B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SHELDON ____________________
____________________
Charlotte Kilroy KC, Michelle Knorr, Isabelle Agerbak (instructed by Leigh Day) for the Claimants Rory Dunlop KC, Sian Reeves, Richard Evans, Paul Erdunast (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendants Hearing dates: 12th December 2025, 26th January 2026 ____________________
HTML VERSION OF APPROVED JUDGMENT ____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Sheldon:
This is a challenge to the way in which the Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs ("the SSFCDA") and the Secretary of State for the Home Department ("the SSHD") (collectively "the Defendants") have dealt with six people living in Gaza (RKC2-7) who wish to be reunited with their father who lives in the United Kingdom (RKC1) (collectively "the Claimants"). It is contended that the Defendants have acted unlawfully in failing to assist RKC2-7 to exit Gaza and transit through the Kingdom of Jordan to the United Kingdom.
The original grounds of challenge were lodged on 31 October 2025, and a "rolled-up" hearing of permission to be followed by a substantive hearing if permission was granted, took place on 12 December 2025. Shortly before that hearing, the Claimants were informed that a submission had been sent to the SSHD on 9 December 2025, for her to consider providing to the Kingdom of Jordan onward travel assurance: that is, a guarantee that if RKC2-7 exit Gaza, they will transit through the Kingdom of Jordan to the United Kingdom irrespective of the outcome of biometric checks that would be undertaken of RKC2-7 in Amman.
No decision had been made on that submission by the time of the rolled-up hearing. The parties did not seek a stay of that hearing. At the end of the hearing, I indicated that if the decision made by the SSHD was negative – that she would not provide the onward travel assurance – and a draft judgment had not been circulated by the time that the SSHD's decision was made, I would hold off from circulating the draft so that a challenge to the negative decision could be made as part of the current proceedings. That is what has occurred.
A decision not to provide onward travel assurance to RKC2-7 was made on 18 December 2025. This decision has been challenged by the Claimants and a further hearing took place on 26 January 2026. In this judgment, I will address the original grounds, and the additional grounds that focus on the decision of 18 December 2025.
I. Factual Background
RKC2-7 were aged between 14 and 23 years old when the claim was lodged. They are the children of RKC1 and his first wife, from whom he is divorced. RKC1 is a recognised refugee in the United Kingdom and suffers from serious mental health problems. RKC1 remarried and his second wife and their twin daughters were assisted to leave Gaza by the SSFCDA in December 2023.
During the war in Gaza, following the attacks by Hamas on 7 October 2023, RKC2-7 have been displaced from their home and separated from their mother. The evidence before the Court is that their physical and mental health has been badly affected by the war and, even since the ceasefire which came into effect on 10 October 2025, they have had limited access to food and clean water, and do not have adequate clothes or shelter from the elements, sanitation or medical attention. RKC1's mental health problems have worsened as a result of his separation from his children and his fears for them.
On 17 April 2024, RKC2-7 applied for entry clearance to the United Kingdom on the basis that they met the requirements of Appendix Family Reunion (Sponsors with Protection) of the Immigration Rules, a route which is also known as 'refugee family reunion'. They resubmitted their applications on 6 February 2025. As part of those applications, RKC2-7 asked to be excused from enrolling their biometrics, and for their visas be approved without enrolling biometrics. Ordinarily, biometric information needs to be provided before visas are granted. Alternatively it was requested that they be given a decision in principle (otherwise known as predetermination) that their visa application would be accepted, which would allow them to negotiate exiting Gaza and for them to provide biometrics in a neighbouring country before travelling to the United Kingdom.
RKC2-7 submitted that they met the criteria for predetermination or biometric excuse as set out in the SSHD's Unsafe Journey Policy. On 16 April 2025, an official (acting on behalf of the SSHD) found that RKC2-7 met the criteria for "predeterminations", but their application for biometric excusal was refused.
In the decision letter, it was stated that:
With respect to "Criterion 4: Travel", it was stated that:
(Emphasis in the original). The decision was confirmed by letter dated 1 April 2025, but actually sent on 1 May 2025: the SSHD was minded to grant entry clearance to RKC2-7, subject to them attending a Visa Application Centre (a "VAC") to enrol their biometric information.
The SSHD's Unsafe Journeys Policy describes biometric enrolment as the recording of an individual's biometric information to seek to verify their claimed identity and to undertake background checks on them. It is explained that:
It is further explained that:
On 14 May 2025, a request was made to the SSFCDA to assist RKC2-7 to leave Gaza. The request was refused on 3 June 2025, on the basis that they did not satisfy the "extended eligibility criteria" for Gaza: that is, an extension to the normal criteria for consular assistance. Further, their circumstances were not regarded as exceptional to warrant a departure from those criteria.
This decision was challenged by the Claimants and their claim (along with claims from five other family units) was case managed behind a similar case which was decided by Chamberlain J on 28 July 2025: R (BEL) v Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs [2025] 4 WLR 103 . In BEL , Chamberlain J allowed one ground of challenge: that the refusal to provide consular assistance was irrational. Chamberlain J rejected a challenge based on Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights ("the Convention"). I shall discuss this judgment further below.
On 30 July 2025, the SSFCDA agreed at a hearing before me that, in light of the judgment in BEL , the decision of 3 June 2025 with respect to RKC2-7 was unlawful and agreed to reconsider the decision by 13 August 2025. On 13 August 2025, the Claimants were informed that the decision had been reconsidered and that the SSFCDA had agreed that "on an exceptional basis the FCDO [Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office] will extend support to the Claimants to try to effect their departure from Gaza." The Claimants were invited to withdraw their claim, which they did on 4 September 2025. The preamble to the Consent Order referred to the agreement made on 13 August 2025 by the SSFCDA.
The decision made by the SSFCDA to extend support to RKC2-7 had been preceded by a submission to the Parliamentary Under-Secretary for the Middle East, Afghanistan and Pakistan, Hamish Falconer MP, on 7 August 2025. The submission was written by Mr Neil Kavanagh, the Deputy Head Consular Assistance at the FCDO. In the submission, Mr Kavanagh highlighted the "range of operational dependencies and requirements necessary to mount a successful operation" to get people out of Gaza and into the United Kingdom. These were explained at paragraph 18 of the submission as:
In the submission, Mr Kavanagh explained that:
(Emphasis added). Mr Kavanagh's recommendation was approved. The Parliamentary Under-Secretary for the Middle East, Afghanistan and Pakistan decided that they "should try to provide support on an exceptional basis to these individuals to leave Gaza, noting advice that this will not be straightforward to deliver."
In an Information Note that Mr Kavanagh prepared on 11 August 2025, which was not shared with the relevant Minister, but set out his thinking at the time, he stated that the FCDO would "work with [Home Office] colleagues to establish their willingness to extend to this cohort the same offer being made on behalf of medevac patients and HMG scholars or other reassurance in the event that they failed biometrics (mindful that there may also be future requests)".
The reference in Mr Kavanagh's submission to the biometric deferral for "medevacs" was to the agreement that had been made by the SSHD to provide biometric excusals for persons in critical medical condition. The Kingdom of Jordan could therefore be assured that this group would be transited through that country to the United Kingdom.
The medevac programme had been announced by the Prime Minister on 24 July 2025. This involved a partnership between the United Kingdom Government and the World Health Organization to identify eligible children who should be evacuated from Gaza to receive medical treatment in the United Kingdom. As of 14 November 2025, 50 critically injured or ill children were evacuated via Jordan to the United Kingdom along with 217 eligible family members.
The rationale for supporting the medevac cohort was explained in a policy paper entitled "UK Government response to the situation in Gaza: policy summary", published by the FCDO on 14 September 2025. This referred to the Prime Minister's statement of 24 July 2025 which had highlighted the worsening situation in Gaza, describing it as a "humanitarian catastrophe". The policy paper stated that:
In his Information Note of 11 August 2025, Mr Kavanagh had also referred to "HMG scholars". This was a reference to a further cohort who were being provided with biometric deferrals to students from Gaza who had been admitted to the Chevening scholarship programme (a programme for Master's degree students in the United Kingdom that had been established in 1983). This cohort was widened to include students who had fully-funded scholarship places to attend universities in the United Kingdom. With respect to this cohort, SSHD agreed to provide the Kingdom of Jordan with assurances of their onward travel. The assurances were subsequently extended to dependants of the scholarship students and to one child of a Chevening scholar. By the end of November 2025, 76 students had been evacuated, and a further 16 were due to arrive shortly.
The rationale for supporting Chevening scholars was to promote United Kingdom foreign policy priorities abroad by creating lasting positive relationships with future leaders, influencers and decision-makers. The support for the fully-funded scholarship students was said to align with the foreign policy objectives of enabling Gaza's brightest students to continue their education and contribute to future reconstruction efforts.
On 14 August 2025, solicitors for the Claimants were written to by officials at the SSFCDA. It was explained that:
The solicitors for the Claimants were notified of the various steps that they needed to take. It was then stated that:
On 12 September 2025, an official of the SSFCDA wrote to the Claimants' solicitors to update them on "progress" following the decision that they would try to effect the departure of RKC2-7 from Gaza. It was confirmed that Israel had granted exit clearance in principle, and they remained in contact with INGO partners who had previously helped. It was explained that:
The Claimants' solicitors wrote to the official at the FCDO on 16 September 2025 to say that their experience had been that "the Home Office can cooperate with the FCDO to act very swiftly to issue visa decisions", and that there was "no prospect" of RKC2-7 failing biometric checks as they have "passed Israeli checks and have never left Gaza. We also understand that the Home Office can also do some further checks on their identities while they await exit, and can examine the passports in advance, as they do when they are minded to issue a biometric excuse."
This was responded to on 19 September 2025. An official at the FCDO wrote to say that "while Israeli clearance has been secured by the FCDO, Jordan sets a requirement that people must depart before their transit permissions expire. We are considering how to approach that requirement (ie for rapid onward travel from Jordan before transit permissions expire) given that your clients' do not yet hold entry clearance for the UK, because it is only after the conclusion of biometric checks that a final decision on their entry clearance applications would be made."
Following further correspondence, a pre-action letter was sent by the Claimants' solicitors on 17 October 2025 complaining about the failure of the SSFCDA to deliver on its agreement to assist RKC2-7 and/or of the failure of the SSHD to take the necessary steps to facilitate their departure from Gaza. The letter referred to the support to exit Gaza that had been provided by the United Kingdom Government to other cohorts: the medevacs and the students. In a response provided on 27 October 2025, the Government Legal Department stated that assurances of onward travel are not provided under the Unsafe Journey Policy , and that a guarantee of onward travel would not be given to the Kingdom of Jordan with respect to RKC2-7.
A judicial review claim was issued on 31 October 2025. On 6 November 2025, I ordered an expedited rolled-up hearing. The initial date for that rolled-up hearing was postponed to 12 December 2025. Detailed Grounds of Resistance were provided on 24 November 2025. A number of submissions to Ministers were disclosed to the Claimants.
The decision-making with respect to RKC2-7 can be discerned from those submissions, and in witness statements provided to the Court by Mr Kavanagh, Sabrina Pickering (an official at the Home Office, where she heads the Crisis Response Hub for Policy, Planning and Operational Engagement) and Dr Christian Dennys-McClure.
Mr Kavanagh has explained that it was always his understanding that the Kingdom of Jordan expected that anyone that the United Kingdom or other countries helped to exit Gaza would leave their territory in a timely manner. Initially, the Kingdom of Jordan agreed to transits on the basis of undertakings that the United Kingdom would use its "best endeavours" to process visas to enable rapid onward travel. The last consular assisted departure that was implemented under these arrangements took place on 27 August 2025, involving a Palestinian mother of three British children travelling with them and her British husband.
In early September 2025, Mr Kavanagh judged that the operating context was changing: more countries were moving people via the Kingdom of Jordan more frequently; there was increasing scrutiny by the Kingdom of Jordan as to whether onward travel had taken place and less time was being given for onward travel; and there was no contingency plan for the event that biometrics or other factors resulted in a visa not being issued and someone becoming 'stuck' in the Kingdom of Jordan, and that the probability of that occurring was increasing.
Mr Kavanagh has stated that on 15 September 2025, he was informed that the Home Office had decided not to provide assurances of onward travel for RKC2-7. Mr Kavanagh explained that he had not personally requested such assurances as he understood that the Home Office was already considering the matter in the round for exceptional cases outside the medevac and student cohorts.
A submission had been made to the Home Secretary on 3 September 2025 by Ms Pickering, in which it was noted that the Kingdom of Jordan "has recently stopped accepting requests for individuals travelling to a third country (i.e. anyone FCDO support is expected to be coming to the UK) without there being assurance of onward travel." Under the heading 'Exceptional requests for Consular Support' reference was made to the cohort of 7 family units, of which RKC2-7 were a part. It was stated that:
(Emphasis added). It was recommended that assurances of onward travel not be provided to those falling within the "Exceptional" cohort, which include the 7 family units of which RKC2-7 were a part.
A reshuffle of Ministers took place before any decision was taken in response to this submission. On 10 September 2025, a further submission was made to the new SSHD by Ms Pickering. The recommendations made in the 10 September submission were that the SSHD should:
The "Considerations" behind the recommendations were set out as follows:
With respect to "Core Consular Cases" – which involves non-British national spouse/partner or children travelling with their British national spouse/partner – it was recommended that "due to the exceptional circumstances in Gaza that you agree, should the Jordanian Government require it, to provide assurance" – which means a guarantee that they would be permitted to enter the United Kingdom.
With respect to what were described as "Exceptional Consular cases" (the cohort that included RKC2-7), it was stated that:
It was recommended, therefore, that the cohort of which RKC2-7 were a part, should not be provided with an assurance of onward travel irrespective of the outcome of any biometric testing.
There was a further section dealing with what were described as "Wider Cohorts":
In an Annex to this submission, Ms Pickering explained what a "predetermination" was under the Unsafe Journeys Policy , distinguishing it from "Biometric excuse":
It was further explained that:
There was a further Annex setting out a "Summary of potential cohorts that we do not recommend providing assurances to as we are unable to assess whether individuals would meet the requirements of the Immigration Rules prior to leaving Gaza." With respect to "Cohort 2", those who are dependants of either British citizens, or those with settled status/granted humanitarian protection in the United Kingdom, it was recognised that they had "an arguably stronger tie to the UK than other cohorts". It was stated, however, that:
By email dated 10 September 2025, it was reported that the SSHD and Alex Norris MP, the Minister of State (Minister for Border Security and Asylum), had reviewed the submissions and were content to accept the recommendations. The decisions made were set out in an email from the Private Secretary to the SSHD on 15 September 2025. The SSHD had agreed to support the departure from Gaza to the United Kingdom of the medevac cohort, the Chevening scholars, and individuals with fully-funded scholarships to a United Kingdom university but not their dependants, as well as existing consular commitments.
With respect to the wider "exceptional" consular cases, then identified as 36 cases, the decision of the SSHD was not to extend assurances "due to the high risk of precedent setting not only for additional groups in Gaza but all other conflict zones, and the risk of undermining the immigration system, in particular the unsafe journey's policy contained within the biometric policy." In addition, the SSHD agreed in principle to a "case-by-case approach" for "Exceptional cases". The email stated that "cases should only be put forward where FCDO confirms that there is pipeline and capacity to support exit; decisions are not for the Home Secretary in isolation".
On 18 September 2025, Mr Kavanagh sent a submission to Parliamentary Under-Secretary Falconer to deal with the issue of "how to deliver FCDO's decision to try to effect the departure from Gaza on an exceptional basis of a number of 'family' cases, where the individuals do not meet the Extended Eligibility Criteria, and who do not benefit from Home Office onward travel assurances?". That is, how to deal with the cohort of which RKC2-7 were a part.
One option was for the British Embassy in Amman to submit to the Kingdom of Jordan "the 36 exceptional family cases that we have already agreed to try to support, setting out explicitly the conditional nature of the entry clearance (which distinguishes these cases from medevacs and scholarship students), and invite them to open a discussion about their red-lines and any arrangements they may be willing to accommodate for contingencies in the event that someone failed biometrics." (Emphasis in the original). The alternative option would be to proceed without assurances, and not submit their names, on the basis that submitting their names could compromise the other cases ( medevac , scholarship students, and consular cases) and for future cases.
Parliamentary Under-Secretary Falconer asked Mr Kavanagh for his view as to the level of risk that the first option would have on the cohorts that were passing through Jordan. Mr Kavanagh's response was:
It was agreed that the Kingdom of Jordan should be spoken to about the other cohort once the move of the medevac and student groups had taken place. A meeting took place on 1 October 2025 with the Jordanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. At that meeting, it was confirmed that a guarantee of onward travel to a defined destination remained a core principle for all countries. Mr Kavanagh explained that the Jordanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs had left open the option to submit a Note Verbale explaining the factual situation with respect to the families (including RKC2-7), but it seemed clear to him that submitting names that were not supported by a guarantee of onward travel would not be successful.
On 7 October 2025, a further submission was sent from Mr Kavanagh to Parliamentary Under-Secretary Falconer with respect to the issue of "how to respond to confirmation that Jordan requires assurances of guaranteed onward travel for anyone we seek to help exit Gaza, where those individuals do not currently benefit from such assurances from the Home Office." It was recommended that the SSFCDA:
As for what decision the SSFCDA should take, one option that was recommended was to inform the exceptional family cases that the SSFCDA was unable to effect their exits via the Kingdom of Jordan at this time. The other option was to use future cross-government discussion of Gaza across all groups to consider the approach to be taken.
In Annexes to the submission of 7 October 2025, it was explained that the Kingdom of Jordan "expects anyone we assist to leave the country within a set period (recently reduced to 72 hours). UK visa processes are therefore integral to enabling all moves. Home Office have agreed that explicit assurances are given to Jordan that medevac and student cohorts will be allowed to travel to the UK, whatever the outcome of their biometric checks. Assurances remove the risk that any of those cases become stranded in Jordan."
The submission continued:
(Emphasis in original).
There was also a description given of "Contingencies". It was stated that:
There was also wording suggested for a "PS-PS Letter": that is, correspondence from one Private Secretary to another. This included the following:
On 16 October 2025, a meeting between Parliamentary Under-Secretary Falconer and the SSFCDA took place. Mr Kavanagh told the Court that at that meeting it was noted that implementation of exit via the Kingdom of Jordan was not possible due to the requirement for a guarantee of onward travel and the policy relating to biometrics. It was concluded that the aim should be to explore other options by which support could be provided, with particular reference to the planned reopening of the Rafah crossing which might not require onward travel guarantees. It was also noted by officials that it remained open to Ministers to exercise discretion in any case across the cohorts, for example, on the basis of any identified particular time sensitivity or other factors. It was also agreed that the affected individuals should be provided with an update, and this was done on 27 October 2025.
Details about the situation of RKC2-7, based on representations made on their behalf, were provided to Parliamentary Under-Secretary Falconer and the SSFCDA on 22 October 2025:
On or about 20 November 2025, the SSFCDA made a request to the SSHD that the Claimants' case be considered individually. The trigger for the request was explained by the Defendants in an application made to the Court to seek a stay of these proceedings on 19 November 2025 (an application which I refused). In that application, it was stated that:
The submission with respect to RKC2-7 was sent by email on 9 December 2025 to, among others, the Private Secretaries to the SSHD and Minister Norris. The submission was addressed to the SSHD as well as to the Minister. The submission stated as follows:
(Emphasis in the original).
There were a number of Annexes to the submission. Annex A was described as "SUBMISSION Wider Cohorts wishing to exit Gaza"; Annex B was described as "overview of individuals with positive predeterminations who have either obtained or are waiting on a decision from FCDO on support to exit". Annex C was a "pen picture" of RKC2-7. This provided the following:
(Emphasis in the original).
An "Information To Note" was sent by email on 16 December 2025 to, among other persons, the Private Secretaries to the Home Secretary and the Minister. The email stated that the attached Information To Note and Annex "which should be read alongside the submission that was attached to this original email chain, in advance of the Home Secretary providing a read-out on her decision." The Annex was the Claimants' skeleton argument for the hearing on 12 December 2025.
The Information To Note addressed a number of points that had arisen at the hearing on 12 December 2025, stating as follows:
(Emphasis in the original).
The decision was actually taken by the Minister and not the SSHD as a result of the latter's illness. A "read-out" of the decision was set out in an email from the Private Secretary to the Minister on 18 December 2025. This stated that:
(Emphasis in the original).
As part of the evidence for the hearing on 26 January 2026, Sarah Crowe, solicitor for the Claimants, provided information about the security checks that were carried out by the Israeli authorities as part of their decision to grant in-principle exit clearance from Gaza for RKC2-7.
Ms Crowe has also updated the Court with respect to the humanitarian situation in Gaza, and the ongoing military operations by Israel in Gaza. With respect to the circumstances of RKC2-7, she says that their situation continues to deteriorate; and RKC1 is said to remain extremely distressed by their situation.
Mr Tom Rutherford, the Deputy Director of the Borders and Aviation Security Unit within the Homeland Security Group in the Home Office, has responded to Ms Crowe's observations about the Israeli security checks. He has stated that:
Also of relevance is a decision taken by the SSHD on or about 25 November 2025 to provide onward travel assurance to a young child in Gaza. The circumstances were that she holds a positive predetermination decision from the Home Office as an eligible dependant of a student. The mother (the sponsor) holds valid permission until 30 January 2030, as a student at a United Kingdom university. The child was not within scope, however, of the process for students and their dependants. The father of the child was declared missing on 7 October 2023 and has been declared deceased; and the child was staying with various relatives temporarily who are unable to care for her long term. The submission made to the SSHD was to recommend assurance drawing on the specific facts of the case, namely: "the age of the child, the fact that they are without parental support in Gaza, the circumstances in which those conditions arose, along with the Immigration Rules being likely met, and that the Foreign Secretary wishes to support their exit."
The Claimants produced Amended Grounds of Claim in advance of the "rolled-up" hearing that took place before me on 12 December 2025. They contended that the Defendants' refusal to exercise the necessary collaboration to achieve the exit of RKC2-7 from Gaza was unlawful for the following reasons:
(1) It was in breach of the Claimants' legitimate expectation, created by the circumstances and terms of the urgent settlement of their claim, that the SSFCDA would take all reasonable steps to assist them to leave Gaza as expeditiously as possible, including, where needed, collaboration with the SSHD.
(2) It was inconsistent with the treatment of other groups of individuals who were provided with onward travel assurances, and there was no proper or rational basis for that inconsistency given RKC2-C7's circumstances, their eligibility for refugee family reunion with RKC1, and the fact they already have the benefit of a Court order after unlawful conduct by the SSFCDA.
(3) It was based on a series of irrational decisions, including the SSHD's decision not to assist a cohort including the Claimants which takes into account a range of irrelevant matters, fails to consider relevant matters, and was procedurally unfair.
(4) It was a breach of the Claimants' rights under Article 8 of the Convention. The SSHD has already decided that the Claimants, who are a refugee father and six children, have a right under Article 8 of the Convention to be reunited. The Defendants, who have a policy and/or practice of working together to achieve the exit from Gaza of certain groups or individuals with a view to their entering the UK, have a positive obligation to facilitate the Claimants' exercise of that Article 8 of the Convention, and have failed to do so without lawful or proper justification.
(5) The Defendants have also unlawfully discriminated against the Claimants in breach of Article 14 of the Convention in conjunction with Article 8 of the Convention, by treating them less favourably than other cohorts they have assisted to leave Gaza. No justification has been offered for the difference in treatment.
In making these claims, the Claimants contend that two decisions were taken:
The September Decision: the decision by the SSHD, following the submission of 10 September 2025, not to provide assurances to the Kingdom of Jordan in various cohorts of cases, one of which included RKC2-7;
The October Decision: the decision of 16 October 2025 not to continue to try to assist RKC2-7 to leave Gaza via the Kingdom of Jordan (the only option for exit at this time) on the basis that it was "not possible" to implement the August decision (to try to effect their departure from Gaza) via the Kingdom of Jordan.
The Parties' Submissions
Miss Kilroy KC appeared for the Claimants along with Michelle Knorr and Isabelle Agerbak. Mr Dunlop KC appeared for the Defendants along with Sian Reeves, Richard Evans and Paul Erdunast.
(i) Breach of legitimate expectation
Ms Kilroy KC contended that the Claimants have a legitimate expectation that the SSFCDA would take all reasonable steps available to her to assist RKC2-7 to leave Gaza as expeditiously as possible, including where needed, in collaboration with the SSHD.
The legitimate expectation arose because (1) the SSFCDA has a practice of collaborating with the SSHD where she agrees to assist individuals to leave Gaza, including by working with the SSHD to allow required visa processes to be completed in a way that also allows individuals to comply with the requirements of countries through which she negotiates transit; and (2) it was known that the Kingdom of Jordan would require an assurance that RKC2-7 would be required to leave the Kingdom of Jordan within a short period; that the SSHD's co-operation would be required to meet that assurance; and (3) the Claimants agreed to settle their claim on this basis.
Ms Kilroy KC contended that the legitimate expectation was breached because the SSFCDA failed to take all reasonable steps available to her. In particular, she failed to ask, let alone, press the SSHD to provide assurances for RKC2-7. Furthermore, the SSFCDA has not acted expeditiously.
Mr Dunlop KC contended that there was no legitimate expectation engendered in the circumstances of this case. All that the SSFCDA promised was to "try and effect [RKC2-7]'s departure from Gaza"; that is, to take reasonable steps, to make a bona fide attempt, to effect their departure from Gaza within a reasonable period of time. Mr Dunlop KC submits that that is too vague to amount to a clear or unambiguous representation to provide any particular form of support. On any view, it did not amount to a promise to offer whatever form of assurance may be required by the Kingdom of Jordan, or to do whatever was necessary to effect their exit from Gaza. It did not amount to a promise that the SSFCDA would give the Kingdom of Jordan a guarantee for onward travel or press the SSHD to give such a guarantee.
In any event, the promise was complied with: the SSFCDA has tried to effect their departure from Gaza and continues to do so. On 19 August 2025, the SSFCDA sought permission from the Israeli authorities for RKC2-7 to leave Gaza and transit through Israel. This permission was obtained on 2 September 2025. The SSFCDA tested the Kingdom of Jordan's position, in a meeting on 1 October 2025, to see if the Kingdom of Jordan might be willing to agree transit without a guarantee of onward travel. The SSFCDA had considered other options for exit, e.g. the possible Rafah re-opening. Moreover, the SSFCDA had recently made a request to the SSHD to consider giving guarantees of onward travel, for all exceptional cases and for RKC2-7 on an exceptional, individual basis. Looking at these matters cumulatively, the SSFCDA has taken all reasonable steps to assist RKC2-7, and has done so expeditiously.
Further, Mr Dunlop KC submitted that it was justified for the SSFCDA not to have made a request of Jordan for RKC2-7 to exit without a guarantee: it was clear that the Kingdom of Jordan would not accept that request.
(ii) Inconsistent treatment with medevac and student cohorts
Ms Kilroy KC submitted that the Defendants have acted irrationally by failing to treat the Claimants' case consistently with the medevac and student cohorts for whom assurances have been given for onward travel. There is no rational justification for the difference in treatment, and the Defendants did not even turn their mind to the question as to whether the difference in treatment was justified.
