Upper Tribunal (Immigration and asylum chamber), 2004-02-17, [2004] UKIAT 27 (AH (Article 8, ECO, Rules))

JurisdictionUK Non-devolved
JudgeHon Mr Justice Ouseley, His Hon Judge N Huskinson, Miss B Mensah
StatusReported
Date17 February 2004
Published date04 March 2005
CourtUpper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber)
Hearing Date17 December 2003
Subject MatterArticle 8, ECO, Rules
Appeal Number[2004] UKIAT 27
JJ

AH (Article 8 _ ECO _ Rules) Somalia [2004] UKIAT 00027



IMMIGRATION APPEAL TRIBUNAL


Date of Hearing: 17th December 2003

Date Determination notified:

17th February 2004


Before:


The Honourable Mr Justice Ouseley (President)

Miss B Mensah

His Honour Judge N Huskinson


Between:





APPELLANTS


and


Entry Clearance Officer, Addis Ababa RESPONDENT


For the Appellant: Mr R Toal, instructed by Wilson & Co

For the Respondent: Ms C Hanrahan, Home Office Presenting Officer



DETERMINATION AND REASONS


  1. This is an appeal against the decision of an Adjudicator, Mr B M Suchak, who, in a determination promulgated on 16th December 2002, dismissed the appeal of the four Appellants against the refusal of entry clearance by the Entry Clearance Officer Addis Ababa of 4th December 2001, refusing them entry clearance to the United Kingdom. (The date of decision in the Adjudicator’s determination of 4th July 2001 is wrong.)


  1. The first two Appellants are the siblings of the sponsor. The third and fourth Appellants are her nephew and niece through her sister. The Appellants are citizens of Somalia and were born respectively on 8th February 1985, 5th November 1986, 4th July 1992 and 10th October 1993. The sponsor is a citizen of Somalia but she fled Somalia in December 1999 arriving in the United Kingdom on 4th January 2000 and made an application for asylum in February 2000. She was granted indefinite leave to remain as a refugee on 26th June 2000.


  1. The Entry Clearance Officer refused entry clearance under the Immigration Rules HC 395 paragraph 297 because he was not satisfied that they would be maintained or accommodated without recourse to public funds in accommodation owned or occupied exclusively by the sponsor. There is no dispute about that. The Entry Clearance Officer also said that he was not satisfied that the Appellants’ parents were settled in or would be admitted for settlement to the United Kingdom, or that a parent whom they intended to join was the sole surviving parent. That is true. Sadly the parents of the first two Appellants and of the sponsor are dead. The identity and whereabouts of the father of the third and fourth Appellants is unknown and the mother, the sponsor’s sister, has no real interest in them and may be unable to care for them in any event.


  1. The Entry Clearance Officer also concluded that there were no serious or compelling family or other considerations which made the Appellants’ exclusion from the United Kingdom undesirable”. Accordingly, the case fell outside the scope of the Immigration Rules.


  1. It was accepted by Mr Toal, who appeared for the Appellants both before the Adjudicator and before us, that the Appellants could not satisfy the requirements of paragraph 297 of the Immigration Rules. However, he contended that they did not fail at every hurdle in the way in which the Entry Clearance Officer’s decision had suggested. In particular, he submitted that there were serious and compelling family or other considerations which made the Appellants’ exclusion undesirable, although that, by itself, was not sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the Immigration Rules.


  1. His primary case was that the Adjudicator had failed to make findings of fact arising from the evidence of the Appellants as to their relationship to the sponsor, and as to the circumstances in which the sponsor departed from Somalia as a refugee. He had erroneously approached the assessment of family life on the basis that she had decided to come to the United Kingdom voluntarily and therefore that the family life they led was one of her making. Mr Toal submitted that properly analysed, the evidence showed that the interference with or respect for the Article 8 rights of the Appellants and sponsor had to be judged against the fact that she was a refugee, as to which there was no dispute. This meant that in addition to Article 8 rights, the Respondent’s family reunion policy for refugees ought to have been considered, including whether there were compelling compassionate circumstances for the grant of entry clearance to these Appellants.


  1. The sponsor’s evidence was that she had lived in Somalia with her parents, siblings, and her nephew and niece (the third and fourth Appellants) as a single family unit. The first Appellant was now, at the date of the hearing before the Tribunal, eighteen and the second Appellant was seventeen. The sponsor’s sister had been abducted during the civil war and held against her will and when she had returned to the family home in 1993 she had a child, the third Appellant, and was pregnant with the fourth. Her mental state was not very good when she returned and she required attention all the time. Her children had always been regarded as part of her parent’s family; they were now eleven and ten. One of the sponsor’s brothers was killed in 1991 and another died due to a heart condition for which he was unable to obtain treatment. Her father was shot dead in the family home in mid-1996 and her mother and her remaining brother were also now dead, probably following a shooting incident in December 1999. The mother of the third and fourth Appellants disappeared from the family home after the shooting of her father in 1996, although contact was re-established in about August 2002. She was in Mogadishu but when the sponsor spoke to her, her sister did not mention her own children. The sponsor was raped by two of the men who shot her mother and brother in December 1999.


  1. The sponsor’s maternal aunt was concerned for the sponsor’s safety and it was decided that, in view of the sponsor’s age and the risk to her, the sponsor should be the first to leave. She fled from Somalia via Kenya. Her maternal aunt and the four Appellants left Somalia in around January 2001 and now live in Addis Ababa. The four Appellants have no right to live in Ethiopia. They are there unlawfully, but they live there with the sponsor’s aunt, who is now 71. The evidence was that she was “quite elderly and too ill to work”. They have no relatives in Somalia, save for the mother of the third and fourth Appellants whose position is rather uncertain.


  1. The Appellants relied on a remittance of $100 a month sent to them by the sponsor. The evidence from the sponsor and from the first two Appellants was that the remittances were the Appellants’ sole source of income and that that money had been provided since 2000. They are in regular contact. The eldest Appellant’s evidence at interview was that he regarded the sponsor, his elder sister, as a mother, even though she is only six years older. The sponsor’s evidence as to the relationship was I am here and I want them to come to live with me. I need them and they need me.


  1. Most, but not all, of what we have set out above is referred to one way or another in the Adjudicator’s determination. The rest is supported by the Appellants’ answers to questions at interview by the Entry Clearance Officer or by material provided to the Adjudicator in a letter to the Entry Clearance Officer on behalf of the sponsor and Appellants.


  1. Having set out much of the evidence as we have described, the Adjudicator referred to the Appellants’ claim, based on Article 8 of the ECHR. Mr Toal had relied upon the judgment of the Court of Appeal in R (Mahmood) v SSHD [2001] INLR 1, on the recommendations in a report of 15th December 1999 that a refugee’s rights to respect for his family life could only be enjoyed through family union in a country where they could lead normal family life, and on the Home Office Practice contained in the family reunion guidelines, exceptionally to allow members of the family other than dependent children to enter if there were compelling compassionate circumstances. Mr Toal had submitted that they all fell within that latter category.


  1. The Adjudicator first addressed himself to the question of whether there was family life as between the...

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