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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Ilori, R (On the Application Of) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2017] EWHC 3355 (Admin) (21 December 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/3355.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 3355 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
R (on the application of) ENOCH KEM ILORI |
Claimant |
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- and |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Eric Metcalfe (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 29 November 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Ms Mulcahy QC :
Introduction, Issues and Conclusion
i) The Defendant's response dated 20 May 2016, notwithstanding her acceptance that the Rule 35 report constituted independent evidence of injury possibly attributable to torture, went on to apply a definition of torture (attribution to a random act of violence by non-state actors) that she now accepts was not valid within the meaning of her policy, in order to justify continued detention. As a result, she failed to consider whether "very exceptional circumstances" existed which justified the Claimant's continued detention.
ii) Whilst the Defendant's further responses to the Rule 35 report dated 5 July 2016 and 4 August 2016 did consider and conclude that "very exceptional circumstances" existed for justifying continued detention, she relied on an alleged "high risk of absconding" in circumstances where the factors relied on did not support the alleged level of risk and where, in any event, it was irrational to conclude that the circumstances relied on to justify continued detention were very exceptional as opposed to routine.
The Factual Background
"Ultrasound has proved the missing testicle however neither my colleague nor me were confident to say this is from his torture or was a congenital malformation. He has a pending Urology appointment, but this may take months. I believe that he is telling us the truths and this brutal injury may lead the testicle absorbed/disappeared. [sic]"
"You have clearly stated in your substantive asylum interview conducted on 1 April 2016 that you were kidnapped for ransom on 20 July 2013 and held for a period of 29 days before you were released. It is noted that you refer to no other incidents of violence directed towards you until you decided to escape, otherwise you thought you would be killed. You claim to have been able to go to the toilet alone and it was there you made your attempt to escape. You claim to have ran but became tired and hid in a shed for approximately 3 minutes but your kidnappers found you. It was here that you claim they beat you; breaking your leg and injuring your testicle. You claim to have passed out and when you awoke you were in a doctor's house, where your leg had been fixed and you had been given medication."
It was then stated:
"As a consequence of this, whilst it is accepted that the injuries identified in the Rule 35 report are independent evidence of an injury possibly attributable to torture, it is considered that the fractured leg you sustained and injury to your testicle are attributed to a random act of violence, not an act of torture by the state its authorities or any of its agents."
i) a challenge to detention based on an alleged breach of the principles in R (Hardial Singh) v Governor of Durham Prison [1984] 1 WLR 704;
ii) a Chapter 55.10 challenge; and
iii) a Rule 35 report delay challenge.
"We write in response to recent submissions made by your representatives raising concerns about our decision to maintain your detention on 20 May 2016, despite you raising a Rule 35 torture claim on 18 May 2016.
It was accepted that the Report, received on 18 May 2016, from the GP at The Verne, constituted independent evidence of an injury possibly attributed to torture.
We accept that within our first consideration it was considered that the injuries you had sustained were attributed to a random act of violence by non-state actors.
After further consideration of your Rule 35 torture claim, further regard has been had to your immigration history, including the risk of you absconding, taking account of the fact that you had; remained in the United Kingdom following the expiry of your visa, had not submitted any application until after you had been arrested by the police and, following the refusal of your asylum claim, have refused to take part in telephone interviews with representatives at the Nigerian High Commission with a view to documenting you for removal. We believe that these factor [sic] raises very exceptional circumstances that would add weight to our decision to maintain your detention.
You entered the United Kingdom on 8 October 2013 after having obtained a visit visa issued on 18 June 2013 in Lagos, which was valid until 18 June 2015. Upon your arrival in the United Kingdom you were granted leave to enter until 1 January 2014.
It is noted that despite you complying with the process to obtain a visa to enter the United Kingdom you failed to leave when you were required to do so, after your leave to enter expired on 1 January 2014.
You did not come to the attention of the authorities until you were arrested by police on suspicion of rape on 10 January 2016 where upon you were served as a Section 10 overstayer and you were granted Temporary Admission after police had bailed you in relation to criminal matters. You were required to report on 3 occasions whilst on police bail and it is noted that you reported as instructed.
On 22 February 2016 you returned to the police station in relation to the criminal matter where you were informed the police would not be taking the matter further as there was insufficient evidence. At which time you were detained under immigration powers for purposes of effecting your removal from the United Kingdom.
Although you have not provided your Nigerian passport that you used to enter the United Kingdom full details from that passport are featured on your online visa application. Therefore, you were referred immediately for a telephone interview with the Nigerian High Commission so that you could be documented for removal, and this interview was scheduled for 2 March 2016. It is noted that you refused to participate in the interview and stated that you would be claiming asylum; on 3 March 2016 you claimed asylum.
You were certified with a certified refusal of your asylum application on 7 June 2016, certified under Section 94(1) and you were referred for another telephone interview with the Nigerian High Commission on the same date. It is noted that you refused to engage once more with the process of obtaining an Emergency Travel Document, refusing to speak to the High Commission.
We believe that this is indicative of your overall attitude to immigration control and that this non-compliance is an attempt to frustrate the removal process. We therefore believe that if released you will continue in this vein and will be unlikely to comply with any reporting conditions.
You have been referred to the detained interview scheme scheduled for 1 July 2016. The only barrier to your removal at this time is the obtaining of an Emergency Travel Document, and as such it is considered that you are now fully well aware of our intention to remove you from the United Kingdom to Nigeria. Furthermore your claim for asylum has been refused and as such there is little incentive for you to remain in touch with authorities and to comply with any conditions of your release.
Therefore, in light of your actions as outlined above the decision to maintain your detention; despite your Rules 35 claim, is justified in line with published policy stated in Chapter 55.10 of the Enforcement Instruction and Guidance. This is under exceptional circumstances due to your non-compliance as a whole."
"The decision to maintain your detention was upheld as it was considered that there were very exceptional circumstances involved in your case in light of your immigration history, including the risk of you absconding, taking account of the fact that you had remained in the United Kingdom beyond the expiration of your visa, that you had not submitted any further applications until after you were arrested by police and that prior to and following the refusal of your asylum claim you refused to participate in telephone interviews with the Nigerian High Commission with a view to documenting you for your removal."
The legal and policy framework
"The power to detain must be retained in the interests of maintaining effective immigration control. However, there is a presumption in favour of temporary admission or release and, wherever possible, alternatives to detention are used (see 55.20 and chapter 57). Detention is most usually appropriate:
(a) to effect removal;
(b) initially to establish a person's identity or basis of claim; or
where there is reason to believe that the person will fail to comply with any conditions attached to the grant of temporary admission or release.
To be lawful, detention must not only be based on one of the statutory powers and accord with the limitations implied by domestic and Strasbourg case law but must also accord with stated policy."
"55.3 Decision to detain (excluding criminal casework cases)
1. There is a presumption in favour of temporary admission or temporary release - there must be strong grounds for believing that a person will not comply with conditions of temporary admission or temporary release for detention to be justified.
2. All reasonable alternatives to detention must be considered before detention is authorised."
"If removal is not imminent, the caseworker should consider the risk of absconding. Where the person has been convicted of a more serious offence, then this may indicate a high risk of absconding. An assessment of the risk of absconding will also include consideration of previous failures to comply with temporary release or bail. Individuals with a long history of failing to comply with immigration control or who have made a determined attempt to breach the UK's immigration laws would normally be assessed as being unlikely to comply with the terms of release on restrictions. Examples of this would include multiple attempts to abscond or the breach of previous conditions, and attempts to frustrate removal (not including the exercise of appeal rights).
Also relevant is where the person's behaviour in prison or immigration removal centre (IRC) (if known) has given cause for concern. The person's family ties in the UK and their expectations about the outcome of the case should also be considered and attention paid to the requirement to have regard to the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of any children involved. The greater the risk of absconding, the more likely it is that detention or continued detention will be appropriate. Where the individual concerned has complied with attempts to re-document them but difficulties remain due to the country concerned, this should not be viewed as non-compliance by the individual." (emphasis in bold added)
"Where [the National Offender Management Service (NOMS)] are unable to produce a risk assessment and the offender manager advises that this is the case, case owners will need to make a judgment on the risk of harm based on the information available to them. Factors relevant to this will be the nature of the original offence, any other offences committed, record of behaviour in prison and or IRC and general record of compliance. A PNC check should always be made. Where there is a conviction for a more serious offence, the nature of the offence is such that the person presents a high risk on the table below. Such high risk offences should be given particularly substantial weight when assessing reasonableness to detain. Those with a long record of persistent offending are likely to be rated in the high or medium risk. Those with a low level, one off conviction and, with a good record of behaviour otherwise are likely to be low risk." (emphasis in bold added)
"55.10 Persons considered unsuitable for detention
Certain persons are normally considered suitable for detention only in very exceptional circumstances, whether in dedicated immigration accommodation or prisons. Others are unsuitable for immigration detention accommodation because their detention requires particular security, care and control.
In CCD[1] cases, the risk of further offending or harm to the public must be carefully weighed against the reason why the individual may be unsuitable for detention.
There may be cases where the risk of harm to the public is such that it outweighs factors that would otherwise normally indicate that a person was unsuitable for detention.
The following are normally considered suitable for detention in only very exceptional circumstances, whether in dedicated immigration detention accommodation or prisons:
Unaccompanied children and young persons under the age of 18 (see 55.9.3 above).
The elderly, especially where significant or constant supervision is required which cannot be satisfactorily managed within detention.
Pregnant women, unless there is the clear prospect of early removal and medical advice suggests no question of confinement prior to this (but see 55.4 above for the detention of women in the early stages of pregnancy at Yarl's Wood).
Those suffering from serious medical conditions which cannot be satisfactorily managed within detention.
Those suffering from serious mental illness which cannot be satisfactorily managed within detention (in criminal casework cases, please contact the specialist mentally disordered offender team). In exceptional cases it may be necessary for detention at a removal centre or prison to continue while individuals are being or waiting to be assessed, or are awaiting transfer under the Mental Health Act.
Those where there is independent evidence that they have been tortured.
People with serious disabilities which cannot be satisfactorily managed within detention.
Persons identified by the competent authorities as victims of trafficking (as set out in Chapter 9).
If a decision is made to detain a person in any of the above categories, the caseworker must set out the very exceptional circumstances for doing so on file." (emphasis in bold added)
"(1) The medical practitioner shall report to the manager on the case of any detained person whose health is likely to be injuriously affected by continued detention or any conditions of detention.
(2) The medical practitioner shall report to the manager on the case of any detained person he suspects of having suicidal intentions, and the detained person shall be placed under special observation for so long as those suspicions remain and a record of his treatment and condition shall be kept throughout that time in a manner to be determined by the Secretary of State.
(3) The medical practitioner shall report to the manager on the case of any detained person who he is concerned may have been the victim of torture.
(4) The manager shall send a copy of any report under paragraphs (1), (2) or (3) to the Secretary of State without delay.
(5) The medical practitioner shall pay special attention to any detained person whose mental condition appears to require it, and make any special arrangements (including counselling arrangements) which appear necessary for his supervision or care."
"Because each case will be different, it is not possible to provide definitive guidance on when a Rule 35 report will constitute independent evidence of torture. However, it must have some corroborative potential (it must "tend to show") that a detainee has been tortured, but it need not definitively prove the alleged torture. The following pointers may assist:
A report which simply repeats an allegation of torture will not be independent evidence of torture;
A report which raises a concern of torture with little reasoning or support or which mentions nothing more than common injuries or scarring for which there are other obvious causes is unlikely to constitute independent evidence of torture;
A report which details clear physical or mental evidence of injuries which would normally only arise as a result of torture (e.g., numerous scars with the appearance of cigarette burns to legs; marks with the appearance of whipping scars), and which records a credible account of torture, is likely to constitute independent evidence of torture."
"Very exceptional circumstances could arise where, for example, release would create an unacceptably high risk of absconding, of reoffending or of harm to the public. There will not be very exceptional circumstances in the case of a routine detention absent other reasons, e.g., a removal without a high absconding risk or harm issue see Ch. 55 of the EIG. The full circumstances applicable to the detainee and their reasons for detention must be considered, in order to establish whether there are very exceptional circumstances that mean detention is appropriate notwithstanding the Rule 35 report.
In some cases where the Rule 35 report is accepted as independent evidence of torture, there may nevertheless be further information which renders the overall account of torture wholly incredible. Such information may form the basis of an assessment that there are very exceptional circumstances making detention appropriate.
For instance, it may be right to detain in very exceptional circumstances if, despite the existing independent evidence of torture, there is a court determination which was made with sight of a full medico-legal report and which dismisses the account of torture, or there is evidence such as visa match evidence which very clearly shows that at the time the detainee claims to have been tortured in one location, he was in fact enrolling biometrics and applying for a visa in another location. Because genuine confusion may be an issue, caution must be exercised in such a consideration."
"'torture' in the detention policy means any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based upon discrimination of any kind".
" In the context of these cases the substantive question is whether there is independent evidence that a person has been tortured. If so, the Secretary of State may normally maintain detention only if there are very exceptional circumstances."
"The policy gives some help with what may inform whether there are very exceptional circumstances. It refers to the need to weigh risks to the public of releasing convicted offenders with particular care. A very high, rather than routine, risk that the detainee will abscond might well also provide a proper basis for maintaining detention. The rubric is such that a host of factors may come into play. It was not suggested by the claimants in these cases that credibility is an irrelevant consideration in determining this question. In my judgment, the credibility of a detainee may be a factor which informs whether there are very exceptional circumstances for maintaining detention. Doubts about the credibility of the detainee would not be sufficient that is commonplace. Acting on doubts would be tantamount to requiring the detainee to prove that the allegation of torture was true. The policy does not require that. However, there may be cases in which the information available to the decision maker leads him to the firm conclusion that the torture claim is untrue, that is to say incredible or very unlikely to be true. It would be a perverse application of the policy to require the Secretary of State to release from custody someone in respect of whom there exists independent evidence of torture but also where it is clear that the claim is untrue. The policy does not require that. However, it should not be overlooked that the fact that a person is in detention in the first place will often have followed, or be associated with, a conclusion that an underlying claim has little or no substance. The fact that a person is in detention will usually suggest that an assessment has been made that there is a risk of absconding, or a risk of offending or some threat to the public. The policy assumes that these facts, presenting in a way which would ordinarily justify detention, are not without more sufficient to do so when there is independent evidence of torture." (emphasis in bold added)
i) In relation to the first example given by the Process Guidance (the first bullet point set out at paragraph 50 above) that "the mere recitation of an account of torture coupled with the fact that the doctor does not find it inherently incredible would not in my view be enough The position is no different even if the doctor also describes injuries or scarring which are visible on the body of the patient but does not relate them in any way to the account" ([32-33]).