For the Defendants, Miss Reeves pointed out that there is a high threshold before a finding of irrationality can be made – which is the proper way to characterise the inconsistent treatment argument. It was not satisfied here, as RKC2-7 are not in the same position as the students and the evacuees under medevac : there is no foreign policy objective which outweighs the risks of not providing biometric information, and RKC2-7 have not been vetted by an external organisation. Furthermore, no final decision has yet been taken as to whether the SSHD will offer the guarantee to RKC2-7: the only decision taken so far is that they will not automatically qualify for the guarantee along with the remainder of the cohort of "exceptional consular cases".
Miss Reeves argued that rationality does not require a public authority to "turn their mind" to differences in treatment between groups who are not analogous.
(iii) Irrationality and Procedural Unfairness
Ms Kilroy KC stated that the Claimants did not seek to challenge the September Decision insofar as it applied to the cohort as a whole. Rather, she submits that the September Decision, and the October Decision which was a reiteration of that earlier decision, were irrational because they amounted to, and were treated as, a refusal to offer guarantees of onward travel for RKC2-7, and yet the SSHD was not asked to and did not ever consider the Claimants' individual circumstances.
The decisions not to assist RKC2-7 were taken on a 'cohort' basis, with their circumstances being wrongly conflated with others with whom they share little. Ms Kilroy KC pointed out that RKC2-7 are highly vulnerable children seeking to join a refugee parent; and they have been granted predetermination under the Immigration Rules, and not on exceptional Article 8 grounds outside of the rules. They are therefore distinct from others within the cohort.
When looking at the wider cohort of 'exceptional consular cases' with whom their cases were joined, RKC2-7 are distinct because they had the benefit of the agreement to assist them. Furthermore, as a result of the unlawful decision taken in June 2025 they have lost the opportunity to benefit from the less stringent, best endeavours, approach that was accepted by the Kingdom of Jordan in the past, and have been caught up in the decision-making with respect to the medevac and student groups.
Further, Ms Kilroy KC submitted that the SSHD's conclusion that providing assurances would undermine the Unsafe Journeys Policy is perverse when applied to RKC2-7, in light of the predetermination decision that had been taken in April 2025, and given the fact that assurances have been given to the medevac and student cases. Ms Kilroy KC emphasised the conclusion reached in the predetermination decision that RKC2-7 met the criterion of "Compelling Circumstances" in line with the Unsafe Journeys Policy . Furthermore, the decision not to grant biometric excuse was based on the belief that the SSFCDA would be able to help them and they would be able to travel to Jordan and give their biometrics in Amman.
The October Decision was unlawful in that it was based on the September Decision. Furthermore, Ms Kilroy KC submitted that it was irrational for the SSFCDA to conclude that it was not possible to facilitate exit via the Kingdom of Jordan when (i) the SSHD had not been asked to provide assurances and (ii) the SSFCDA had not submitted an individualised request to the Kingdom of Jordan concerning the Claimants.
Ms Kilroy KC argued that the failure of the Defendants to disclose the September and October Decisions until 24 November 2025 constitutes procedural unfairness. It is submitted that had these decisions been disclosed sooner, the errors in the decision-making process could have been pointed out earlier.
Mr Dunlop KC resisted these submissions on behalf of the Defendants, contending that the decision of 10 September 2025 not to extend the cohorts to whom a guarantee of onward travel would be provided was rational and fair. There was, in Mr Dunlop KC's submission, no decision taken in October 2025.
Mr Dunlop KC explained that the September Decision was a "general policy" decision not to create any new cohorts where all members would receive guarantees of onward travel, and was only the first stage of the process. The second stage was individual consideration which is now taking place. Mr Dunlop KC contended that that is what was envisaged by the September Decision.
Mr Dunlop KC submitted that the only matters that were required to be taken into account on that individual consideration are those which are "so obviously material" that they need to be taken into account: see R (Friends of the Earth) v Heathrow Airport Ltd [2020] UKSC 52 at [119].
Further, Mr Dunlop KC submits that the conclusion of the SSHD that providing guarantees to all "exceptional consular cases" would undermine the Unsafe Journeys Policy was rational. If the decision had been taken to offer guarantees of onward travel to all in this cohort, it would have undermined that policy because (i) it would have created a new, and far broader, group of individuals whom the United Kingdom would be obliged to accept without biometric checks and (ii) it might have led to predeterminations being used as a basis to demand that the United Kingdom Government assist the subject to cross international borders.
