In a rebuke of
Immigration lawyers said the
The Court’s decision Thursday in the case ‘NA vs. United Kingdom’ is intended to give guidance to national and European decision makers in assessing asylum claims by Tamils fleeing persecution by the Sri Lankan state.
In short, it says that deporting NA to
The judgement noted: “The Court has taken note of the current climate of general violence in
In June 2007, NA appealed to the European Court of Human Rights, saying the
In response to the appeal, the Court decided to apply Rule 39 of the Rules of Court (interim measures), insisting the
Thereafter, the Court received an increasing number of similar requests for interim measures from Tamils who were being forcibly returned to
This stoppage has since been granted in respect of 342 Tamil applicants in the
The
That judgment came Thursday.
The Court upheld NA’s appeal and also ordered the
NA, a Sri Lankan Tamil had claimed asylum in August 1999 on the grounds he feared both the Sri Lankan government and the LTTE.
He had been arrested and detained by the Army six times between 1990 and 1997 on suspicion of involvement with the Tigers. Each time he was released without charge. Whilst in detention he had been ill-treated and his legs were scarred from being beaten. During the 1997 detention the applicant had been photographed and his fingerprints had been taken.
NA said he also feared the LTTE because his father had done some work for the Army. He said they had also tried to recruit him in 1997 and 1998.
NA claims were repeatedly rejected by the British Home Office and in April 2006, his deportation was ordered. The
The
Meanwhile, British Foreign Minister Lord Malloch-Brown, who is visiting Sri Lanka, was quoted as telling President Mahinda Rajapaksa that Sri Lanka “had achieved something remarkable and impressive in establishing a process for the resolution of human rights issues.”
Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Bogollagama told his British counterpart that