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United Kingdom Immigration and Asylum (AIT/IAC) Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Immigration and Asylum (AIT/IAC) Unreported Judgments >> PA001432015 & PA003282015 [2016] UKAITUR PA001432015 (13 April 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKAITUR/2016/PA001432015.html Cite as: [2016] UKAITUR PA001432015, [2016] UKAITUR PA1432015 |
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Upper Tribunal
(Immigration and Asylum Chamber) Appeal Number: PA/00143/2015
PA/00328/2015
THE IMMIGRATION ACTS
Heard at Field House |
Decision Promulgated |
On 5 April 2016 |
On 13 April 2016 |
|
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Before
Upper Tribunal Judge Southern
Between
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT
Appellant
and
Mrs A. G.
Mr T. R.
(Anonymity Direction made)
Respondents
Representation :
For the Appellant: Mr T. Wilding, Senior Home Office Presenting Officer
For the Respondents: Mr J. Knight of Duncan Lewis, Solicitors
DECISION
"...in April 2015 the first appellant returned to Pakistan in order to spend Easter with her family. They wanted her to enter into an arranged marriage and she was constrained to tell her family that she was already married. That provoked rage and a sense of breach of honour for her family. They confined her to her room, confiscated her passport and phone and had subjected her to beating. They had also e-mailed the second appellant demanding that he divorce her. Both appellants were threatened with their lives. The First appellant had managed to escape with the assistance of her mother on 26 April 2015; and had returned to the UK on the same date when she claimed asylum and was detained. The sense of revenge and breach of honour is one that was felt by both appellants' families."
"Essentially, this is an appeal which rests upon the critical issue of credibility of the appellants."
And then made clear that he accepted the appellants' evidence:
"The Secretary of State in her letter of refusal and at this appeal... has roundly challenged the credibility of both appellants. It was contended that their accounts to the interviewing officers and now to this Tribunal had been fabricated as a means of securing their stay in the UK.
I do not accept that they are lacking in credibility. I have found both the appellants to be credible in the central core of the evidence they have presented in support of their claims"
The judge specifically found as a fact that:
"... both appellants are at serious risk of revenge and retribution from their families because of the relationship and marriage they have entered into."
And:
"I believe the first appellant's account of the retribution now being exacted by her biological brother on behalf of his family and also, on the part of the second appellant, the risks arising not only by virtue of the rift with his own family but more especially the risks arising not only by virtue of the rift with his own family but more especially the risks to him and his wife arising from his determination to adhere to his Ahmadi faith.
In the circumstances of family retribution described in the evidence, I find that there is little prospect of adequate state protection for both appellants if they were to have to be return to their home country."
The Judge then made clear that he recognised that the dynamics of the possibility of internal relocation differed depending upon the nature of the risk to be avoided:
"Of course, in the context of the family difficulties, then their internal relocation may be viewed as a prospect for them. But, in reality, I accept the evidence that has been presented by the first appellant that the influence of her family is likely to extend beyond the locality where she has been brought up. Indeed, it seems that the blunt determination of her brother to wreak revenge is something that will extend beyond mere regional boundaries.
I do not consider that the respondent has presented sufficient evidence to persuade this tribunal that the First Information Report and the arrest warrant are mere forgeries and fabrications designed to support the appellants' account."
"... Whatever decision I make must apply to both of them. If they are removed they must be removed to Pakistan together..."
On that basis, having accepted the appellants as credible witnesses whose evidence was accepted, and that it was supported by the documentary evidence of the FIR and arrest warranty, the judge allowed both appeals.
"It is respectfully submitted that the Judge has failed to give reasons why the First Appellant's family influence is likely to extend beyond the locality where she was brought up."
There is no challenge to the positive credibility findings made by the judge nor to his finding of fact that the FIR and arrest warrant are genuine documents upon which he could rely as to the truth of their contents. It might be noted also that the grounds make no attempt to challenge the findings in relation to the risk faced on return to Pakistan by the second appellant on account of his commitment to practice and preach his religious beliefs. Therefore, that the second appellant succeeds in his appeal in that respect goes unchallenged. Given the fact that the judge accepted that the appellants would be confronted jointly by whatever difficulties either one of them attracted to themselves, the grounds lead nowhere at all and, frankly, it is hard to see that a grant of permission to appeal can be justified.
Summary of decision:
Signed
Date: 7 April 2016
Upper Tribunal Judge Southern