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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 >> XZ (Russia) & Anor v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] EWCA Civ 180 (11 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/180.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 180 |
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C5/2007/1699 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
CC/00027/2006 & AA/05797/2006
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
____________________
XZ (RUSSIA) & ANOTHER |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
Miss S Chan (instructed by The Treasury Solicitors) for the Respondents
Hearing date: Wednesday 13 February 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
14. In brief, the appellants contend they would face a real risk of persecution or other serious harm if they returned to Russia. They say they would be identified as being from Chechnya and would be at risk simply for their ethnicity. In addition, they believe the Russian authorities would think they held political opinions against the state because of their long absence from Russia, their stay in London and their association to the husband of the first appellant and his political activities. The appellants relied on the fact they had experienced serious harm (including abduction, assaults, threats to life and attacks on property, relatives and friends) in Chechnya and that they had encountered discrimination elsewhere within the Russian Federation and had been arrested when living in Russia, resulting in the Russian authorities maintaining a record about them. The appellants fear being identified and ill treated at the Russian boarder post because of their ethnicity and imputed political opinion. The appellants fear is compounded at this time because the relationship between Moscow and Chechnya and between Moscow and the United Kingdom had deteriorated.
11. The background to the claim advanced by both Applicants lies in the extremely traumatic events surrounding the Chechen War and the appalling treatment that they, along with other members of their family, had suffered at the hands of Russian Security force personnel. Essentially, the claim advanced by the Applicants was that they had been targeted because of the political activities of A1's husband (and A2's father) who had been active within the Chechen Parliament (and therefore associated with the Chechen Separatist movement), leading to reprisals being taken against him and other family members, that came to include A1 and A2; or on more general account of the position of their family.
12. From very detailed psychiatric evidence before the Panel (considered further below), it was clear that A1 and A2 had both been profoundly affected by what had happened to them in Chechnya. That psychiatric evidence was uncontroverted before the Tribunal. Both Applicants were said to be suffering from PTSD and the psychological sequelae of their experiences, such that their presentation and ability to give evidence was likely to be significantly affected and impaired.
15. In outline:
(a). A1 has been married on two occasions. Her second husband was involved in politics and, so she believed, worked with the [Chechen separatist] Jorhar Dudaev Government. Her husband came from a wealthy family. A1 explained in her witness statement and the point is clearly significant in the light of the subsequent approach taken by the Tribunal to her evidence that he spent very long periods (in some cases, years) away from home, so that she had little specific knowledge of his political activities. Furthermore, she had never asked or been told about what he was actually doing (the Chenciner report takes up this point and indicates that such, as is in any event is probably self-evident, was likely to be the case in a traditional and patriarchal society such as that of Chechnya). A1 had had to become essentially self-sufficient in order to support herself and her children and had run a business in Grozny;
(b). A2's evidence was that his father had been connected with the Chechen Parliament, although that was not a matter that he could discuss with his father, and he had in any event been very young at the time. He said in his witness statement that he knew of his father's political involvement and that such was in point of fact common knowledge in the community 'Our neighbours knew and people would talk. Also my friend Shamil's father worked in the Chechen Parliament and I knew that my father worked with him. Also important looking people would come to our house and when they would take their jackets off they would be armed. Sometimes they would take the bullets out of the gun and give me the gun to play with'
(c). A2 also stated that his uncle and cousins had been involved with the Chechen government (and it was not in issue before the Tribunal that they had been killed: see below). His cousins had been working in the militia of the rebel Chechen President Maskhadov;
(d). A1's husband had been killed. She believed that his death had resulted from his political involvement
(e). A1 was living with her son in Grozny. In 1995, during the period of the first Chechen war, A1 had been waiting at a bus stop and had been dragged in to a car and punched so that she lost consciousness. When she regained consciousness, she discovered that she been taken up in to the mountains. She believed that her abductors were members of the Russian security forces, and that they had all spoken in Russian. She was raped on multiple occasions by a group of men who surrounded her. After the ordeal had finished she was left under guard; she asked the men who were guarding her if they were going to let her go. They replied that could not do so as they risked being killed themselves and 'said something about my husband and the political things he was involved in but I didn't understand them.' In her later statement she explained, during the ordeal of her abduction, that they had asked for 'documents' although she had not understood to what they were referring and had said to her 'You Hamza's wife, we waited for this moment a long time' A managed to get away from her captors in the darkness, and hid in a nearby field. Eventually, she managed to return home where she was reunited with her son. He had been abducted on the same night, as he described in his own statement;
