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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Struk, Re A Petition for Judicial Review [2005] ScotCS CSOH_30 (18 February 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2005/CSOH_30.html Cite as: [2005] ScotCS CSOH_30, [2005] CSOH 30 |
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Struk, Re A Petition for Judicial Review [2005] ScotCS CSOH_30 (18 February 2005)
OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION [2005] CSOH 30 |
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P1226/02
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OPINION OF LORD WHEATLEY in the Petition of IGOR STRUK (AP) Petitioner; for Judicial Review of a determination of the Immigration Appeal Tribunal to refuse leave to appeal Respondent:
________________ |
Petitioner: Mitchell, Q.C.; Anderson Strathern, W.S.
Respondent: Thomson, H F Macdiarmid, Solicitor to the Advocate General
18 February 2005
[1] The petitioner, who is a Ukrainian national, made an application for asylum to the Home Secretary on 14 March 2001. The Home Secretary made a determination on 24 June 2001, and thereafter issued removal directions on 9 July 2001. The petitioner applied to the Adjudicator, who decided on his application on 4 January 2002 and refused it. This was notified to the petitioner on 12 February 2002. There was then a further procedural issue which took a considerable time to resolve, and which is no longer of direct interest in this application, although because of the delay the procedural rules applicable to the application have since changed. On 30 January 2002 the Vice President of the Immigration Appeal Tribunal refused the petitioner leave to appeal to the Tribunal against the determination of the Adjudicator to refuse his application for asylum. This determination was notified to the petitioner on 12 February 2002. The petitioner appeals against that decision and in effect also seeks reduction of the determination of the Immigration Appeal Tribunal refusing leave to appeal by challenging the Adjudicator's earlier decision. [2] The petitioner was born on 26 January 1976 in the Ukraine. He claimed asylum in the United Kingdom on the basis that he was a homosexual and had been persecuted in his home country because of this. In particular he alleged in his application that he had been attacked and beaten on two occasions. For the purpose of the present application, the Adjudicator held that homosexuals in the Ukraine were not a particular social group and that the ill-treatment which he had received did not cross the threshold of severity for establishing persecution. He also held that there was a sufficiency of protection to the petitioner provided by the Ukrainian State. The Adjudicator was in effect not satisfied that the petitioner's complaints were of sufficient moment to satisfy the various relevant tests which would allow him to claim asylum. [3] The relevant statutory provisions at the material time are contained in the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 and the Immigration and Asylum Appeal Rules 2000. [4] Rule 18(1) provides:-"An appeal from the determination of an adjudicator may be made only with the leave of the Tribunal".
"identify the alleged errors of fact and law in the adjudicator's determination which would have made a material difference to the outcome, together with all the grounds relied on for the appeal;"
"Leave to appeal shall be granted only where -
(a) the Tribunal is satisfied that the appeal would have a real prospect of success; or
(b) there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard".
"The Tribunal may consider as evidence any note or record made by the adjudicator of any proceedings before him in connection with the appeal".
"Subject to paragraph (3), the Tribunal may of its own motion or on the application of any party, consider evidence further to that which was submitted to the adjudicator".
[14] The second argument in the petition is that the Adjudicator unreasonably rejected the petitioner's account that there was widespread discrimination against homosexuals and failures by the police to protect homosexuals from attack. The Adjudicator clearly disbelieved the petitioner that he had been arrested during police raids on gay bars (para.31). The Adjudicator was entitled to consider in assessing the appropriate level of intolerance or persecution suffered by the applicant that he had been lying to enhance his claims (para.31). The applicant was not able to point to any extraneous sources of persecution. It was not just a case of difficulty in producing evidence as the petitioner claimed; evidence of what happens in the Ukraine was readily available. The question of whether there was State persecution of homosexuals should not be confused with what happened to the petitioner, and the proper tests must be applied to the background evidence. The Adjudicator's approach to this topic could not be faulted. There is no reference to homosexual discrimination in the background information (CIPU document) and it therefore cannot be said that the Adjudicator unreasonably rejected the petitioner's claim in this respect.
[15] The next argument for the applicant concerned the social group issue. Counsel for the petitioner had submitted that the Adjudicator erred in concluding that homosexuals in the Ukraine were not a social group for the purposes of the Convention because it was necessary for such a group to be formed as a result of persecution. It was also submitted for the applicant that in other cases the Tribunal had come to the view that there might be a case for holding that homosexuals in Ukraine were properly considered as a separate social group. However, counsel for the respondent argued that the Tribunal had to identify an error made by the Adjudicator before they could reverse his Decision, and this was not possible in the present case. Each case had to be considered on its own facts. The petitioner had argued that background evidence should be consistent, but in the present case the information available did not support the view that the petitioner had suffered persecution or was part of a social group. The Tribunal (at para.30) did not say that the Adjudicator was wrong on this matter, merely that the point might be arguable. As a secondary submission, counsel for the respondent maintained that it was academic if the Adjudicator was wrong in this respect, namely the question of whether homosexuals in the Ukraine were a social group, it was clearly a relatively insignificant error (Hanif 1999 S.L.T.854). There were other matters which determined the issue in the present case. But the respondent's main submission was that the Adjudicator and his approach was correct; reference had been made to the relevant definition of "refugee" (in Islam v Secretary of State for the Home Department (supra)) where it was held that when deciding what in ordinary parlance is meant by a social group it does not help to consider whether or not someone is a refugee. For example being a woman would not make that person a member of a social group; however, being a woman in Pakistan did make that person a member of a social group because of abuse and persecution from non-state sources, and from the state (because of a potential death sentence for adultery). Accordingly, for the purposes of the present application, the relevant group would not just be a homosexual group, but homosexuals who are persecuted. Cohesiveness in itself does not necessarily lead to the formation of a social group, although it may do. However, there was no evidence before the adjudicator that homosexuals were a cohesive group in the Ukraine. Accordingly, although the petitioner was one of a number of homosexuals in the Ukraine, he was not a member of a relevant social group; there has to be not just persecution but persecution by virtue of membership of that group. The adjudicator in the present case had to consider what made homosexuals in the Ukraine a social group and the only ground available was discrimination. Accordingly, the approach of the adjudicator could not be regarded as an error. He had to make a decision on the evidence. There is not a general trend of different views about homosexuals in the Ukraine in the case authorities, but there is a small number of cases where there are different verdicts based on different evidence. Each of these was decided on the facts and not on the background information, and in any event the background information was not available to the adjudicator in the present case. All that was available was the CIPU report (CP143) which indicated that full protection was available to homosexuals in the Ukraine (p145). There was therefore no evidence of persecution of homosexuals. In Dimitrou (6/4) homosexuals were regarded as a social group in Romania. There however stronger rules existed; there was evidence of police brutality, campaigns against homosexuals and public opprobrium, so that was very different from the present case where the petitioner had for years lived openly as a homosexual. In Skenderat 2000 4 All E.R. 554 an Albanian was held to be part of a social group because of a vendetta. All that that case proved however was that discrimination is not always a pre-requisite for a social group to be formed. It was difficult to see how that could be achieved in the present case if it was not based on discrimination. But it cannot be suggested, and was not in the present or any other case, that all homosexuals are a special group. Such a conclusion would be unjustifiable. [16] In these circumstances counsel argued that the applicant was wrong to found on decided cases to establish that homosexuals are a special group in Ukraine. This, he said, was not so; in all cases it depends on the evidence available to the adjudicator, and generalisations are not appropriate. In-country data can be inconsistent. It is said that the Tribunal has to be consistent but it is not the case that different conclusions have been reached on the same evidence. Counsel for the respondent then distinguished the present case from the various authorities referred to by the applicant, and reiterated his submission that even if one of the grounds on which the Adjudicator had based his decision was arguable on appeal, the other reasons for his decision would mean that there were still no reasonable prospects of success. The applicant had been living openly as a homosexual and there was only one incident, which involved neighbours, which might suggest that he had been attacked because he was a homosexual. In these circumstances there was only a minimal risk of further harm in the future. The incidents complained of were trivial, and did not amount to persecution. The question of state protection therefore did not arise; nonetheless such state protection did exist. In these circumstances the applicant had wholly failed to meet the appropriate tests and standards, and the application should be refused. [17] The petitioner's next argument, contained in paragraph 8 in petition, was that the Adjudicator had only had regard to the past and not to the future. Counsel for the respondent maintained that this was clearly not so; the whole thrust of the decision looked to the future and contemplated the question of the protection by the state against further difficulties (paras.31, 32 and 33). The applicant had been openly living as a homosexual for a number of years in a number of relationships and has suffered only one incident when he may have been discriminated against by neighbours who knew him after a verbal altercation. There could only be a minimal sense of risk in the future. A single beating with a real risk of repetition may constitute persecution, but that conclusion is far