BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Kpandang, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] EWHC 2130 (Admin) (30 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/2130.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2130 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF ZITA KPANDANG | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | (DEFENDANT) |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MS J RICHARDS (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"The provisions of Schedule 2 to this Act shall have effect with respect to [I omit words down to subparagraph D, continuing the quotation] the detention of persons pending examination or pending removal from the United Kingdom."
"A person who may be required to submit to examination under paragraph 2 above may be detained under the authority of an immigration officer pending his examination and pending the decision to give or refuse him leave to enter."
"In order to effect this new procedure, we will detain straightforward claimants to enable a quick initial decision and swift removal after any appeal, providing they meet the criteria of detention."
"Any medical condition which requires 24-hour nursing or medical intervention.
"Any claim may be fast tracked where it appears, after screening, to be one that may be decided quickly. The duty coordinator identifies cases suitable for Fast Track processing at either Oakington or Harmondsworth."
"The Fast Track Processes Suitability List is used for identifying and accepting claimants into both the Oakington and Harmondsworth Fast Track processes. However, whilst Oakington has what are termed as 'single male', 'single female' and 'family beds'; Harmondsworth has only 'single male' beds. In other words, Harmondsworth can only physically accommodate men on their own. The use of the term 'single' is not, and has never been, intended to reflect the marital or relationship status of claimants. It is a term to reflect the fact that the males and females detained are being detained in 'single' sex accommodation and not as a family unit, or married/common law couple in discrete family accommodation."
"With respect to acceptance into the Harmondsworth Fast Track, we cannot, and therefore do not, accept family units because there is no accommodation for them. A family unit can be an individual (male or female) with children or couples without children but in a subsisting relationship. In general at Harmondsworth, we do not detain and separate a claimant from anyone who is a dependant upon his claim -- not because they fall outside the terms of the policy or criteria for admission but because there are operational issues in doing so. For example, but not exclusively so, the operational difficulties are principally resolving and notifying to them the immigration status of the dependants and effecting the removal of all family members at the same time as the principal claimant. This is an operational issue and is not relevant to whether the claim itself is one we believe is capable of being decided quickly. Claims from those who have dependants on their claim may be capable of being decided quickly or they may not. The existence or otherwise of dependants on the claim does not normally go to the issue of suitability for fast tracking because the claim itself is normally made no less or more complicated by dependants. There may be occasions when, despite the existence of dependants on a claim, it is considered necessary and justified to separate them to enable the claim to be quickly resolved via the all male bed Harmondsworth Fast Track process."
"Harmondsworth Fast Track procedures were introduced on 10/04/03. Any single male asylum applicant who meets the usual Oakington criteria, arriving at any port or ASU, and who has no dependants, should be fully screened to the appropriate level before being referred to Oakington. Those considered by the Oakington coordinator to be suitable will be transferred to Harmondsworth to be processed through the Fast Track process. The aim is to take unsuccessful cases from asylum claim through appeal and removal within four weeks."
"The Harmondsworth scheme was to apply to those who were considered to have straightforward claims and who could be detained pending a quick decision. There was, it was said, to be a 'sharp focus on high-quality decision-making with on site access to legal advice and, so far as possible, the same case worker and legal representative dealing with an application from start to finish'. It was to 'build on the successful Oakington process'. It is limited to single male applicants from countries which are believed by the defendant to be those where in general there is no risk of persecution."
"Quite a lot of these claims are those who come to light when they are discovered having been here some time, and they claim asylum when there is a question of removal. In that sort of case, Article 8 often is a relevant consideration because they may well have settled down here, be married here, got children here and so on. Article 8 can be quite a difficult issue. I mean, I know Mahmood is there."
"There is a tendency sometimes to say, well, Mahmood gives the answer to everything, but it is not. You have got to look at the circumstances, the family circumstances quite often and that alone does not appear to have loomed very large in the approach in L, does it?"
"That is right. It certainly did not loom large in L. It is not going to loom large in this case either, and the reason it is not going to loom large in this case is, as I have already explained to your Lordship, we are going to have to focus on typical Harmondsworth --"
"But a large number of typical Harmondsworth cases are said to be those where they have been in the country for some time -- "
"Maybe I could at this stage say that one of the standard criterion [sic] for Harmondsworth includes people who have got -- they are single, they are without children."
"1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
"2. There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others."
"The contours of the principle of proportionality are familiar. In de Freitas ... the Privy Council adopted a three-stage test. Lord Clyde observed, at page 80, that in determining whether a limitation (by an act, rule or decision) is arbitrary or excessive the court should ask itself:
"'Whether: (i) the legislative objective is sufficiently important to justify limiting a fundamental right; (ii) the measures designed to meet the legislative objective are rationally connected to it; and (iii) the means used to impair the right or freedom are no more than is necessary to accomplish the objective.'"
"There is now no doubt that the justification relied on for the claimants being sent to and held at Oakington was that these cases fell within the category of those capable of speedy decision. It is not suggested, whatever they may have erroneously been told in form IS91R as being the reasons relied on, that they were detained because there was a risk that they would abscond (which particularly in Dr Saadi's case would seem a flimsy reason). Nor is it said that they had committed unlawful activities in other countries, even though they had arrived in this country concealed in the back of a lorry, a course understandable in view of the conditions and the risk of persecution under which some would-be asylum seekers lived.
"22. The claimants' first argument was on the basis of the provisions of the Immigration Acts. The position under domestic law shorn of Human Rights Act considerations (which is now a largely hypothetical question) is in my view clear. As the judge and the Court of Appeal stressed, paragraph 16 of Schedule 2 gives power to detain 'pending' examination and a decision; that in my view means for the period up to the time when the examination is concluded and a decision taken. There is no qualification that the Secretary of State must show that it is necessary to detain for the purposes of the examination in that the examination could not otherwise be carried out since applicants would run away. Nor is it limited to those who can not for whatever reason appropriately be granted temporary admission. The period of detention in order to arrive at a decision must however be reasonable in all the circumstances.
"23. It is Government policy that temporary admission should be granted where appropriate but it does not follow that if temporary admission can be granted there is no power to detain. On the contrary the power to grant temporary admission under paragraph 21 of Schedule 2 only arises where there is a power to detain.
"24. There is obviously force in the argument for the claimants that if there is no suggestion that they might run away then it cannot be strictly necessary to detain them as opposed to requiring them to comply with a fixed regime enabling detailed examination to take place. This, however, ignores the reality -- large numbers of applicants have to be considered intensively in a short period. If people failed to arrive on time or at all the programme would be disrupted and delays caused not only to the individual case but to dealing with the whole problem. If conditions in the centre were less acceptable than they are taken to be there might be more room for doubt but it seems to me that the need for speed justifies detention for a short period in acceptable physical conditions as being reasonably necessary."
"There remains the issue whether, even if detention to achieve speedy asylum decision-making does fall within Article 5(1)(f), 'detention was unlawful on grounds of being a disproportionate response to the reasonable requirements of immigration control'."
"45. In Chahal's case [that is a reference to Chahal v United Kingdom [1996] 23 European Human Rights Reports page 413] the Court of Human Rights said that the lawfulness of detention had to be seen against the substantive and procedural rules of national law 'but it requires in addition that any deprivation of liberty should be in keeping with the purpose of Article 5, namely to protect the individual from arbitrariness'. I do not see that either the methods of selection of these cases (are they suitable for speedy decision?) or the objective (speedy decision) or the way in which people are held for a short period (ie, short in relation to the procedures to be gone through) and in reasonable physical conditions even if involving compulsory detention can be said to be arbitrary or disproportionate. The evidence of Mr Martin gives strong support to the view that it was appropriate, in the light of the Secretary of State's experience, for the Secretary of State to adopt the Oakington policy and that other alternative methods would practically not be effective.
"46. The need for highly structured and tightly managed arrangements, which would be disrupted by late or non-attendance of the applicant for interview, is apparent. On the other side applicants not living at Oakington, but living where they chose, would inevitably suffer considerable inconvenience if they had to be available at short notice and continuously in order to answer questions.
"47. It is regrettable that anyone should be deprived of his liberty other than pursuant to the order of a court but there are situations where such a course is justified. In a situation like the present with huge numbers and difficult decisions involved, with the risk of long delays to applicants seeking to come, a balancing exercise has to be performed. Getting a speedy decision is in the interests not only of the applicants but of those increasingly in the queue. Accepting as I do the arrangements made at Oakington provide reasonable conditions, both for individuals and families and that the period taken is not in any sense excessive, I consider that the balance is in favour of recognising that the detention under the Oakington procedure is proportionate and reasonable. Far from being arbitrary, it seems to me that the Secretary of State has done all that he could be expected to do to palliate the deprivation of liberty of the many applicants for asylum here."