BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> FM (Articles 3/8 in medical cases) Uganda [2005] UKIAT 00012 (17 January 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00012.html Cite as: [2005] UKIAT 12, [2005] UKAIT 00012, [2005] UKIAT 00012 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
FM (Articles 3/8 in medical cases) Uganda [2005] UKIAT 00012
Date of hearing: 29 September 2004
Date Determination notified: 17 January 2005
Secretary of State for the Home Department | APPELLANT |
and | |
FM | RESPONDENT |
"5.5 I accept that the [Respondent] suffers from AIDS. According to a letter from Dr Gary Brooke… she has severe late stage HIV, she requires antiretroviral treatment which is not available in Uganda. If deported he says that she will die within 2 years. Another letter from Dr Steven Dawson dated 28 November 2002 also emphasises her fragile health, and the need for continuous treatment and monitoring. A further letter from him dated 7.8.03 makes it clear that the [Respondent] is being treated with a combination of three drugs, which in his view are unlikely to be available in Uganda. I have also considered the reports of Dr Barnett dated 11.6.03. There is also a report from Dr Catalan which concludes that the [Respondent] is suffering from post-traumatic stress, and dysthymic disorder. I accept therefore that there are strong indications that if returned to Uganda her mental and physical health will suffer, and that she may die."
"The application of Article 3 where the complaint in essence is of want of resources in the Applicant's home country (in contrast to what has been available to him in the country from which he is to be removed) is only justified where the humanitarian appeal of the case is so powerful that it could not in reason be resisted by the authorities of a civilised State. This does not I acknowledge amount to a sharp legal test; there are no sharp legal tests in this area. I intend only to emphasise that an Article 3 case of this kind must be based on facts which are not only exceptional, but extreme; extreme, that is, judged in the context of cases all or many of which (like this one) demand one's sympathy on pressing grounds."
"The balance between the demands of the general interest of the community, whose service is conspicuously the duty of elected government, and the requirements of the protection of the individual's fundamental rights" (paragraph 40).
"If on facts such as those of this case we were to fix the Secretary of State with a legal obligation to permit the Appellant to remain in the UK, we would in my judgment effect an unacceptable – constitutionally unacceptable – curtailment of the elective government's power to control the conditions of lawful immigration. I do not believe that our benign obligations arising under the Human Rights Act 1998 require us to do any such thing. Quite the contrary; our duty is to strike the very balance between public interest and private right to which I have referred."
"It is only in a very exceptional case, where there are compelling humanitarian considerations in play, that the application of the extension to the extension [created by Strasbourg in D] is justified. It is clear that what was considered by the court to be very exceptional about the facts in D … was that the Applicant's fatal illness had reached a critical stage and that:
"the limited quality of life he now enjoys results from the availability of sophisticated treatment and medication in the United Kingdom and the care and kindness administered by a charitable organisation. He has been counselled on how to approach death and has formed bonds with his carers."
It was the removal of these facilities in these circumstances that would expose the Applicant to the risk of dying under the most distressing circumstances. As Judge Pettiti pointed out, it was not the inequality of medical treatment that made the removal of D a violation of Article 3. It was the fact that the Applicant was to be deported in the final stages of an incurable disease".
"Their life expectancy may, and in many cases almost certainly will, be substantially reduced. But, tragic though all such cases are, it seems to me it is clear from D that the ECtHR would not, without more, recognise such cases as raising humanitarian considerations so compelling as to engage Article 3. The court would not regard such circumstances as exceptional, still less very exceptional. The fact that an Applicant's life expectancy will be reduced, even substantially reduced, because the facilities in the receiving country do not match those in the expelling country is not sufficient to engage Article 3. Something more is required."
"Tragic though such cases undoubtedly are, unless they have some special feature which gives rise to particularly compelling humanitarian considerations, they do not meet the stringent requirement that they be truly exceptional in order to satisfy the Article 3 criteria."
"The progress of AIDS is monitored by what is called the CD4 cell count, which decreases as the immune system weakens, and by the viral load (VL) which increases. The CD4 cell count in a normal healthy individual is over 500."
At paragraph 3 of the judgment, N's CD4 count was 20 and her viral load was around 50,000 copies-ML at base line.
(a) The case of N continues to be binding authority in cases such as this;
(b) The adjudicator accordingly erred in law in failing to appreciate that the facts of the present case, assessed against the "benchmark" of N, conspicuously fail to show that the present case should be treated as exceptional and extreme. The use of N as a benchmark in ill-health cases of this kind has been specifically endorsed by the Tribunal in the case of UK Rwanda [2004] UKIAT 00262 and that approach remains correct in the light of both Ullah and CA;
(c) It is irrelevant that the adjudicator promulgated his determination in the present case before the judgments in N were handed down;
(d) The adjudicator erred in law in allowing the appeal under Article 8 in the absence of any "exceptional" feature such as to override the Secretary of State's policy of immigration control.
P R LANE
VICE PRESIDENT
Approved for electronic distribution