OP (EEA; Permanent Right of Residence) Colombia: AIT 23 Sep 2008

AIT (1) Where a person relies (wholly or in part) on a period of residence under the earlier 2000 EEA Regulations in order to establish a permanent right of residence under regulation 15 of the 2006 EEA Regulations, the period of 5 years continuous residence in the UK must end on, or after, 30 April 2006 when the 2006 EEA Regulations came into force. (2) Whilst residence in accordance with the 2000 Regulations (but not the 1994 Order) counts as residence ‘in accordance with’ the 2006 Regulations for the purposes of regulation 15(1)(b), a family member must also show by evidence that that residence was ‘with the EEA national’.
[2008] UKAIT 00074
Bailii
England and Wales

Updated: 07 September 2021; Ref: scu.277834

MK (Lesbians) Albania CG: AIT 9 Sep 2009

AIT (1) It cannot be said that without more there is a real risk that a woman without family support in Albania would suffer destitution amounting to inhuman or degrading treatment resulting in a breach of her rights under article 3 of the ECHR or persecution, but each case must be determined on its own facts.
(2) Although it is no longer illegal for consenting adults to have homosexual relations in private, homosexual men known to be members of gay associations and those who visit cruising areas in the centre of Tirana are likely be harassed and on occasions ill-treated by the police and in individual cases homosexual men may be at risk of harm from members of their families.
(3) In general terms, lesbian women do not frequent cruising areas and do not join LGBT organisations. Therefore there is lacking the opportunity for them to be harassed or persecuted by the police.
(4) In general terms in Albania women of lesbian orientation are able to carry on lesbian relationships discreetly without attracting the risk of serious harm. A lesbian woman, whose sexual orientation becomes known, may be at risk of harm from members of her family, particularly if she is from a traditional family from the north of Albania, but each case must be determined on its merits. In such a case, however, it is likely that there would be an adequacy of state protection.
(5) In any particular case where the safety of the return of a lesbian woman to Albania is in issue, it will have to be determined whether she is likely to behave discreetly upon return and if so whether ‘discretion’ is something that she can reasonably be expected to tolerate, in the light of all of the circumstances of the case, including the social norms and religious beliefs commonly held in Albania. Such a person will only establish a right to refugee status if she can establish that the apprehended violation of her fundamental rights is likely to attain a substantial level of seriousness.
Goldstein, Spencer SIJJ
[2009] UKAIT 00036
Bailii
England and Wales

Updated: 07 September 2021; Ref: scu.377927