Upper Tribunal (Immigration and asylum chamber), 2018-11-19, PA/08895/2017

JurisdictionUK Non-devolved
Date19 November 2018
Published date12 December 2018
Hearing Date02 November 2018
CourtUpper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber)
StatusUnreported
Appeal NumberPA/08895/2017

Upper Tribunal

(Immigration and Asylum Chamber) Appeal Number: PA/08895/2017


THE IMMIGRATION ACTS


Heard at Manchester Civil Justice Centre

Decision & Reasons Promulgated

On 2nd November 2018

On 19th November 2018




Before


DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE JUSS


Between


mr h m h a

(ANONYMITY direction made)

Appellant


and


THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT

Respondent


Representation:


For the Appellant: Ms N Patel (Solicitor)

For the Respondent: Mr A McVeety (Senior HOPO)


DECISION AND REASONS


  1. This is an appeal against a determination of First-tier Tribunal Judge Boylan-Kemp MBE, promulgated on 23rd January 2018, following a hearing at Birmingham Sheldon Court on 22nd December 2017. In the determination, the judge dismissed the appeal of the Appellant, whereupon the Appellant subsequently applied for, and was granted, permission to appeal to the Upper Tribunal, and thus the matter comes before me.

The Appellant

  1. The Appellant is a male, a citizen of Sudan, and was born on 1st January 1988. He appealed against the decision of the Respondent Secretary of State dated 25th August 2017 refusing his claim for asylum and humanitarian protection, pursuant to paragraph 339C of HC 395.

The Appellant’s Claim

  1. The essence of the Appellant’s claim is that he is a member of the Tama tribe, which is a non-Arab tribe, originating from Darfur. Whilst working in a tyre shop in October 2015, he was arrested and detained due to the authorities’ suspicion that he was supporting the opposition. The Appellant, however, has no political involvement. He was detained for ten days, and then released on licence and required to report back and sign on a weekly basis. He left five days later, going to Libya, and from there onwards to Italy, before coming to the UK to claim asylum. The Appellant has family still living in Sudan, namely, his mother, four brothers, and one sister and his wife. He has been in contact with them by telephone.

  2. The Respondent accepts the Appellant’s identity, his nationality, and his ethnicity. His claim that he was detained by the authorities, or that they continued to show an interest in him, was rejected, because he had not been involved in any opposition groups, and had not been politically active in Sudan. Moreover, the new country guidance shows that if the authorities have no specific interest in the Appellant, then he would be able to relocate to Khartoum, and there will be no further risk to impute his ethnicity.

The Judge’s Decision

  1. The judge began by observing that the Appellant’s claim was based upon his imputed political opinion and his race. The judge had regard to the expert report from Mr Verney (at paragraph 56 of the report) where it is said that, “the Home Office has not understood that ethnic identity alone is enough in the eyes of the Sudanese security apparatus to merit an accusation of supporting the ‘rebel’ opposition.” She recorded Mr Verney as having concluded that the Respondent’s refusal letter “demonstrates a serious absence of comprehension of the methods and purposes of the Sudanese security apparatus” (paragraph 68 of the report). The judge also recorded Mr Verney as stating that, “the authorities do not care if the detainee is seriously a member of the opposition, or simply likely to be on the basis of racist assumptions” (paragraph 72 of the report). She took all of this into account (at paragraph 19 of the determination). However, the judge did not find the Appellant’s evidence to be credible (paragraph 20). Therefore the question was whether the Appellant could be returned and find internal relocation in Sudan. Consideration was given by the judge to a number of leading authorities (paragraphs 24 to 26) in relation to non-Arab Darfuris in Sudan. In the end, however, the judge was swayed by the CPIN; Sudan: Non-Arab Darfuris of August 2017. This reflected and analysed a number of government and other agency reports since 2014, and which considered whether those of non-Arab Darfuri ethnicity would face persecution, or whether in fact it was simply discrimination that they would face, upon return to Sudan. The judge noted how a number of countries including the UK, Australia and Denmark have gathered information. Given that matters had not improved in Darfur, such that the Appellant could not return there, the judge observed that,

I need to assess whether on the grounds of his ethnicity, he would face persecution on relocating to Khartoum. The CPIN states that following an analysis of the UK, Australian and Danish Missions it is evident that there is discrimination of non-Arab Darfuri people but not widespread and systemic targeting of these groups in Khartoum. Those critical of the government or those with a political profile may be monitored and those of a non-Arab Darfuri background may face worse treatment if detained. It is therefore political activity, not their ethnicity, which brings them to the attention of the authorities, with their ethnicity being only one factor which may increase the likelihood of them coming to the attention of the authorities …. This Appellant does not fall into this category on my findings” (paragraph 29).

  1. With this, the judge concluded that, “I find that there is no satisfactory material in the background information provided to show that non-Arab Darfuris will face persecutory treatment” (paragraph 30).

  2. The appeal was dismissed.

Grounds of Application

  1. The grounds of application state that the judge was wrong to have placed controlling weight on the CPIN of August 2017, and to have concluded that the Appellant could safely internally relocate to Khartoum. This is because both the case law that the judge referred to as well as the expert report of Mr Peter Verney, confirmed that ethnic issues in themselves in Sudan, “lead to persecution of non-Arabs”, who would be falsely accused of “political activities”. This was clear from the citation of the extract from Mr Verney’s report, which the judge expressly referred to (at paragraph 19), namely, that “the Home Office has not understood that ethnic identity alone is enough in the eyes of the Sudanese security apparatus to merit an accusation of supporting the ‘rebel’ opposition”.

  2. Second, the CPIN relied primarily upon a Joint Danish-UK Fact-Finding Mission of early 2016, but this Danish-UK Report which was so heavily relied upon, was not served upon the Appellant, and it makes references to unnamed/undisclosed “sources”, and it is unclear what the “sources” refer to are in the Joint Mission Report, such that this would reduce the reliability of the Joint Mission Report. In any event, the Danish Immigration Service, an organisation that was brought into severe disrepute for their production of a politicised report in relation to the on ground situation in Eritrea, has already been discredited given the country guidance case of MST and Others (national service – risk categories) CG. The judge ought, therefore, not to have placed such controlling weight on this report.

  3. Third, in finding that the Appellant was not credible in his account, the judge blurred the distinction between the risk of persecution to him on account of his ethnicity alone, and the credibility account of the Appellant, which the judge referred to. This was important because the acceptance of the Appellant’s non-Arab ethnicity in itself is sufficient to warrant a grant of asylum.

  4. Finally, the plain fact remained that the judge did not have any new cogent evidence before her which justified parting from the country guidance case law.

  5. In June 2018, permission to appeal was granted by the Upper Tribunal on two grounds. First, that there was an apparent conflict between the CPIN Note of August 2017 and...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT