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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> JZ, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs & Ors (Rev1) [2022] EWHC 771 (Admin) (01 April 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/771.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 771 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
The QUEEN | ||
(on the application of JZ) | Claimant | |
and | ||
(1) THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR FOREIGN, COMMONWEALTH AND DEVELOPMENT AFFAIRS | ||
(2) THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | ||
(3) THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR DEFENCE | Defendants | |
and | ||
(1) Q1, (2) Q2, (3) Q3, (4) Q4, (5) Q5, (6) Q6, (7) Q7 | Interested Parties |
____________________
Ms Lisa Giovannetti QC, Mr Mark Vinall and Ms Hafsah Mahsood (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 24 March 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
"16. Between 00:49 and 00:51 on 26 August 2021 PM messaged via WhatsApp "can you confirm ASAP where your brother and family are" "an exception has been made thus far for them. Cannot influence final step", "they need to get to Abbey Gate past TB checkpoint ASAP", please revert ASAP"
17. At 00:51 on 26 August 2021 PM also tried calling me, but I was unable to take the call as I fell asleep on my chair waiting for his call.
18. When I did not answer, PM called my brother at 03:23 Kabul time informing him that he, alongside his wife, 6 children and brother, [name redacted] must go to Abbey Gate, Kabul Airport.
19. At 1:10 on 26 August my nephew messaged me via WhatsApp. "we got call from the UK, he tells me that we come to abigate [Abbey Gate] door of the airport I also asked him that where is the gate located he tells that he don't knows"."
"Re Urgent; SQ's family need urgent evacuation
Ok
Please advise the family to make their way to the British embassy compound in Kabul – there is transport from there to the airport.
The Taliban are blocking access by Afghan nationals to the airport so don't try that
UK operations will wind down on Friday COP to allow safe withdrawal of UK forces prior to final US withdrawl
They are on the list of approved persons according to the Foreign Office
Good luck and god speed" [SQ anonymised]
The name at the foot of this message is cut off, but for somebody with a list of people concerned in Operation Pitting it would not be difficult to decipher. The Defendant says this letter is not in a format generally used and that she cannot investigate it without being told the name of the author. Ms Sabic says that if permission is granted then the Claimant, and in particular SQ can consider further whether the name can be revealed. In my view, at the very least this message needs further investigation by the Defendant.
"In addition to the above, I have applied my own knowledge developed through heading the Counter Terrorism Team at the British Embassy in Kabul (BE Kabul) since January 2021 to its closure in August 2021, I consulted with my team who worked with me there and who on my behalf undertook enquiries with Afghan judges relocated to the UK under Operation PITTING. These confirm that [JZ] was a judge, who most recently sat in the Traffic Courts in Kabul.
My knowledge of the application of military and civilian law in justice operations at Bagram Air Base is limited. I note that in June 2010, the Justice Centre in Parwan became an Afghan controlled and operated court that benefitted from mentoring and training by coalition forces. Prior to June 2010 (during the applicant's employment) cases were prosecuted under the US Law of Armed Conflict and it was a US military establishment."
The decision further states that the following test was applied:
"individuals who (1) had worked in a role that made a material contribution to HMG's mission in Afghanistan, and (2) without whose work the UK's operations would have been adversely affected, and (3) who were now at risk because of their work given the changing situation in Afghanistan."
The decision maker refused to sponsor the Claimant's application for the following reasons:
"2. On the evidence provided to me, I have concluded that the applicant was indeed a judge within Afghanistan and sat as a judge at the Justice Centre in Parwan (referred to in the evidence bundle as Bagram Air Force Base) and at Pol-e-Charki prison. I note the threats the applicant claims are against him. I am personally aware of threats made against other members of the Afghan Justice System that considered issues of Afghanistan's national security.
3. I note that the US Marshals Service provided support and training whilst [JZ] worked at the Justice Centre in Parwan demonstrating the high threat he faced in 2008-11. [JZ's] own statement (para 15, page 11 of the evidence bundle) references that some of those he convicted would have been released by now. In addition, I am aware that many other prisoners have now been released either as a consequence of the US Taliban peace deal (referred to in the statement) or the thousands of detainees let out of prison by the Taliban following the collapse of the Afghan Government.
4. The translated threat document (pages 25 to 27 of the evidence bundle) does make reference to [JZ] having "imprisoned many of our members/personnel", whilst this might well be a consequence of his time at the Justice Centre in Parwan, there is no mention of his involvement with international forces or foreign governments.
5. In light of these considerations, whilst I accept that [JZ] is at risk, I am not satisfied that the threat to [JZ] is heightened as a consequence of engagement with the United Kingdom. My decision not to sponsor this application are further based on the following factors:
6. I have no evidence to lead me to believe that [JZ] was an employee of Her Majesty's Government, nor does it refer to work alongside or in cooperation with HMG units. The Justice Centre in Parwan was not a UK or HMG led intervention and from June 2010 was indeed an Afghan institution – albeit one that benefitted from extensive donor support.
7. Based on the evidence reviewed, it does not appear to me that [JZ] made a material contribution to HMG's mission in Afghanistan. The UK's capacity building effort around justice and the rule of law over the last nine years was focussed in Kabul – that was also the focus of HMG's counter terrorism mission in Afghanistan. As [JZ] does not claim to have worked in the anti-terrorism courts within Kabul he did not make a material contribution to HMG's mission there. Based on my limited knowledge of military operations in Afghanistan and the limited detail about [JZ's] involvement with HMG provided in the evidence bundle, I cannot come to an alternative view.
