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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Gezer v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] EWCA Civ 1730 (17 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1730.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 1730 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FGROM THE ADMINSTRATIVE COURT
(The Hon Mr Justice Moses)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
and
MR JUSTICE ELIAS
____________________
GEZER |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss Monica Carss-Frisk QC and Miss Lisa Giovannetti (instructed by Treasury Solictors) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
INTRODUCTORY
THE FACTS
"In view of their traumatic experiences in Glasgow, we trust that you will agree that future dispersal to Glasgow would be inappropriate. Our client and his family would, however, be prepared to consider a dispersal to Leicester where they have family."
The letter describes the racist attack which had taken place on 27 October 2001. NASS indicated very promptly that it would investigate these allegations of racial violence, but stated "that it would be reasonable for you to stay in your allocated accommodation [that is to say, on the Toryglen estate] until there has been a comprehensive investigation and decision made on whether relocation is warranted". The appellant's solicitors indicated by letter of 13 November 2001 that their clients would remain in London pending the Home Office investigation. They stated also that the decision to return the family to the same address in Glasgow meantime was "perverse given the circumstances". Then on 22 November 2001 there was a substantive letter from the Home Office, which stated:
"The police have recommended that Mr Gezer and his family should be allocated alternative housing within the Glasgow dispersal area.
After careful consideration of the information available the Secretary of State is satisfied that it is reasonable for Mr Gezer to return to Glasgow. Mr Gezer and his family should travel back to Glasgow on Wednesday 28 November 2001…"
It should be noted, though it is plain enough, that this was not a proposal to return the family to the Toryglen estate.
THE IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM ACT 1999
"95(1) The Secretary of State may provide, or arrange for the provision of, support for –
(a) asylum-seekers, or
(b) dependants of asylum-seekers,
who appear to the Secretary of State to be destitute or to be likely to become destitute…
96(1) Support may be provided for under section 95 -
(a) by providing accommodation appearing to the Secretary of State to be adequate for the needs of the supported person and his dependants…
97(1) When exercising his power under section 95 to provide accommodation the Secretary of State must have regard to –
(a) the fact that the accommodation is to be temporary pending determination of the asylum-seeker's claim;
(b) the desirability, in general, of providing accommodation in areas in which there is a ready supply of accommodation…
(2) But he may not have regard to –
(a) any preference that the supported person or his dependants (if any) may have as to the locality in which the accommodation is to be provided…"
THE ISSUES
THE APPROACH OF THE JUDGE BELOW
"(47) It seems to me the essential question is whether the risks of which NASS ought to have known at the deck access housing on the Toryglen estate were of such gravity as to require a decision to have been made before October 2001 not to accommodate asylum seekers in such housing on the Toryglen.
(48) This depends on whether the risk of racial violence coupled with abuse had reached such a level that it was no longer reasonable to rely upon police protection. Unless it had reached such a level, the policy considerations which I have identified made it reasonable to rely upon the protection afforded by the police, coupled with the support provided to asylum seekers.
(49) I should say at the outset that I am concerned at the apparent ignorance of NASS as to increasing problems on the Toryglen estate. Whilst much of that information has only been made available in consequence of the order after the first day's hearing before a different judge, it does not seem to me sufficient that NASS relied upon statistics available in September 2002, which were only relevant up to the end of December 2001. It seems to me that there ought to have been in place a system whereby such information was updated to cover at least the first part of 2002. But that is of no avail to the claimant unless on receipt of such information, NASS ought to have declared the deck access property, a 'no go' area before the dispersal of the claimant and his family to such accommodation. In my judgment the obligation to provide adequate protection against the risk of racial violence and abuse in such accommodation did not require NASS to ensure that asylum seekers were not accommodated in deck access accommodation on the Toryglen estate. Prior to the incident on 27 October 2001, the police had not advised Glasgow City Council to provide alternative accommodation. It appears from the letter from Chief Inspector McKinlay that it was only after the incident of 27th October 2001 that he took the view that the situation had deteriorated to the extent that it was necessary to have a meeting to discuss the future use of such accommodation. It was only then that the police appear to have taken the view that such accommodation was no longer viable. I appreciate there were concerns before, but until the police took the view that advice to discontinue the use of deck access accommodation should be given, NASS was under no obligation to discontinue their use. Absent such advice, the measures of protection were, in my judgment, reasonable involving, as they did, police protection which included, as the evidence of the claimant's wife discloses, the provision of an alarm system in at least one flat. The police appear to have taken the view that before the incident on 27th October 2001, the situation had not deteriorated to the extent that advice to discontinue deck access accommodation should be given. In those circumstances I do not find that the level of protection was inadequate."
THE STATE OF KNOWLEDGE OF THE CONDITIONS ON THE TORYGLEN ESTATE
"Around half of current casework surface users are asylum seekers and refugees and 90% of them cite racial harassment as their primary problem. This ranges from verbal racist abuse to spitting, stone throwing, and physical assault."
