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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 >> A v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Iran) [2003] UKIAT 00154 (20 November 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2003/00154.html Cite as: [2003] UKIAT 154, [2003] UKIAT 00154 |
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[2003] UKIAT 00154 A (Iran)
Heard at: Field House
On: 10 November 2003
Written on: 13 November 2003
Determination Notified: 20 November 2003
Between
Appellant
Respondent
Representation
Appellant – Ms Rebecca Chapman of counsel instructed by Bindman and Partners
Secretary of State – Mr J McGirr Home Office Presenting Officer
(a) The appellant's father in law was head of Savak for the Teheran area which were the Security Forces under the Shah prior to the revolution. After the revolution he was detained for two years and from time to time thereafter.
(b) The father in law was not allowed to work and had most of his property confiscated. He remained under surveillance.
(c) Because they had difficulty renting a place for themselves the appellant and her husband lived with his parents for 4 years.
(d) When they were discovered with a satellite dish her husband was taken away and abused. He was later apprehended in relation to possession of a stolen cheque.
(e) He was required to report several times in relation to this charge. He was asked to give information about his father's associates.
(f) The appellant thought that she was being watched and her house was broken into and property destroyed.
(g) Her husband was summoned to appear in court but had the matter adjourned. During the period of adjournment the appellant was arrested on the basis that she was driving a stolen car. She was held for several hours without food or drink and told she should persuade her husband to be more cooperative.
(h) The appellant's husband did not respond to a summons to come to court and was told that an arrest warrant had been issued for him. Her husband went into hiding.
(i) The appellant obtained a visa to come to the United Kingdom for herself and her children to enter as visitors. She arrived in the United Kingdom on 16 December 2001 and applied for asylum on 7 January 2002.
(j) The appellant now says her husband abused her and she has brought divorce proceedings against him in this country.
(a) He did not accept that her father in law's role would make the appellant of interest to the Iranian authorities.
(b) Her father in law had not been detained since 1989.
(c) He did not accept that the authorities would have written to her husband advising him of a warrant for his arrest. They would simply have arrested him.
(d) The appellant was able to leave Iran on her own properly issued passport which would not have been possible had she been of interest to the Iranian authorities.
(e) She had represented to the Embassy that she wished to visit her brother in the United Kingdom and did not have problems in Iran. Clearly she was either being untruthful then or now.
(f) Her parents and siblings live in Iran and have had no problems.
(g) In her Statement of Evidence Form (SEF) of January 2002 or her interview the appellant made no mention of matrimonial problems. The first time she mentioned them was in September 2002. The adjudicator thought they had been mentioned to enhance her claim.
(h) In the absence of evidence from her church he would not accept that she was taking instruction in Christianity.
(i) The adjudicator declined to deal with any problems arising from her marriage breakdown because he was not given any documents to support her suggestion that she had brought divorce proceedings in the United Kingdom.
Thomas S Culver
Legal Member