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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Parra, R (on the application of) v Immigration Appeal Tribunal [2000] EWHC Admin 377 (26 July 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2000/377.html Cite as: [2000] EWHC Admin 377 |
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Case No: CO 1475/99
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION)
CROWN OFFICE
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Date: 26th July 2000
The Queen |
| |
- v - |
MRS JUSTICE SMITH:
1. This is an application for judicial review of the decision of the
Immigration Appeal Tribunal (IAT) on 25 February 1999 refusing leave to appeal
against the decision of a Special Adjudicator, Mr C.J. Hopkinson delivered on
30th November 1998. The Special Adjudicator had rejected the
Applicant's appeal from the Secretary of State's decision dated 24th
February 1998 that she did not qualify for asylum under the 1951 United Nations
Convention relating to the Status of Refugees (the Convention).
2. Article 33(1) of the Convention provides:
`No contracting state shall expel or return a refugee in any manner
whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where his life or freedom would
be threatened on account of his race, religion, nationality, membership of a
particular social group or political opinion'.
3. By Article 1A, a `refugee' is defined as a person who `owing to a well
founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality,
membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the
country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling
to avail himself of the protection of that country.'
4. Following an application for asylum, the initial decision is taken by the
Secretary of State for the Home Office. There is a right of appeal to a
Special Adjudicator pursuant to section 8(1) of the Asylum and Immigration
Appeals Act 1993 and, with permission, from the Special Adjudicator to the IAT,
pursuant to Part II of the Immigration Act 1971. The IAT has the power to
overturn the Special Adjudicator 's determination on a point of law and also on
questions of fact. There is no right of appeal from the IAT's refusal to
grant leave and the only channel by which such a refusal may be challenged is
by judicial review.
5. The applicant is a citizen of Ecuador and was born in 1976. She arrived in
the UK on 22nd June 1997, having flown from Ecuador with a short
transit stop in Holland. On arrival in the UK she claimed asylum and, in
interview on the day of arrival, speaking through an interpreter, gave an
account of her reasons for so doing. She said that about 2 years before, she
had joined the Partido Social Cristiano, which roughly translated means the
Social Christian Party (SCP). This is a lawful political party, one of the two
main parties in Ecuador. She had been an active member, distributing leaflets
and notices and attending meetings to support the leaders. All her family were
members of the party. Between February and March 1997, she and other members
of the SCP had been insulted and verbally threatened with death by members of a
rival political party the Partido Roldosista Ecuatoriano ( PRE). The PRE is
the other main political party. These threats had not been directed at her
individually but at the members present. She had not reported this to the
police as such threats were not unusual.
6. Her flight to the UK had been precipitated by an incident on 9th
June (12 days earlier) in which she said she had been sitting in a parked car
with two SCP colleagues when two men had approached. She said `now we think
that they were employed by the PRE'. Without saying anything, they began
shooting at the car tyres. Because the car was low and the windows open, one
of her colleagues, Douglas Peralta, was hit in the face and was killed ´on
the spot'. The other, Jorge Bastidas, was injured and was still in hospital.
The attackers then ran away. She, who was in the back of the car, had got down
on the floor and had not been hit. After the incident, people came to help and
called for an ambulance. Her two friends were taken to hospital. She went by
taxi straight to her friends' parents' houses to tell them what had happened.
She had not waited for the police at the scene as she was too nervous. After
going to her friends' houses, she went home and told her father what had
happened. He asked her if she wanted to leave the country. She thought about
it for a while and, as her mother lives in England, she decided to come. She
had never been interviewed about the incident by the police and had been in
hiding at her aunt's house between the incident and her departure. Her aunt
had made enquiries at the hospital and had found out that one of her friends
had died. Also her aunt had talked to members of the SCP who had provided
funds for her journey to England. Her passport had been obtained through
normal official channels.
7. She said she had had no problems with the authorities in Ecuador and, apart
from the incidents described, she had had no other problems of any kind. She
was asked about the history, objectives and leadership of the SCP. Her answers
were very brief. She said the party was founded in 1980, which was wrong; it
was founded in about 1951. She did not know the name of any founding member.
She named one current leader as Heinz Mollees. Asked about her employment
history and financial support, she said her sister and father worked; then she
said that her father had not worked for 3 years as he was disabled. He had
been a security guard at a prawn farm.