"The situation at this location causes me considerable concern. There is a significant problem of disorder by young people, many of whom are targeting asylum seekers in what can only be described as racially motivated attacks.
Despite increased police patrols the acts of disorder continue. Local officers feel that the 'deck access' houses there are not suitable for asylum seekers due mainly to the lack of concierge support and controlled entry systems. They feel that this family [viz. the appellant's] should be allocated alternative housing in Glasgow and I fully support this view."
Then on 4 April 2002 the Chief Inspector wrote to the appellant's solicitors. He drew attention to the difficulties (in terms of accommodation for asylum-seekers) caused by the "deck access" properties from the beginning. Then he said this:
"The situation regarding the houses deteriorated to such an extent that on Thursday 1 November 2001, a meeting was held in Toryglen to discuss their future use. Representatives of Glasgow City Council Housing, Glasgow Asylum Seekers Support Project and Strathclyde Police were present.
As the police representative, I took the view that the continued use of the 'deck access' houses as accommodation for asylum seekers was no longer viable due to the number of incidents where they were victims. Although this view caused them severe difficulties the City Council accepted this advice and decided to discontinue their use. …
In general the situation for asylum seekers is Glasgow is not as bad as the media would portray …
There are now between 7,500 and 8,000 asylum seekers and refugees resident in Glasgow, the vast majority of whom have settled well and seem happy there. Health, education and social services facilities are in place and are well structured, offering a wide range of services to dispersed asylum seekers.
In conclusion, while it is acknowledged that your client suffered trauma while at 86 Prospecthill Circus, from a policing point of view there is no reason why he and his family could not have been accommodated elsewhere in the city."
"… no evidence of a racial motivation was led during the trial and the charge was abandoned by the prosecution before the jury were asked to consider their verdict. The police stance has always been that we would not rule out a racial motivation."
"The material Ms Guest [sc. the appellant's solicitor] has provided relates to information made available to either Strathclyde Police or Glasgow City Council, and not to NASS. I repeat that I had no knowledge of any specific problems with 'deck access' accommodation prior to November 2001, and that if any information had been received elsewhere in NASS I would have expected it to have been passed to me."
There is no reason to doubt this evidence and I accordingly accept it.
THE LAW
"28. In R v Governor of Pentonville Prison, Ex p Fernandez [1971] 1 WLR 987, after adumbrating the various phrases which he considered expressed the same degree of risk, Lord Diplock referred… to the alternative of 'applying, untrammelled by semantics, principles of common sense and common humanity'. We believe that there is much to commend that approach in the present case. The search for a phrase which encapsulates a threshold of risk which engages article 2 is a search for a chimera… Of one thing we are clear. The degree of risk described as 'real and immediate' in Osman v United Kingdom 29 EHRR 245, as used in that case, was a very high degree of risk calling for positive action from the authorities to protect life. It was 'a real and immediate risk to the life of an identified individual or individuals from the criminal acts of a third party' which was, or ought to have been, known to the authorities… Such a degree of risk is well above the threshold that will engage article 2 when the risk is attendant upon some action that an authority is contemplating putting into effect itself. It was not an appropriate test to invoke in the present context.
29. In R v Lord Saville of Newdigate Ex p A [2000] 1 WLR 1855, 1877, para 68(5) Lord Woolf MR said:
'the right approach here once it is accepted that the fears of the soldiers are based on reasonable grounds should be to ask: is there any compelling justification for naming the soldiers, the evidence being that this would increase the risk?'
…
30. In the present appeal, the fact that the soldier witnesses will have subjective fears if called to give evidence in Londonderry is a relevant factor when considering whether it will be fair to require them to do so. Those fears will, however, have much more significance if they are objectively justified…
31. We consider that the appropriate course is to consider first the nature of the subjective fears that the soldier witnesses are likely to experience if called to give evidence in the Guildhall, to consider the extent to which those fears are objectively justified and then to consider the extent to which those fears, and the grounds giving rise to them, will be alleviated if the soldiers give their evidence somewhere in Great Britain rather than in Londonderry. That alleviation then has to be balanced against the adverse consequences to the inquiry of the move of venue, applying common sense and humanity. The result of the balancing exercise will determine the appropriate decision…"
"The obligation on High Contracting Parties under Art. 1… taken together with Art. 3, requires States to take measures designed to ensure that individuals within their jurisdiction are not subjected to torture or inhuman or degrading treatment, including such ill-treatment administered by private individuals. These measures should provide effective protection, in particular, of children and other vulnerable persons, and include reasonable steps to prevent ill-treatment of which the authorities had or ought to have had knowledge."
The reference to vulnerable persons calls up Mr Rabinder Singh's particular submissions relating to the appellant's poor mental health to which I will come in due course.
