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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> EOG (Anonymity Order Made) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Rev 1) [2020] EWHC 3310 (Admin) (03 December 2020)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/3310.html
Cite as: [2021] Imm AR 564, [2020] WLR(D) 658, [2021] 1 WLR 1875, [2020] EWHC 3310 (Admin), [2021] ACD 24, [2021] WLR 1875

[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2021] 1 WLR 1875] [View ICLR summary: [2020] WLR(D) 658] [Help]


Neutral Citation Number: [2020] EWHC 3310 (Admin)
Case No: CO/4903/2019

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT

Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
03/12/2020

B e f o r e :

MR JUSTICE MOSTYN
____________________

Between:
EOG (anonymity order made)
Claimant

- and –


SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT


Defendant

____________________

Amanda Weston QC and Miranda Butler (instructed by Duncan Lewis Solicitors) for the Claimant
Robin Tam QC and William Irwin (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant

Hearing date: 24 November 2020

____________________

HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT APPROVED
____________________

Crown Copyright ©

    Mr Justice Mostyn:

  1. The Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings ("ECAT") was signed in Warsaw on 16 May 2005. Its paramount objectives, as stated in its recitals, are respect for victims' rights; protection of victims; and action to combat trafficking. In a similar vein, Article 1 provides that the purposes of ECAT are (a) to prevent and combat trafficking in human beings and (b) to protect the human rights of the victims of trafficking and to design a comprehensive framework for the protection and assistance of victims and witnesses.
  2. Although ECAT has not been formally incorporated into our domestic law it has been held that a failure by the government to apply its principles will be justiciable (see, for example, R (PK (Ghana)) v Home Secretary [2018] 1 WLR 3955 and MS (Pakistan) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2020] UKSC 9 at [20]). Further, the Modern Slavery Act 2015 states in its explanatory notes that the Act was passed against the backdrop of ECAT and other international instruments and that the guidance that the Secretary of State is obliged to issue under section 49 must take into account the international requirements set out in the Convention. The latest version of that guidance (version 1.02) was re-issued in August 2020 ("the Main Guidance").
  3. Therefore, ECAT is as close to being incorporated in our domestic law, without actually being so, as it is possible to be.
  4. The obligations imposed by ECAT are discussed and explained in its Explanatory Report also dated 16 May 2005 ("the Explanatory Report") and have been further considered in authorities stretching to the Supreme Court.
  5. I will also be referring to a further piece of guidance: Discretionary Leave Considerations for Victims of Modern Slavery the latest version of which (3.0) was issued on 9 October 2020 ("the DL Guidance").
  6. Those documents and authorities set out how this country has sought to comply with its international obligations. The arrangements that have been made are well-known. They are pithily summarised by Baroness Hale of Richmond in MS (Pakistan) v Home Secretary at [2].
  7. In this country a person who is a suspected victim of trafficking is referred to the National Referral Mechanism ("NRM"). This is a body within the Home Office which acts as the competent authority for the purposes of ECAT. Its creation was by executive action alone; it has no statutory origin. Its staff must be trained and qualified in preventing and combatting trafficking. Using legislative and other measures it must seek to "identify" the referred person as a victim. Article 10 provides that the process of identification has two stages. First, there is a preliminary sift to determine if there are "reasonable grounds" to believe that a person has been a victim of trafficking (see the Explanatory Report at paras 131 and 132). If that decision is positive then the potential victim:
  8. i) cannot be removed from this country (see Article 10.2 and the Explanatory Report at para 132);

    ii) gains the benefit of the "recovery and reflection period" referred to in Article 13 which must last at least 30 days (but which probably should be longer (see the Explanatory Report at para 177)) and which is set at 45 days in this country (see the Main Guidance at paras 7.1 and 7.2); and

    iii) gains entitlement to the assistance specified in Article 12(1) and (2) (see the Explanatory Report at paras 135 and 147).

