AA (Zimbabwe) test case
The test case of AA (Zimbabwe), mentioned in previous posts, is being dropped by the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal in favour of another case, called HS (Zimbabwe). This is apparently because the AIT did not want to have to deal with argument about what issues the Court of Appeal ordered should be re-argued.
The new test case has been listed for a one week hearing starting 23rd July 2007 and will deal with refugee status issues, Article 3 ECHR issues and will also consider risk of ill-treatment on return, humanitarian conditions in the country and what deterioration has occurred since last summer.
The HS case was actually one in which the Immigration Advisory Service were representing. The Refugee Legal Centre were the represetatives in the AA case. Given the at times unhealthy rivalry between the two organisations, both offshoots of the now defunct United Kingdom Immigrants’ Advice Service, this might have been significant, and I can’t help wondering whether this was deliberate on the part of the AIT. However, given the excellent work done by RLC on the AA case, IAS has very sensibly transferred the case to RLC, so the legal team remains the same: the indomitable Sonal Ghelani and extremely able Mark Henderson of Doughty Street Chambers.
In the meantime, it is rumoured that the Administrative Division of the High Court is staying all Zimbabwean matters until the outcome of the new test case.
Will the new test case be the last word, though? There’s very little chance of either side accepting the result, so an appeal is almost inevitable. The Home Office simply cannot, for political reasons, accept a class action by which all Zimbabwean asylum seekers in the UK become entitled to status. And the legal team for the appellants will always be able to find holes in a supposedly comprehensive decision by the AIT. The only thing that can bring this neverending litigation to an end is the fall of Robert Mugabe.
7 Responses to AA (Zimbabwe) test case
@freemvntblog
- Vintage Mash: May ‘thought illegal immigrants had tentacles’ thedailymash.co.uk/politics/polit… 11 hours ago
- Border hopefuls queueing long enough to gain citizenship thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/b… 11 hours ago
- Article 3 medical treatment cases are worth fighting, grim case of GS (India) overturned: freemovement.org.uk/2012/05/17/gs-… 17 hours ago
- RT @Paul_Dillane: New UKBA Operational Guidance Note on DRC. Section on returns of particular interest - bia.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitecontent/do… 23 hours ago
- RT @Paul_Dillane: UKBA issue its first Operational Guidance Note on Gambia. Very helpful bia.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitecontent/do… 23 hours ago
Immigration cases- R (on the application of SS)v London Borough of Croydon (AAJR) [2012] UKUT 139 (IAC) (16 May 2012) 16 May 2012
- R (on the application of ES) v London Borough of Hounslow (AAJR) [2012] UKUT 138 (IAC) (15 May 2012) 16 May 2012
- MK (documents - relocation) Iraq CG [2012] UKUT 126 (IAC) (25 April 2012) 14 May 2012
- Mumu (paragraph 320; Article 8; scope) Bangladesh [2012] UKUT 143 (IAC) (14 May 2012) 14 May 2012
- Ahmadi (s.47 decision: validity; Sapkota) Afghanistan [2012] UKUT 147 (IAC) (14 May 2012) 14 May 2012
- Buama (inter-country adoption - competent court) Ghana [2012] UKUT 146 (IAC) (14 May 2012) 14 May 2012
- Barnett and others (EEA Regulations: rights and documentation) Jamaica [2012] UKUT 142 (IAC) (14 May 2012) 14 May 2012
- LK (Somalia)), R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWHC 1229 (Admin) (10 May 2012) 10 May 2012
UK Border Agency- Removing full right of appeal for family visitors 10 May 2012
- Scrapping family visitor appeal rights will save millions 10 May 2012
- Service disruption at public enquiry offices 4 May 2012
- Child experts recruited to Family Returns Panel 25 April 2012
- Tier 2 certificates of sponsorship allocations for 2012/13 20 April 2012
Immigration news- Damian Green questioned by MPs over Heathrow delays: Politics live blog 18 May 2012
- In this week's New Statesman: European Crisis 17 May 2012
- New rules on overseas students 'will cost universities billions' 17 May 2012
- Dissenting Tories pushed out of backbench committee 17 May 2012
- Europe’s endgame 16 May 2012
Policy and research- Why asking the public to report irregular migrants to the UKBA is the wrong path to go down 17 May 2012
- "Home Office plans are too harsh" - Letter to the editor 16 May 2012
- Maps/Multimedia 16 May 2012
- Focus on Africa/Africans 16 May 2012
- Focus on Statelessness 15 May 2012
- The Free Movement blog is written mainly by barristers in the immigration team at Renaissance Chambers
Free email updates
Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog by email- or get a Kindle blog subscription
Blog topics
Latest from HJT Training
- Drafting a statement. Drafting representations. Completing a Notice of Appeal. Dont miss out on these topics! hjt-training.co.uk/venues/1855-92… 2 days ago
- New courses. New SRA regulations. Comply or get FINED! hjt-training.co.uk/services/immig… 3 days ago
- Employment Law: Age Discrimination and the effect of the decisions of the Supreme Court in Seldon and Homer hjt-training.co.uk/venues/1842-92… 1 week ago
- EU, Human Right and PBS Update - Book all 3 course for £300 - thats 9 CPD!! Great offer once again! 2 weeks ago
- OISC Level 1 Manchester now £180 + VAT offer ends 30th April hjt-training.co.uk/venues/1856-92… 3 weeks ago
Disclaimer
The information and commentary on this blog is provided free of charge for information purposes only. The information and commentary does not, and is not intended to, amount to legal advice to any person. Views expressed in blog posts are those of the author only, not Renaissance Chambers as a whole.












May you please comment on Zimbabwean cases that were allowed by immigration judges before AA hearing in April 2006.Reconsideration was not granted on request by the Home Office,and since last year these cases are still awaiting hearing by the High Court,a year and some months now,as Home Office requested a second reconsideration.Cases that had reconsideration granted have been disposed off by the High Court, those that were allowed and Home Office did not get a reconsideration order are still pending.May you please explain these issues please.
I can’t give legal advice, I’m afraid. The Home Office is capable of extraordinarily double standards in immigration, though. If they lose a case and appeal it, they say it is the old law that applies in the meantime. See the certificate of approval mess caused by the Baiai case. If they win and the other side appeals, they say the opposite.
There was a good example over the original AA Court of Appeal victory. The Home Secretary said that it was ridiculous that the courts could decide so many cases in one go and that each case had to be looked at individually. Do they say the same when they win a big country guideline case? I think not.
The problem with bringing challenges in these sorts of situations is that the challenge may get stayed by the courts while the main case is sorted out, so you don’t end up getting anywhere.
Please can someone tell me how long can people suffer. When immigration hold decesion for more than 5 years. Is it possible for the home office to give individuals same time , if they lose cases in the courts?
Since home office wishes not to give these people papers/status can they issue them united nation status so they can stay in other countries.
I’ll be writing a post shortly on the 5 year wait that may immigrants are now facing before their cases are resolved because of the ‘Legacy’ exercise announced by John Reid last June.
can you please explain to me the new asylum model being used by the home office?
[...] on this site from people looking for news about the Zimbabwe test cases. The latest news is that last week’s hearing is now over. The panel consisted of Mr Ockelton (Deputy President of the Asylum and Immigration [...]
[...] is unlikely to be the end of the matter and I am certain that the top notch HS team will be looking to appeal this yet again. In a determination as long as this, it is difficult to [...]