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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Article 39 v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2023] EWHC 1398 (Fam) (09 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2023/1398.html Cite as: [2023] WLR(D) 255, [2023] EWHC 1398 (Fam), [2023] 4 WLR 58 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ARTICLE 39 |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR EDUCATION |
Interested Party |
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Ms Fiona Paterson KC and Ms Lisa Giovannetti KC (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Ms Joanne Clement KC (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Interested Party
Ms Maria Stanley attended on behalf of Cafcass as an advocate to the Court
Hearing dates: 18 April 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
Background
"The situation led to something of a crisis in south-east England, with Kent County Council declaring itself unable to look after any more UAS children. The voluntary scheme could not place all the new arrivals in other participating authorities. The Home Office was forced to place (older) UAS children in hotels pending a solution. That was not sustainable. It is local authorities who must discharge Children Act functions; the Home Office has no functions in relation to the care of UAS children and no infrastructure to provide it. The accommodation of UAS children in hotels, other than on an emergency or short-term basis, with no sustained care support or services, is plainly not a discharge of Children Act responsibilities and not in the children's best interests."
Submissions
"3. What is the status of the missing children?
I have been informed that both the Local Authority and the Home Office are currently seeking legal advice on this incredibly important issue. At the time of writing this report the status of UASC children remains 'in limbo'. They do not have looked after children or child in need status with the Local Authority and the Home Office has no statutory responsibility for their care. This creates a significant statutory gap in provision and leaves the child with no corporate parent. Statutory agencies have no specific guidance and the longer a child waits to be placed in the care of a Local Authority via the National Transfer Scheme the greater the risk to them.
The system that has been introduced has been led by the Home Office who maintain they have no direct statutory provision to deal with the children in these circumstances, but that they have the power to put arrangements in place which are borne out of necessity in the absence of appropriate facilities to house children at the point of entry. Local safeguarding agencies have responded to the situation with advice, training, consultation and full engagement in safeguarding referrals made on a case-by-case basis. The Local Authority have maintained that the primary responsibility for the welfare of the children in the hotel remains that of the Home Office. They are clear that the Local Authority in whose area the Home Office places UASC before they are transferred to care cannot be expected to treat them as looked after children for that period. In the case of Brighton & Hove City Council, at the time of writing this report, were the authority to have triggered duties to accommodate the children under section 20 of the Children Act it would have meant providing accommodation for in the region of 1700 children since July 2021.
The Local Authority recognises UASC are likely to be children in need but maintain that the Home Office are primarily [responsible] for meeting these needs until such time as the child is placed in the care of a Local Authority under the National Transfer Scheme.
Local safeguarding agencies have responded to the situation, but the Local Authority remain clear that the children do not have 'looked after' or 'child in need' status. They are clear that they will respond to specific safeguarding issues / concerns when they are raised regarding children placed in the hotel."
"Whilst it is absolutely clear that the Home Office take the issue of safety and wellbeing seriously, investing in staff and partnership engagement, I am unable to offer appropriate reassurance regarding many aspects of safeguarding within the hotel. Whilst an inspection has been carried out by the Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration, I am concerned that a more thorough inspection process should take place if the use of this and other hotels continue. I understand that this accommodation would fall out of the regulated inspection frameworks which currently exist; but it is clear they are housing extremely vulnerable children and as such should be the subject of scrutiny. An OFSTED led inspection process would provide reassurance and support improvements that would benefit children and professionals involved."
"… the prerogative jurisdiction has shown striking versatility throughout its long history in adapting its powers to the protective needs of children, encompassing all kinds of different situations. Although the jurisdiction is theoretically boundless, the courts have, nevertheless, found it necessary to set self-imposed limits upon its exercise, for the sake of clarity and consistency and of avoiding conflict between child welfare and other public advantages."
"The parents owe the child a duty to give or to withhold consent in the best interests of the child and without regard to their own interests.
The Court, when exercising the parens patriae jurisdiction, takes over the rights and duties of the parents, although this is not to say that the parents would be excluded from the decision making process. Nevertheless, in the end, responsibility for the decision, whether to give or withhold consent, is that of the Court alone".
"32. This is not the occasion, and there is no need for me, to explore the range of circumstances in which it may be appropriate to make a child who is outside the jurisdiction a ward of court. I merely observe that cases such as this demonstrate the continuing need for a remedy which, despite its antiquity, has shown, is showing and must continue to show a remarkable adaptability to meet the ever emerging needs of an ever changing world. I add that the use of the jurisdiction in cases where the risk to a child is of harm of the type that would engage Articles 2 or 3 of the Convention - risk to life or risk of degrading or inhuman treatment - is surely unproblematic. So wardship is surely an appropriate remedy, even if the child has already left the jurisdiction, in cases where the fear is that a child has been taken abroad for the purposes of a forced marriage (as in Re KR and Re B) or so that she can be subjected to female genital mutilation or (as here) where the fear is that a child has been taken abroad to travel to a dangerous war-zone….
33. In the Tower Hamlets case, Hayden J recognised (para 11) that the relief he was being asked to grant arose in circumstances without recent precedent, but rightly saw that as no obstacle. Hesaid (paras 57-58), and I entirely agree:
"57. The family court system, particularly the Family Division, is, and always has been, in my view, in the vanguard of change in life and society. Where there are changes in medicine or in technology or cultural change, so often they resonate first within the family. Here, the type of harm I have been asked to evaluate is a different facet of vulnerability for children than that which the courts have had to deal with in the past.
58. What, however, is clear is that the conventional safeguarding principles will still afford the best protection.""
a. Section 17 which gives the general duty in respect of children in need. She accepted that it was likely that UAS children would be children in need given their situation when they arrive in the UK.
b. Section 20 which gives a duty to accommodate children in need if they require it.
c. Section 22 which sets out the duties to children looked after by the local authority.
d. Section 31 setting out the power to make care and supervision orders.
e. Section 47 setting out the duty to investigate if there is reason to believe that a child in their area is suffering or is likely to suffer significant harm.
f. Section 11 of the Children Act 2004 is the duty on local authorities to make arrangements to safeguard children.