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Haci Demirkaya v Secretary of State for Home Department: CA 23 Jun 1999

Whether an asylum applicant had a well founded fear of persecution if he returned home, is always a question of fact and degree, and could not be made a question of law. Even so where there was a clear risk of repeated rather than single beatings if the applicant returned, it was likely that the fear would be well founded. The tribunal had accepted the applicant’s account of his torture, but referred to it as being arrested and released, making no reference to being beaten, starved, slashed with a bayonet, made to lie in iced water, being hung out of a window through broken glass until he lost consciousness. This amounted to persecution.
References: Times 29-Jun-1999, [1999] EWCA Civ 1654
Links: Bailii
Jurisdiction: England and Wales
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Last Update: 07 September 2020; Ref: scu.146569 br>

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