ii) In relation to the second example given by the Process Guidance (the second bullet point at paragraph 50 above) that "the existence of commonly found scars coupled with a mere assertion of torture would not in general be enough". However, "a reasoned explanation of why the scarring is consistent with the account does lend expert support to the account (and I do not read the example as suggesting otherwise)". Therefore "unless the account of the detainee is inherently incredible so that there is no proper claim of torture capable of being corroborated, medical evidence consistent with the account will in my view generally satisfy the requirement" (at [41]).
iii) In relation to the third example (the third bullet point at paragraph 50 above), "even with unusual scarring, the account of torture must be credible in the sense of being capable of belief. If the account is inherently incredible, that will be likely fatally to undermine the conclusion that the scarring was caused by torture" (at [50]).
"Where the policy does apply, there is, as shown by Anam's case (see [52]-[54] above) a high hurdle to overcome to justify detention. It is self-evident that the mere liability to be removed and refusal to leave voluntarily cannot constitute the 'very exceptional circumstances' required or the policy would be denuded of virtually all its operation: R (AM) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWCA Civ 521 at [34] per Rix LJ. Similarly, AA (Nigeria)'s case suggests (see [2010] EWHC 2265 (Admin) at [40]) that the detention of a person cannot be justified by reference to that person's own well-being (in that case to prevent suicide attempts) either in general or as an exceptional circumstance. But the balancing process described in Anam's case may, particularly where the case concerns a foreign national prisoner who poses a serious risk to the public, for example a person who poses a high risk of killing someone else, or where there are cogent grounds for believing that removal will take place in a very short time, mean that detention will be justified. In the case of a person who poses a high risk of killing someone else, this will be because the circumstances can be regarded as 'very exceptional' so that detention pursuant to the policy of ensuring the firm and fair application of immigration controls is justified. Where there are cogent grounds for believing that removal will take place in a very short time, detention will be justified because a short period of detention of that character is not likely to raise questions of 'satisfactory management', as Miss Rose accepted." (emphasis added)
The Claimant's case
The Defendant's case
i) Her assessment that the Claimant was at high risk of absconding as evidence by:
a) The fact that he overstayed for more than 6 months following the expiry of his visa and was only apprehended when he was arrested on suspicion of rape; and
b) His attempts to frustrate his removal by refusing to cooperate with efforts to obtain emergency travel documents on his behalf.
ii) Her assessment that, by reason of his arrest on suspicion of rape, the nature of the alleged office (with a Harm Matrix score of A) and the circumstances of the decision not to proceed against him "raises doubt in relation to how he conducts himself towards women and as such it is considered that he presents a high risk of harm to the public".
iii) The lack of credibility of the Claimant's account, as evidenced by its sheer implausibility (because the Claimant claimed to have been kidnapped and that there was a contract out on his life), the fact that he waited nearly 2½ years before claiming asylum, and then only after he had been arrested and detained; and
iv) The very slight degree of corroboration offered by the Rule 35 Report, in which the examining doctors were unable to say whether the Claimant's missing testicle was as a result of injury (whether intentional or not) or whether it was simply the result of congenital malformation.
It was stated that, taking all these factors together, the Defendant was entitled to conclude that between his high risk of absconding, the high risk of harm he presented to the public and the lack of credibility of his account there were very exceptional circumstances that warranted his continued detention notwithstanding the slender findings of the Rule 35 report.
The test to be applied
"It follows that in considering the question of whether something constitutes independent evidence of torture, and also the question whether there are very exceptional circumstances justifying continued detention, the court's role is to ask whether the Secretary of State was entitled on the information before her to come to the conclusion or conclusions that she did. The second aspect, whether there exist very exceptional circumstances, is one that might lead to legitimate differences of view between different people considering the same material. The first aspect, even though governed by public law principles, is in reality fairly hard-edged. Whether something is, or is not independent evidence of torture, will less often be capable of two different answers."
Analysis and conclusions