8. In view of the above, it is not apparent that the UK's operations would have been adversely affected without [JZ's] work. As stated in paragraph 7, the UK's counter-terrorism mission was focussed in Kabul. As [JZ] did not work there, his contribution to the UK's counter terrorism mission was minimal. Mr English's letter of support highlights [JZ's] role in hearing cases to determine if detainees should continue to be detained under Afghan law and how this facilitated the exit of ISAF. However, from my position in determining whether the FCDO Counter-Terrorism team within the Afghanistan Task Force should sponsor [JZ] the case does not provide clear evidence on how [JZ's] work supported UK counter-terrorism operations."
"ii. The Claimant's case was "included on a list of "remaining unprocessed, high profile cases" sent by a military liaison officer in the Crisis Unit to FCDO staff in the Crisis Unit early in the morning of 26 August 2021, indicating that your client had not been approved for evacuation at that time. Our clients have no record of your client having been "called forward" or otherwise approved for evacuation. His name does not appear on the list of those called forward. We note the information you have provided about (a) emails on 25 August 2021; (b) a telephone call at 03:23 AFT on 26 August 2021; and (c) WhatsApp messages on 26 August 2021. The refusal, in your letter of 8 October 2021, to provide details of the senders of the messages has made it impossible for our clients to investigate this aspect of the case as fully as they would have wished."
"4. Biometric data is normally provided at the same time that an entry clearance application is made, subject to any exemptions or exceptions to this requirement. This is because any biometric data results form an integral and mandatory part of any consideration on any entry clearance applications, whether being considered within Part 9 of the Rules or outside the Immigration Rules. It enables the Secretary of State to confirm and fix the applicant's identity and undertake background suitability checks to assess whether the applicant poses a threat to public safety. No circumstances have been put forward now as to why [JZ] and his family should be exempted or excused under the standard exemptions or exceptions, such as physical incapacity or children aged under 5 years, from some or all of the normal biometric data provision, facial image and ten fingerprints, for entry clearance applications.
5. It is therefore necessary to consider whether it is appropriate to make an exception to the usual requirements in [JZ's] particular case. I note that [JZ] and his family have all held valid Pakistani family visit visas since October 2021, which they can use to legally enter Pakistan. This means that they are able to cross the border to access a visa application centre (VAC). Your representations refer to the fact that biometrics cannot be enrolled in Afghanistan at present. In itself, the absence of a VAC in Afghanistan is not considered to be a circumstance so exceptional for [JZ] and his family as to result in the deferral or waiver of the requirement to enrol biometric data. Even prior to the change of government in Afghanistan, there were no UK visa application centres in Afghanistan; Afghan nationals provided biometric data for entry clearance applications at any of the VACs in Pakistan. There have not been direct air links between the UK and Afghanistan for some years, and any air links between Afghanistan and other neighbouring countries have always remained limited. In this respect there has not been any change to the UK entry clearance application process for Afghan nationals. Furthermore, [JZ] and his family are able to travel legally to Pakistan."
" 'it fails to acknowledge the existence of discretion derived from the 2008 Regulations as to the enrolment of biometric information. Indeed, the distinct impression arising from the guidance is that there is no discretion, save in respect of children under 5 years old. This is a misleading picture of the true legal position, which in fact provides for a broader discretion."
"Counsel were agreed (in the most general terms) that when the court is asked to grant an interim injunction in a public law case, it should approach the matter on the lines indicated by the House of Lords in American Cyanamid… but with modifications appropriate to the public law element is one of the possible "special factors" referred to by Lord Diplock in that case, at p. 409. Another special factor might be if the grant of refusal of interim relief were likely to be, in practical terms, decisive of the whole case…"
"American Cyanamid principles apply, subject to appropriate modification for the public law context. In this case, the claimants must show a real prospect that at trial they will succeed in obtaining a permanent injunction, taking account of the fact that any decision to grant any such relief would include consideration of the public interest. If the required "real prospect" exists, the issue is whether or not the balance of convenience favours the grant of relief at this stage, too, the public interest is a relevant consideration… In this case, the relevant public interest is that of the Secretary of State continuing to operate an effective system of immigration control. We also accept the submission made by the Secretary of State that since the relief sought at (c) [that is, an order requiring the SSHD to release from immigration detention all persons (except high-risk offenders) who would otherwise be removed to any country not presently accepting returns because of COVID-19] is, for all practical purposes, final relief, and for that matter also is an application for a mandatory order, this application for interim relief cannot succeed unless a particularly strong case is shown."
"… It is well-established that there are effectively two stages [in an application for interim relief]. First of all, the court must satisfy itself that there is a reasonable prospect of the claim succeeding: the court must at the very least take account of whether the underlying substantive claim is one that is reasonably arguable. The second stage is to consider where the balance of convenience lies. Mr Anderson has drawn my attention helpfully to what Saini J said about that in the case of R (Zalys) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2020] EWHC 2029 (Admin) [17], where Saini J observed that:
"The availability of rapid "rolled-up" hearings in the Administrative Court is an important factor in exercising the discretion to make interim injunctions in the public law jurisdiction; and indeed may point in certain cases to not making injunctions which require potentially irreversible steps (such as release) to be taken by public authorities when a final resolution by way of expedited hearing is available."
28. Those observations – and there are many others in the cases – point to the importance, in a case such as the present one where the decision on interim relief may well resolve the underlying claim, of the court being astute to consider, firstly, the underlying merits of the claim and, secondly, a sensible and robust approach as to where the balance of convenience lies."