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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 >> AM (Begedi, members generally at risk) Somalia [2005] UKAIT 00107 (01 June 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00107.html Cite as: [2005] UKAIT 00107, [2005] UKIAT 00107, [2005] UKAIT 107 |
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AM (Begedi – members generally at risk) Somalia [2005] UKAIT 00107
Date of hearing: 5 April 2005
Date Determination notified: 01 June, 2005
AM |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
'In failing to make any findings on this point the assertion that Begedi in Afgoye can be considered to be Benadiri is of little value because no findings have been made as to whether the Adjudicator accepts the appellant is in fact from that area.'
'In light of the findings of the Tribunal in SH, the Adjudicator ought to have considered whether the appellant could relocate to the Bay and Bakool region where the Rahanweyne have consolidated their control to avoid persecution from other majority clans.'
'The respondent has provided me with a list of Somali clans and this list describes the Begedi as "Digil" – "links with Benadiri in Afgoye". The respondent draws my attention to page 47 at 11.1 in the Report on Minority Groups. This paragraph suggests Digil, also known as the Imirifle and Rahanweyne, are halfway between a Somali clan and a minority.'
'The appellant's representative, for his part, has drawn my attention to the expert evidence of Anita Adam and Dr Virginia Luling, to the Tribunal Country Guideline case of KS [2004] UKIAT 00271 and the Home Office Operational Guidelines (undated). As far as the report by Anita Adam is concerned she concluded that the Begedi are a minority clan and are a clan of the Digil Rahanweyn. She states that:
"They are an unarmed group and are not affiliated to the dominant pastoralist Somali clans further north, so the civil war post-civil war period have been extremely vulnerable to having their lands occupied and properties looted."
She goes on to say as follows:
"In the academic literature, in strict genealogical descent terms the Begedi are classified within the Digil, which is a large though not politically powerful clan family of southern Somalia, and not one of the major armed clans who have been part of the struggle for control of national resources. In practice they are much more closely allied with the coastal Benadiri groups considering themselves as a Benadiri minority and associating with the Reer Hamar rather than the Digil. (my italics)
Dr Virginia Luling states as follows:
"(The Begedi): In the civil war they have suffered badly. The militia have treated them as inferior and without rights. They are looked down on by such groups as the Habir Gidir who come from a nomadic background and are in control of much of southern Somalia. For instance in 1999 many Begedi were killed in Awdhegle by the militia of the Garre (Digil) clan, because they had refused to support the Garre in their war against the Habir Gedir. This particular episode is over, but it shows how vulnerable groups like the Begedi are. An informant in Somalia tells them that they may still be kidnapped and harassed on a daily basis ... groups like the Bededi ... can also be classed as Benadiri because they are light skinned (Gibil Cad) and are treated in the same way."
Dr Luling draws attention to the fact that some expert in the joint British Danish Fact Finding Mission to Nairobi consider the Digil and Rahanweyne as being minority groups. Undated operational guidance note from the Home Office gives guidance as the way in which Benadiri ethnicity is to be established. It seems to suggest that in Afgoye the Begedi cans be considered to be Benadiri. In the Country Guideline case of [2004] UKIAT 00271 it is suggested that where membership of a minority clan generally does give rise to a real risk "the claim will normally depend on the fact the claimant is genuinely a member of that minority clan". In this case the Home Office have conceded that the appellant is a member of the clan he claims. Having considered the objective evidence before me I hold that Begedi can be classified as a minority clan. Further, in the light of the expert evidence I have considered, I am satisfied that members of the clan have been shown to be at real risk of persecution and that there is no effective protection for them from any more powerful clan. This being so, I am bound to conclude that this appellant, as a member of this clan, would be at real risk of persecution if he were returned to Somalia. It is unnecessary for me to consider the substance of the appellant's claim in greater detail in view of my findings in relation to the Begedi clan.'