Man with mental health problems can seek to prevent transfer to UK, court rules

Important judgment has implications for more than 100 asylum cases raising similar issues

A young Afghan man with “significant” mental health difficulties may apply to prevent his transfer from here to the UK on grounds of the mental health consequences of that, the Court of Appeal has ruled.

In an important judgment with implications for more than 100 asylum cases raising similar issues, the three-judge court found the High Court erred in not permitting the man make that claim in judicial review proceedings.

The case centres on whether the International Protection Appeals Tribunal (IPAT) had wrongly concluded it had no discretion under an EC Regulation – the Dublin III Regulation – to refuse the man’s transfer to the UK on grounds of the mental health consequences of that.

The Court of Appeal noted the tribunal had accepted the man presents as “traumatised” with ongoing significant mental health difficulties linked to uncertainty over his immigration status over some six years since he came to Europe, aged 18.

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The man’s judicial review will now return to the High Court, which will decide the mental health and other claims relating to the State’s operation of discretionary powers under the Dublin III Regulation, which provides for asylum applications to be dealt with by the first member state of entry.

Mr Justice Gerard Hogan, giving the Court of Appeal judgment, said the case raised “important questions” about the operation of Dublin III, particularly proper interpretation of the discretionary provisions of Article 17.1.

Article 17 gives a member state discretion to deal with an asylum application even if it is not the first member state of entry.

After the man, aged 25, applied for asylum here in 2016, it emerged he previously unsuccessfully applied for asylum in the UK in 2010. The UK agreed in May 2016 to a “take back” request from the Irish authorities in line with Dublin III and a direction was made for the man’s transfer to the UK.

After the man lost his appeal to the International Protection Appeals Tribunal over transfer, Eamon Dornan BL, instructed by Brian Burns solicitor, for the man, secured leave for judicial review on some grounds.

The High Court refused leave on two particular grounds – whether the International Protection Appeals Tribunal was entitled to (1) exercise the discretion conferred by Article 17 and (2) to have regard to the potential impact of Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights in deciding whether or not to set aside the man’s transfer to the UK.

In his judgment partially allowing the man’s appeal, Mr Justice Hogan said the man’s poor mental health is at the heart of the proceedings. The International Protection Appeals Tribunal had accepted he has ongoing significant mental health difficulties, is particularly vulnerable for that reason, had attempted suicide and comes from a country experiencing internal armed conflict.

The International Protection Appeals Tribunal had said he “may well have a strong putative claim to international protection” but considered the Minister for Justice, not the tribunal, had discretion under Dublin III whether to permit him seek asylum here rather than move him to the UK to renew his application.

Mr Justice Hogan said, given various decisions of the Court of Justice of the EU, it seemed the International Protection Appeals Tribunal member was also obliged to consider exercising the discretionary power. That included, where necessary, to examine the impact on the man’s mental health of physically moving him to the UK.

In the circumstances, the man was entitled to leave for judicial review of the tribunal’s ruling it had no jurisdiction to exercise the Article 17 discretion, he ruled.

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan is the Legal Affairs Correspondent of the Irish Times