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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> LM (Relocation, Khartoum, AE reaffirmed) Sudan [2005] UKAIT 00114 (30 June 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00114.html Cite as: [2005] UKAIT 00114, [2005] UKAIT 114, [2005] UKIAT 00114 |
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LM (Relocation – Khartoum –AE reaffirmed) Sudan [2005] UKAIT 00114
Date of hearing: 18 May 2005
Date Determination notified: 30 June 2005
LM | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
[Return to Sudan safe for man with no political profile, eastern Sudanese (African origin) returning with young family. AE applied and US State Department Report (not before Tribunal in AE) considered. Must show individual risk to appellant; Darfurian origin or African ethnicity alone insufficient. No risk at Convention level to non-Darfurian Sudanese.
Conditions in camps not ideal but evidence not sufficient to establish that internal relocation to internally displaced person camp in Khartoum alone enough to meet ECHR Article 2 and 3. Risk in internally displaced person camps limited on present evidence to students, lawyers, merchants, traders or those with perceived rebel profile who are of African ethnicity. Those with family members still in Sudan required to prove need to use internally displaced persons' camp.]
History of this appeal
Preliminary issue
Standard and burden of proof
Documents and materials before the Tribunal
(a) The Home Office bundle and all material previously filed
(b) The Adjudicator's and Immigration Appeal Tribunal determinations;
(c) a bundle (60 pages) of personal and country background evidence filed by the appellant under cover of a letter of 3 May 2005;
(d) a skeleton argument dated 13 May 2005, produced at the hearing today;
(e) an additional witness statement, for Mrs Ramli Mazza Khaled, dated 17 May 2005, produced at the hearing today; and
(f) CIPU Country Report for Sudan, April 2005, filed at the hearing today by the Presenting Officer.
The appellant's evidence and core account
Oral evidence before this Tribunal
Submissions
Summary of country background evidence
Findings of Fact and Credibility
Conclusions
36. "On the 18th May 2004 UNHCR accepted that "Sudanese of non Arab Darfurian background returning to Sudan faced heightened risk of scrutiny by the security apparatus … internally displaced persons from Darfur often faced protection risks including forced relocation and forced return". But the area around Khartoum has 1.8 million internally displaced persons of who some hundreds of thousands are from the Darfur region and most of whom will be from the "African" tribal groups. This appellant was found to be at risk of persecution in Darfur because of his ethnic origin. To suggest that this appellant on any return and on relocation to Khartoum faces a real risk of persecution or indeed a real risk of ill-treatment contrary to Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights is tantamount to accepting that all and every internally displaced person within Khartoum faces such a risk. Had that been the case we are satisfied that UNHCR with long and careful knowledge of the area would have so indicated by now. Internally displaced persons in the Khartoum area clearly face a number of difficulties. It may be that for some there may be a real risk arising out of the fact that the authorities would target them as active sympathisers of armed rebel groups or as persons connected with opposition political groups. But we cannot accept that there is a real risk there to this individual appellant. We are conscious of having to consider this matter on a "case by case" basis as urged by UNHCR. There is no evidence to suggest that this appellant would be perceived as involved with armed rebel groups or opposition political groups or that the appellant would inextricably be driven to the worst circumstances for internally displaced persons in Khartoum, where ever they may be. The previous decisions of the IAT, which we accept, do not suggest there is likely to be an automatic risk of serious harm or ill-treatment contrary to Article 3 in the Khartoum area.
37. Nor do we accept that this appellant will be singled out at Khartoum airport on any return. His ethnicity may be clear but it does not follow from that that the appellant will be targeted, arrested and persecuted or ill-treated"
"There were estimates that up to 4 million persons were displaced internally due to the civil war. …Tens of thousands of persons, largely southerners and westerners displaced by famine and civil war, continued to live in squatter slums ringing Khartoum. Refugee International researchers estimated that more than 300,000 refugees and displaced persons returned home during the year.
There were frequent reports of abuses committed against IDPs, including rapes, beatings, and attempts by the Government to forcibly return persons to their homes. The Government forcibly emptied some IDP camps; for example, on November 2, the Government closed two camps (Al Jeer and Otash), using tear gas to drive IDPs out. The Government stated that it merely was moving IDPs to newer, better camps. There also were numerous credible reports that government troops harassed IDPs or denied persons access to camps. On August 3, police reportedly removed 50 newly arrived men from Kalma camp. On August 5, 48 students who attempted to enter Kalma camp were arrested, detained, and then released. …In December, the Government publicly committed itself to the principle of voluntary relocation of IDPs in cooperation with the U.N. and NGOs, and the International Organization for Migration reported a few voluntary returns. The U.N. reported that IDPs lived in a climate of fear.
The Government pressured IDPs to return home against their wishes. In one instance, foreign observers, visiting an IDP return site in Sani Deleiba set up by the Government, discovered that IDPs who had been forced home and promised assistance to rebuild their homes received two small bowls of sorghum and a piece of plastic sheeting."
33. The appellant regarded internally displaced persons as being given very minimal provision. The appellant accepted there was several hundreds of thousands of internally displaced persons in Khartoum. The appellant thought that the appellant might be identified by informer systems that operated in camps. The appellant said that there were reports of arrests and detention of students, lawyers, merchants and traders but accepted that the appellant did not fit into any of these categories. The appellant asserted that anybody from the appellant's ethnic background would have loyalty to the rebels imputed to them. The witnesses overall approach was that in effect the appellant would be at a relatively high risk of persecution "like others from African ethnic groups who are perceived to sympathise with rebel groups".
DECISION
We find that the original Tribunal made a material error of law and we substitute the following decision -
(i) The appeal is dismissed on asylum grounds, and
(ii) The appeal is dismissed on human rights grounds.
Signed Dated: 23 June 2005
Mrs J A J C Gleeson
Senior Immigration Judge