  9. The assistance to be afforded to potential victims under Articles 12.1 and 12.2 is that which is necessary for them in their physical, psychological and social recovery. At a minimum it includes (i) money for accommodation and psychological and material assistance; (ii) access to emergency medical treatment; (iii) access to education for children; and (iv) a general obligation to take account of the victim's safety and protection needs. The Explanatory Report states at para 150:
  10. "The aim of the assistance provided for in sub-paragraphs (a) to (f) [of Article 12.1] is to "assist victims in their physical, psychological and social recovery". The authorities must therefore make arrangements for those assistance measures while bearing in mind the specific nature of that aim."

    The obligation on the state to assist potential victims awaiting a conclusive grounds decision in their physical, psychological and social recovery is at the heart of the dispute in this case.

  11. For most potential victims these obligations are largely met by the government paying for accommodation; providing a weekly subsistence allowance of £65; and affording access to the NHS and education for children.
  12. Although it is not stated explicitly, it is obvious that an underlying principle of ECAT and its Explanatory Report is that the preliminary reasonable grounds decision should be taken very quickly. This imperative of expedition is reflected in the Main Guidance paras 7.2, 14.48 and 14.57 where it is stated that a reasonable grounds decision should be made within five working days "wherever possible".
  13. The second stage of the process of identification is for the Single Competent Authority ("SCA"), the decision-making arm of the NRM, to decide on the balance of probability if the referred person is indeed a victim of trafficking. This is known as the "conclusive grounds" decision.
  14. A positive conclusive grounds decision gives rise to an entitlement to a 45-day run-off of the interim support referred to above (see the Main Guidance at paras 7.1 and 7.2). More significantly, it opens the door under Article 14 to the possibility of the issue of a renewable residence permit. I shall deal with this in detail below. A conclusive grounds decision also allows for the meeting of long-term recovery needs for those with such needs.
  15. It is implicit in the terms of ECAT that the conclusive grounds decision should be taken in a reasonable time. In R (O) v SSHD [2019] EWHC 148 (Admin) Garnham J at [67] stated:
  16. "… decisions must be taken in a reasonable time. What is reasonable, however, will turn on the nature of the power being exercised, the effect of exercising, and failing to exercise, the power, and all the circumstances of the case."
  17. The need to make a conclusive grounds decision in a reasonable time is reflected in the Main Guidance. At para 7.1 it states:
  18. "The SCA will make a Conclusive Grounds decision no sooner than 45 calendar days after the reasonable grounds decision, to determine whether 'on the balance of probabilities' there are sufficient grounds to decide that the individual is a victim of modern slavery. This decision is based on evidence made available to the SCA. Following a positive Conclusive Grounds decision, victims will be exited from support only when appropriate to do so. Victims with a positive Conclusive Grounds decision will receive at least 45 calendar days of support during the move-on support period."

    Para 7.2 states:

    "Conclusive Grounds decision is made by the SCA. The Conclusive Grounds decision should generally be made as soon as possible after 45 calendar days."

    At para 14.77 it states:

    "There is no target to make a Conclusive Grounds decision within a specific timeframe. A Conclusive Grounds decision should be made as soon as possible after the 45-calendar day Recovery Period has ended, unless the SCA has received a request to delay the decision. The 45-day period begins when the SCA makes a positive Reasonable Grounds decision. The SCA is responsible for making a Conclusive Grounds decision."

    And at para 14.243:

