so, it is argued [counsel for the Secretary of State], the deceptive intention of the person seeking entry that is important, not whether that person is successful in the deception."
"...that there is a 'clear principle that a would-be immigrant cannot improve his position by resorting to fraud'"
Beatson J continued:
"This statement was made when dealing with dicta of Davies J, at first instance, that the submissions made on behalf of the Secretary of State in that case meant that person granted temporary entry, perhaps by being economical as to the truth with the immigration authorities, but who unlawfully overstayed was potentially able to take advantage of the standstill clause. Lord Woolf stated that the dicta of Davies J should not be understood as in any way conflicting with the clear principle he set out about the effect of fraud. Brooke LJ agreed with Lord Woolf's judgment. Sedley LJ also agreed and stated that the court was not dealing with a fraud case and that Davies J's dicta was not necessary for the decision. Since the Court was not dealing with a fraud case, it did not have to consider and determine the precise scope of the fraud exception. Nevertheless, Lord Woolf's formulation does not suggest a narrow approach to it."
"...but when he made an application for asylum he did so by giving an account of how and in what circumstances he had left Turkey. That account was the subject of examination by the adjudicator when hearing the appeal against a refusal of asylum. It is perfectly plain from the terms of the adjudicator's decision, in particular paragraphs 20 to 22 and 25 and 26 of his reasons, that the adjudicator concluded that the claimant had put forward a fraudulent and false account in order to support his claim for asylum. It describes the claim as obviously false. It describes the only inference that he could draw from various matters was that the appellant put forward a false story from the moment he arrived in the United Kingdom."
Wilkie J concluded that that case fell within the dicta of Beatson J in Yilmaz. Although Mr Waheed emphasised that in the present case there had been no appeal to an adjudicator and thus no opportunity for an independent consideration as to whether or not the claimant's claim was true or false, that is simply because the claimant's false account was discovered at an earlier stage. It is plain that his account of not having sought asylum elsewhere in the United Kingdom was simply untrue and was a device to obtain entry to this country. As such he falls within Yilmaz and Taskale.