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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> AB, Re Judicial Review [2013] ScotCS CSOH_20 (05 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2013/2013CSOH20.html Cite as: [2013] ScotCS CSOH_20 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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P564/12
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OPINION OF LORD STEWART
in the Petition of
A B
Petitioner;
for
Judicial Review of a decision by the United Kingdom Border Agency on behalf of the Secretary of State for the Home Department dated 3 May 2012 refusing to treat the petitioner's further submissions as a fresh claim, etcetera
and Answers for
The Secretary of State for the Home Department
Respondent:
________________
|
Petitioner: Winter; Drummond Miller LLP
Respondent: McKendrick; Office of the Solicitor for the Advocate General
5 February 2013
[1] The
petitioner is an adult Iranian male. He has been in the United Kingdom since he entered illegally in 2008. The underlying question is whether he practises
homosexuality. If he is a practising homosexual, he is probably entitled - following
the ruling of the Supreme Court in HJ (Iran) - to refugee status in the
United Kingdom; indeed he is probably entitled to sexual asylum if he is
suspected by potential persecutors of being homosexual [HJ (Iran) v
Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] 1 AC 596]. The United
Kingdom Border Agency [UKBA] acting on behalf of the Secretary of State for the
Home Department disbelieves the petitioner's asserted sexual orientation. His
most recent claim for asylum/ humanitarian protection has been refused by UKBA;
and he has been told, for the fourth time, to remove himself.
[2] On 21 May 2012 the petitioner presented this application to challenge the latest UKBA decision.
The court fixed a first hearing for 3 October 2012. Having heard submissions by counsel on that day I made avizandum. I have now
decided that the petition should be granted. I have arrived at this decision
contrary to the impression that I formed about the case at the hearing and with
some reluctance. If our border control system is dysfunctional, it is not the
job of the courts to make it more dysfunctional. The petitioner should have
left the United Kingdom four years ago when he became
rights-of-appeal-exhausted: but we are where we are and the decision whether
this petitioner is now to be removed or is now to stay should be properly made.
[3] The issue
for my determination is whether there is an error in the UKBA decision-making
process and, if so, whether the error is of such materiality that the decision
has to be re-made. I emphasise that I have not been called on to make, and I
have not made, a decision about the petitioner's sexuality or perceived
sexuality. Still, I cannot help thinking about the challenges involved in deciding
the merits of the claim. In HJ (Iran) Lord Rodger said [at § 82]:
"When an applicant applies for asylum on the ground of a well-founded fear of persecution because he is gay, the tribunal must first ask itself whether it is satisfied on the evidence that he is gay, or that he would be treated as gay by potential persecutors in his country of nationality."
UKBA has the task of sorting genuine from bogus homosexual asylum claims: but is it acceptable for the state and its agencies to carry out an inquisition into people's sexuality; and, anyway, how are decision-makers supposed to satisfy themselves that claimants really are gay? The Supreme Court has given no practical guidance.
Petitioner's immigration history
[4] The
petitioner's date of birth is 24 December 1983. He states that he
travelled by lorry to the United Kingdom arriving on 15 October 2008. He claimed asylum at UKBA's offices in Liverpool. He told UKBA that although
he did not consider himself to be gay he was perceived by family and
acquaintances to be gay. He is apparently a skilled boxer. Other members of
his boxing clubs would not spar with him. Two important persons in his life, one
being his brother, an influential cleric, and the other being a senior official
of the Iranian Boxing Federation are said to be homophobic and reportedly think
that the petitioner is gay. The petitioner claimed that in his more feminine
phases he had an interest in men. The petitioner's asylum claim was refused by
UKBA on 11 November 2008 primarily on the basis that even if he were gay
the treatment that he had received from others in Iran amounted at its highest
to societal discrimination but not to persecution in terms of the Refugee
Convention 1951. He was told that he had to remove himself from the United Kingdom.