(f). A2 (as a nine year old child) had been taken from the street to a school building and forced to view a number of badly mutilated corpses;
(g). A1 stated that there had also been an incident in which a bullet had come through the window of their flat, and that a friend, who had been wearing A1's coat at the time, had been killed. A1 believed that her death had resulted from a case of mistaken identity ;
(h). A fire was started in the family's apartment, and A1 believed that it had been deliberately targeted, because no other apartments had been affected A family friend had suggested that they needed to move for their own safety because her husband had been 'involved in political issues', and that he held information that other people wanted;
(i). A1 stated that she had been forced to move around, and that she had been told that her mother and neighbours had been questioned on many occasions about her whereabouts (the Tribunal were critical of A1's evidence on this point, as her evidence appeared to place her mother in two completely different places in and out of Chechnya at the same time);
(j). A1 and her son then moved around, staying for short periods in various locations, and feeling very scared.
(a) In 1995, when he was 9, he was abducted in the street and taken to a building where he was shown a badly mutilated corpse.
(b) This happened on the same day as the mother was kidnapped and raped by Russian soldiers.
(c) In 1995 his father was killed. So were his uncle and cousins.
(d) A friend of the mother's was shot dead through her apartment window while wearing the mother's coat.
(e) On separate occasions a shot was fired at their apartment, a break-in was attempted and a fire was started there.
(f) In Moscow both had been arrested on one occasion.
41. It is accepted that the appellants have not given consistent accounts. The first appellant had given a number of accounts each of which contains significant differences about what happened to her. The accounts given by the second appellant have similar difficulties. In addition, there are material differences between the accounts given by the first and second appellants. Furthermore, both appellants give vague accounts being unable to recall dates or places and often running one incident into another. Their accounts vary because there is no consistency over which incidents are mentioned. Some incidents mentioned in earlier statements do not appear in later accounts and some incidents appear only in later accounts. These discrepancies are unsurprising given he medical evidence we have examined. The medical evidence is unchallenged.
42. In other circumstances we would probably have concluded that the inconsistencies in the accounts were evidence that the appellants were not truthful. We do not draw such a conclusion here because there is a clear explanation why the accounts should not be expected to be consistent. However, that is not to say that we accept everything the appellants say as having happened. We cannot draw that conclusion because it is unclear what accounts we should accept over other accounts. We do accept, however, that the medical evidence is of such strength as to indicate that both appellants experienced severe trauma in the past. The medical report about injuries suffered by the first appellant further supports her claim to have suffered severe trauma.
43. The first difficulty we have, therefore, is identifying what traumatic events were encountered.
44. The appellants have been generally consistent about a number of incidents which include the death of the husband of the first appellant, the abduction of the first appellant by Russian military men and her rape, the abduction of the second appellant and his having to view a corpse, a shot fired through the window of their apartment, a break-in and arson attack on the same flat after they moved out, the death of a tenant/friend in another flat owned by the first appellant who may have been mistaken for the first appellant. These events have appeared throughout the appellants' accounts and have been acknowledged by the Tribunal in relation to the scope of the reconsideration of the second appellant's appeal.
45. We accept these claims as facts for the purposes of these appeals because the expert reports and background country information indicate that there was a likelihood that such events happened at that time. As we have already said, the medical reports strongly support the claim that the appellants suffered severe trauma. In reaching this conclusion we have also borne in mind the scope of the appeal of the second appellant and the findings which were sustained at the outset of this reconsideration.
46. However, we cannot make any other positive findings of fact. Neither the medical reports nor the expert reports can assist with regard to the political activities of the husband of the first appellant or whether the appellants were targeted because of links with him. At best Mr Chenciner has identified that the appellants bear a name which is renowned in Russia in a work by Tolstoy. We note that the second appellant suggested that his father's name was well known in the area and throughout Russia which might be a reference to this background information.
