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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Kalombo, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] EWCA Civ 302 (17 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/302.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 302 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(MR JUSTICE CRANSTON)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF KALOMBO |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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Mr C Zwart (instructed by the Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Toulson:
"When a human rights or asylum claim has been refused and any appeal relating to that claim is no longer pending, the decision maker will consider any further submissions and, if rejected, will then determine whether they amount to a fresh claim. The submissions will amount to a fresh claim if they are significantly different from the material that has previously been considered."
The term "significantly different" is defined in the same paragraph:
"The submissions will only be significantly different if the content:
(i) had not already been considered; and
(ii) taken together with the previously considered material, created a realistic prospect of success, notwithstanding its rejection."
"I myself was born in the DRC and therefore I am Congolese. However, I took my tribal origin from my mother's tribe, the Kasai people as I had never been to Rwanda and have no connection or knowledge of this country"
"My conclusion is that the appellant never went to Kisingani and if he is indeed married then I believe his wife is alive and well in Kinshasa where neither nor his wife would have experienced any problems from either the security forces or the general population. By the appellant's own admission, he certainly had no problems in Kinshasa throughout his life despite the fact that he claims his father is Hutu and even during the first three years of his marriage. In summary I do not believe the appellant at all."
"(1) Our client is half-Rwandan
(2) His original asylum claim had been finally determined by March 2003
(3) The two leading country guidance cases on risk on return to the DRC, VL (DRC) CG [2004] UKIAT 00007 and AB and DM (DRC) CG [2005] UKIAT 00118, and much of the evidence considered in them, post-date the final determination of our client's first appeal
(4) In VL (DRC) (at 93(a)), the IAT identified as a specific risk category 'nationality or perceived nationality of a state regarded as hostile to the DRC (in particular those who have or are presumed to have Rwandan connections or are of Rwandan origin)'. No distinction is made here between those of Rwandan Tutsi and those of Rwandan Hutu origin.
(5) In AB and DM (DRC), the IAT reaffirmed its decision in VL (DRC), adding the extra category of actual and perceived Tutsis (see para. 51(ii)). The category of those with actual or presumed Rwandan connections or origins is left in place (51(i)). As AB and DM makes clear, one is ethnicity-based, the other nationality-based; the categories overlap in part, but are distinct.
(6) In AB and DM(DRC), the IAT also found that the position for perceived Rwandans had significantly deteriorated in 2004: 'The resentment against anything or anybody Rwandan or perceived to be Rwandan is very high and such that there is a real risk of generalised hostility from the local communities against which the authorities are currently unlikely to protect. The situation improved in 2003 but we are satisfied in the light of the evidence before us that there has been a sharp deterioration in 2004 [emphasis supplied in the letter]."
"The judgment [ie in AB and DM] does not imply that all individual claimants with Rwandan connections will automatically be at risk of persecution simply on the basis of their ethnicity, rather that ethnicity in addition to other factors such as political activity are likely to bring such individuals to the adverse attention to the authorities resulting in mistreatment which may amount to persecution. Your client was found not to be credible by the Adjudicator at his One-Stop appeal hearing. Your client has no political or military past. We therefore do not believe that your client will come to the adverse attention of the authorities purely as a result of his Rwandan connections. It is therefore considered that he is not availed by the findings of AB and DM (DRC) CG [2005] UKIAT 00118."
The letter then went on to say:
"In the light of all of the above, the points raised in your submissions, taken together with the material previously considered in the letter/determination, would not have created a realistic prospect of success … As we have decided not to reverse the decision on the earlier claim and have determined that your submissions do not amount to a fresh claim, your client has no further right of appeal."
"1.8. In the cogent submissions made on behalf of the claimant, it is said that the Secretary of State simply got those provisions in that judgment wrong. The submission was that, in particular, the Secretary of State was wrong to say that the Tribunal had found that Rwandan connections alone do not create a risk. The submission is that the Tribunal's decision cannot sustain that interpretation. Nothing, it is said, in the Tribunal's decision suggests that perceived Rwandan ethnicity is merely one factor which can act cumulatively with other factors to create risk. In this submission Rwandan connections are a freestanding risk category. In the light of that it is said that the Secretary of State in her letter should have been focussing on the ethnicity of the claimant, that he is half Rwandan.
…
1.11. In my judgment, the Secretary of State, applying anxious scrutiny, was entitled to take that view of the Tribunal decision. As with any judgment, the decision of the Tribunal cannot be read as a statute … The Secretary of State was entitled to read the Tribunal decision as saying that Rwandan connections alone are not determinative."
"The tribunal's conclusions are, accordingly, as follows:
a) On the information available to it, as at 9 July 2003, it is not the fact that a person returned to the DRC is, by reason only of being a failed asylum seeker, at real risk of persecution or Article 3 ill treatment;
b) In order to run a real risk of being taken into detention, following the screening of a returnee at Kinshasa airport, there must be something further in the returnee's background, such as past political or military activities or nationality of a state regarded as hostile to the DRC.
c) There is nothing in the circumstances of the appellant in this case to suggest that he would be of any adverse interest to the DRC authorities."
"Our essential focus in this determination has been on the issue of failed asylum seekers. However, the adjudicator in allowing this appeal made reference to one further risk factor, namely, being a woman with a very young child … In view of the analysis set out in M and in preceding paragraphs of this determination, we also have to consider whether there was another possible risk category into which she would fall, with reference to identification by the Tribunal in M of two definite risk categories as follows;
a) nationality or perceived nationality of a state regarded as hostile to the DRC (in particular those who have or are presumed to have Rwandan connections or are of random origin;
b) having or being perceived to have a military or political profile or background."
"The evidence currently available satisfies us that the position has changed since the Tribunal considered the issue of the risk to Tutsis in M and TC. In the current situation in the DRC the Tribunal accept that, with the exception of high level officials of RCD/Goma, returnees of Tutsi ethnicity or believed to be of this ethnicity could be at real risk on return. The resentment against anything or anybody Rwandan or perceived to be Rwandan is very high and such that there is a real risk of generalised hostility from local communities against which the authorities are currently unlikely to protect. The situation improved in 2003 but we are satisfied in the light of the evidence before us there has been a sharp deterioration in 2004."
51. Building on previous country guidance cases and in particular M and VL, the Tribunal would reformulate and summarise the current risk categories as follows:
(i) We confirm as continuing to be a risk category those with a nationality or perceived nationality of a state regarded as hostile to the DRC and in particular those who have or presumed to have Rwandan connections or are of Rwandan origins.
We consider that in light of recent developments there is now a risk category consisting of those who are Tutsi (or Banyamulenge) or are perceived to be Tutsi (or Banyamulenge). [then it deals with a possible exceptions and continues] However, they are distinct categories, one nationality-based, the other ethnicity-based.
(iii) We also confirm as an existing risk category those having or being perceived to have a military or political profile in opposition to the government. The risk fluctuates in accordance with the political situation."
It will be noted that the reformulation of the first category of those at risk follows entirely the language of VL except that the words which in VL appeared in brackets no longer are in brackets. Nobody suggests that the disappearance of the brackets carries any significance when it comes to understanding and applying the law.
"In the light of this evidence dealing with the heightened risks to those suspected of Rwandan or Tutsi background and the fact that the first appellant has come to the attention of the authorities in the past, the Tribunal is satisfied that there is a real risk of persecution on return. We bear in mind that the Adjudicator accepted that in January 2000 the authorities were looking for him and there was a newspaper article indicating that he had encountered some difficulties because of his ethnicity.
58. The first appellant does not have the identifiable physical characteristics of a Tutsi, but the newspaper report indicates that his perceived ethnicity of Tutsi has been a significant factor in the adverse interest taken in him by the authorities previously. We consider that his perceived Tutsi ethnicity, together with his past political and musical involvements, would mean that he was likely to continue facing a real risk of adverse treatment either from the authorities or from local communities against which he would not receive effective protection.
"Your client has no political or military past. We therefore do not believe that your client will come to the adverse attention of the authorities purely as a result of his Rwandan connections."
Lord Justice Sullivan:
Sir Anthony Clarke:
Order: Appeal allowed; permission to apply for judicial review granted; application for judicial review granted; the Secretary of State's decision of 25.1.07 quashed