[5] The
petitioner appealed to an immigration judge on asylum grounds, humanitarian
protection grounds and European Convention on Human Rights [ECHR] article 3
(inhuman and degrading treatment) grounds. The immigration judge found that
the petitioner had psychological problems and that on the petitioner's own evidence
he was not homosexual: the petitioner simply perceived others as perceiving
him to be homosexual. The immigration judge also found that the petitioner
"is someone who would act in a discreet manner with regard to his sexuality
(whatever it happens to be) on return to Iran". On 13 February 2009, applying
the ratio of HJ (Iran) as then decided in the Asylum and
Immigration Tribunal on 10 May 2008, the immigration judge dismissed the
appeal [HJ (Homosexuality: reasonably tolerating living discreetly) Iran [2008] UKAIT 00044]. The law at that stage was that sexual asylum would not be
granted to individuals who could reasonably be expected to cooperate in their
own protection by living discreetly. This was the so-called "discretion-based
reasoning".
[6] The petitioner
became rights-of-appeal-exhausted on 19 February 2009. On 7 July 2009 the petitioner's new solicitors made further submissions to UKBA. These
further submissions were rejected in terms of the Immigration Rules, rule 353,
on 18 July 2009 on the basis that the submissions were "not significantly
different" from those previously considered by the immigration judge. By
letter dated 18 August 2010 the petitioner's solicitors made second
further submissions to UKBA which were accompanied by (1) copy judgment of the
United Kingdom Supreme Court in HJ (Iran) and HT (Cameroon) dated
7 July 2010, (2) statement of the petitioner dated 16 August 2010,
(3) letter dated 17 June 2010 from Dr Dorothy Moodie, consultant
psychiatrist, Homeless Mental Health Services, who apparently has clinical
oversight of the petitioner in the community and reviewed him after his stay in
the intensive psychiatric care unit, Stobhill Hospital, where he was admitted from
the end of December 2009 to the middle of March 2010, (4) letter dated 12 August
2010 from Vicky Reed, programme co-ordinator, Venture Scotland. In HJ (Iran) the Supreme Court decided that living discreetly in order to avoid persecution on
grounds of sexual orientation was tantamount to persecution; and that sexual
asylum claimants should not be expected to live discreetly from motives of
self-protection. The second further submissions were rejected on 27 August 2010 in terms of rule 353. The main reason for rejecting the second further
submissions was that "another immigration judge would find that [the
petitioner] has not established that he is, or ever has been, a
homosexual".
[7] By letter
dated 17 April 2012 the petitioner's solicitors made third further submissions
to UKBA. The submissions were supported by (1) report dated 26 July
2011 by Dr A Sam, MB, ChB, psychiatrist, (2) letter dated 14 December
2011 from Catriona Eaglesham, Glasgow Council social care worker, (3) letter
dated 24 February 2012 by Greg Higgins, NHS community psychiatric nurse,
(4) handwritten letter, undated, from JT, a male with whom the petitioner
claimed to have been in a same sex relationship for eight months together with
photocopy of the bio-data page from an expired United Kingdom passport bearing
to have been issued to JT on 10 June 2000, (5) copy documents
previously submitted to the immigration judge including psychiatric report
dated 29 January 2009, by Dr David Gerber, MB, ChB, MRCPsych, MBA,
consultant psychiatrist. These third further submissions were rejected by
UKBA on 3 May 2012 in terms of rule 353. The reason for rejecting
the claim in relation to sexual orientation was that "there is no realistic
prospect of an Immigration Judge, applying the rule of anxious scrutiny,
finding that your client has established that he is gay or would be treated as
gay by potential persecutors in his home country". This is the decision the
petitioner seeks to bring under review.
Rule 353 and principles of judicial review
[8] Rule 353
governs the situation where an asylum claimant who is rights-of-appeal-exhausted
makes further submissions to UKBA. The UKBA decision-maker has to decide
whether or not to allow the claim on the basis of the further submissions and,
if the claim is rejected, whether the further submissions nonetheless amount to
a fresh claim in respect of which, in effect, leave to appeal to an immigration
judge should be granted. The rule provides:
"When a human rights or asylum claim has been refused... and any appeal relating to that claim is no longer pending, the decision maker will consider any further submissions and, if rejected, will then determine whether they amount to a fresh claim. The submissions will amount to a fresh claim if they are significantly different from the material that has previously been considered. The submissions will only be significantly different if the content:
(i) had not already been considered; and
(ii) taken together with the previously considered material, created a realistic prospect of success, notwithstanding its rejection."
A "realistic prospect of success" means a realistic prospect of success on appeal to another immigration judge. The threshold is a low one. In an extreme risk case, such as the present one, decision-makers are supposed to apply "anxious scrutiny".
[9] Counsel
are agreed that the proper approach for this Court in reviewing the UKBA rule 353
decision of 3 May 2012 is the standard, "Wednesbury" approach.
This was made clear by the Inner House in FO v Secretary of State
for the Home Department 2010 SLT 1087
under reference to WM (Democratic Republic of Congo) v Secretary of
State for the Home Department
[2006] EWCA Civ 1495
(9 November 2006); and it was confirmed by the Inner House in Dangol v
Secretary of State for the Home Department 2011 SC 560. The passage in WM
(Democratic Republic of Congo) that endorses the Wednesbury approach
is at paragraph 9 where, under reference to a previous decision of the
Court of Appeal, Lord Justice Buxton stated: "There is no escaping from the
ratio of [Cakabay v Secretary of State for the Home Department
[1999] Imm AR 176] that... the determination of the Secretary of
State is only capable of being impugned on Wednesbury grounds." Shortly
put it is not for this Court to make or to substitute its own decision:
the task for this Court is to determine whether the UKBA decision was properly
made and, if not, whether it should be set aside so that it can be re-made properly
[Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corp
[1948] 1 KB 223;
cf. R (on the application of YH (Iraq)) v Secretary of State for the
Home Department
[2010] 4 All ER 448].
UKBA rule 353
decision dated 3 May 2012
[10] Counsel
for the petitioner submitted that the relevant part of the UKBA decision letter
in this case, dated 3 May 2012, is to be found at paragraphs 1 to 35
inclusive, which counsel read. The rest of the letter, counsel told me, is
not relevant to the present application. The UKBA decision-maker's
consideration of the rule 353 issue starts by setting out, correctly, the
fresh claim test [decision letter, §§ 6-7] and progresses to quoting the
applicable principles as established by the Court of Appeal in WM
(Democratic Republic of Congo) [decision letter, § 8]. The letter
then identifies, accurately, the material that had not previously been considered
and states [decision letter, §§ 9-10]:
"In consideration of whether this new evidence would create a realistic prospect of success, the Secretary of State has taken into account the findings below, which she considers that an Immigration Judge, when applying the rule of anxious scrutiny, would take into account."
The decision-maker next quotes the main conclusions reached by the first immigration judge in her determination of 13 February 2009 [decision letter, §§ 11-12]. The decision-maker moves on to summarise the fact situation as established at the first appeal [decision letter, § 13]:
"... The Immigration Judge determined, with the full facts of the case before her, that your client is not homosexual and has never been perceived as homosexual by people in Iran. A report your client produced at his appeal hearing by Dr David Gerber, MB, ChB, MRCPsych, MBA, Consultant Psychiatrist also concluded that your client is not homosexual".
The decision-maker turns to consider the law as applied in the determination of 13 February 2009, namely HJ (Homosexuality: reasonably tolerating living discreetly) Iran [2008] UKAIT 00044, noting that the decision had been superseded (by the subsequent decision of the Supreme Court). She also states that the immigration judge found, in any event, that the petitioner had not been perceived as homosexual in Iran: rather it was the case that he had perceived others as perceiving him to be homosexual [decision letter, § 14].
[11] At
paragraphs 15 to 16 of her decision letter, the UKBA decision-maker records
that, according to the petitioner's statement of 16 August 2010, the
petitioner had at that point "come to the conclusion he could not resist or
suppress his feelings any longer" and that this had happened approximately one
month after the Supreme Court's judgment in HJ (Iran). The decision letter
also notes that in his statement the petitioner claimed to have had four "one
night stands", with different men, in the period from March to August 2010. The
decision-maker questions why the petitioner had waited until approximately one
month after the decision in HJ (Iran) before disclosing that he had
become "a practising homosexual". The decision-maker states that these
matters of timing are significant matters "that another Immigration Judge,
applying the rule of anxious scrutiny, would take into consideration".
[12] The
decision-maker also raises the question of timing in relation to the disclosure
of the petitioner's claimed relationship with JT. She states that another immigration
judge "would also consider this alleged relationship was initiated after it was
highlighted in the [UKBA] refusal letter dated 27/08/10 that your client had provided no evidence of him being a practising homosexual". Other
points noted are that JT's letter was undated but bore a date stamp of 26 April 2011 and was submitted 12 months after the date of the date stamp, that
the letter was lacking in detail, that the letter did not state that the
petitioner and JT were living together. These matters are said to be relevant
"when considering the reliance to be placed on this document". It is also
noted that, although the third further submissions letter referred to "letters
from his family" provided by JT, no letters had been submitted [decision
letter, §§ 17-20].