more likely to be reached where the discrimination is state-based All of the applicant's complaints had failed to cross the threshold of severity. [18] I have come to the view that the Immigration Appeal Tribunal was correct to refuse leave to appeal in this case. In particular, I am satisfied that the Tribunal was justified in its conclusion, in terms of Rule 18(7)(a), that in the circumstances the appeal did not have a real prospect of success. In respect of the three grounds on which the present review is based, I consider that at least one of those suggests that the appeal would not have succeeded. I note that, as was I think fully accepted by counsel for the petitioner, even if one of these grounds was properly regarded as failing to provide a real prospect of success in the appeal, that would be enough to refuse the present application irrespective of the effectiveness of the other grounds. [19] The first submission by the petitioner was that he was entitled to be regarded as a member of a social group. In particular, the definition of that societal group is that he is a homosexual living in Ukraine. The Adjudicator found that in certain circumstances homosexuals can form a social group, if as a group defined by their sexuality they suffer discrimination (Shah and Islam 1999 1 NLR 144). However, the Adjudicator found also that the applicant had tendered no evidence of legal or societal discrimination against homosexuals in Ukraine. The Immigration Appeal Tribunal did accept that this conclusion might be arguable. It would appear that this observation may have been partly based on other appeals which suggested homosexuals in Ukraine might be regarded as such a group. An examination of these other cases do not reveal any line of authority which holds that homosexuals in Ukraine should be so regarded. In the case of Bespalko (supra) the Tribunal did reach a view that homosexuals in Ukraine were a special group, but the circumstances in that case, and the arguments upon which the application proceeded, appear to have been very different to the present case. Further, in Bespalko the Tribunal made it clear (in paragraph 14) that their conclusions on the treatment of homosexuals in Ukraine related wholly to the evidence in that particular case, and should specifically not be regarded as a general conclusion that homosexuals in Ukraine were subject to persecution. The Adjudicator in the present case had found no such evidence; indeed the personal experience of the applicant appear to suggest very little in the way of such persecution. Accordingly, even if regard is had to the conclusions reached in other cases, the Tribunal could be said to be justified in concluding that there was no real prospect of success in pursuing this ground of appeal in the present application. However, as the Tribunal has conceded that this point might be arguable, I have concluded that I should accept that the petitioner's submissions in this respect were well-founded, in the sense that this argument, had it stood alone, should be remitted back to the Tribunal for reconsideration. [20] However, the Adjudicator was in my view wholly justified in concluding that the applicant had not demonstrated that he was subject or liable to persecution as a member of that social group in his native country. The applicant had testified that he had been assaulted twice in all the years that he had lived in the Ukraine. On one occasion the assault was clearly quite unrelated to his homosexuality; the applicant had simply got into an altercation with some drunken strangers. The other assault appears to have followed a neighbour's dispute and was likely to have been characterised in part at least by his sexual orientation. Beyond that incident, and some abuse and graffiti, it appears that the applicant had not been the subject of anything other than very occasional and minor difficulties. On other areas of complaint, he was disbelieved. It would appear that the applicant had lived openly as a homosexual in Ukraine for a considerable period, and had enjoyed a number of such relationships during that time. In addition, the objective evidence available to the Adjudicator did not suggest that such material persecution existed in any kind of general sense. In the circumstances it is very difficult to see how the applicant's complaint can be said to have crossed the threshold of severity to amount to persecution. While homosexuals may form a social group in Ukraine which has been subject to persecution because of their sexuality, it does not necessarily follow that every homosexual in Ukraine qualifies for inclusion in that group. The Adjudicator has concluded that the applicant has not suffered any discrimination or persecution. Clearly, being a homosexual in Ukraine by itself would not justify the Adjudication or the Tribunal in granting the applicant's request for asylum. While I accept that the law in this area is very much as the petitioner's counsel described, I cannot see that in the event there could be any real prospect of success on this ground of appeal. [21] The final ground of appeal is that the applicant claimed that he would not receive protection from the police against such persecution. The Adjudicator noted that the applicant had never sought that protection but that he understood from friends that it was not forthcoming. The Adjudicator concluded that there was a complete lack of any objective evidence showing discrimination against homosexuals as opposed to general inefficiency and corruption in the police. The applicant had no direct experience of any failure to receive protection in this respect. Homosexuality had been legalised in Ukraine for a number of years. In these circumstances I do not think it can be said that the Adjudicator unreasonably rejected the petitioner's claim. The applicant was not able to point to any extraneous sources of persecution. There was no reference to homosexual discrimination in the background information, and no information to suggest that the police in general terms would fail to protect someone in the applicant's position. However, in view of the Tribunal's decision in Bespalko (supra) it would again be difficult to refuse the petitioner's request that this issue, had it stood alone, should not be looked at again. But the applicant's case in my view must fail because he failed to establish that he himself had been persecuted because of his homosexuality in terms of his second submission. That is in my view sufficient to indicate that this appeal would have not succeeded. In all the circumstances I shall refuse the petition.