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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Khan v. Secretary State Home Department [2003] ScotCS 81 (21 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2003/81.html Cite as: [2003] ScotCS 81 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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P407/02
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OPINION OF LORD KINGARTH in Petition of WARIS KHAN Petitioner; against THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT Respondent:
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Petitioner: Party
Respondent: Lindsay; H. Macdiarmid, Solicitor to the Advocate General
21 March 2003
"19. The appellant was interviewed on 10 January, 2001 having arrived in the United Kingdom on 9 January, 2001. His interview was recorded in writing.
20. At interview the Appellant was asked if he was fit and well and happy to be interviewed in Pashtu. He confirmed that he was.
21. The appellant declared at the conclusion of the interview that he had been informed of the purpose of the interview, and that he understood the questions put. He confirmed that he was aware that this was his opportunity to explain why he wished to claim asylum.
22. The Appellant now gives a completely different explanation of the interview and claims that his date of birth was recorded wrongly since he now had a birth certificate showing his date of birth to be 20 January 1974 and not 1 January 1965 which he allegedly told the interviewing officer.
23. The Appellant produced in evidence a birth certificate in English. That birth certificate indicated his date of birth to be 20 January 1974. The birth certificate was only partially filled out. Various parts of the birth certificate which ought to have been filled out have not been filled out. The birth certificate was not signed. A number of stamps were affixed to the birth certificate which were difficult to decipher. I was not prepared to place any weight on the birth certificate.
24. The Appellant produced a Taskerat. He claimed that this showed his Afghani nationality. The translation of the Taskerat did not give the Appellant's date of birth and age but had the words "seventeen years old as in 1991". It indicated that he was married. The Appellant in evidence indicated that he was not married. The Respondent called into question the authenticity of this document. It was stapled together. It was difficult to assess its probative value. It missed out various pieces of information with regard to the Appellant which on the face of it, it should have contained. Where changes of address should have been recorded no change was recorded.
25. The Appellant in his asylum interview indicated that he had problems with the Taleban. He claimed that he was involved in one incident only. That incident happened when he was removed from a bus and told to pray again. When the Appellant claimed to have prayed only half an hour before he was taken from the bus and struck by the one of the Taleban soldiers. They told him that he did not even have a beard. The Appellant claimed to be struck by a stick on his back.
26. At question 13 of his interview the Appellant was asked if he had been harassed on any other occasion and indicated that he had not. However, in his evidence he claimed another, more serious incident where the Taleban told him that he would require to fight for them and that they would come and get him the next day. It was at that point, according to the Appellant that he decided that he would leave. He claims he would be executed if he were caught after refusing to fight for the Taleban.
27. The Appellant in his asylum interview claimed that he had been living in Pakistan for most of his life. He claimed that he had only returned to Afghanistan for fifteen days. At question 40 of his interview he confirmed that he had spent most of his life in Pakistan.
28. According to the Appellant at interview one of his main problems was the fact that the house in which he was living in Pakistan belonged to other persons and they wanted the house back. In his evidence before me the Appellant denied that. The Appellant claimed in his evidence that he had been feeling tired and unwell during the course of the interview. He claimed that his interview had been misinterpreted. He denied that he had ever said that he had lived in Pakistan. He claimed that he told the interpreter that he had lived in Afghanistan. Something had gone wrong. The Appellant could not explain why he had not mentioned the second incident during the course of his interview. He stated that he answered what he was asked. He also indicated in his evidence to me that he was not sure that he was being interviewed at the time. He was not sure what to say and what not to say.
29. The Appellant claimed that his interview was not read back to him. He never asked what he was signing. He just kept signing pages. He claimed not to understand what was going on at the time. He claimed to have complained to the interpreter during the course of the interview.
30. I did not believe the Appellant in any of the core elements of his claim. I could see nothing in his original interview to indicate that he was confused, or did not understand what was going on. If it had been a matter of simple misinterpretation that might be understandable in the circumstances. However, in this case the Appellant's version of events has changed dramatically from his interview to his subsequent statement and his evidence before me. I consider that the Appellant was lying in what he told me. I did not accept what he said. In particular, I did not accept that he has spent most of his life in Afghanistan. He was perfectly clear that he had spent most of his life in Pakistan and that he had only visited Afghanistan for a period of about fifteen days. He gave an explanation as to why he had to leave because the house which he was living in was being repossessed. His story regarding the Taleban I did not accept. Although such incidents may well occur, or have occurred in the past in Afghanistan, the Appellant's other evidence was to unbelievable that I was not prepared to accept his version of events with regard to what happened when he was stopped by the Taleban. In particular, the fact that he embellished his story by inventing a further incident made me sceptical regarding the first and I was not prepared to accept that it had taken place. I consider that the Appellant invented the second occasion to bolster his credibility. I was not prepared to accept either version.
31. The documents which the Appellant used to support his claim I was not prepared to accept either for the reasons which I have indicated above.
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33. The Appellant claims that he fears persecution by the state. On the facts as described above, I find that the Appellant has not established that he has any subjectively genuine, or objectively well founded, fear of persecution by the state or its agents. I did not believe the Appellant in any of the core elements of his claim. I considered that the story which he propounded was a fabrication. His later version of events was so diametrically opposed to what he said at his interview that I did not believe him. In my opinion he had no credibility whatsoever. I took the view that the Appellant had lived in Pakistan for a substantial number of years although he may originally have come from Afghanistan. In my view he had no well founded fear of persecution whatsoever. I could see no reason why he could not return to where he had lived for the past thirty years. Indeed, as matters currently stand in Afghanistan I do not consider that the Appellant has any well founded fear of persecution since those whom he allegedly fears are now no longer in power.
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35. The Appellant's Representative has submitted that the Appellant's rights under Articles 2 and 3 of the 1950 Convention are engaged. I have examined the arguments put forward in support of this submission but, in the light of the facts as established, have found no substance in them. Miss McGill submitted that removal to Afghanistan at the current time would breach his human rights. In my view the Appellant doesn't have any well founded fear of persecution but even if he did have those whom he feared have now been removed and he would not have any fear of death, torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
36. I find therefore that if the Appellant is now returned to his country of nationality, there is not a real risk that he will suffer a breach of his protected rights under Article 2 or 3."