AND UPON the Court noting that an anonymity order was made by the Court of Appeal on 6 October 2022 and that order continues to have effect.
[2024] UKSC 32
On appeal from: [2023] NICA 14
JUDGMENT
CAO (Respondent) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Appellant) (Northern Ireland)
before
Lord Lloyd-Jones
Lord Sales
Lord Hamblen
Lady Rose
Dame Siobhan Keegan
23 October 2024
Heard on 5 and 6 June 2024
Appellant
Tony McGleenan KC
Philip Henry KC
(Instructed by Crown Solicitors Office (Belfast))
Respondent
Mark Mulholland KC
Erik Peters
Gordon Anthony
(Instructed by Wilson Nesbitt (Belfast))
LORD SALES AND DAME SIOBHAN KEEGAN (with whom Lord Lloyd-Jones, Lord Hamblen and Lady Rose agree):
Introduction
This appeal concerns the meaning and effect of section 55 of the Borders, Citizenship and Immigration Act 2009 (“section 55” and “the 2009 Act”, respectively). This provision is concerned with safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children in the United Kingdom, including when decisions are made regarding their immigration status. The court also has to consider the interaction of section 55 with article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (“article 8” and “the ECHR”, respectively), as given effect in domestic law by the Human Rights Act 1998 (“the HRA”), which is also concerned with the protection of children’s welfare.
Section 55 provides in relevant part as follows:
Duty regarding the welfare of children
The Secretary of State must make arrangements for ensuring that—
the functions mentioned in subsection (2) are discharged having regard to the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children who are in the United Kingdom, and
any services provided by another person pursuant to arrangements which are made by the Secretary of State and relate to the discharge of a function mentioned in subsection (2) are provided having regard to that need.
The functions referred to in subsection (1) are—
any function of the Secretary of State in relation to immigration, asylum or nationality;
any function conferred by or by virtue of the Immigration Acts on an immigration officer;
any general customs function of the Secretary of State;
any customs function conferred on a designated customs official.
A person exercising any of those functions must, in exercising the function, have regard to any guidance given to the person by the Secretary of State for the purpose of subsection (1).
…
In this section—
‘children’ means persons who are under the age of 18; …
Section 21 of the UK Borders Act 2007 (c 30) (children) ceases to have effect.”
The background to this provision was explained by Baroness Hale of Richmond in the leading decision of this court in ZH (Tanzania) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] UKSC 4; [2011] 2 AC 166 (“ZH (Tanzania)”), at para 23. When the United Kingdom acceded to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child 1989 (“UNCRC”) it originally entered a reservation concerning immigration matters. Article 3.1 of the UNCRC states: “In all actions concerning children, whether undertaken by public or private social welfare institutions, courts of law, administrative authorities or legislative bodies, the best interests of the child shall be a primary consideration”. Outside the immigration field, section 11 of the Children Act 2004 placed a duty on a wide range of public bodies to make arrangements to carry out their functions having regard to the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children, reflecting the substance of the obligation in article 3.1 of the UNCRC. Within that field, section 21 of the UK Borders Act 2007 provided for the Secretary of State to issue a code of practice for border officials to ensure that while children were in the United Kingdom they were “safe from harm”. The reservation for immigration matters was lifted in 2008 and, as a result, section 55 of the 2009 Act was enacted. At the same time, section 55(8) stated that section 21 of the 2007 Act ceased to have effect; the code of practice issued under it was superseded.
Section 11 of the Children Act 2004 is not replicated in the Children (Northern Ireland) Order 1995. However, the substance of section 11 is substantially mirrored in section 12 of the Safeguarding Board (Northern Ireland) Act 2011. Thus, in Northern Ireland a wide range of public bodies also have obligations to carry out their functions having regard to the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children who are within this jurisdiction.
Section 55(1) places a specific duty upon the Secretary of State to make arrangements to ensure that any functions in relation to immigration are discharged having regard to the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children. An ancillary duty is found in section 55(3) in that any person exercising immigration functions must have regard to any guidance given by the Secretary of State. This duty is directed to a range of officials, including the Secretary of State him- or herself, officials acting on behalf of the Secretary of State under the Carltona doctrine (Carltona Ltd v Coms of Works [1943] 2 All ER 560) and immigration officers.
When section 55 was brought into effect the Secretary of State issued guidance to the UK Border Agency pursuant to section 55(3): Every Child Matters: Change for Children: Statutory guidance to the UK Border Agency on making arrangements to safeguard and promote the welfare of children (November 2009) (“the Guidance”). The Guidance explained (para 4) that section 55 is intended to achieve the same effect as section 11 of the Children Act 2004, which placed a similar duty on other public organisations. The Guidance was stated to be aimed at staff of the UK Border Agency and contractors when carrying out UK Border Agency functions: para 5. Due to administrative reorganisation within the Home Office, in 2013 the UK Border Agency ceased to exist as an executive agency of the Home Office and its relevant functions were absorbed into the Home Office’s Immigration Enforcement section. It is common ground that the Guidance continues to apply to Home Office officials.
