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Zimbabwean national with 17years UK residence satisfies the rigorous “very significant obstacles to integration” requirement in both tiers of the Tribunal

Disappointingly in this case, the  First Tier Tribunal permitted  itself to be persuaded  by the Home  Office  to grant  permission to appeal in relation to an Immigration  Judge’s decision allowing  the Appellant’s Article 8 appeal.

 

Ironically, the same Home Office Guidance on private life which the Secretary of State  relied  upon and which formed the basis of grant of permission, was utilized  to the Appellant’s benefit in the Upper Tribunal – although neither   the presenting officer nor  myself  at the First Tier Tribunal hearing   referred to  it all.  The Immigration Judge made no reference to  the guidance in her decision when allowing the Appellant’s appeal.

 

Additionally, the fact of the Home Office’s past policy of   non – returns to Zimbabwe  until 2011 was successfully  relied upon in  the Appellant’s favor  even though he never claimed asylum during his period of residence in the UK.

 

The dire political, social and economic situation in Zimbabwe over  the past years and currently,   by reference to background evidence, was thrown into the  mix  for good measure  and that argument  also  found favour with both tiers of the  Tribunal. The Appellant’s current circumstances and also the country situation in Zimbabwe  therefore  contributed substantially to a finding that there were  very significant obstacles to integration in Zimbabwe.

 

The Immigration Judge had allowed the Appellant’s  appeal solely by reference to the  Immigration Rules on the basis  that  if returned to Zimbabwe  he  would face  very significant  obstacles to his reintegration in his home country.

 

The thrust of the Secretary’s State’s permission application was that in considering Paragraph  276ADE(1)(vi) of the Immigration Rules, the Immigration Judge had failed to appreciate  the nature of the test  within that paragraph.  Reference was also  made  to the Home Office guidance  in that respect and it was  asserted that the Judge made her findings on the basis  that the Appellant  had no one to support him in Zimbabwe and no one to send  remittances from the UK.  In effect,  the  permission application asserted that the Immigration Judge  failed to appreciate that, A very significant obstacle to integration means something which would prevent or seriously inhibit the applicant from integrating into the country of return. The decision maker is looking for more than obstacles. They are looking to see whether there are “very significant” obstacles, which is a high threshold. Very significant obstacles will exist where the applicant demonstrates that they would be unable to establish a private life in the country of return, or where establishing a private life in the country of return would entail very serious hardship for the applicant”.

 

 

Summary background:

 

The Appellant arrived in the UK from Zimbabwe as a visitor in 1999 and remained in the UK with leave up until January  2002 when his student visa application was refused. The next application he sought to  make was  of a very general nature in 2009  relying on Article 8 of the ECHR. This was refused with no right of appeal in 2010.  No enforcement action was taken. A further application followed again along similar lines  in 2015. This was refused a few months later with a right of appeal. Following refusal and after lodging his  own appeal grounds, the Appellant instructed me.  The FFT allowed the appeal in November 2016 however upon application, permission to appeal was  granted to the Secretary of State in April  2017.  The Upper Tribunal  upheld the FTT Judge’s decision in July 2017.

 

As regards family circumstances,   it was noted that the Appellant has an adult son living in  Zimbabwe, unemployed and supported by others. The Appellant also  has two  adult children who are settled in the UK, as well as some grandchildren.

 

The relevant Home Office Guidance relied upon:

 

The Immigration Directorate Instruction Family Migration: Appendix FM Section 1.0b  Family Life (as a Partner or Parent) and Private Life: 10-Year Routes, August 2015   relevantly provides:

 

“8.2.3.4. Assessing whether there are “very significant obstacles to integration into” the country of return

Paragraph 276ADE(1)(vi) of the Immigration Rules, allows an applicant who is over the age of 18 and who has lived continuously in the UK for less than 20 years, to meet the requirements of this rule if they can demonstrate there would be very significant obstacles to the applicant’s integration into the country to which he would have to go if required to leave the UK.

When assessing whether there are “very significant obstacles to integration into the country to which they would have to go if required to leave the UK”, the starting point is to assume that the applicant will be able to integrate into their country of return, unless they can demonstrate why that is not the case. The onus is on the applicant to show that there are very significant obstacles to that integration, not on the decision maker to show that there are not.

The decision maker should expect to see original, independent and verifiable documentary evidence of any claims made in this regard, and must place less weight on assertions which are unsubstantiated. Where it is not reasonable to expect corroborating evidence to be provided, consideration must be given to the credibility of the applicant’s claims.

A very significant obstacle to integration means something which would prevent or seriously inhibit the applicant from integrating into the country of return. The decision maker is looking for more than obstacles. They are looking to see whether there are “very significant” obstacles, which is a high threshold. Very significant obstacles will exist where the applicant demonstrates that they would be unable to establish a private life in the country of return, or where establishing a private life in the country of return would entail very serious hardship for the applicant.

The assessment of whether there are very significant obstacles to integration will generally consider the proposed country of return, unless there is information to suggest that the applicant might have a choice about where they choose to relocate to, such as where they have a right to reside in a country other than the country of return, or where they have more than one nationality. In that case the decision maker can take account of whether there are very significant obstacles to integration continuing in any of the relevant countries.

The decision maker must consider all the reasons put forward by the applicant as to why there would be obstacles to their integration in the country of return. These reasons must be considered individually and cumulatively to assess whether there are very significant obstacles to integration. In considering whether there are very significant obstacles to integration, the decision maker should consider whether the applicant has the ability to form an adequate private life by the standards of the country of return – not by UK standards. The decision maker will need to consider whether the applicant will be able to establish a private life in respect of all its essential elements, even if, for example, their job, or their ability to find work, or their network of friends and relationships may be differently constituted in the country of return.

The fact the applicant may find life difficult or challenging in the country of return does not mean that they have established that there would be very significant obstacles to integration there. The decision maker must consider all relevant factors in the person’s background and the conditions they are likely to face in the country of return in making their decision as to whether there are very significant obstacles to integration”.

 

Arguments in Appellant’s favour before the First Tier Tribunal:

 

In summary, the following arguments were advanced on the Appellant’s behalf:

 

 

The Immigration Judge reasoned and found as follows:

 

 

The Response:

 

Having successfully represented the Appellant  at his FTT appeal hearing,   he had no hesitation in instructing me to continue that representation  at  the Upper Tribunal. The written  Response I prepared   set forth  the following,  among other matters:

 

 

The Upper Tribunal’s decision:

 

In addition to relying upon the written Response I had prepared,  arguments were  also made on  the  Appellant’s behalf that the grounds  for permission sought to  oversimplify matters as the Secretary of State relied  only upon 3 lines of the Judge’s decision. It was  submitted that the  Immigration Judge’s decision contained no  error of law  and  if there was any such error of law, it was not material.

 

The Appellant’s appeal was allowed on the day of the Upper Tribunal hearing itself  in June 2017, following  oral submissions.

 

In her written decision of July 2017, the Upper Tribunal Judge  considered and found as followed:

 

 

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