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United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> D v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Afghanistan) [2003] UKIAT 00114 (29 October 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2003/00114.html Cite as: [2003] UKIAT 00114, [2003] UKIAT 114 |
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KH
Heard at Field House
[2003] UKIAT 00114 D (Afghanistan)
Date: 10 October 2003
Date
Determination notified: 29.October 2003
Between
APPELLANT
RESPONDENT
"1. The adjudicator has erred in his approach to the objective situation. At paragraph 18 of his determination the adjudicator states that "having considered the objective evidence I am of the opinion there is not a sufficiency of protection." It is submitted that in Kabul the town that the respondent would be returned to, there is sufficient protection against non-state agents. This is borne out by paragraphs 5.31 and 5.32 of the October 2002 Cipu report. Paragraph 5.32 quotes a report from the Danish fact-finding mission which states that "the security situation in Kabul was (in May 2002) generally good". Reliance is placed on the case of No. 14 (2002 UKIAT 05345) in which (at paras 52 and 53) the tribunal considers this and other evidence and makes a positive finding regarding the security situation in Kabul. It is submitted that if the respondent were to be returned to Kabul the authorities would be both willing and able to offer him protection.
"You claim that as an Hazara and Shia Muslim you and many others faced difficulties under the Taliban's rule and your religious activities were restricted. You claim that in 1999 a Hezbe-e-Wahdat Commander stayed at your hotel and he was arrested. You claimed to have received threatening messages which stated that there would be severe consequences if you were ever found as they believed you had told the Taliban the Commander was in your hotel. You claimed to have been hiding in different places. You claimed your brother was arrested by the Taliban in late 2000 due to his religion and ethnicity and escaped after 26 days. You claim to have gone into hiding and your house was searched by the Taliban as they wanted you and your brother but arrested your father, who later died in custody due to being tortured. You claim that when the Taliban lost control and the Northern Alliance gained power in November 2001 your house was searched by the Commander's men, who had stayed at your hotel, but you were not at home. You claimed to have decided you needed to leave Afghanistan and so paid 9,000 dollars for an agent who brought you to the United Kingdom via unknown countries."
J A O'Brien Quinn QC
Chairman