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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> SA (Persecution, Eyle, Weak) Somalia [2002] UKIAT 06665 (20 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2002/06665.html Cite as: [2002] UKIAT 06665, [2002] UKIAT 6665 |
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SA (Persecution-Eyle-Weak) Somalia [2002] UKIAT 06665
HX17991-2002
Date of hearing: 24 October 2002
Date Determination notified: 20 February 2003
SA | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"1. The appellant does not seek to appeal against the decision of the Adjudicator allowing her Human Rights Appeal. Her appeal is only against the decision of the Adjudicator to reject her asylum appeal.
2. The Adjudicator concluded at paragraph 35 of his determination that the appellant failed to show that her persecution and that of her family was for a Convention reason over and above the ordinary risks of clan warfare. In so doing the Adjudicator failed properly to consider the evidence.
3. The Adjudicator at paragraph 32 accepted that the appellant's evidence was "generally credible". At paragraph 34 he accepted objective evidence that the Eyle Clan was a minority clan without protection from the main Somali clans and that relationship with clans in the home areas of the Eyle was not good.
4. In reaching the conclusion which he did the Adjudicator failed properly to assess the appellant's position in the context of the civil war in Somalia. The harm suffered by the appellant and her family was not an instant of civil war, ordinary or otherwise because:
a) The appellant was not a member of a warring clan;
b) She was not targeted in the course of or as a means to prosecute the civil war;
c) The harm suffered by the appellant and her family was not inflicted during the course of or as a means to prosecute fighting between "warring clans";
d) She had not been "caught up in the fighting";
e) Nor was the appellant merely "caught in the cross fire".
5. The appellant and her family were deliberately targeted by armed gunmen. Albeit that this occurred against the backdrop of civil war and state collapse, it amounted to persecution and not an incident of the civil war. In the absence of significant change of circumstances three is a real risk that the appellant will suffer similar persecution in the future.
6.If Adan requires that an asylum seeker establish that s/he is more at risk than the population in general in order to show well founded fear of persecution, it is submitted that the following factors establish such a risk:
a) The appellant is a young woman and therefore more vulnerable to abuse by militia men and bandits than men are;
b) She is a member of a clan that does not have a militia to protect its members;
c) Her clan does not have control over any territory in which its members are safe from the militias of other clans.
7.Further it is submitted that if what the appellant and her family suffered are found to be "incidents of civil war", they are no "ordinary incidents of civil war". The treatment inflicted on them, whilst they were taking no active part in hostilities, amounted to "serious violations" of Common Articles C and A3 of the 1949 Geneva Conventions including "(a) the killing of the appellant's father and subsequent step father; (b) the rape of the appellant and of her sisters; (c) the repeated looting of the appellant's family home.
8.The above amounted to persecution rather than "ordinary incidents" of civil war. The flagrant disregard for international humanitarian law by all of the militias in Somalia is such that manifestly the appellant does not have the protection of the 1949 Geneva Conventions so as to obviate protection by the Refugee Convention.
9.For the above reasons the appellant submits that the Adjudicator erred."
"I conclude from these authorities and from my understanding of what the framers of the Convention had in mind that where a state of civil war exists it is not enough for an asylum seeker to show that he would be at risk if he were returned to his country. He must be able to show what Mr Pannett calls a differential impact. In other words he must be able to show fear of persecution for Convention reasons over and above ordinary risks of clan warfare."
J R A Fox
Vice President