8. The information provided in interview was corrected and amplified in a
statement and documentary material sent to the Secretary of State on
24th October 1997. The applicant explained that she had completed
one year at university. Her SCP membership card was provided, dated
1st March 1992, that is 3 years before she had said she had joined
the party. She said she had joined when she was about 16 and had been mistaken
when she had said in interview that she had joined about two years ago. She
said her mistake in giving the date of the founding of SCP as 1980 was due to
tiredness after her flight. She corrected the name of the leader of the
party to Heinz Mollers. She said that the threats against her had begun in
1996, not February 1997 and had been directed at her individually. They had
become worse and she had been told that she would be `made to disappear'. On
one occasion insults and stones had been hurled at her and others. She sought
to correct the impression given that the attackers on 9th June had
shot at the tyres of the car. They had shot at the people but the first shots
hit the tyres. Also supplied was a medical certificate dated 9th
June, which stated that Jorge Bastidas had been treated for serious firearm
injuries and was in a critical condition. Also enclosed was a newspaper
cutting dated 11th June 1997, describing a shooting incident said to
have taken place the previous Monday as a result of which Douglas Peralta had
died the following day from internal haemorrhage. A second man had been
seriously injured. She was named as having been involved and having sustained
injuries to the face and body. It was said that she had been trapped in the
back seat due to the impact following the abrupt manoeuvring of the vehicle
when the driver had seen two vehicles blocking their way. Two men had got of
the car and shot at point blank range. She had recognised the men as PRE
members. The victims belonged to the SCP.
9. On the basis of that evidence, the Secretary of State made his decision by
letter dated 24th February 1998. This expressed the view that the
material submitted on 24th October 1997 had been an attempt to
bolster the application. The Secretary of State noted the discrepancy arising
out the membership card and other discrepancies between the applicant's account
and that in the newspaper report. He did not consider that the medical report
on Jorge Bastidas confirmed the veracity of the applicant's account. He drew
attention to the inaccurate answer she had given as to the date when the SCP
had been founded and the inaccurate naming of the current leader said to be
called Dr Heinz Moeller Freile. He said that these shortcomings served to
further doubts about her degree of claimed involvement with the SCP. He
observed that as the Ecuadorian constitution provided for freedom of speech,
opinion and assembly and as Ecuadorians were free to join parties such as the
SCP and were not harassed on account of membership, he did not consider that
membership of the SCP, even if accepted, would give arise to a claim for
asylum. He observed that there was no evidence that the attackers on
9th June were in fact members of the PRE. In any event he took the
view that the attackers could not be regarded as the agents of persecution
within the meaning of the 1951 Convention. There was no reason why the
applicant could not have sought protection from the authorities. He thought
the harassment she claimed to have faced was in any event of a localised
nature. She could have lived safely in another part of the country where she
was not known. He observed that the easy and open manner in which she had left
Ecuador confirmed that she was of no interest to the authorities.
10. The applicant and her advisers can have been in no doubt from that time
that her credibility was under suspicion. The applicant appealed against
the Secretary of State's decision and by letter dated 15th September
1998 submitted further material for consideration by the Special Adjudicator.
Much of this was background material relating to civil rights in Ecuador. Also
included was a newspaper cutting dated 7th February 1997 naming 3
members of the PRE who had been identified as being responsible for attacks,
such as `gagging' students at the University of Guayaquil. The applicant was a
student at that university which was in her home town. She was one of the two
students named as victims of such treatment. Others had not wished to be named
as they feared retaliation. All were members of the SCP. The other document
of significance submitted at this time was an affidavit dated 18th
July 1997 sworn by the applicant's father. He said that the applicant had
travelled to London on 21st June 1997 in order to be reunited with
her mother. She had done so because she was being harassed, sexually accosted,
pursued with intent to rape and threatened with death by individuals with `bad
history.'
11. Two weeks later on 30th September 1998, the applicant submitted
a further witness statement for use at the hearing before the Special
Adjudicator. For the first time she claimed she had been `sexually accosted'
but gave no details of this. She said she had been very scared by the threats
she had received. In respect of the incident of 9th June 1997, she
asserted that the attackers had been firing at her as well as her friends.
She had got away with minor injuries. She had been very frightened and her
father had suggested that she leave the country. She had agreed to do so as
she did not want to `keep hiding from these people.' As for the Secretary of
State's letter of refusal she denied that she had tried to bolster her claim.
She claimed that many misunderstandings had arisen due to difficulty in
communicating through an interpreter. She had not had the opportunity to
describe the injuries she sustained on 9th June 1997. These had
been minor injuries to the face and body but were nothing in comparison with
those of her friends. She said she was afraid to return to Ecuador. She had
been forced to leave due to abuse and attacks by the PRE which had resulted in
the death of her friend. She believed she would be persecuted and harassed
again if she returned.
12. At the hearing, she gave evidence orally. She said she had been very tired
when interviewed on arrival in the UK, especially at the end of the interview.
Asked why she had not sought asylum in Holland, she said she had not known the
aeroplane would land in Holland. Her ticket was for London. She had sat in a
transit lounge for about half an hour. She said she had not sought
protection from the police in Ecuador because they would not have taken any
notice. She knew this from personal experience because 3 years earlier, her
father had been attacked and the police had made no attempt to investigate.
She explained the circumstances in which her father had been injured while
acting as a bodyguard for someone in the SCP. She said he had been shot in
the face by someone in the opposition party, had been unconscious for 6 hours
and was now paralysed. He was now lucid at times and could walk a bit but was
not a normal person. This had not been a factor in her decision to leave.
Finally she said that she could not safely live in any part of Ecuador. It was
a small country and `the attack would come wherever she was.' She was still
worried for herself and her family despite the lapse of a year since her
departure.
13. When cross examined about her membership of the SCP, she asserted that the
interview record was wrong when it stated that she had joined the party two
years earlier and the threats had been made in February/March 1997. She had
joined the party at the age of 15 but had not become active until the age of
18. She said that the threats had begun two years before she came to England.
She could not name those who had threatened her as there were too many but she
knew they were members of the PRE as they wore identifying T shirts. She
agreed the party was not illegal and that many members of the party held high
office in local and national positions. In respect of the 9th
June, she said (for the first time) that she knew the attackers were members of
the PRE because their car carried stripes, in the PRE colours. The car she
had been in also carried stripes, in the SCP colours. She said that afterwards
she had not spoken to the police as she was frightened and because she knew
they had gone to the hospital to speak to her injured friend. She did not
think the police had tried to contact her as they would not have had her
address or telephone number. She said it had never crossed her mind to move
to another part of Ecuador. She had been in touch with her family since she
had come to England and they had not been harassed in any way.
14. She then gave an account of the 9th June in her own words. She
said the car she was in had been stopped on a corner for only a few moments.
She and her friends saw a car on the other corner with two people in it. Then
the shots came. She did not know how many shots were fired and did not see
the gun. She got down quickly and felt a blow or two but not from the firing
of bullets. The gunmen went off. People came to help. She said her friends
did not get out of the car as they were waiting for the ambulance. She got out
through the back door. She had no treatment for her injuries which were only
bruises.
15. She said that if she went back to Ecuador her political opponents would
want to get her because their president was in exile and they wanted to be
stronger and to take revenge because of that. When asked whether all members
of the SCP faced the same risks as she, she said that it was only the active
members who needed to seek refuge in other countries. When asked if there were
any active members left in the party she said she thought from what her sister
had told her that there were some new ones.
16. The Special Adjudicator rejected the applicant's evidence as untrue and
unreliable on a number of grounds. Before he came to consider her evidence in
detail he correctly set out the applicable law and also considered the
background documents put before him concerning the state of affairs in Ecuador.
These included several Amnesty International reports and a US Department of
State report of 1997. He noted that Ecuador was a democratic republic with a
unicameral legislature chosen in periodic free elections with universal
suffrage. The judiciary was constitutionally independent but in practice
corrupt. The legal system was politicised and inefficient. He noted the
significant autonomy of the military but observed that they did not interfere
in domestic affairs. He also noted that there were credible allegations of
human rights abuses against the police and on isolated occasions the military
too. The constitution guaranteed freedom of speech and this was generally
respected in practice. There was a free press. Rights of assembly and
association for peaceful purposes were respected. There was freedom of
movement within the country and abroad. Human rights organisations operate
openly and publish their findings. There had been no reports of disappearances
or of political killings in the last two years. But there were credible reports
of police involvement in extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests and physical
mistreatment of suspects. There were reports of the government's failure to
investigate allegations of human rights violations. As these human rights
violations related to abuses by the police and government authorities and not
by members of political parties on their opponents, the Special Adjudicator did
not consider they were of relevance to the applicant's case. He concluded that
the background documents did not show that politics were conducted in an
atmosphere of animosity or hostility likely to result in the death, serious
injury or persecution of those involved.
17. I return to the Special Adjudicator 's decision to reject the
applicant's evidence. As this is the underlying issue in this application, it
will be necessary to go through his reasons in detail.
i) He found that she had deliberately changed her story about when she had
joined the SCP, in order to bring it in line with the membership card she had
produced. He did not accept that the membership card was genuine and noted
that she had not signed it. For someone said to be active in the party he was
sceptical of her inability to answer questions about its history and
leadership. He did not accept that she had ever been a member of or active in
the SCP.
ii) He did not accept her evidence in respect of the incident of 9th
June 1997. In particular, he noted that she had first said that her friend had
died `on the spot' and on another occasion had said that he died later. He
thought her account of her conduct immediately after the incident was
incredible. She would not have gone to her friends' homes and then to her own
home as she claimed. She would have gone to the hospital, as she claimed to
have received some bruises. He noted that the Immigration Officer had not
noted any marks on her face on 22nd June. He found her reasons for
not speaking to the police after the incident to be incredible. Seeing how
serious the incident was she would have wanted the perpetrators to be caught.
Her explanation, that the police would not be interested was not plausible. He
accepted that the newspaper reports of the incident were genuine extracts from
publications. But he did not accept that the account was true or that it
corroborated the Applicant's story. He said: `You cannot believe everything
you read in a newspaper. Members of the public can and do submit reports which
regrettably are sometimes published without proper verification by an
independent reporter'. He drew attention to the several differences between
the reports and the applicant's account in evidence. Finally he rejected as
not genuine the medical certificate on Jorge Bastidas. He noted that it was
dated 9th June. As the alleged incident had not occurred until
about 9.40 that evening, he could not accept that a doctor would have prepared
and had typed such a certificate on that evening. It could have served no
useful purpose.
iii) Next he considered the applicant's father's evidence. He noted apparent
inconsistencies in her evidence about him, his employment and how he came to
sustain injury. He rejected her claim that he was only occasionally lucid and
had difficulty moving around. If that were so he would not have been able to
swear his affidavit. He noted that the affidavit did not support the
applicant's claim. He thought there was a ring of truth in the passage which
said that the applicant had come to London to be reunited with her mother. He
noted that the affidavit said that she had left Ecuador because she was being
harassed, sexually accosted and pursued with intent to rape. This did not
accord with the applicant's evidence. The father had not mentioned any
political background to any harassment or to her flight. Nor did he mention
the incident of 9th June. He found that these documents were
prepared to bolster a bogus claim for asylum.
iv) Finally he considered the credibility of the applicant overall. He said
that the way in which the evidence had come out showed a gradual embellishment
of her claim. He took account of language difficulties and made allowance for
the small discrepancies which inevitably creep into an account when it is
repeated over a period of time. But he rejected her story as untrue.
18. In a section headed `Findings of fact' he noted nine points which led to
his conclusion that the applicant had failed to show that she had a well
founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason on her return to Ecuador
for which she required protection. These were:
1. Her failure to claim asylum in Holland which undermined her claim to be in
fear.
2. She had come to the UK to be reunited with her mother who had
been here for 5 or 6 years.
3. She did not have a genuine subjective fear of persecution at the time of
leaving Ecuador either on account of her political opinions or any other
reason.
4. There was no objective evidence that members of the SCP risk persecution in
Ecuador from the authorities or other political parties including the PRE.
5. There was evidence that the necessary constitutional legal and security
safeguards were in place in Ecuador to provide a sufficiency of protection
against the agents of persecution. There was no reason why the applicant should
not have sought the protection of the Ecuadorian authorities if she needed it.
6. There was no evidence, which he accepted, that the applicant could not have
lived safely in some other part of Ecuador than Guayaquil, if she had been in
danger there. She had simply not considered it.
7. Although there were credible reports of human rights abuses in Ecuador,
these were not relevant to the applicant's case. She was not wanted for any
offence and had left Ecuador openly using her own passport without any
difficulty.
8. There was no evidence that failed asylum seekers were persecuted on their
return to Ecuador.
9. There was no risk of persecution to the appellant on her return.
19. In her notice of application for permission to appeal this decision, the
applicant alleged that the Special Adjudicator had failed to have sufficient
regard to various aspects of the evidence. It was said that his conclusions
were inconsistent with the evidence. In particular complaint was made about
the findings in respect of the membership card and the medical certificate.
Finally it was said that the Special Adjudicator should have accepted the
newspaper report of the incident of 9th June as some support for her
account. A further witness statement dated 29.9 98 was submitted in
support of the application which purported to clarify various matters which she
thought might have been misunderstood.
20. In refusing permission, Mr Maddison, a chairman of IAT, said that all the
Special Adjudicator's conclusions were fully supported by evidence, bearing in
mind his assessment of the applicant's evidence and the documentation put
before him. There was no misdirection of law. Read as a whole, the
determination was a full fair and reasoned view of the case.
21. In this application for judicial review of that refusal of leave, Mr Fripp
on the applicant's behalf submitted that the IAT had acted irrationally in
refusing leave to appeal because `the authority of the (Special Adjudicator
's) determination is vitiated by deep seated errors of law, reasoning and
logic' of which he sought to give examples. There were, he said, a number of
respects in which the Special Adjudicator's findings of fact were unsupported
by adequate reasoning or were against the weight of the evidence or had been
reached without giving the applicant an opportunity to address points which
were about to be taken against her. In order to make clear what the applicant
would have said on such issues, had she been given the opportunity, he applied
to admit further evidence from the applicant. This was late and the respondent
objected. I admitted it, out of an abundance of caution, although I was not
entirely satisfied with the explanation for the delay.
22. Mr Fripp properly described the Special Adjudicator's duty to reach
conclusions based on the whole of the evidence and to express intelligible
reasons for his conclusions on the main points. Fairness includes the
requirement that the applicant must have an opportunity to deal with any point
of substance which is to be taken against her. My attention was drawn to the
unreported decision of this Court in R v IAT ex parte Gunn
(22nd January 1998) where Turner J had said that where an allegation
were to be rejected on the ground that it were untrue, the allegation must be
specifically challenged and adequate reasons should be given as to why it has
or has not succeeded. I was also shown the decision of the IAT in
Mayiskole, where the tribunal had adopted the view of Ognall J in
earlier unnamed proceedings that where an adjudicator relies on apparent
discrepancy in statements by the appellant, he must give the appellant an
opportunity to deal with the matter. All this is not contentious. Mr Fripp
set about demonstrating that this decision fell short of those requirements to
an extent that required the IAT to conclude that an appeal was at least
properly arguable. He complained of the following matters:
(i) The Special Adjudicator was not entitled to conclude that the applicant had
never been a member of the SCP for the reasons he gave. He did not spell out
which questions she had failed to answer about the history or leadership of the
party and had not given her, as it was submitted he should, an opportunity to
demonstrate her knowledge of party matters. I reject this complaint as
groundless. The applicant must have known from the Secretary of State's letter
that her knowledge of the party had not been thought impressive. It would have
been quite pointless to give her an opportunity some months later to show what
she knew. She could have learned a lot more in between times. In any case, her
lack of knowledge was but one factor in the Special Adjudicator's decision on
that point. He also had in mind that the unsigned membership card did not bear
the date on which she had said she had joined and he was entitled to reject, as
late invention, her claim that she had joined when she was 15 but not become
active until she was 18. The applicant had ample opportunity to deal with this
point about membership at the hearing and was cross examined about it.
(ii) In respect of the incident of 9th June, it was submitted first
is that the Special Adjudicator was not entitled to say that the applicant's
credibility was damaged by the discrepancy between her accounts of the death of
her friend. In interview with the Investigating Officer (IO) she had said that
her friend died on the spot. Later, when she had produced the newspaper
report, which said he had died the next day from internal bleeding, the
applicant had said that he had died in hospital. Mr Fripp complains that this
difference was never put to her. It was unreasonable to expect her to give a
clear account in the initial interview and if she had had the opportunity to
explain what she had meant, she would have said that she had thought he was
dead when he was shot in the car but later she found out that he was still
alive then and died later. Mr Underwood submitted that that does not sit
comfortably with her evidence at the hearing that after the shooting, her
friends `did not get out of the car but waited for the ambulance', while she
was able to get out of the back of the car. In a perfect world, it would be
desirable that a point such as this should be put to the applicant
specifically. As Mr Underwood pointed out, there was until the most recent
affidavit, no evidence that the applicant was not given the opportunity to deal
with this point. There is no confirmation that this was not put to her. The
notes of evidence have not been called for. In my judgement it would have been
desirable for her to be asked about this discrepancy so as to give her a chance
to deal with it. However, I do not think the explanation now given would have
removed the Special Adjudicator's suspicion that she was trimming her evidence
to make it tally with the supporting evidence. In any case the point is of
modest significance.
(iii) Next Mr Fripp complains that the Special Adjudicator's approach to the
applicant's reactions to the shooting incident were unrealistic. He had said
that if the applicant had really been in this situation, she would not have
just gone away; she would have gone to the hospital and would have sought help
for her own injuries even though they were not serious. Mr Fripp says she was
not asked about this and, if she had been, she would have explained that,
unlike in England, people in Ecuador are not allowed to accompany injured
friends to hospital in an ambulance. For one thing there would not be room. Mr
Fripp complains that the Special Adjudicator was here judging the applicant by
the standards of what someone could be expected to do in England. Mr
Underwood submitted that Mr Fripp had misunderstood this passage of the
decision. What the Special Adjudicator had meant was that he did not think the
applicant's behaviour showed a normal human reaction to the situation she
claimed to be in. One would normally expect a person who herself had been
slightly injured and whose friends had been very seriously injured or killed to
go to the hospital for several reasons, possibly to seek treatment for herself
but also to see how her friends were. There was no suggestion that she could
not have done so; she took a taxi and went to her friends' homes, (which may
have been entirely reasonable) but did not then go to the hospital. I accept
Mr Underwood's submission on that point. It seems to me that the Special
Adjudicator was entitled to judge her conduct by what he regards as a normal
human behaviour which is the same the world over. In my view, the Special
Adjudicator was entitled to reach this conclusion and to take it into account.