    "To make sure that a Conclusive Grounds decision can be made as near as possible to day 45 (although that may not be possible in every case), a review date for day 30 should be set to:
    • monitor progress on the case
    • check it is on target for a conclusive decision."
    (Emphasis added)
  19. I turn to residence permits. Under Article 14 of ECAT a residence permit "shall be issued to a victim" where the competent authority considers that their stay in the national territory is "necessary owing to their personal situation" or where it is considered that their stay is "necessary for the purposes of cooperation with the authorities in investigation or criminal proceeding." For the purposes of Article 14 a "victim" is someone who has had the benefit of a conclusive grounds decision, not merely a reasonable grounds decision.
  20. In this country the victims who will be seeking a residence permit under Article 14 will be those who are not British or EEA citizens.
  21. The Explanatory Report para 181 explains how the immediate return of a victim to her country of origin is unsatisfactory both for the victim and the law enforcement authorities combating the trafficking. It explains how a return may lead the victim back into the hands of traffickers; how it is unlikely to deter other victims from falling into the same trap; and how it may expose victims to a risk of reprisal. From the law-enforcement perspective the availability of residence permits is a measure calculated to encourage victims to cooperate. Para 183 expresses the first ground where it would be reasonable to grant a residence permit as: "the victim's personal circumstances must be such that it would be unreasonable to compel them to leave the national territory". Para 184 explains that the personal situation requirement will take in a range of situations, such as the victim's safety, state of health, family situation or some other factor which should be considered.
  22. The issue of a residence permit pursuant to Article 14 triggers the further entitlements referred to in Articles 12.3 and 12.4. Those entitlements are: (a) access to necessary medical or other assistance to which the victim does not have adequate resources and access; and (b) in accordance with nationally devised rules, access to the labour market and to vocational training and education. The entitlements are only available to victims who are "lawfully resident" in the state in question. The Explanatory Report at para 165 explains that lawful residence covers those victims issued with residence permits under Article 14. Para 166 goes on to say:
  23. "[Article 12.4] provides that each Party is to adopt the rules under which victims lawfully resident in the Party's territory are allowed access to the labour market, to vocational training and to education. In the drafters' view these measures are desirable for helping victims reintegrate socially and more particularly take greater charge of their lives. However, ECAT does not establish an actual right of access to the labour market, vocational training and education. It is for the Parties to decide the conditions governing access. As in paragraph 3, the words "lawfully resident" refer, for instance, to victims who have a residence permit referred to in Article 14 or who have the Party's nationality. The authorisation referred to need not involve issuing an administrative document to the person concerned that allows them to work."
  24. ECAT does not establish an absolute right of the beneficiary of a residence permit under Article 14 to work but, rather, mandates that the contracting states should devise rules whereby such persons can access the labour market. However, that distinction is of no relevance in this country as the relevant policy here permits a victim who has received our version of an Article 14 residence permit to work in any field and to access public funds.
  25. The policy in this country is set out in the DL Guidance. The Article 14 residence permit will be a grant of discretionary leave. The standard grant is for 30 months. The decision whether to grant discretionary leave is made by the SCA. Consistently with the terms of Article 14, consideration of whether there should be a grant of discretionary leave will only arise once there has been a positive conclusive grounds decision.
  26. Page 6 of the DL Guidance states that a victim will not qualify for discretionary leave solely because the SCA has confirmed that he or she is a victim of modern slavery. It says: "there must be reasons based on their individual circumstances to justify a grant of discretionary leave".
  27. It states at page 7:

    "Discretionary leave may be considered under this specific policy where the SCA has made a positive conclusive grounds decision that an individual is a victim of modern slavery and they satisfy one of the following criteria:
    • leave is necessary owing to personal circumstances
    • leave is necessary to pursue compensation
    • victims who are helping police with their enquiries."

    And at page 11:

    "A positive conclusive grounds decision does not result in an automatic grant of immigration leave. However, unless the confirmed victim has an outstanding asylum claim at the time the positive conclusive grounds decision is made, automatic consideration should normally be given at the same time, or as soon as possible afterwards, to whether a grant of discretionary leave is appropriate under this policy." (Emphasis added)
  28. Therefore, it can be seen that the policy which has been adopted, reflecting the tacit imperative of expedition inherent in ECAT, is that a conclusive grounds decision should be made "as soon as possible" after the 45-day recovery period has finished. And that a decision about discretionary leave, where that is relevant, should be made at the same time as the conclusive grounds decision or "as soon as possible" thereafter.
  29. In R (O) v SSHD a wholesale attack was mounted against the NRM on the grounds that it was beset by systemic, chronic delay and as such its functioning was irrational in public law terms and therefore unlawful. Between [41] and [45] Garnham J analysed the statistics as they stood in the final quarter of 2018. The statistics revealed great delays. However, at [99] Garnham J held on the evidence before him:
  30. "Furthermore, it appears from the evidence and the agreed statistics that the position is now improving. The problems appear to have been identified and resources are being devoted to improving the speed at which cases are determined."
  31. In the case before me I have been directed by a witness statement made by Nicola Simpson, the head of the NRM Sustainability and Policy Team, to a URL[1] which allowed the download of an Excel spreadsheet prepared by government statisticians containing a wealth of information about the functioning of the NRM. From that it has been possible to extract data which undermines the belief of Garnham J that things were improving. On any view things have gone from bad to worse.
  32. I have also seen a letter from the Independent Anti-slavery Commissioner, Dame Sara Thornton, to Victoria Atkins MP, the Parliamentary Undersecretary for Safeguarding and Vulnerability, dated 18 October 2019. This letter reveals the scale, past and present, of the backlog of unresolved cases at the NRM.
  33. I set out in the following table the pertinent data extracted from the above-mentioned sources:
  34. Image 1

  35. This table, and the underlying data, make for very dispiriting reading. The table shows a remorseless increase in cases referred to the NRM. While it is true that the number of reasonable grounds decisions has matched the incoming caseload, the same cannot be said of conclusive grounds decisions. There was an increase in such decisions between 2017 and 2018 but the number in 2018 was only about half of what was needed to deal with the volume of incoming cases; and in 2019 it was only just over a third. Hence the increase in the backlog from 7,000 to 9,000 cases which at the current disposal rate will take between two and three years to conclude. The present average (mean) number of 462 days (i.e.15 months) to dispose conclusively of cases will inevitably worsen given the scale of the backlog.
  36. The data also belies Garnham J's projection in [41], based on the statistical evidence before him, that in 2018 the number of referrals would fall to 4,245 as well as his projection in [43] that the average length of time for making a conclusive grounds decision was falling. He estimated that for 2017 the average length of time for making such a decision had fallen to 327 days. In fact, it was 356 days, and rose sharply in 2018 to 462 days where it stayed for 2019.
  37. These delays are mirrored by the personal experience of the claimant in this case. She was referred to the NRM on 11 September 2018. She did receive a reasonable grounds decision, albeit negative, within six days. The NRM agreed to reconsider that decision. It took, remarkably, until 11 June 2019 for the claimant to receive a positive reasonable grounds decision. That was 273 days after her initial referral to the NRM. By the time that she made her judicial review application on 11 December 2019, 456 days after her initial referral, she had not received a conclusive grounds decision. She did not receive a conclusive grounds decision until 28 April 2020, an astonishing 595 days after her initial referral to the NRM. That conclusive grounds decision should have led to an automatic consideration of discretionary leave yet at the date I write this judgment, 26 November 2020, she has not yet been granted or refused such leave. 211 days have elapsed since the conclusive grounds decision without a decision having been made about discretionary leave. An astonishing 806 days have elapsed between her initial referral to the NRM and today.
  38. The effect of these delays has been to hit the claimant very hard. She entered this country on 20 September 2017 having been granted a Tier 5 Youth Mobility Scheme Visa, which entitled her to work and which was valid until 20 September 2019. Unfortunately, in April 2018 she fell under the domination of a man who abused her sexually and forced her into prostitution. Eventually she managed to escape, and as stated above, on 11 September 2018 she was referred into the NRM. On 25 June 2019 the claimant started work with a trafficking support organisation. She was able to do so because her visa remained unexpired. She very much enjoyed this work and on any view her ability to do it was an important component in her psychological and social recovery with which the state was obligated to assist her under the terms of the Convention. However, as stated above, her visa was due to expire on 20 September 2019. Therefore, a few days before that, on 14 September 2019, she ceased work, and has not worked since. Since then she has been dependant on payments from the state.
  39. 14 September 2019 was more than a year after her referral into the NRM. Even allowing for management and resource difficulties any reasonable estimation of the likely timescales for decisions on reasonable grounds, conclusive grounds and discretionary leave would have led to the conclusion that they would have been completed with plenty of time to spare within a year. The claimant therefore must have had a not unreasonable expectation that she would have been able to have continued with her work once her visa had expired because by then, surely, she would have reasoned, she would have gained discretionary leave.
  40. But no. Instead the claimant was forced to give up her employment and was cast into the "hostile environment" mandated by the Immigration Act 2014 for overstayers and other illegal migrants. The features of this environment were well described in R (Balajigari) v SSHD [2019] 1 WLR 4647 by Underhill LJ at [81]:
  41. "Secondly, Mr Biggs relied on the legal consequences for an applicant who remained in the UK without leave, which have been rendered more severe by the so-called "hostile environment" provisions introduced by the Immigration Act 2014. It is, in the first place, a criminal offence to be in the UK without leave to remain: see section 24 of the Immigration Act 1971. As regards practical consequences, a person without leave faces severe restrictions on their right to work (see section 24B of the 1971 Act), to rent accommodation (section 22 of the 2014 Act), to have a bank account (section 40 of the 2014 Act) and to hold a driving licence (sections 97, 97A and 99 of the Road Traffic Act 1988); nor will they be entitled to free treatment from the NHS: section 175 of the National Health Service Act 2006. He submitted that those consequences are bound to have a serious impact on a migrant's private life irrespective of any removal action."
  42. So it can be seen as a result of the defendant's delay the claimant finds herself in a most unhappy situation where she, as an overstayer, is branded a criminal (although no one has seriously suggested she would actually be prosecuted), deprived of access to basic services, unemployed, dehumanised and penalised. She has filed some moving evidence describing her sense of failure and emotional isolation since she has been deprived of the opportunity to work. The treatment meted out to her is far removed from the idea of social and psychological recovery.
  43. The claimant's claim for judicial review argues that her predicament on 11 December 2019 was the consequence of the application to her of an unlawful policy by the defendant. Specifically, she argues that (1) the defendant's policy of excluding a recipient of a reasonable grounds decision from a grant of discretionary leave is unlawful and (2) the defendant's refusal to treat a referral into the NRM as an application to vary her existing visa leave, thereby extending that leave under section 3C Immigration Act 1971, is likewise unlawful. Further, she argues that as a non-British, non-EEA national she is treated less favourably than a British or EEA national for the purposes of Article 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights and this discrimination also renders the policy unlawful.
  44. The claimant has been careful not to rerun the arguments based on chronic systemic delays unsuccessfully mounted by Ms Lieven QC in R(O) v SSHD. Ms Weston QC recognises that a judicial review based on delay is always a very steep climb requiring clear proof of irrationality. Rather, Ms Weston QC has been careful to confine the claim in the way I have set out above.
  45. However, the merit or otherwise of the claim has to be judged in the specific factual context where all referrals to the NRM appear to be beset by extreme delay and where those delays arguably have resulted in unacceptable treatment being meted out to this claimant.
  46. If there had been no delays, and if the claimant's referral to the NRM had been processed within the timescales advertised in the two policy documents, then she would have had no case to bring before this court. Well before her visa ran out she would have received her conclusive grounds decision together with a decision on discretionary leave. One way or another her position would have been certain. She would either have been lawfully continuing to work; or she would have been preparing to return to her homeland if she had not already done so.
  47. Therefore, the argument of Ms Weston QC was refined during her oral submissions. She argued that in circumstances where such gross delays arose it was incumbent on the defendant to include within the existing policy terms which regulated the leave position of a person who had received a positive reasonable grounds decision. Ms Weston QC placed strong reliance on article 10.2. This provides:
  48. "Article 10 – Identification of the victims
    2. Each Party shall adopt such legislative or other measures as may be necessary to identify victims as appropriate in collaboration with other Parties and relevant support organisations. Each Party shall ensure that, if the competent authorities have reasonable grounds to believe that a person has been victim of trafficking in human beings, that person shall not be removed from its territory until the identification process as victim of an offence provided for in Article 18 of this Convention has been completed by the competent authorities and shall likewise ensure that that person receives the assistance provided for in Article 12, paragraphs 1 and 2."
  49. This makes abundantly clear, she argues, that following a reasonable grounds decision discretionary leave to remain, in some form, must be granted to that person. An obligation not to remove must mean the same as an authorisation to stay. And an authorisation to stay can only be expressed by a grant of discretionary leave. Yet, a decision on reasonable grounds says nothing about being allowed to stay at that point in time. The decision dated 11 June 2019 sent to the claimant only addressed the future. It said: "if you are not a UK or EU/EEA national, and you receive a positive decision at Conclusive Grounds stage, then we will consider whether you will qualify for Discretionary Leave under the Modern Slavery policy."
  50. Ms Weston QC bolsters her argument about the meaning of Article 10.2 by reliance on some rather ambiguous drafting in Article 13.1. As explained above, this provides for a recovery and reflection period, set at 45 days in this country, to start immediately following a positive reasonable grounds decision. Article 13.1 provides
  51. "Article 13 – Recovery and reflection period
    1. Each Party shall provide in its internal law a recovery and reflection period of at least 30 days, when there are reasonable grounds to believe that the person concerned is a victim. Such a period shall be sufficient for the person concerned to recover and escape the influence of traffickers and/or to take an informed decision on cooperating with the competent authorities. During this period it shall not be possible to enforce any expulsion order against him or her. This provision is without prejudice to the activities carried out by the competent authorities in all phases of the relevant national proceedings, and in particular when investigating and prosecuting the offences concerned. During this period, the Parties shall authorise the persons concerned to stay in their territory."

    Ms Weston QC argues that the mention of "this period" in the final sentence (which I have underlined) refers to, and is governed by, the scenario in the immediately preceding sentence namely the time taken to undertake the activities carried out by the competent authorities in all phases of the relevant national proceedings. Ms Weston QC says that "these activities" plainly extend to reaching a conclusive grounds decision. Therefore, in that period the state must authorise the person to stay here. That can only be done by a grant of discretionary leave.

  52. Although this is a respectable argument I do not agree with it. Nor do I think it is necessary to enable the primary argument about the meaning of Article 10.2 to succeed. Although the drafting is ambiguous it seems to me that the reference to "this period" in the final sentence is indeed to the recovery and reflection period. Article 13 is about the recovery and reflection period and nothing else. Had the final sentence been referring to a different period it would have said "that period" to distinguish it from the period referred to in the heading of the Article and in its first three sentences.
  53. Reverting to her primary argument, Ms Weston QC submits that the absence of the grant of any kind of leave, however limited, to the beneficiary of a reasonable grounds decision is a fatal failure to implement the clear requirement not to remove such a person from the national territory as provided for in Article 10.2. As pointed out by Underhill LJ in Balajigari it is a criminal offence for anyone who is not a British or EEA citizen to be in this country without leave. It is unthinkable, it is argued, that a government agency whose obligation is to promote the psychological and social recovery of potential victims of trafficking should withhold interim leave from such people and force them into the status of criminality and exposure to the chill winds reserved for overstayers and other illegal immigrants.
  54. Ms Weston QC argues that any new policy would necessarily have to deal with those potential victims who had no leave as well as those potential victims who, like the claimant, had extant leave entitling them to work. As regards the latter class Ms Weston QC argues that the new policy should apply the principle embodied in section 3C of the Immigration Act 1971 and treat the reasonable grounds decision as having the effect of extending the existing leave until the process was concluded.
  55. Mr Tam QC argues that the true complaint of the claimant is about the delay that she has suffered at each stage of her journey through the system. He does not dispute that the data appears to show a further deterioration since Garnham J considered the statistics in late 2018. He accepts that the delay in dealing with all three stages of the claimant's progress has been most regrettable. However, he argues that this attack on the policy is completely misplaced when there were remedies available to the claimant in respect of the delay that she was suffering. First, she could have sought discretionary leave outside the Immigration Rules on the ground that she was a potential victim of trafficking and had been waiting an unconscionably long time for a conclusive grounds decision. Had she made that application before her visa expired then section 3C would have operated to have extended that leave until her application was determined.
  56. Second, she could make a claim for humanitarian protection or asylum if she feared harm were she to be made to return to her homeland. Third, and similarly, she could make a human rights claim relying on Article 4 of the European Convention on Human Rights were she to be returned to her homeland. If she had made either of the latter two applications then an adverse decision would have attracted a right of appeal to the First-Tier Tribunal. Therefore, as she had these alternative routes of challenge it would be inappropriate for the court to allow a more wide-ranging attack on the policy itself.
  57. As for the attacks on the policy Mr Tam QC argues that it has been formulated precisely in accordance with the state's international obligations under ECAT. By its terms ECAT contemplates that a potential victim of trafficking might simultaneously be present illegally in the national territory and still require protection and recovery. See, for example, Article 13.1, which contemplates the temporary suspension of an expulsion order.
  58. In her reply Ms Weston QC characterised the three potential applications that Mr Tam QC suggests her client might make as being straw men which required dismantling. Under the existing published policy for the grant of discretionary leave outside the Immigration Rules the criterion is very stringent. Compelling compassionate grounds must be demonstrated and even then the grant of leave will be very sparingly exercised. She maintains that her client would have no chance whatsoever of being granted leave on that ground. Similarly, the two latter claims that Mr Tam QC trailed would be essentially impossible having regard to the fact that her homeland is New Zealand. Any decision-maker would safely assume she would receive full protection in New Zealand if she faced any harm.
  59. My conclusion is as follows. I agree with Ms Weston QC that there is an unlawful lacuna in the existing policy inasmuch as it fails to implement the obligation in Article 10.2 formally to protect persons in receipt of a positive reasonable grounds decision from removal from this country's national territory pending the conclusion of the process. Suffering such persons to remain as overstayers, or as illegal immigrants, does not fulfil the obligation. The defendant must formulate a policy that grants such persons interim discretionary leave on such terms and conditions as are appropriate both to their existing leave positions and to the likely delay that they will face. It is not for me to prescribe what such terms and conditions should be. I agree with Mr Tam QC that constitutionally that is a matter reserved to the defendant. However, the terms and conditions must obviously be lawful and this would mean that someone in the position of the claimant, who has a time-limited right to work, should not have the arbitrary adverse consequence of a removal of that right meted out to her simply by virtue of the delays that she is likely to face.
  60. What interim discretionary leave policy the defendant should formulate in relation to those potential victims who have no leave of any type to be here will be a matter for her to decide.
  61. I therefore will grant a declaration which incorporates my decision set out in para 48 above. I ask counsel to seek to agree the terms of the declaration. If they cannot do so then I will rule on any disputed wording.
  62. Having made my primary decision, I can deal with the discrimination claim extremely shortly. For the reasons given by Mr Tam QC I am completely satisfied that this claim has no substance whatsoever. I do not accept that a non-British, non-EEA potential victim of trafficking is a qualifying status for the purposes of Article 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights. If I am wrong about that and if there is differential treatment then in my judgment it is abundantly objectively justified as it relates to the immigration conditions of the claimant and her comparator. It is indisputable that it is objectively justified to dispense different treatment to two people in otherwise identical positions by reference to their immigration statuses. That is the very essence of immigration control. I agree that this ground is devoid of merit.
  63. That is my judgment.
  64. _______________________________

Note 1   www.gov.uk/government/publications/modern-slavery-national-referral-mechanism-and-duty-to-notify- statistics-uk-quarter-2-2020-april-to-june/modern-slavery-national-referral-mechanism-and-duty-to-notify- statistics-uk-quarter-2-2020-april-to-june     [Back]


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