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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> OML (AP), Re Judicial Review [2010] ScotCS CSOH_155 (23 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2010/2010CSOH155.html Cite as: [2010] ScotCS CSOH_155, [2010] CSOH 155 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
[2010] CSOH 155
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OPINION OF LORD TYRE
in the cause
O.M.L (A.P.)
Petitioner;
for
Judicial Review of a decision by the Secretary of State for the Home Department dated 25 November 2008
ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________
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Petitioner: Forrest; Drummond Miller
Defender: Campbell; Office of the Solicitor to the Advocate General
23 November 2010
Introduction
[1] The petitioner is a national of the Democratic Republic of Congo ("DRC") who entered the United Kingdom on or around 11 October 2007 and claimed asylum on the ground that he feared persecution in DRC on account of his political opinion and previous ill-treatment to which he said he had been subjected. The Secretary of State for the Home Department (the respondent in this application) rejected his claim on 22 February 2008. His appeal to an immigration judge was refused on 18 April 2008 and his application for a reconsideration of this decision was rejected by a senior immigration judge on 20 May 2008.
[2] The basis of the petitioner's claim that he would be subject
to persecution and ill-treatment on return to DRC was that he was a member of a
political organisation called the Bundu Dia Kongo (BDK) which operates in the
Bas Congo province of DRC.
In rejecting the petitioner's appeal, the immigration judge reached conclusions
regarding the petitioner's credibility which were strongly adverse to him. He
found the petitioner's account to be wholly without credibility and rejected
his assertion that he was a member of the BDK. The immigration judge further
observed that even if he had accepted the petitioner's assertion of membership
of the BDK, he was satisfied that as a low level member he would not be at risk
of persecution on return to DRC. In this regard the immigration judge referred
to certain observations by the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal in TN &
Others (BDK not at risk) v Secretary of State for Home Department [2005] UKAIT 00152 (at paras 32 and 33) regarding the absence of risk to BDK members
of persecution or treatment such as would constitute a breach of Article 3 of
the European Convention on Human Rights.
[3] In the course of his brief decision refusing reconsideration,
the senior immigration judge noted that the TN decision was no longer
listed as country guidance for DRC but concluded that the immigration judge's
reasons for finding the petitioner wholly lacking in credibility were adequate,
proper and intelligible, and that the TN decision was not therefore
material to the petitioner's case.
[4] By letter dated 15 August 2008,
agents for the petitioner submitted an application to the respondent that fresh
consideration be given to the petitioner's claim for asylum. This application was submitted under reference to
documentary evidence which had not been before the immigration judge. By a
decision letter dated 25 November
2008, the Secretary of State refused to
reverse her decision on the earlier claim and determined that the petitioner's
submissions did not amount to a fresh claim, with the consequence that the
petitioner had no further right of appeal. The petitioner seeks reduction of
that decision and the matter came before me for a first hearing.
Treatment as a "fresh claim"
[5] The petitioner's application to the Secretary of State was
made in pursuance of Rule 353 of the Immigration Rules, which provides as
follows:
"When a human rights or asylum claim has been refused and any appeal relating to that claim is no longer pending, the decision maker will consider any further submissions and, if rejected, will then determine whether they amount to a fresh claim. The submissions will amount to a fresh claim if they are significantly different from the material that has previously been considered. The submissions will only be significantly different if the content:
(i) had not already been considered; and
(ii) taken together with the previously considered material, created a realistic prospect of success, notwithstanding its rejection.
This paragraph does not apply to claims made overseas."
[6] It
is common ground that in a Rule 353 application, the Secretary of State must consider whether the
application is "significantly different" from material previously considered,
as defined in the Rule, i.e. whether the content (a) has not already been
considered and (b) taken together with previously considered material creates a
realistic prospect of success in an appeal to the First-tier Tribunal
(Immigration and Asylum Chamber) against the refusal. If so, the decision
maker must treat the claim as a fresh claim notwithstanding his or her decision
to reject it, with the consequence that the refusal is appealable. It is also common
ground that the standard to be applied in assessing whether a claim has a "realistic
prospect of success" is a modest one. In R (AK (Sri Lanka)) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] 1 WLR 855,
Laws LJ observed at paragraph 34:
"A case which has no realistic prospect of success...is a case with no more than a fanciful prospect of success. 'Realistic prospect of success' means only more than a fanciful such prospect." (Emphasis in original.)