(iv) The next complaint is similar to the last. The Special Adjudicator said
that he found it incredible that if the applicant really had been involved in
this shooting, she never made any attempt to give the police an account of what
she had seen. He found her explanation that the police would not have been
interested to be implausible. Mr Fripp complains that the Special Adjudicator
did not have regard to the evidence before him to the effect that there were
known examples where the police were not prepared to investigate crime in
indigenous areas or the poor areas of large cities. He accepted that the area
in which this shooting took place could not be so described. He submitted that
the implausibility of her behaviour had not been put her so that she could deal
with. In my view she had every opportunity to deal with this issue. She was
asked about her reasons for not waiting for the police or otherwise making any
report to them. The issue was raised fairly and squarely and she had every
chance to deal with it. Moreover on the basis of the evidence before him about
police behaviour, the Special Adjudicator was entitled to say that her reasons
for not speaking to the police at some time were implausible.
(v) Next it is said that the Special Adjudicator should not have held it
against the applicant that the IO did not notice any marks on the applicant's
face at the time of the interview. It is said that she did not have the chance
to deal with this point at the hearing. It will be recalled that at interview
she had then said that she had escaped the shooting incident without injury.
Later she said she had had bruises. In her evidence to the Special
Adjudicator she had said that she had sustained injuries but nothing serious;
she had bruises to her face and body not requiring treatment. She had not had
the opportunity to expand on this during her interview on 22nd June.
She now says, in her most recent affidavit that in fact she still had visible
marks on her face on 22nd June but she had not thought to mention
them. The IO had stared at her face but had not mentioned the marks and she
did not think to do so. In my judgment, this small point in the Special
Adjudicator 's decision has been taken out of context and has been blown up
into something it was never intended to be. As I read the decision, the
Special Adjudicator was not making a finding against the applicant in saying
that the IO had not noticed any marks on the applicant's face. He was merely
pointing out that a piece of potentially corroborative evidence was not
available because the IO had not noticed any marks. It seems to be common
ground that the applicant did not mention them to him, which if they were there
to be seen, was a pity and an opportunity lost. In my view this was a point
of no significance whatever.
(vi) Next Mr Fripp complains about the Special Adjudicator's approach to the
newspaper report. This was presented as support for her claim to have been
involved in the incident of 9th June 1997. Mr Fripp had to accept
that there were many discrepancies between the report and the applicant's
account. However, he submitted that the Special Adjudicator should have
applied the appropriate lower than usual standard of proof (see Kaja
(1995 IMR1 and should have accepted that there was at least a
reasonable degree of likelihood that the account was true and related to the
applicant. This he said went to the core of the applicant's case because if
there were such a reasonable likelihood then the Special Adjudicator's decision
was completely undermined. He submitted that, if the unreliability of the
report had been raised at the hearing, the point could have been made that the
report appeared to have been written by someone who did not have first hand
knowledge of the incident and also the applicant would have explained that it
was quite common for newspapers in Ecuador to dramatise events to make them
more attractive for readers. I am quite unimpressed by this last point. The
honesty and reliability of the applicant's claim to have been involved in this
incident, as supported by this report, were plainly in issue at the hearing and
the applicant's representative must have realised that the discrepancies
between her account and the report were a matter of interest and concern.
There was every opportunity to explain the bad habits of Ecuadorian editors and
to draw attention to the hearsay nature of the material. However, as to this,
Mr Underwood pointed out that the writer of the report appeared to have
received information either directly from the applicant or from someone who had
spoken to her. From the wording, it even appeared that she might have been
involved in its compilation. Yet the report was different from her account in
important respects. She had proffered no explanation as to how her apparent
contribution had been made. I have considered this point with some anxiety as
it appears that this was the point on which the Judge gave leave to move for
judicial review, but considering all the factors and bearing in mind that he
had the benefit of seeing the applicant, it does seem to me that the Special
Adjudicator was justified in rejecting this report as unreliable and not worthy
of belief.
(vii) Mr Fripp submitted that the Special Adjudicator had not been entitled to
reject as false the medical certificate on Jorge Bastidas on the basis that no
doctor would ever have made such a report within a few hours of the event.
There had been no warning that he was going to take this point against her.
She had had no chance to explain how things were done in Ecuador. In her most
recent affidavit she explained that it was quite possible that a report such as
this might be made on the very night of the incident if the incident might give
rise to a claim in future. There is no confirmation of the applicant's claim
that this matter was not raised at the hearing. For present purposes I give
her the benefit of the doubt on that and accept that it is possible that had
the Special Adjudicator heard that explanation he might not have rejected the
certificate as false. However, the document is still of no real assistance to
the applicant as it does not provide any support for her claim that she was
involved in the incident in which Jorge Bastidas was injured.