The introduction to the Guidance stated (para 6) that it was issued under section 55(3) and (5), which requires any person exercising immigration, asylum, nationality and customs functions to have regard to guidance given by the Secretary of State, and continued: “This means they must take this guidance into account and, if they decide to depart from it, have clear reasons for doing so.”
Part 1 of the Guidance, entitled “Understanding the duty to make arrangements to safeguard and promote the welfare of children”, included the following:
The duty under section 55 requires the UK Border Agency “to carry out its existing functions in a way that takes into account the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children” (para 1.3).
The UK Border Agency’s contribution to safeguarding and promoting children’s welfare would be “to identify and act on their concerns about the welfare of children with whom they come in contact” (para 1.6).
Key features at an organisational level for safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children comprise senior management commitment to the importance of this objective, making a statement of responsibilities available for all staff, a clear line of accountability within the organisation for work on this objective, taking account of this objective in service development, staff training, safe recruitment, effective inter-agency working and information sharing (para 1.9).
Under the heading “Work with individual children and their families”, at para 1.14:
“In order to safeguard and promote the welfare of individual children, the following should be taken into account, in addition to the relevant section of Part 2 of this guidance. The key features of an effective system are:
Children and young people are listened to and what they have to say is taken seriously and acted on; …
Where possible the wishes and feelings of the particular child are obtained and taken into account when deciding on action to be undertaken in relation to him or her.”
Para 1.13 stated:
“The ways in which agencies work with or have contact with individual children and their families will differ depending on the functions of each agency. Some will focus on direct work with children and young people, whereas others will work with children and their families, and still others will work with adults with parenting responsibilities for children.”
Para 1.15 said that the UK Border Agency should seek to reflect certain general principles underpinning work with children and their families “as appropriate”, including (para 1.16) that the work should be “child centred”, “supporting the achievement of the best possible outcomes for children and improving their wellbeing”, “involve children and families, taking their wishes and feelings into account” and “informed by evidence”. In relation to involvement of children and families, para 1.17(b) stated:
“In order to appreciate the child’s needs and how they make sense of their circumstances it is important to listen and take account of their wishes and feelings. It is also important to develop a co-operative constructive working relationship with parents and caregivers so that they recognise that they are being respected and are being kept informed. Where there is respect and honesty in relating to parents they are likely to feel more confident about providing vital information about their child, themselves and their circumstances.”
Part 2 of the Guidance, entitled “The role of the UK Border Agency in relation to safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children”, included the following:
“The UK Border Agency’s main contributions to safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children include:
Ensuring good treatment and good interactions with children throughout the immigration and customs process” (para 2.4).
“The UK Border Agency acknowledges the status and importance of the following: the [ECHR]” (para 2.6).
Para 2.7 stated:
“The UK Border Agency must also act according to the following principles:
Every child matters even if they are someone subject to immigration control.
In accordance with the [UNCRC] the best interests of the child will be a primary consideration (although not necessarily the only consideration) when making decisions affecting children. …
Children should be consulted and the wishes and feelings of children taken into account wherever practicable when decisions affecting them are made, even though it will not always be possible to reach decisions with which the child will agree. In instances where parents and carers are present they will have primary responsibility for the children’s concerns.”
More detailed guidance was provided in relation to the matters referred to in para 8(iii) above, such as training for UK Border Agency staff.
Under the heading, “Work with individual children”, para 2.18 stated:
“This guidance cannot cover all the different situations in which the UK Border Agency comes in contact with children. Staff need to be ready to use their judgement in how to apply the duty in particular situations … . In general, staff should seek to be as responsive as they reasonably can be to the needs of the children with whom they deal, whilst still carrying out their core functions.”
Flowing from the above we make the obvious point that this is high level guidance which must be adapted by officials to the facts of a particular case when children are involved.
Article 8 provides:
Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic wellbeing of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.”
Factual Background and the Proceedings Below
The respondent is a national of Nigeria born in 1971. She arrived in the United Kingdom on 25 September 2018 with her son (then aged 16) and daughter (then aged 12), who are also nationals of Nigeria, and was granted entry on the basis of a visitor’s visa. On 8 November 2018 she applied for asylum for herself and her children.
The basis for the asylum application was that (i) the respondent had experienced serious domestic violence at the hands of her husband both before and after their separation in 2013 and feared that she would be exposed to this again if she were returned to Nigeria and (ii) her husband’s family expect her daughter to undergo female genital mutilation (“FGM”) and he had been making efforts to take the daughter from her in order to subject her to that procedure. The respondent said that she learned that the procedure was scheduled to take place in October 2018, so to protect her daughter she tricked her husband into giving his consent for her to take her children on a holiday to the United Kingdom and came here. The respondent claimed that her husband would be able to track her and the children down were they returned to Nigeria.
By a decision letter dated 10 April 2019 (“the Decision Letter”) the appellant Secretary of State refused the respondent’s application. The Secretary of State referred to certain inconsistencies in the respondent’s account and to the fact that she had not made an asylum claim on a previous visit to the United Kingdom in 2012. The Secretary of State was not persuaded that there was a real risk of FGM for the respondent’s daughter: on the respondent’s account she had not discussed this with her husband for 12 years; FGM did not appear to be culturally important for her husband, as he had married the respondent who had not undergone FGM; the husband had signed a consent form to allow the respondent to take her daughter to the United Kingdom and paid for the trip despite the respondent’s opposition to FGM for her daughter; and it was implausible that he would have told the respondent of his plans to subject the daughter to FGM in October 2018, given the respondent’s resistance to the procedure. The Secretary of State also considered that state authorities in Nigeria would provide protection for the respondent and her daughter if they asked for help and that, in any event, internal relocation within Nigeria to Benin City or other large cities would be possible for them—where they would not be traced and would not be at risk. The respondent was well educated to degree level and had had a senior job in a bank between 1999 and 2016 and had started two businesses of her own, which indicated that she would be able to re-establish herself in this way. She had her own family support network who could assist her. In making these judgments, the Secretary of State took into account information about the situation in Nigeria contained in the up-to-date country guidance documents. In the Secretary of State’s view, the respondent had not established that she was entitled to humanitarian protection and the return of the respondent and her children to Nigeria would not violate any of their Convention rights under the ECHR and the HRA.
A section towards the end of the Decision Letter was headed “Section 55 Consideration”. It was stated that the Secretary of State had “taken into account the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children in the United Kingdom in accordance with the Secretary of State’s duty under section 55 of [the 2009 Act]”. No specific reference was made to section 55(3), nor to the Guidance. However, the letter said that the Secretary of State had considered the impact of his decision on the wellbeing of the children, having regard to their best interests. Various factors were taken into account. In the limited time the children had been in the United Kingdom they had not created significant links here and it would not be unreasonable to expect them to reintegrate back into life in Nigeria. It was therefore considered that it would be in their best interests to be returned with the respondent to Nigeria as a family unit.
The respondent exercised her right of appeal to the First-tier Tribunal (“the FTT”) under section 82(1) of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 (“the NIAA 2002”). Such an appeal takes the form of a re-hearing of the case by the FTT, on the basis of evidence adduced in the FTT and with reference to country guidance information. The respondent was represented by counsel, Mr Beech. At this stage, the respondent made no complaint about the lack of reference in the Decision Letter to section 55(3) and the Guidance. The respondent gave evidence at the hearing. The presenting officer for the Secretary of State was ill on the day of the hearing, but no objection was raised to the FTT proceeding in their absence.
In its decision promulgated on 25 February 2020, the FTT (Judge Grimes) considered whether the respondent had shown that there was a real risk of her or her children being persecuted for one of the reasons set out in the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (“Refugee Convention”) if returned to Nigeria, or that their rights under article 2 (right to life), article 3 (prohibition of torture, inhuman or degrading treatment) or article 8 (right to respect for private and family life) of the ECHR would be violated, noting that the burden of proof was on the respondent.
The FTT found that there were significant inconsistencies in the account given by the respondent. She was also vague about significant matters. She adduced as evidence a letter from the pastor of her church in Nigeria, but this did not support her account on important points. The FTT found that the respondent had been subject to domestic violence at the hands of her husband up to their separation in 2013 but not thereafter. The FTT found that the respondent was not at risk of domestic violence from her husband if returned to Nigeria.
As regards the threat of FGM in relation to the respondent’s daughter upon return to Nigeria, the FTT again found that there were inconsistencies in the respondent’s evidence which undermined her credibility. She did not have a good explanation why she did not claim asylum immediately upon her arrival in the United Kingdom in September 2018. Her account of how her husband came to give his consent for the children to come with her to the United Kingdom was not consistent with her account of the threat he posed to her daughter in relation to FGM. The respondent adduced written evidence from her solicitor that in 2016–2017 she had hidden her daughter with friends, but this was inconsistent with her oral evidence that her daughter was at boarding school in that period. The letter from the respondent’s pastor did not refer to FGM at all. Upon reviewing all the evidence, the FTT was not satisfied that the respondent’s husband wanted to subject his daughter to the FGM procedure.
The FTT went on to make further findings, having regard to relevant country guidance information in the form of the current Country Policy and Information Note entitled “Nigeria: Female Genital Mutilation (FGM)” 2007 (“the CPIN”) and other aspects of the respondent’s evidence. Based on the information in the CPIN the FTT found that the threat of FGM in relation to girls over the age of five was low, and the respondent’s objection to the procedure was a significant protective factor. Even if there was a threat to subject the respondent’s daughter to FGM, the respondent would be able to seek protection from the police and it was likely that the police would provide such protection.
In addition, the FTT found that the respondent and her children could relocate in Nigeria to avoid any risk of FGM and it would be reasonable to expect them to do so. The respondent is well educated and had previously held employment at a bank and been self-employed, so she would be able to work again and provide for her family. She has good relations with her parents and siblings, who would be able to provide her with support in relocating, if needed.