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Just like that, High Court Judge says Kirkuk is no longer a contested area: Departure from AA(Iraq)?

So,  has a High Court Judge  really gone ahead and done what the Home Office  has been wanting  them to do these past months, ie indicate  some  sort of or indeed wholesale  “departure ”  from current country guidance  AA (Article 15(c)) (Rev 1) Iraq CG [2015] UKUT 544 (IAC)?

 

Sir Ross Cranston sitting as a Judge of the High Court has stated in Amin, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2017] EWHC 2417 (Admin)  that  “Kirkuk is no longer a contested area”.

 

The outcome in Amin  however merely seems a  blanket  acceptance  of  the Secretary of  State’s current County Report,  Country policy and information note: Security and humanitarian situation, Iraq, March 2017 . 

 

It took a short judgement, littered with a few  references to  some  caselaw  and a seeming  cursory approach  to  recent  Home Office Country  Reports on Iraq, for  the Court to simply conclude that Kirkuk is no longer a contested area.  No reference is made within the judgment to  actual  relevant background  evidence  within the March  2017  Notes which  justify the conclusion  that Kirkuk is no longer a contested area.  As matters stand, the  conclusion to be  drawn therefore is that the High Court Judge appears on this occasion to have simply  said: The Secretary of State has  presented this and therefore I accept it.

 

On the other hand, the quality of the background evidence  that formed part of the  initial representations  submitted by the claimant is not clear within the judgement. There is a reference  to the claimant  providing a “short letter” to the Secretary of  State but that the Home Office had the “latest evidence”  whereas  the claimant “had provided nothing further on this point”.

 

It is however the submissions on the leave application to the Court of Appeal made on the claimant’s behalf that make the  most interesting  reading and not to be missed. Presented most respectfully, however the point was  made clear: the High Court Judge‘s treatment  and approach of the  issues  was way off the mark.

 

Background Summary:

 

The claimant an Iraqi national, a Kurd had been resident in the UK  for several years  but became subject to  deportation proceedings.

 

On 26 April 2017, the Secretary of State set removal directions for the claimant’s deportation in early May to Baghdad via Istanbul. On  27 April, the claimant sent a “short letter” requesting among other issues that he not be returned to Iraq as it was not safe. The Secretary of State treated the claimant’s letter as raising further representations. By decision of 2 May 2017 the  Secretary of State rejected the claimant’s submission that Iraq was unsafe. The claimant sought  to challenge the decision of the Secretary of State by way of judicial review.

 

The Secretary of State’ position:

 

In her decision, the Secretary of State referred to the decision of AA (Article 15(c)) (Rev 1) Iraq CG [2015] UKUT 544 (IAC) as well Country Policy and Information Note: Iraq, May 2017.  The refusal decision quoted from both these  and  rejected the claimant’s statement that Iraq was not safe.  This was  rejected  in line with previous appeal findings, the judgment in AA and the  “latest available country evidence”.

 

The Secretary of State’s position was that:

 

 

The Claimant’s contentions:

 

It was argued on the Claimant’ s behalf that:

 

 

What the Court summarised as relevant for consideration on the issue:

 

The Court noted the following:

 

  1. parts of Mosul and the surrounding areas;

  2. Tal Afar and surrounding areas in northern Ninewah;

  3. Hawija and surrounding areas in Kirkuk governorate; and

  4. parts of west Anbar

 

So what reasoning was applied by the Court in dismissing the claim?

 

The reasons for dismissing the Claimant’s claim are contained in two simple paragraphs  of the judgment:

 

 

In combination with other various issues raised, the  Court concluded that the Secretary of State’s decision was not Wednesbury unreasonable.  The Secretary of State’s decision on the claimant’s representations in relation to paragraph 353 of the Immigration Rules was lawful and rational.

 

Conclusion

 

The judgment in Amin cannot with any confidence be considered to have resolved issues as regards the continued viability of AA (Iraqi). Of course AA  still stands as relevant country guidance caselaw.

 

Meanwhile however, Amin  is now a real opportunity  for the Home Office to  refer to  it in deciding  claims for Humanitarian Protection from  Iraqi nationals in particular  those originating from  Kirkuk.  The key is to seek to counter the real basis of the March 2017  Country Information Notes  by in turn producing  background evidence of real substance.

 

It seems apparent from how the application for leave to appeal to the Court of Appeal  is clothed, that  there is a real issue to  be taken up  with  the Judge’s approach  and the Secretary of State’ s current position in relation to the security  conditions in Iraq;  the quality of  background evidence; relocation to Baghdad  and the issue of documentation.

 

Where the litigation in Amin continues, it’s back once more to the Court of Appeal: barely 4months after AA (Iraq) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2017] EWCA Civ 944 was published.

 

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