Official Statistics
Immigration and asylum appeals allowed under articles 3 and 8 of ECHR - CSV format (Microsoft Excel file - 2kb)
Updated 13 July 2011
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| Immigration and asylum appeals allowed under Articles 3 and 8 ECHR |
|---|
| Appeal type |
| Criminal Casework (foreign national prisoners) |
| International Group (Entry clearance) (1) |
| Special Cases (2) |
| Asylum appeals (3)(4) |
| Temporary Migration (5) |
| Permanent Migration - settlement (5) |
| Permanent Migration - decisions under the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2006 (6) |
| Source: Management information sourced from administrative records unless otherwise stated. The data have not been quality assured to the extent of published |
| National Statistics. |
| The figures relate to appeals at the First-tier Tribunal. A proportion of allowed appeals are subsequently successfully challenged by the UK Border Agency |
| and overturned at the Upper Tribunal or Court of Appeal so the figures given above do not necessarily result in the grant of leave to the appellant. The figures do |
| not include appeals allowed subsequent to the First-tier Tribunal. |
| (1) Entry clearance appeal cases allowed for a reason which is not captured in the Rules (for example those allowed on ECHR grounds) are referred to the |
| International Directorate casework team, Referred Casework Unit (RCU) in Croydon. The allowed figure is the number referred to this unit. |
| (2) There is currently an appeal against one of the decisions. Neither of the cases were national security cases. |
| (3) Asylum appeal cases determined and allowed are based on published National Statistics. Source: Control of Immigration: quarterly statistical summary |
| Q1 2011. National Statistics rounded to the nearest 5. |
| (4) In the case of asylum appeals, of the 805 determinations 401 cases were examined to determine the reason for the appeal to be allowed. Of those |
| allowed under Article 3, 2 were for humanitarian reasons and 2 were for medical reasons. The remaining 364 were allowed on asylum grounds. |
| (5) Where data are not available, this is due to data quality |
| (6) Data for January to May 2011. |
| .. Not available. |