[13] The
decision letter then quotes Lord Rodger at paragraph 82 in HJ
(Iran) to the effect that the tribunal must first ask itself whether the
applicant is gay or would be treated by potential persecutors as gay [decision letter,
§ 21]. The decision-maker reminds herself that the first immigration judge
determined that the petitioner "is not homosexual and had never been perceived
as homosexual by people in Iran" [decision letter, §§ 22-23]. She then
states [decision letter, § 24]:
"For the reasons given above and when considering the [third further submissions] letter in the round with the previous findings of the Immigration Judge, there is no realistic prospect of Immigration Judge [sic], applying the rule of anxious scrutiny, finding that your client has established that he is gay or would be treated as gay by potential persecutors in his home country... "
Paragraph 25 of the decision letter notes "furthermore" that the petitioner applied on two separate occasions, first on 8 December 2009 and again on 1 March 2010, for assisted voluntary return [AVR] to Iran. The decision-maker states: "Therefore it appears your client did not fear persecution on return to his home country during this period, despite claiming that in March 2010 he accepted that he was homosexual and began to engage in homosexual relationships."
[14] From
paragraph 26 to paragraph 35 the decision letter reviews the
information contained in the letter dated 14 December 2011 from Catriona
Eaglesham, Glasgow Council social care worker [§§ decision letter, 26-27],
the letter dated 24 February 2012 by Greg Higgins, NHS community
psychiatric nurse [decision letter, § 28] and the report dated 26 July
2011 by Dr A Sam, MB, ChB, psychiatrist [decision letter, §§ 30-34]. There
are a number of references to the petitioner's sexuality. It is noted that
the petitioner has disclosed to Social Care Services that he is homosexual and
that he struggles with the emotional and religious issues relating to his
sexuality [decision letter, § 26]. The decision-maker notes the contents
of Ms Eaglesham's letter and comments that Ms Eaglesham does not
state when the disclosure about homosexuality was made [decision letter, § 27].
(The decision letter does not refer specifically to Ms Eaglesham's
statement that the petitioner feels able to discuss his concerns with his
community psychiatric nurse, something the petitioner values as a mental health
support.)
[15] Referring
to the letter from Mr Higgins, the community psychiatric nurse in
question, the decision-maker notes that the petitioner has "consistently stated
that he is homosexual and has engaged in several relationships with men". She
again makes the comment that it is not stated when the disclosure about
homosexuality was made, when the petitioner began his "alleged relationships
with men, or any details of the men". The decision-maker adds that Dr Dorothy
Moodie, consultant psychiatrist, "makes no mention of your client's alleged
homosexuality". (The decision-maker does not refer to the concerns expressed
by Mr Higgins about the petitioner's sexuality, namely a concern as to
whether the petitioner was using protection against sexually transmitted
diseases and a concern, given the petitioner's description of certain
relationships, that the petitioner was being sexually exploited because of his
dire circumstances) [decision letter, § 28].
[16] The
decision letter addresses the claim made in the third further submissions
letter that the petitioner's major psychotic incident "was, in some part,
brought on by his struggling with his sexuality". The decision-maker notes
that Dr Sam's report was submitted nine months after it had been compiled;
that Dr Sam did not have access to the petitioner's previous psychiatric or
medical case notes; and that Dr Sam was "unable to obtain a collaborative
history from [the petitioner's] partner or any member of his family or
from any individual who knows [the petitioner] apart from speaking to
his solicitor". It is noted that Dr Sam, like Dr Gerber before him,
compiled his report based on information provided by the petitioner; and that
the information given by the petitioner about his sexuality to Dr Sam was
inconsistent with the information given to Dr Gerber [decision letter, §§ 30-31].
The decision-maker comments that although the petitioner informed Dr Sam
that he was in a long term, same sex relationship with an individual who
supported him, the petitioner did not name his boyfriend and, again, that Dr Sam
was unable to obtain a collaborative history from the individual [decision
letter, § 32].
Submissions for the parties
[17] The argument
for the petitioner identifies three principle problems with the UKBA decision-making.
First, the UKBA decision-maker has not given consideration to the merits of
the further submissions in accordance with the first stage of rule 353: instead
she has "telescoped" the procedure and moved straight to the second stage which
involves deciding whether the further submissions amount to a fresh claim. Secondly,
the conclusion on the second stage, "fresh claim" question is apparently stated
at paragraph 24 of the decision and precedes the analysis, in paragraphs 26
to 35, of a substantial amount of admittedly new content, namely the information
contained in the letter dated 14 December 2011 from Catriona Eaglesham,
Glasgow Council social care worker [§§ 26-27], the letter dated 24 February
2012 by Greg Higgins, NHS community psychiatric nurse [§ 28] and the
report dated 26 July 2011 by Dr A Sam, MB, ChB, psychiatrist [§§ 30-35].
Thirdly, the UKBA decision-maker addresses the question of the prospects of success
on appeal to some extent: but she completely fails to do so in relation to the
admittedly new content discussed in paragraphs 26 to 35 either by itself
or in conjunction with other new content and the previously considered material.
[18] These three
points are interlinked. Going back to the first point, the risk involved in
running together the two stages of the rule 353 process is that the
different tests for the first and second stages of the decision may be confused
with the result that the decision-maker resolves, for himself or herself and
for the purpose of both stages, issues of credibility, reliability and fact
which ought in the second stage to be recognised as arguable and therefore properly
open for determination by an immigration judge on appeal [RQK (Iraq) v
Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] CSOH 199 §§ 10-12].
[19] The
narrative advanced on behalf of the petitioner is that he has suffered a
breakdown struggling to reject his true sexual orientation; and that he has
gradually come to terms with his sexuality. This is key, it is said, to
understanding his previous denials, which were the basis of the immigration
judge's determination in 2009. The petitioner suffered a major psychotic
episode between December 2009 and March 2010 which resolved as he came to
accept his sexual identity. (Counsel told me that there is an entry in the solicitors'
fee account dated 6 May 2010: "Discussing his homosexuality on release
from sectioning.") Issues of credibility and reliability cannot be addressed
without taking account of the petitioner's mental state; and the
decision-maker should have treated the new material in relation to the
petitioner's mental state as at least arguably supportive of his credibility
and reliability. Counsel for the petitioner submits that in reaching her view
on the prospects of success before another immigration judge the UKBA
decision-maker made one or more of a number of errors: she left out of account
the material relating to the petitioner's mental health canvassed at paragraphs 26
to 35 of her decision letter or treated it as "an add-on"; and, or
alternatively, she artificially compartmentalised the evidence which she was
bound to consider as a whole and in the round when assessing credibility and
reliability; and, or alternatively, she failed to apply the correct test to the
material at paragraphs 26 to 35 and omitted to apply anxious scrutiny or to
evaluate how that material might impact on the determination of another immigration
judge. Counsel describes the decision letter as structurally flawed [Hassan
v Secretary of State for the Home Department 2004 SLT 140; Mibanga v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2005] INLR 377;
MO (Algeria) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 1276 at §§ 15-16 per Moses LJ with whom the other members of
the Court of Appeal agreed].
[20] On a point
of detail, counsel for the petitioner submits that the UKBA decision-maker was
not entitled to attach weight to the petitioner's applications for AVR: having been refused leave and being rights-of-appeal exhausted the petitioner was
destitute; and the only way he could re-qualify for asylum-seeker support was
to apply for assistance to make a voluntary return to Iran. (The implication
of this submission is that the petitioner, whatever he pretended, had no
intention of returning voluntarily.)
