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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> TS (Working Holidaymaker: no third party support) India [2008] UKAIT 00024 (20 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2008/00024.html Cite as: [2008] UKAIT 24, [2008] UKAIT 00024, [2008] Imm AR 440 |
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TS (Working Holidaymaker: no third party support) India [2008] UKAIT 00024
ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
Date of hearing: 20 December 2007
Date Determination notified: 20 March 2008
Before
Between
TS | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
A working holidaymaker must show that he has sufficient resources of his own (including those derived from work as allowed by the scheme) to maintain and accommodate himself during his stay. The requirement in para 95(v) is not met by the provision, or promised provision, of support by third parties.
"Although I accept that your age makes you eligible to apply for a working holiday visa, you must also show me that you will leave the United Kingdom at the end of your working holiday and that you will not take up permanent work. You indicate that you completed a hotel management course in September 2006 and that you are presently awaiting results. You explain that you have been helping your father on his family farm since then. You have failed to provide any credible explanation as to why you now seek to go on a holiday for two years. This is particularly relevant, as you have also not explained; how you will spend your leisure time in the UK; or how you will support yourself when the money you plan to take with you has run out. Because of these things, I am not satisfied that you plan to leave the UK at the end of your working holiday or that you plan to only do temporary work.
To go on a working holiday to the UK, you must be able to support yourself without taking up full time work for the main part of your time in the UK, or using public funds. You indicate that a cousin in the UK will fund your entire two year stay. You have not been able to provide any indication as to how much this will cost or any credible explanation as to why your cousin is to fund your entire stay for two years when he has a family of four to support, or provide any details of his financial commitment. Furthermore I note that your family circumstances in India are modest, that your father farms 7 acres land and supports a family of four. You have not explained or show that it is realistic for you to spend your sponsor's savings on a working holiday. Because of this , I am not satisfied that you want to enter the UK for a working holiday as you have claimed, or that you plan to leave the UK at the end of your stay.
The Lonely Planet Guide 2006 for the UK says that people visiting London will need at least £40 a day for the cheapest accommodation, travel and food. It goes on to say that even fairly cheap sightseeing or nightlife can easily add another £20 to this. Outside London, you will still need at least £30 a day if you have your own transport (which you say you do not) and cook your own meals. However the Guide says that if you stay in bed and breakfast accommodation eat one sit down meal a day and do not try to save money on entry fees you will need about £60 a day. You have not provided any credible explanation as to how you will be able to support yourself without taking up full time work or using public funds.
When I asked you what you plan to do after your working holiday ends, you did not give a clear explanation of your plans. Although I accept that you may not have firm plans for the future, you must show that you plan to leave the UK at the end of your working holiday. Because you have not shown me any realistic future plans, I am not satisfied that you plan to leave the UK at the end of your stay.
"[the Respondent] made it clear that there was no issue as to the Sponsor's capacity to maintain and accommodate the appellant, or assist the appellant with the cost of his return or onward journey".
"10. On the totality of the evidence I find that the appellant has not discharged the relevant burden and standard of proof placed upon him in the proceedings. I find for the respondent.
11. I make such finding because against the appropriate standard, I find that I am bound by AM and I note the reference made to paragraph 22 of AM in relation to the appellant being responsible for the costs of his own maintenance; Mr Addy in his skeleton argument rightly points to many working holiday makers not having sponsors in any event. I have evidence before me of a job offer; which I accept is genuine; but if the appellant were to work 5 days every week as suggested in submissions, this surely raises the issue as to whether the appellant is intending only to take employment incidental to a holiday. I find that the appellant therein, as was submitted, falls foul of paragraph 95(vi).
12. In relation to the costs of the return or onward journey; again there is little evidence, as to what if any of the joint savings the appellant has are available to him in real terms. The wording of paragraph 95 I find is such that the appellant must show he has the means to pay for the same; I uphold Mr Addy's submission therein. I find against the appropriate standard, there is no evidence that the appellant has the means to pay the costs of the ticket required. I do not doubt the Sponsor would advance him the costs of the same even as a loan that might never be called for repayment, if needs be but there was no evidence of this before me. The submissions were based on the appellant's own savings as put in the interview and there was no evidence before me as to what the costs of those tickets might be. Equally, there is no evidence before me as to whether the appellant could apply any of the savings to his maintenance whilst establishing himself with some funds from work in the United Kingdom, or apply the savings combined with earnings to achieve the work/leisure balance of the rule. The whole basis of his application, and appeal prepared for the hearing, was that the appellant would be sponsored. I am merely left with submissions, largely unsupported by evidence, to deal with the respondent's position; perhaps the position may have been recovered if an adjournment had been sought, or a new application submitted. I was not without some sympathy for the appellant's representative in all the circumstances. "
41(vi) ... will maintain and accommodate himself and any dependents adequately out of resources available to him without recourse to public funds or taking employment; or will, with any dependents, be maintained and accommodated adequately by relatives or friends
95(v) ... is able and intends to maintain and accommodate himself without recourse to public funds.
'32 ..it is quite wrong for an Entry Clearance Officer to assume, from the fact that the scheme will offer the applicant an opportunity, during the year that he is lawfully employed under it, to make what may by his standards be a considerable amount of money, that the applicant will thereafter seek to work unlawfully. That is equivalent to an assumption that anyone who has the opportunity to commit an offence will do so. Nor should Entry Clearance Officers confuse actual intention with apparent motive. The fact that an applicant has no apparent economic reason to return to his own country does not mean that he has no intention of returning to his own country at the end of his employment.
…
34 It follows also that entry clearance applications cannot properly be refused on the basis of generalities that may originate from a disapproval of the scheme and a suspicion of abuse. Each applicant is entitled to individual consideration of his own individual circumstances and individual intentions. If the application is refused, the notice of refusal and the explanatory statement must show that the refusal was based not merely on a generalised suspicion but on a proper evaluation of the appellant's evidence.'
Immigration Judge Holmes
Date: