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United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> AE (Bimaal clan, sufficiency of protection) Somalia [2004] UKIAT 00281 (5 October 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00281.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 281, [2004] UKIAT 00281 |
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AE (Bimaal clan - sufficiency of protection) Somalia [2004] UKIAT 00281
Date of hearing: 20 September 2004
Date Determination notified: 5 October 2004
AE |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"It will be seen from these rather brief findings of fact that I have difficulty in accepting, even at the appropriate low standard of proof, what the appellant has said about her family's detention in the house for 12 years and the circumstances in which he was able to escape, leading her children with her mother. The appellant's answers in cross-examination did not satisfy me that she was telling me the truth, and that together with the issues raised in the refusal letter which led the respondent to disbelieve the appellant, lead me to the conclusion that her claim is not credible."
"The other issue that I have to address is that related to the [Bimaal] clan, and in this respect I have regard both to the Tribunal determination in Iimi and to the joint report and schedule of clan is produced by the respondent which have both shown the [Bimaal] is being a sub clan of the Dir. It is significant that the appellant and her family have been able to live in worked in the Mogadishu area for some 12 years whilst it was under the control of the Hawiye militia. The objective material against suggests that members of the Dir clan and presumably the [Bimall] sub clan are not targeted specifically by the home we a militia although there may of course be at risk, as of all members of the population, have been caught out in fighting between rival militias. It is that this reason that I do not accept that the appellant as a member of the [Bimaal] sub clan would be at any greater risk if returned to Somalia than that faced at the population as a whole."
"Wayne Long [chief security officer UNDP Somalia] emphasised that minorities can rarely challenge the dominant Somalia clan militias on a military basis, as they have no military capability of their own. One exception to this is the Bimaal, who he described as a neo-Somali group, part of the Dir clan family but of mixed Arab ancestry, who have no organised militia but are able to assemble small armed groups to challenge Haber Gedir dominance."
".. The additional objective information indicates that the[Bimaal] minority tribe or sub-clan are group who are based in Mogadishu and southern parts of Somalia. They are stated to have some defensive capability in the form of armed groups. However the objective information does not state where or how protection from those groups could be accessed. It does however state that the protection is required from one of the larger clan is of the Haber Gedir. This sub-clan is led by General Aideed and appears to control most of southern Mogadishu."
The Tribunal allowed the appellant's appeal, having found that there was no adequacy of protection.
"Tensions between competing faction led by Musa Sude and Mohammed Dhere led to fierce clashes around Jowhar in July 2003, although calm was restored by early September 2003. Overall Jowhar stabilised through the course of 2003. Though the Lower Shabelle has no single authority it is fairly quiet apart from a few land disputes. The new strong man Indha-Adde, who belongs to the Haber Gedir..has taken over control of Merka and the uppermost part of the region."
"The Bimaal of the south definitely do not see themselves as belonging to the same clan as the other Dir (the Iise and Gadabursi) of the north. They have been separated from them for at least two centuries, they speak a different Dir, and so far as I know that are no effective tights between them. The connection is a theoretical one, known to elders but not have much practical relevance. I say this from my general knowledge of southern Somali society, and from conversations that I had with Bimaal in Marka in 1996."
"The security situation has not improved in Merka, where a complex power struggle pits the Haber Gedir-dominated shari'a administration against the Bimaal clan and a new front, the Bimaal Resistance Movement. The Bimaal regard the Haber Gedir as occupiers, and his part of their effort to discredit the shari'a administration attacked international agency compounds earlier this summer. The Haber Gedir have responded by allegedly inciting local into clan fights in a divide and rule tactic."
"The name 'Bimaal Resistance Movement' shows how they see themselves and indicates the sort of activity of a engaging: hit-and-run raids designed to destabilise the occupying force. This does not amount to providing protection to their fellow townspeople. The situation in the Marka area has not materially altered since this report."
Decision: the appellant's appeal is allowed.
ANDREW JORDAN
VICE PRESIDENT
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