- Regina v. Special Adjudicator
Regina v. Special Adjudicator
ex parte Ullah, also known as Doe v. Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] UKHL 26 on appeal from [2002] EWCA Civ 1856, was a legal case in theUnited Kingdom . (It should be noted that this was a joint decision, meaning two cases were heard at the same time, so the case may be cited as either of the case titles above).Decision
This was a decision of the
United Kingdom Appellate Committee of the House of Lords, composed ofLord Bingham of Cornhill,Lord Steyn ,Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe,Baroness Hale of Richmond andLord Carswell . The decision was made on Thursday17 June 2004.The issue in the case was whether a person can be deported from the United Kingdom to a state where there are known
human rights abuses, or refusedAsylum to the United Kingdom when the applicant is from such a state.The appellants in the cases, Mr Ullah and Miss Do, wished to rely on an Article of the
European Convention on Human Rights other than Article 3 (no body shall be subjected totorture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment). The Appellants wished to rely on Article 9 of the Convention, guaranteeing the right to freedom, thought and conscience. At first instance and in theCourt of Appeal the Appellants' submissions were rejected and it was held that deporting a person too a country which violated Article 9 will not amount to a violation of Article 3 of the Convention, and thus an applicant could be deported to the state in violation of Article 9.Particular notice should be drawn to Paragraph 4-6 of the judgment of Lord Bingham. Here it is stated (using the judgment of the Court of Appeal, [2002] EWCA Civ 1856, as authority) that the Appellants, in order to rely on Article 9, would have to prove that the interference with Convention Rights was 'flagrant'. In the present case it was decided that the interference was not flagrant (see Paragraph 69-70 of the judgment by Lord Carswell for a brief discussion of the term 'flagrant'), which is why the appeal was dismissed in all courts.
Lord Walker and Baroness Hale delivered concurring judgments.
External links
* [http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld200304/ldjudgmt/jd040617/ullah-1.htm The Judgement for the case Regina v. Special Adjudicator]
* [http://www.hri.org/docs/ECHR50.html For the European Convention on Human Rights]
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