47. The expert provides no information to indicate that the second appellant's father was involved in the Chechen parliament or was well known for any other political activity. That is despite the second appellant describing his father as having been a member of the Chechen parliament or at the very least having been well known for his opposition activity to the Russian regime. It is also in spite of the first appellant's description of her husband having held an influential role in the National Guard and having worked at the Parliament.
48. The expert points out that neither appellant should be expected to have knowledge about the activities of their husband/father. We accept that they do have very limited knowledge and that they have had to speculate in order to answer questions. That conclusion, however, leads us to find that they have not shown that their husband/father had a political profile. In turn that leads us to find that the appellants have not shown that they were specifically targeted for abuse in 1995 or 1996.
49. We also bear in mind that the appellants have not been consistent in any of their accounts regarding the role of their husband/father. This is in stark contrast to the consistency shown with regard to the incidents we have identified above. We have considered the medical reports which indicate difficulties the appellants would have in recalling information. That explanation, however, does not cover the situation where the appellants have remembered facts and incidents which have no consistency over time.
50. For example, it may be that the appellants have difficulty remembering what happened and that they have to speculate to fill in the many gaps in their memories. We reach this conclusion because the first appellant appears to have introduced further risk factors each time she has received a negative decision about her claim. She did not mention anything about her husband having a political profile before her claim was first refused. She only mentioned his political activity before her first appeal and only mentioned further details about her abductors asking about her husband's military documents in connection with the hearing before us. This speculation is not something we find to undermine the overall credibility of the appellants but does mean that we cannot rely on those vague memories as sufficient evidence.
62. We accept that the appellants suffered incidents in 1995 and 1996 which severely traumatised them. However, for the reasons already given, we do not find they would amount to serious harm or persecution because the incidents took place during an internal armed conflict. Therefore, the fact these incidents happened is not a basis on which we can infer the appellants would face a real risk of other serious harm or persecution. In reaching this conclusion we have taken account of the fact that between 1998 and 2001 the appellants appear to have returned and lived in Chechnya voluntarily for varying amounts of time without incident. They have not shown there was any particular need for their return.
63. We do not find that the appellants have shown any political aspect to their claims. We have not accepted that the appellants have shown that the husband of the first appellant had a political profile. We do not accept that the appellants were targeted for ill-treatment in 1995 or 1996 because of any link to him. We do not accept that the fact they suffered numerous incidents is not an indication that they were targeted specifically for the reasons we have already given. Therefore, we do not infer from the number of incidents any inference that the appellants were targeted for political reasons.
"Their claim rests on the political profile of the husband of the first appellant. We have not been able to accept that he had any political profile. Without any other explanation, we cannot accept that what happened to the appellants, tragic though it was, was not the result of the indiscriminate violence caused by the armed conflict rather than by an individual threat to them arising from that conflict."
59. A second example relates to the first appellant's account of her contact with her mother. The first appellant told us during the hearing that she had just recalled that when she returned to Chechnya after being in Europe her mother told her about an incident when a group of men had come to her house and threatened her with weapons because they wanted the appellants. The first appellant also told us that this happened when she last returned to Chechnya which was in 2001. She said that her mother had told her about other similar incidents but these had not been as serious as the group had not been armed. The first appellant also told us that her mother went to Spain in 2000, where she claimed asylum and now holds citizenship. As with the accounts she gave of her son, her mother appears to have been in two places at the same time. When these points were put to the appellant, she said she did not understand but offered no clarification relying on her mental health condition.
60. We have considered the evidence and what to make of it. The first appellant has said she returned to Chechnya in 2001 to collect her son but both she and her son have been adamant that she never left him in Chechnya. The appellant evaded questions about why she returned to Chechnya in 2001 if she was in fear of her life and did not have to collect her son from there. We can only conclude that the appellant did not fear for her life in Chechnya in 2001.
Lord Justice Longmore:
Lord Justice Pill: