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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Bedane -v- Refugee Appeals Tribunal & Ors [2012] IEHC 6 (13 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2012/H6.html Cite as: [2012] IEHC 6 |
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Judgment Title: Bedane -v- Refugee Appeals Tribunal & Ors Composition of Court: Judgment by: Hogan J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2012] IEHC 6 THE HIGH COURT 2008 1367 JR BETWEEN/ DANIEL MULUGETA BEDANE APPLICANT AND
REFUGEE APPEAL TRIBUNAL, MINISTER FOR JUSTICE AND LAW REFORM, IRELAND AND THE ATTORNEY GENERAL RESPONDENTS JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Gerard Hogan delivered on 13th January, 2012 1. This application for leave to apply for judicial review of a decision of the Refugee Appeal Tribunal on 21st October, 2008, rejecting his claim for asylum has certain unusual facts. The case is, in many ways, reminiscent of a Cold War-style defection from a Soviet bloc country and it presents once again the troubling question of what constitutes a refugee sur place. 2. The applicant is a highly-educated Ethiopian national of Guarga ethnicity who, immediately prior to his arrival in Ireland, was the mayor of Butajira, a city of some 40,000 people located in the south east of Ethiopia. He is married with four dependent children. 3. In April, 2005 representatives of South Dublin City Council (“SDCC”) travelled to Butajira with a view to seeing at first hand the potential development of a partnership with an African local authority. This was not a purely ceremonial connection, as Council staff were later to travel to Ethiopia to carry out drainage and sewerage works. Other projects relating to urban planning, solar energy and internet access were also contemplated. 4. With this in mind, on 26th October, 2005, Mr. Jacob of SDCC sent a report entitled “SDCC/Ethiopian Friendship/Development Project 2006-2009” to a number of interpreted parties, including the applicant. Among the steps that were proposed for 2006 was the hosting of a conference by SDCC in Dublin “of key local authority leaders from the two Ethiopian local authorities on the subject of corporate governance”. 5. Representatives from the Council visited Butajira again in early 2006 and shortly afterwards on 15th February, 2006, the Council extended an invitation to the applicant and three other colleagues to visit Dublin for a conference between 21st March, 2006 and 27th March, 2006. Towards the end of their stay, the four absconded and sought asylum. One of the four has, it appears, already been granted asylum. 6. The applicant claimed that he was a member of Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (“EPRDF”). This is the ruling coalition government which agreed to hold elections in May 2005, the results of which were disputed. There is no doubt but that Ethiopia’s human rights record is extremely poor. Thus, in the words of a UNHRC report for 2006, the “government’s human rights record remained poor and worsened in some areas”, although it conceded that there had been some improvements. The report nonetheless noted that in the aftermath of the election:
Is the applicant entitled to asylum by reason of his actions and conduct in Ethiopia prior to coming to Ireland? 9. The applicant further contended that he kept the trip to Ireland secret from the authorities, save for a few close confidants. The Tribunal did not find this plausible either, as the proposed visit had been known for a few weeks prior to that date and the planning for the trip could not have been kept secret. Nor did the Tribunal member think it was plausible that the authorities would have issued him with a passport if his position and, indeed, loyalty to the regime was under suspicion, even though the applicant maintained at his s. 11 interview that his problem was with the regional government and that as the central government would not have been aware of this, this did not constitute an impediment to the issue of a passport. 10. With regard to this aspect of the claim, I will merely say that these were findings which the Tribunal member was fully entitled to reach on the evidence before me and there is no basis upon which I can interfere with such findings. We can now proceed to examine the more significant feature of the case, namely, the question of whether the applicant can be regarded as a refugee sur place. Whether the applicant is entitled to be regarded as a refugee sur place?
14. In the first place I would reject the argument that the Geneva Convention impliedly contains a good faith exception for all the reasons advanced by me in my judgment in HM v. Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform [2011] IEHC 16. To this I would add the comments of Elias L.J. in TM (Zimbabwe) v. Home Secretary [2010] EWCA Civ 916:-
16. There were, moreover, hundreds of examples during the Cold War period of cases of politicians, diplomats, scientists, writers, artists and athletes who gave up a privileged existence in an oppressive society in order to seek asylum in the West, often to the utter dismay of their parents, spouses, children, wider family and friends who were left behind. Prominent historical examples include Ferenc Puskas (ranking with Pele, Cruyff and Messi as among the greatest of all footballers), Martina Navratilova (regarded by many as the greatest female tennis player of all time) and Maxim Shostakovich (the famous conductor and son of the composer). 17. Why did such persons give up a life of privilege to seek asylum, not least when they must have known that the fate facing their remaining family at home was often an uncertain one? Perhaps in some cases they could not live with their own conscience, as they were not prepared to suppress the cry of freedom in order to live in a gilded cage. Others were doubtless swayed by economic factors, since they felt sure that with their talents they could easily build a new and better life in the West. 18. In many respects, however, it is almost irrelevant to seek to ascribe a motive to those who defected in this manner. One might as well as ask the reason why those brave souls who endeavoured to escape over the Berlin Wall risked everything to make good their escape. For most, the motives were probably mixed and, in a few cases at least, the actual motive was purely economic. Nevertheless, irrespective of motive, in virtually all of these historical cases the defectors would have to have been regarded as refugees sur place, since the very act of claiming asylum was enough to make them instantly enemies of the regime. 19. Here, then, is the critical test: would the fact that the applicant claimed asylum in itself be a fact which would be likely to ground a well founded fear of persecution in Ethiopia in the future, irrespective of the opportunistic nature of the asylum claim or the fact that the applicant previously held a (relatively low level) of power and privilege in the regime or, indeed, that the claim was also prompted by economic factors or even the fact that the assessment of the claim to date appears to have been tinged by sublimated moral disapproval of the applicant’s conduct? To my mind, in view of what is known about the Ethiopian Government from the country of origin information, the Tribunal could not reasonably have answered this question other than in the affirmative. As Elias L.J. observed in TM (Zimbabwe):
23. Again, unlike SS (Iran), the Ethiopian authorities are fully aware of the applicant’s case and it would be foolish to think that they were not obviously concerned about his actions in seeking asylum and the embarrassment which this caused. Everything that we know about Ethiopian regime from the relevant country of origin information suggests that it would view a defector of this kind in much the same light as a former Soviet bloc country would have done. A regime that was (and is) prepared to jail, arbitrarily detain and even kill its opponents would be more than likely to mete out a severe punishment to a defector who had publicly embarrassed the regime by applying for asylum in a donor country in the public manner in which he did. With all due respect to a very experienced and distinguished Tribunal member, it is simply naïve to suggest otherwise. All of this clearly points to the fact the applicant should be regarded as falling with the classic category of a refugee sur place, since he clearly has a well founded fear of persecution. Conclusions
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