Submissions for the Respondent
[21] Counsel for
the respondent reminds me that a reviewing court has to read decision letters
as a whole, fairly, reasonably and in a common sense way, albeit with anxious
scrutiny in this sort of case [Harbachou v Secretary of State for the
Home Department [2007] CSOH 18, § 10]. He submits that the UKBA
decision-maker has given full consideration to all the material presented in
the third further submissions together with the material previously considered,
that she has applied the correct test and that she has followed the approach
laid down by the Court of Appeal. In order to benefit from the rule in HJ
(Iran) a claimant has to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the relevant
fact-finder that he is gay, or that he would be treated as gay by potential
persecutors; and that this petitioner faces significant challenges to his
credibility and reliability. Yes, the "rule of anxious scrutiny" applies: but
"anxious scrutiny works both ways". The task of the UKBA decision-maker in
terms of rule 353 involves making judgments about the likely credibility
and reliability of the new material in the light of findings of credibility and
reliability already made [HJ (Iran) v Secretary of State for the Home
Department [2011] 1 AC 596 at § 82 per Lord Rodger; R (on
the application of YH (Iraq)) v Secretary of State for the Home
Department [2010] EWCA Civ 116 at § 24 per Carnwath LJ; WM
(Democratic Republic of Congo) v Secretary of State for the Home
Department [2006] EWCA Civ 1780 at § 6 per Buxton LJ].
[22] Counsel
submits that it is incorrect to attribute "apparent" credibility and
reliability to new material for the purpose of applying the rule 353 test:
the correct approach is to assess credibility in accordance with WM
(Democratic Republic of Congo) principles. The correct approach has
recently been exemplified in SG (Iran), another sexual asylum
case. Referring to the supporting letters from the community psychiatric
nurse and the social care worker and to Dr Sam's psychiatric report, counsel
for the respondent submits that self-reported symptoms would rarely be treated
as carrying significant corroborative weight. The UKBA decision-maker was
entitled to approach the supporting letters and report with caution in the
light of the previously considered material. The UKBA decision-maker did not
fall into the error of artificially compartmentalising the evidence but arrived
at a judgment on the whole evidence before her "in the round". The issue raised
by the petitioner is one of form rather than substance: as a rule it is
unimportant where the consideration of further submissions starts provided
nothing is left out of account. Counsel characterises the approach of the
UKBA decision-maker as "giving a 'running commentary' on the material"
submitted for her consideration [S (Ethiopia) v Secretary of State
for the Home Department [2006] EWCA Civ 1153 at §§ 20-32 per Rix
LJ with whom the other members of the Court of Appeal agreed; WM
(Democratic Republic of Congo) v Secretary of State for the Home
Department [2006] EWCA Civ 1780 at § 6 per Buxton LJ; SG (Iran) v
Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] CSOH 114 at §§ 6, 12
and 13; cf. Hassan v Secretary of State for the Home Department 2004
SLT 140; UKBA determination dated 3 May 2012, 6/1, §§ 26-28].
[23] Counsel for
the respondent submits that the petitioner's story is so full of
inconsistencies that it undermines the superficially persuasive narrative that
is being advanced on his behalf. The petitioner told Dr Sam - for the
first time, more than three years after the petitioner's arrival in the United Kingdom - that he had been caught in Iran "going out with other men". When the
petitioner claimed asylum on 20 October 2008 it was on the basis that he believed
he was perceived to be effeminate, not that he was gay; and according to his
asylum interview he had never had a relationship with another man. He was
interviewed by Dr Gerber on 16 December 2008 and on 27 January 2009: on both occasions the petitioner stated that he was heterosexual and
had no homosexual inclinations. Paragraph 6 of the petitioner's witness
statement placed before the immigration judge on 2 February 2009 (not produced) apparently stated that the petitioner is not gay. In spite of the
petitioner's now claimed anxiety that he would be subject to persecution and
execution in the event of removal to Iran he had twice applied for AVR. His first claim to be homosexual was in his witness statement of 16 August 2010, which was signed just five weeks after the Supreme Court issued the judgment in HJ
(Iran). These matters had properly been taken into account by the UKBA
decision-maker [report by Dr Sam, 6/2, page 4; determination
of immigration judge, 6/5, §§ 24-26; petitioner's witness statement, 6/6,
pages 1 and 2; UKBA decision dated 3 May 2012, 6/1, §§ 11, 15, 25].
