The Weekly Round-Up: Proposed migrant legislation and reviews for convicted victims of coercive control

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12 July 2021 by William Craig Cohen

In the news:

On Thursday, the Crown Prosecution Service announced that they would no longer prosecute migrants uninvolved in any criminal activity other than illegal entry to the UK. The development, supported by the notion that these cases can be better dealt with by administrative deportation than by prison overcrowding, is being widely reported as a blow to the Home Secretary’s Tuesday announcement of the Nationality and Borders Bill. The Bill seeks to further differentiate between migrants who enter the UK illegally and those who do not. Significant changes introduced by the new legislation are the increase of the maximum sentence for illegal entry from six months to twelve, introduced at clause 37, and the removal of protections for migrants who are escorted to the UK by the Border Force, who currently technically enter the country legally. The Bill will require that migrants have prior authorisation to enter the country to avoid entering illegally. How the CPS guidance, apparently adopted after ‘close consultation with the Home Office’ will interact with the new law, if passed, remains to be seen.

Kenan Malik writes in the Guardian that such changes are unnecessarily restrictive, given the difficulty in obtaining prior authorisation when such migrants are genuine refugees, who can hardly be expected to obtain appropriate documents from states actively engaged in their persecution. Clause 34 of the Bill also attempts to gloss Article 31 of the Refugee Convention, requiring that asylum seekers demonstrate that they could not have reasonably been expected to seek the protection of any country they passed through before entering the UK. Freemovement.org reports that much of the Bill does not actually substantially change existing legislation, and new powers to remove migrants will ultimately still depend on agreements with other countries to accept the return of asylum applicants.

In other news:

  • The Observer revealed on Saturday that the Criminal Cases Review Commission is in the process of re-examining a number of murder convictions in light of Sally Challen’s recent appeal and retrial for the murder of her husband in 2010. Challen’s appeal relied on the new developments contained in s.76 of the Serious Crime Act 2015, which introduced the offence of coercive control. While the law previously recognised ‘battered person syndrome’, the new law focused on psychological control rather than physical abuse. In combination with new psychological evidence, Sally Challen was released following her retrial due to her time served and her successful defence of provocation, now able to encompass coercive control.
  • Three black men, Courtney Harriot, Paul Green and Cleveland Davidson have had their 1972 convictions quashed by the Court of Appeal after it heard of their framing by corrupt police officer Derek Ridgewell, who himself died in prison in 1982. Ridgewell became notorious for making false allegations against young black men, and is known to have been dishonest for decades. Ridgewell’s activities in the 1970s are said to have significantly affected the entire lives of innocent men.

In the courts:

  • In AA (Sudan) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2021] EWHC 1869 (Admin), the Administrative Court found that the Home Secretary must exercise best efforts to bring a non-Arab Darfuri man who claimed to be a victim of slavery in Libya back from France. The Claimant was returned to France, where his first asylum application was rejected, after a screening interview in the UK failed to identify the Claimant as a victim of modern slavery. The Claimant is currently liable to be removed from France to Sudan at any time. He argued that the screening interview was conducted without his being asked the key questions of “why have you come to the United Kingdom?” and “please outline your journey to the United Kingdom“. These questions were a part of the Defendant’s published policy at the time of the interview and were omitted as a part of a secret policy, admitted by the Defendant. The court reiterated the law following Lumba -v- Secreatry of State for the Home Department [2012] 1 AC 245, that an unpublished policy must not be inconsistent with a published policy, and asserted that the Claimant had given believable evidence of his being tortured and trafficked. Although the Claimant initially denied being a victim of ‘exploitation’, he had asserted that he had been tortured, which accrued no follow-up questions. The indirect questions omitted were to give an opportunity for discourse which was denied to the Claimant.

On the UKHRB:


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