(viii) Mr Fripp only faintly pursued his eighth point which was a complaint
that the Special Adjudicator failed to make clear specific findings about the
9th June incident. He had not made it plain whether the incident
happened at all and if so whether she had played any part in it. That is true.
The Special Adjudicator did not. Nor was he under a duty to do so. The burden
of proof lay on the applicant to prove to the requisite standard that she had
been involved in a shooting incident which had frightened her so much that she
had fled the country. If she failed to satisfy the Special Adjudicator that
there was a reasonable probability that the kernel of her evidence on this
issue was true, one is bound to ask rhetorically how he could possibly be
expected to decide what had actually happened.
(ix) Mr Fripp's ninth point concerned the evidence about and from the
applicant's father. It is said that the Special Adjudicator should not have
said that if the father had been injured to the extent the applicant had
claimed, he would not have been able to go to court to swear his affidavit.
That in itself is a small point but the applicant's real problem here is that
she produced a piece of evidence from a person who, of all people besides her,
should know why she had fled Ecuador. On her account, her father advised her to
go when she told him about the shooting incident. Yet his evidence does not
mention any such incident. It says she has been subject to sexual harassment
which is a reason she herself had never mentioned until after the affidavit
arrived. Even then she gave no details of it. The father makes no reference to
9th June or to politics or rival parties or anything of that kind.
The complaint is made on her behalf that these points were not specifically put
to her. Well maybe they were not. They were so obvious that if she had had
anything to say about them she would have said it. In any event, she has not
proffered any explanation of what she would have said, given the chance. Her
complaint about the conclusions drawn from the father's evidence is hopeless
and the evidence itself points to this being a bogus claim.
(x) The tenth point is a complaint that the Special Adjudicator found there was
a discrepancy between her two accounts relating to her belief that the two
attackers were members of the PRE when in fact there was no inconsistency
between them. In interview she had said `Now we think they are members of the
PRE'. In evidence she said that she knew immediately that they were because
they were in a car bearing the PRE's coloured stripes. It is submitted that
this is really no more than the kind of difference or misunderstanding which
can arise due to language difficulties and the problems of speaking through an
interpreter. So it may be but the Special Adjudicator is entitled and obliged
to make a judgement as to whether this discrepancy was innocuous or whether it
was an attempt to embellish the claim. He is not required to demonstrate the
validity of his conclusions as if he were proving a theorem. He has to
exercise judgement and his judgement should not be attacked if he reaches a
conclusion which was open to him on the evidence. This one was.
(xi) I now come to the applicant's best point. It is that the Special
Adjudicator should not have found that the applicant's decision to come to
England rather than seeking asylum in Holland damaged the credibility of her
claim to be in fear. With respect to the Special Adjudicator, this seems to me
to be a thoroughly bad point on which to have relied. This young single woman,
aged 20, has a mother living in England. If she were in fear of her life in
Ecuador and had decided to flee, it would be natural that she would choose
England as she would there have the support and protection of her mother. She
would obviously not wish to stay in Holland if she could reach England in
safety. Also, assuming that her fear for life and limb while in Ecuador were
genuine, it seems to me obvious that that fear would be largely abated as soon
as she landed in any European country. Her concern would then to be to reach a
country where she would have not just physical safety but a degree of support.
In any event she had a ticket for London. Why, assuming her story to be true,
would she want to stay in Holland? On this point, the applicant makes good her
complaint.
(xii) Next it is said that the Special Adjudicator erred in finding that the
background material did not warrant his conclusion that the constitutional,
legal and security safeguards were in place in Ecuador to provide a sufficiency
of protection against agents of persecution. It is said that he failed to heed
the US State Department report which referred to the failure of the police to
deal with crime in indigenous areas and poor quarters of large cities. It is
said that he also failed to heed another passage from the same report which
spoke of an increasing tendency for groups of citizens to take the law into
their own hands on account of their dissatisfaction with efforts made by the
police. Also it was said that he had not heeded the newspaper report of
February 1997 relating to student political activity at the University of
Guayaquil. This report had named the applicant as a victim. Dealing with the
last point first, the applicant spoke about political harassment which she and
others had suffered in February 1997. She described it in rather different
terms from the newspaper report and said she had not reported it to the police
because such conduct was not unusual. As for the background material, I have
read it and it seems to me that the Special Adjudicator summarised it fairly,
(as Mr Fripp at one stage conceded) and that it fully justified his conclusion.
I think it important to note that the Special Adjudicator 's conclusion on this
point is plainly intended to mean that even if the applicant had been the
victim of a politically motivated shooting attack (which on the facts he
rejects) he would still find that there was no reason why she should not have
sought the protection of the Ecuadorian authorities. In other words, even if
her story were true, she would not be entitled to asylum.
(xiii) That exhausted Mr Fripp's written list of complaints. However, he added
one more, namely that the Special Adjudicator should not have criticised the
applicant for failing to produce Douglas Peralta's death certificate although
she said she had done. This is a point of no merit whatsoever. The Special
Adjudicator did not criticise her; he simply noted in passing that although the
papers said that the death certificate had been produced he had not seen it.
In any event, the death certificate could not have helped the applicant, which
is no doubt why the Special Adjudicator did not mention during the hearing that
it was missing from his bundle.
23. I have gone through these grounds in detail and with great care,
mindful as I am of the need to give anxious scrutiny to a decision such as
this, which will have an important effect on the life of the applicant. With
the exception of the ´Holland point' on which the applicant's complaint is
made good, it seems to me that all the Special Adjudicator's findings of fact
are justified by the evidence.
24. Mr Fripp submitted that if even one of the findings of fact were held to
have been unjustified, the whole decision would be undermined and the applicant
would have made her point that the IAT had been wrong not to grant permission
to appeal. This was so, he submitted, because it is not possible to tell from
the decision what weight had been attached to any single factor. The Holland
point may have been of real significance in the Special Adjudicator's mind.
Accordingly, I should quash the IAT's decision.
25. I cannot accept that submission. It seems to me that the Special
Adjudicator 's decision must be looked at as a whole. That is what the
Chairman of the IAT Mr Maddison purported to do when refusing permission and in
my judgement he was right to do so. It will not be every single unjustifiable
finding of fact or every single unwarranted intermediate judgement which will
undermine a decision of this kind. The IAT when considering whether to grant
leave will not do so just because one or two findings of fact cannot be
justified. It will depend upon the importance of the unjustified findings
within the factual framework of the case as a whole. It may be that a single
finding of fact will be so central to the issues that, if it be successfully
challenged, the foundation for the decision will be seen to be shaky. On the
other hand, one or more findings may be so peripheral that the appellate or
reviewing body will have no difficulty in concluding that the remaining
structure is sound.
26. In the present case, I have no hesitation in saying that the Holland point is peripheral to the Special Adjudicator's decision. This Special Adjudicator gave a careful, detailed and well-structured decision. He made no errors of law. I have found that one of his findings of fact was unjustified but it was plainly not a matter of any great significance. In my judgement, the IAT were right to refuse permission to appeal this decision and for that reason this application for judicial review fails.
27. I add only this. Even had I accepted more of Mr Fripp's criticisms of the
Special Adjudicator, I would still not have granted judicial review. It is
clear in my view that the Special Adjudicator based his decision not only on
his rejection of the applicant's evidence as untrue but also on his view that
even if the facts were as she claimed, she would still not be entitled to
asylum. He made a finding which, although not prefaced by the words, `even if
her claim were true' was plainly based on the hypothetical assumption that it
was. He found that there was no reason why she should not have sought the
protection of the Ecuadorian authorities. He found that, were her claim
genuine, she could have lived safely in another part of Ecuador. He observed
that there was no evidence that failed asylum seekers are persecuted on their
return to Ecuador. Those findings in themselves are sufficient support for
his final conclusion that (even if her account of events were true) the
applicant had failed to show a well founded fear of persecution for a
Convention reason on her return to Ecuador, for which she required surrogate
international protection.
C O S T S
MR UNDERWOOD: Thank you my Lady. I ask for costs in the
usual form as it now reads.
MRS JUSTICE SMITH: Yes. Mr Fripp?
MR FRIPP: Yes, I do not seek strongly to resist that. I simply note
that this is a lady who is likely to be returned to Ecuador. Her father is a
disabled ex-security guard in Ecuador.
MRS JUSTICE SMITH: Well, I do not know that her father would,
in any event, ever have any possible liability to costs, but if she is to be
returned to Ecuador, the prospects of recovering any costs from her are remote
in the extreme, but it seems to me that I should make the usual order just in
case some eventuality turns up. Have you any objection to that?
MR FRIPP: I do not, save for those matters.
MRS JUSTICE SMITH: Thank you very much. The application is
refused. The applicant will pay the defendant's costs but the determination of
her liability for such payment will be postponed pending further
application.
MR FRIPP: My Lady, may I respectfully seek legal aid
assessment?
MRS JUSTICE SMITH: Yes, of course.
MR FRIPP: I am grateful.