That description of the standard has been consistently adopted in applications to this court for judicial review of decisions taken by the Secretary of State in pursuance of Rule 353.
[7] As
already mentioned, the petitioner's further application was accompanied by
certain documents which had not been before the immigration judge. I mention
only those upon which counsel for the petitioner continued to rely in the
course of the hearing before me. They were as follows:
(Although these cards are described as "translated" in the letter of 15 August 2008, no translation was included in the documents lodged for the hearing before me.)
In their accompanying letter to the Secretary of State, the petitioner's agents submitted that this documentary evidence should be regarded as genuine unless proved otherwise, that it demonstrated that the petitioner was politically active in DRC, and that it was this political activity which resulted in his leaving DRC and claiming asylum in the United Kingdom. They further submitted that, in any event, removal of the petitioner to DRC would constitute a breach of his rights of enjoyment of private and family life under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights. This latter argument was not pursued before me and I need say no more about it.
[8] The Secretary of State refused to accept that the new material
provided, when taken together with the previously considered material, created
a realistic prospect of success in an appeal to an immigration judge. Having
quoted a number of passages from the decision of the immigration judge who
rejected the petitioner's claim to BDK membership as not credible, the
Secretary of State noted that the new documents submitted were copies and not
originals. She observed that the immigration judge had in any event found that
low level membership of the BDK did not expose the petitioner to risk of
inhuman or degrading treatment or torture were he to be returned to DRC. The
Secretary of State concluded:
"After considering all the evidence in the round, in line with the principles laid out in the authority Tanweer Ahmed (previously noted), taking into account the other discrepancies highlighted in your client's claim, the conclusion has been reached that little weight can be placed on the documents."
The Secretary of State then made certain detailed criticisms of some of the documents submitted with the petitioner's application, but at the first hearing those documents were no longer relied upon.
Scope of review by the court
[9] The
task of the court in cases concerning either Rule 353 or certification by the
Secretary of State under section 94(2) of the Nationality, Immigration and
Asylum Act 2002 has been
analysed in a series of decisions, including in particular WM (DRC) v
Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] Imm AR 337, ZT (Kosovo)
v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] 1 WLR 348 and R (YH)
v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] EWCA Civ 116;
[2010] 4 All ER 448, which decisions have frequently been applied in petitions
for judicial review in Scotland. The parties in the present case were agreed that
the court must make its own assessment of how an immigration judge might decide
the matter, and in particular of whether the applicant would have a realistic
prospect of success in such an appeal. In so doing the court must, in its turn,
give the matter anxious scrutiny. It is, however, important to emphasise that
this remains a process of judicial review, not a de novo hearing, and
that the issue must be judged on the material available to the Secretary of
State (see R (YH) above, Carnwath LJ at paragraph 21).
The Secretary of State's decision
[11] On behalf of the petitioner it was submitted, firstly, that the
Secretary of State had erred in law by applying the wrong test in assessing
whether or not the petitioner's further submissions amounted to a fresh claim
and, secondly, that in any event the Secretary of State's decision that an
appeal to an immigration judge would have no reasonable prospect of success was
irrational. I deal with each of these submissions in turn below. I should,
however, note at this stage that it was common ground that a case such as this,
in which fresh evidence was submitted in support of what was in effect the same
claim (i.e. for asylum) as had previously been unsuccessful, fell within the
scope of Rule 353.
(i) Did the Secretary of State ask herself the correct question?
[12] In her decision letter, the Secretary of State described her
task as follows:
"...The question is not whether the Secretary of State herself thinks that the new claim is a good one or should succeed, but whether there is a realistic prospect of an immigration judge, applying the rule of anxious scrutiny, finding that your client will be exposed to a real risk of persecution or serious harm on return. The Secretary of State can, and should, treat her own view of the merits as a starting point for the enquiry. When addressing that question, both in respect of the evaluation of the facts and in respect of the legal conclusions to be drawn from those facts, the Secretary of State must also satisfy the requirement of anxious scrutiny."
This formulation is closely modelled upon a well known dictum of Buxton LJ in WM (DRC) (above) at paragraph 11. Counsel for the petitioner accepted that this had at one time been the appropriate test, but submitted that in the light of subsequent case law a more sophisticated test now required to be applied. Reference was made to the judgment of Carnwath LJ in R (YH) (above) at paragraphs 15-24, and in particular to paragraph 16 where it is emphasised that although the concept of a hypothetical immigration judge may be helpful, the Secretary of State is standing in his or her own shoes in deciding this "threshold question".
[13] In my opinion there is nothing in the subsequent case law,
including R (YH), to indicate that the Secretary of State erred in law
in continuing to follow the guidance given by Buxton LJ in WM (DRC). It
does appear to me, for the reasons which I set out in my opinion in IM,
Petitioner [2010] CSOH 103, that some of Buxton LJ's observations in WM
(DRC) regarding the task of the court require to be elaborated upon
in the light of the subsequent case law to which I have referred. I did not
understand this to be disputed by counsel for the Secretary of State. However,
I do not consider that that case law indicates any material departure from what
was said by Buxton LJ regarding the task of the Secretary of State. In
my opinion the Secretary of State asked herself the correct question in this
case, and I therefore reject the petitioner's first submission.
(ii) Was the Secretary of State's decision irrational?
[14] It will be recalled that the petitioner's previous claim for
asylum had failed for two reasons: firstly, because the immigration judge did
not find his assertion of membership of the BDK to be credible and, secondly,
because, in any event, the judge was not satisfied that a low-level member of
the BDK would be at risk of inhuman or degrading treatment or torture if
returned to DRC. In order to demonstrate a realistic prospect of success in an
appeal to an immigration judge, the petitioner required to address both of
these issues. It is appropriate at this stage to consider in a little more
detail the new material which the petitioner's agents placed before the
Secretary of State for consideration.
[15] As regards the petitioner's claim to membership of the BDK, the
petitioner provided photocopies of cards
said to be identification cards showing the petitioner's membership of the BDK
and the making of regular donations to the organisation by
the petitioner prior to his departure from DRC. The membership card bears the
date 19/02/2007 and the "donations" card appears to contain entries
for the years 2006 and 2007. In the absence of either original cards or
translations of the copies, it is somewhat difficult to know what to make of
this material. The first of the two letters produced by the petitioner is a
letter in French (with English translation) headed with the name of the BDK and
dated 9 April 2008 (i.e. after the date of the hearing by the
immigration judge but before the date of his determination). It is addressed
to "our brothers in the United Kingdom" whom it begs "to accept our brother [name] who is,
by the power of the Lord our God, in the United
Kingdom". The second letter which I
understand to be in Congolese dialect (with English translation) is also headed
with the name of the BDK and bears to be a "reference", stating:
"This is to testify that Mr [name] is one of those helping Bundu dia Kongo in the territory of England, London office.
Today (08.07.2008), we deliver to him an acknowledgment card with the number 010842.
Whoever sees this card should know that the bearer is one of the activists of Bundu dia Kongo in the territory of England."
This letter carries a London postal address, an email address and a website url for the BDK. It appears to refer to a card (bearing the same contact details) copies of both sides of which were also included in the copy documents provided.
[16] Counsel
for the respondent submitted that I should conclude, as the Secretary of State
had done, that even with this new material the petitioner had no realistic
prospect of satisfying an immigration judge that he was a member of the BDK.
Reference was made to the first two principles set out in the decision of the
Immigration Appeal Tribunal in Tanweer Ahmed v Secretary of State for
the Home Department [2002] UKIAT00439 at paragraph 38, namely (1) that it
is for a claimant to show that a document on which he seeks to rely can be relied
on, and (2) that the decision maker should consider whether a document is one
on which reliance should properly be placed after looking at all the evidence
in the round. An immigration judge considering the new material would approach
it with a degree of scepticism given the previous immigration judge's adverse
findings on the petitioner's credibility. He would note that copies and not
principals had been provided and that no translation of the cards was made
available. He would note the coincidence of timing between the date of the
immigration appeal and the date of the letter stated to have been received from
the BDK in DRC. Taking all these factors into account and looking at all the
evidence in the round, the petitioner would have no realistic prospect of
satisfying a judge that he was a member of the BDK.
[17] I
accept that an immigration judge hearing a further appeal would be likely to
take all of these factors into account. In particular, he would be entitled to
have regard to the first immigration judge's trenchantly expressed reasons for
finding the petitioner's evidence implausible and incredible. On the other
hand, the copy documents now produced by the petitioner, if genuine, do provide
at least prima facie evidence not available to the previous judge that
the petitioner was a member of the BDK prior to his departure from DRC. It
seems to me that an immigration judge might be persuaded not only that these
are copies of genuine documents but also that the information which they
contain is true. I do not therefore feel able to conclude on the basis of the
material before me that the petitioner would have no more than a fanciful
prospect of persuading an immigration judge that he was indeed a member of that
organisation in DRC.
[18] As
regards the second issue, namely the risk to the petitioner of persecution were
he to be returned to DRC, I consider that the petitioner is in more
difficulty. Neither the letter to the Secretary of State dated 15 August 2008 nor
any of the material submitted with it addresses the issue of risk facing the
petitioner on his return to DRC. In order to address this deficiency, counsel
for the petitioner founded upon the observation by the senior immigration judge
who refused the petitioner's application for reconsideration that "the country
guidance decision that [the immigration judge] relied on...was no longer listed
as country guidance". It is averred in the petition that the TN case
upon which the immigration judge had relied pre-dated violent events involving
members of the BDK which occurred in 2007. Counsel submitted that, unlike the
immigration judge who decided the petitioner's previous appeal, no immigration
judge could now reasonably rely upon TN as affording country guidance
regarding the likelihood of persecution of a member of the BDK.
[19] I have already observed
that this is a process of judicial review and that my assessment of the
prospects of success in an appeal to an immigration judge must be made on the
basis of the material available to the Secretary of State. Clearly the Secretary
of State had before her the senior immigration judge's reasons for refusing
reconsideration, which include the observation that the TN decision is
no longer listed as country guidance. That, however, in my opinion, takes the
petitioner nowhere in establishing the current situation regarding risk of
persecution of a BDK member in DRC. As counsel for the respondent submitted,
it simply creates a hole in the evidence which was presented to the Secretary
of State and which must therefore be presumed to be before an immigration
judge. In the absence of any information whatsoever regarding the risk of
persecution of the petitioner as a BDK member on his return to DRC, let alone
any material not previously considered, it does not appear to me that he would
have any realistic prospect of success in an appeal to the immigration judge
against the Secretary of State's refusal of his further application.
[20] Even
if it were legitimate - which in my opinion it is not - for me to have regard
to the averment in the petition that violent events occurred in 2007 involving
members of the BDK, I do not consider this averment to be sufficient to disturb
my conclusion regarding prospects of success. In Devaseelan v
Secretary of State for the Home Department [2003] Imm AR 1, the Immigration
Appeal Tribunal set out guidelines (at paragraphs 37-42) on the approach to be
adopted by an adjudicator in a second appeal to the determination of the
adjudicator in a previous unsuccessful appeal. Although the procedural
framework which provided the context for the Tribunal's observations has
changed, the guidelines continue to be referred to by the courts with approval
in, for example, what were described by Hooper LJ in AA (Somalia) v
Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] Imm AR 241 at paragraph 7
as "the somewhat analogous cases involving fresh asylum and human rights
claims" such as the present case. With regard to country evidence, the
Tribunal made the following observations at paragraph 40:
"Evidence of other facts - for example, country evidence - may not suffer from the same concerns as to credibility, but should be treated with caution... Evidence dating from before the determination of the first adjudicator might well have been relevant if it had been tendered to him: but it was not, and he made his determination without it. The situation in the appellant's own country at the time of that determination is very unlikely to be relevant in deciding whether the appellant's removal at the time of the second adjudicator's determination would breach his human rights. Those representing the appellant would be better advised to assemble up-to-date evidence than to rely on material that is (ex hypothesi) now rather dated."
In my opinion, a general reference to violent events involving members of the BDK which occurred on an unspecified date or dates in 2007 would not have been regarded by an immigration judge as relevant in deciding whether the petitioner's removal to DRC in the latter part of 2008 would put him at risk of such persecution or treatment as would constitute a breach of his Article 3 rights. It would, in my view, be for the petitioner to place before the judge up-to-date country guidance supporting his assertion of risk of persecution. No such material was placed before the Secretary of State.
Disposal
[21] For these reasons I hold that the Secretary of State asked
herself the correct question, that she has satisfied the requirement of anxious
scrutiny, and that her decision not to treat the representations made on behalf
of the petitioner as a fresh claim was not irrational or unreasonable. I
therefore repel the plea-in-law for the petitioner, sustain the third
plea-in-law for the respondent and refuse the petition.