"In… the Lord Saville case… Lord Phillips MR adopted a lower threshold, or, put another way, a higher obligation on the state than one of a 'real and immediate risk' because, there, the risk from non-state actors flowed from a proposed positive action of the state itself. But that does not seem to me to establish a separate rule for such a circumstance so as automatically to put it in a 'Soering[24] category', if such exists. As Lord Phillips MR reasoned, at paragraphs 28-31…, where the threshold lies is a matter of degree and common sense in the circumstances of each case…"
"This figure of a spectrum seems to imply the existence of a point upon the spectrum which marks the dividing line, in terms of State acts or omissions, between what violates Article 3 and what does not. There is such a point, but it does not, I fear, provide a brightline rule by which the court may readily determine whether any particular set of facts falls on this or that side of the line. The point is at the place between cases where government action is justified notwithstanding the individual's suffering, and cases where it is not. Various factors will determine where this place is to be found. They will include the severity of the threatened suffering, its origin in violence or otherwise, and the nature of the government's reasons or purpose in acting as it does."
CONCLUSIONS ON THE MERITS
Lord Justice Carnwath :
"…that by the initial decision to disperse to Glasgow made in September 2001 to an estate where there was already evidence of clear hostility and a neighbouring estate in which a Kurdish asylum seeker had been murdered, the Secretary of State for the Home Department ought to have appreciated there was a risk of harm to someone suffering from the effects of torture who had fled to this country…"
"Prior to the incident on 27th October 2001, the police had not advised Glasgow City Council to provide alternative accommodation. It appears from the letter from Chief Inspector McKinlay that it was only after the incident of 27th October 2001 that they took the view that the situation had deteriorated to the extent that it was necessary to have a meeting to discuss the future use of such accommodation. It was only then that the police appear to have taken the view that such accommodation was no longer viable. I appreciate that there were concerns before, but until the police took the view that advice to discontinue the use of deck access accommodation should be given, NASS was under no obligation to discontinue their use. Absent such advice, the measures of protection were, in my judgment, reasonable involving, as they did, police protection which included, as the evidence of the claimant's wife discloses, the provision of an alarm system in at least one flat. The police appear to have taken the view that before the incident on 27th October 2001, the situation had not deteriorated to the extent that advice to discontinue deck access accommodation would be given. In those circumstances I do not find that the level of protection was inadequate."
Mr Justice Elias:
.
Note 1 This language of “categories” comes from my judgment in Limbuela v Secretary of State [2004] 3 WLR 561, paragraphs 59 ff. It is convenient to retain it here for the purposes of shorthand and cross-reference. I was in the minority in Limbuela, but Carnwath and Jacob LJJ did not differ from the general approach to the application of Article 3 which I sought to sketch at paragraphs 69-77. [Back] Note 2 See, for a general statement, Pretty v UK 35 EHRR 1,32, paragraph 50. [Back] Note 3 See Limbuela paragraph 65. [Back] Note 4 See for example Keenan v United Kingdom (2001) 33 EHRR 913. Of course ECHR Article 2, which guarantees the right to life, will or may be engaged where there is a death. [Back] Note 5 See for example D v United Kingdom (1997) 24 EHRR 423. [Back] Note 6 Pretty, paragraph 52. [Back] Note 7 See Limbuela at paragraph 71. [Back] Note 8 Judgment, paragraphs 16 and 19. [Back] Note 9 (1998) 29 EHRR 245 (in fact an Article 2 case). [Back] Note 10 [2002] 1 AC 800, 816-817. [Back] Note 11 35 EHRR 1 paragraph 51. [Back] Note 12 [2004] QB 36, paragraphs 54-55. [Back] Note 13 [2004] 3 WLR 561, paragraphs 61 ff. [Back] Note 15 A v United Kingdom (1998) 27 EHRR 611, Z v Untied Kingdom (2001) 34 EHRR 97. [Back] Note 16 Appellant’s supplementary skeleton argument, paragraph 14. [Back] Note 17 Respondent’s supplementary skeleton argument, paragraph 4. [Back] Note 18 [2002] 1 WLR 1249. As will be evident the case involved ECHR Article 2, but if everything else were equal there would be no bar to the reasoning being read across to Article 3. [Back] Note 19 Paragraphs 28-31. [Back] Note 20 (2003) 36 EHRR 519. [Back] Note 21 Judgment, paragraph 88. [Back] Note 22 [2004] 1 WLR 1207. [Back] Note 24 Soering v United Kingdom (1989) 11 EHRR 439. The Strasbourg court held that the applicant’s extradition by the United Kingdom authorities to Virginia on a charge of capital murder would violate his rights under Article 3, because he was liable to be incarcerated on death row. [Back] Note 25 Limbuela, paragraph 70. [Back] Note 27 See paragraph 23 above. [Back] Note 28 Judgment, paragraph 35. [Back] Note 29 [2004] 2 AC 159, paragraph 44. [Back] Note 30 [2003] 1 WLR 2724. [Back] Note 32 Clarified by a helpful note put in after the hearing. [Back]