[24] Referring
to paragraph 24 of the UKBA decision letter of 3 May 2012, counsel
continued to the effect that the primary fact in issue is whether there is a
realistic prospect of another immigration judge, applying the rule of anxious
scrutiny, finding that the petitioner has established that he is gay or that he
would be treated as gay by potential persecutors. The "previously considered
material" contradicted the position taken by the petitioner. The immigration
judge expressed significant concerns about the petitioner's credibility in her
determination of 13 February 2009. Counsel emphasised that Dr Sam
had not been made aware of the petitioner's two applications for AVR. Counsel also pointed out that the consultant psychiatrist with clinical care of the
petitioner, Dr Moodie, had expressed the view that the petitioner's major
psychotic illness was linked with "abnormal beliefs of a religious nature". The
treating consultant had expressed the view that it would be detrimental to the
petitioner to be returned to Iran, but this had nothing to do with his sexual
orientation. All these matters entered into the UKBA decision-making, and
properly so [Harbachou v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] CSOH 18, § 10; first further submissions dated 7 July 2009, 7/1;
report by Dr Gerber dated 29 January 2009, 6/2, pages 2 and 3;
second further submissions dated 18 August 2010, 7/3; report by Dr Sam
dated 26 July 2011, 6/2; letter from Dr Moodie dated 17 June
2010, 7/7; determination of immigration judge, 7/5, §§ 23-26, 32-33; UKBA
decision dated 3 May 2012, 6/1, §§ 25, 28].
Discussion and decision
[25] What does
not come across from the submissions as I have recorded them above is the severity
of the petitioner's mental disturbance. The petitioner has been diagnosed as
suffering from schizophrenia. According to Dr Sam the petitioner's
psychosis manifests in hearing voices from an angel of God and thinking that he
is the son of God by the name of Jesus or, on another account, the brother of
Jesus. He believes that he is in contact with famous persons such as
President Obama. I gather from the history taken by Dr Sam that the
incident which resulted in the petitioner being sectioned and admitted to Stobhill Hospital for almost three months was an assault on an employee of UKBA. The
petitioner's community psychiatric nurse reports that "on a few occasions he
has interrupted Catholic Mass by walking on to the alter [sic] to
declare to the congregation that he was the son of God and could cure anyone
that had HIV or cancer". The petitioner has no insight into his delusions.
[26] On the face
of it the mental health material referred to at paragraphs 26 to 35 of the
UKBA decision letter of 3 May is potentially relevant to the issue of
whether the petitioner is, or is at risk of being perceived as, homosexual were
he to return to Iran. The potential relevance of the material is not
disputed. It does seem that the UKBA decision-maker has not brought this
material into her preceding evaluation at paragraph 24 of the prospect of
success for the petitioner's sexual asylum claim. Paragraph 24 starts: "For
the reasons given above..." Paragraphs 26 to 35 are obviously not "above"
paragraph 24. At the same time it is clear, as counsel for the
respondent submits, that the decision-maker well understands the correct legal
framework for her decision-making; and it is also clear that she has, in one
way or another, given full consideration to all the material with which she was
presented. I agree that, on the face of it at least, the letter of 3 May 2012 looks like a highly competent decision on the second stage, rule 353
question.
[27] What I
suspect has happened is that the decision-maker has indeed evaluated the
material referred to at paragraphs 26 to 35 but she has done so in
connection with a separate branch of the petitioner's claim, namely the claim
that his removal to Iran would violate his ECHR article 3 (inhuman and
degrading treatment) rights by depriving him of support, medication and medical
treatment for his mental condition. There is no obvious coda at paragraph 35
and I have thus been induced to read beyond the point in the decision letter of
13 May 2012 where counsel's analysis stops. Properly I think paragraphs 26
to 35 should be read as belonging to a section consisting of paragraphs 26
to 45. This section starts, at paragraph 26, as follows:
"You have submitted a letter from Catriona Eaglesham, Social care Work [sic] dated 14/12/11 in which Ms Eaglesham states your client was referred to Social services in September 2011. Ms Eaglesham states your client has been diagnosed with schizophrenia and receives medication to manage the effects of his condition. She states that your [sic] has appropriate health care suppor5ts [sic] in place and that your client engages well with these supports. Ms Eaglesham states your client has disclosed to them that he is homosexual and that he struggles with the emotional and religious issues relating to his sexuality. She states your client is now able to explore his concerns with his community psychiatric nurse, however, he fears losing this support would be detrimental to his health and well-being."
After rehearsing the information provided by Ms Eaglesham, Mr Higgins and Dr Sam, the decision-maker at paragraphs 36 and 37 quotes the background information on the availability of mental health services and medicines in Iran. Paragraphs 38 and 39 summarise the law, of which it is said another immigration judge would be aware, applicable to ECHR article 3 medical cases, namely D v United Kingdom and N v SSHD [D v United Kingdom (1997) 24 EHRR 423; N v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2005] 2 AC 296]. The decision-maker states that in D "there was an absolute non-existence of any support or medical treatment available to the claimant back in his country of origin". Paragraph 40 the decision letter continues:
"With regard to the symptoms surrounding your client's mental health conditions, a new Immigration Judge would note that there is provision in Iran for your client to continue with any treatment or medication required."
Paragraph 41 quotes KH (Afghanistan) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] EWCA 1354 as to the exceptionality test: "mental illness among failed asylum seekers cannot really be regarded as exceptional..."
[28] Paragraphs 42
to 44 deal specifically with the question of suicide risk in the event of
removal to Iran. The mental health section concludes with the following
evaluation at paragraph 45:
"With regards to your client's particular case, there is no realistic prospect of an Immigration Judge, applying the rule of anxious scrutiny, concluding that the extremely high threshold laid down in the case law of D v UK (1997) and N v SSHD (2005) would be breached. This is because, as detailed above in the background information provided, there are medical facilities and treatment available in Iran, albeit acknowledged that they would not be the same standard as that enjoyed in the United Kingdom. This treatment may not necessarily be the same as what your client is receiving in the United Kingdom, however an Immigration Judge would be likely to conclude that your client would be in the same position as others in Iran with the same conditions."
The decision letter then moves to the separate section dealing with the ECHR article 8 [private and family] claim.
[29] I have to
conclude that the decision-maker did not bring the mental health material into
her evaluation of the prospects of success for the petitioner's homosexuality
claim and that this was an omission. I say it was an omission because it is
plain from the third further submissions letter from the petitioner's solicitors
dated 17 April 2012 that the mental health material was being founded on
to support the claim for sexual asylum. The letter asserts that the
petitioner "suffered from a major psychotic incident, which was, in some part,
brought on by his struggling with his sexuality". The letter states that the
petitioner's position at interview with Dr Gerber in 2009 - when he denied
homosexual tendencies - has to be seen "in the light of subsequent
developments, and these are set out in our client's previous Statement [statement
of the petitioner dated 16 August 2010], the Report from Independent
Psychiatry [report by Dr A Sam, psychiatrist, dated 26 July 2011],
and further supporting evidence attached". The letter also states that the
letter from Mr Higgins, community psychiatric nurse, is relied on "in its
entirety in establishing our client's sexuality, and therefore the attendant
risk of Persecution should he be returned to Iran".
[30] Does the
omission amount to a material error? I agree with counsel for the respondent
that there are arguments for attaching limited weight, possibly even no weight,
to the mental health information in the rule 353 evaluation of the sexual asylum
claim. Unlike Dr Gerber and Dr Moodie, Dr Sam is not
apparently a consultant (and may well still be in a training grade). Unlike Dr Gerber,
Dr Sam does not profess to be a specialist in psycho-sexual dysfunction. Unlike
Dr Moodie, Dr Sam did not have clinical care of the petitioner; nor
did he have access to the petitioner's psychiatric or medical records. Dr Moodie
presumably had at least a discharge summary from the treating psychiatrist at Stobhill Hospital when she reviewed the petitioner. The instructions to Dr Sam from
the petitioner's solicitors have not been disclosed. Dr Sam's impression
of a connection between the petitioner's sexuality and his psychosis is
tentative. Also as counsel correctly says, the information given by Dr Sam,
Ms Eaglesham and Mr Higgins about the petitioner's sexuality is
derivative and imprecise. All these points may be germane: but they do not
detract from the argument advanced on the petitioner's behalf that the material
has apparently been left out of account in the decision-maker's evaluation of
the prospects of success for the sexual asylum claim. This is not a case in
which, applying anxious scrutiny, I feel able to say that it would have made or
would make no difference to put the mental health material into the mix. Therefore
the decision has to be re-made taking account of the left-out material.
[31] The
petitioner calls the UKBA decision of 3 May 2012 "irrational". In my view the decision is not irrational: but it is nonetheless technically flawed for
the reasons given above. On that understanding I shall repel the respondent's
pleas-in-law, sustain the petitioner's plea and reduce the decision complained
of, reserving meantime the question of expenses.