With respect to the predetermination decision made in April 2025, which found that the compelling circumstances test was satisfied, Mr Dunlop KC contended that that decision was made by an official and did not bind the SSHD. Mr Dunlop KC stated that a decision to permit someone to come into the United Kingdom without their biometrics being checked had to be made by the SSHD herself, and that was clearly set out in the Unsafe Journeys Policy . That policy was, according to Mr Dunlop KC, never meant to be a lever to pressure the SSFCDA, or to guarantee onward travel, but to help individuals with their decision making when considering an unsafe journey.
Mr Dunlop KC argued that it was not procedurally unfair to fail to inform the Claimants of the September Decision. That decision was a policy decision which covered a broad range of individuals and not just the Claimants. The Claimants have a fair opportunity to challenge the decision at the rolled-up hearing. In any event, the decision did not affect the status quo for the Claimants, as the SSFCDA has continued to support RKC2-7 to try to exit Gaza.
(iv) Breach of Article 8 of the Convention
Ms Kilroy KC submitted that the Strasbourg Court had stated that, under Article 8 of the Convention, there may be a 'positive obligation' to facilitate admission to the United Kingdom of relatives depending on "the particular circumstances of the persons involved" and with respect to refugees "the family unit is an essential right of refugees" and "family reunification is a critical element for permitting persons who have fled persecutions to resume a normal life" (see e.g. Tuquabo-Tekle v Netherlands [2006] 1 FLR at [42]-[44]). In the circumstances of this case, the Defendants' failure to take the steps necessary to assist RKC2-7 to leave Gaza put the United Kingdom Government in breach of this positive obligation.
This included the decision of the SSHD on 10 September 2025 to apply the "Exceptional consular cases" cohort decision to RKC2-7. That decision interfered with their Article 8 rights because it prevented them from exiting Gaza to exercise the rights given to them by the SSHD to enter the United Kingdom. That decision was not "in accordance with the law" and was not justified.
There are also procedural protections to ensure that if family members are at risk visas requests are to be "examined quickly, attentively and with particular diligence", and where needed there is flexibility with respect to biometrics to ensure applications can be made: that was not done here. Further, the withholding of information about the September and October Decisions breached the Claimants' procedural rights.
Ms Kilroy KC submitted that the Article 8 claim in this case is distinguishable from BEL in that the Claimants' case is not about consular assistance, as the SSFCDA has agreed to provide that assistance. The issue in this case is the failure of the Defendants to take steps to implement the agreement to provide assistance and their approach to biometrics.
For the Defendants, Mr Dunlop KC acknowledged that Article 8 of the Convention may impose a positive obligation to admit a person presenting themselves at the United Kingdom border, or to provide them with United Kingdom travel documents which would enable them to enter at the border. However, it cannot extend to an obligation to provide consular assistance: see BEL at [87]; and therefore does not impose a positive obligation to provide the assistance that is sought by RKC2-7: a guarantee to the Kingdom of Jordan of onward travel, regardless of biometrics. That would amount to obliging the United Kingdom Government to undertake international engagement on behalf of an individual outside of its territory, even if not doing so would have an impact on the Article 8 rights of an individual within its territory. Mr Dunlop KC submitted that that would be an improper extension of the jurisdiction of the Convention: Article 1 provides that "The High Contracting Parties shall secure to everyone within their jurisdiction the rights and freedoms defined in Section I of this Convention".
If there was such an obligation it would fall on the SSHD, and whether or not the obligation was complied with depends on the overall outcome, not the process: see R (FWF) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2021] EWCA Civ 88 at [144]. At the time of the "rolled-up" hearing, no individualised decision had been taken with respect to RKC2-7.
In any event, whether or not to offer a guarantee of onward travel was a matter which, Mr Dunlop KC submitted, was well within the margin of appreciation to be accorded to the Government. The decision impacts on national security as well as international relations.
Mr Dunlop KC also contended that the Claimants' procedural rights under Article 8 have not been breached, in any event. The Claimants have been able to make detailed submissions as to the nature of the assistance to be provided to them.
(v) Article 14 of the Convention: discrimination
Ms Kilroy KC submitted that the Defendants had breached Article 14 of the Convention, read with Article 8. RKC2-7 were in a relevantly similar situation to cohorts for whom assistance has been agreed for them to leave Gaza via the Kingdom of Jordan and there was no justification to treat them less favourably.
The difference in treatment was on the ground of 'other status' related to the basis on which RKC2-7 are entitled to enter the United Kingdom, the cohort into which they have been placed by the SSHD, or because they qualify for and have decisions made under the Unsafe Journeys Policy .
Further, RKC2-7 had been treated in the same way as other cohorts when they should have received more favourable treatment in accordance with the principle in Thlimennos v Greece (2001) 31 EHRR 15 .
Miss Reeves, for the Defendants, submitted that the Article 14 claim failed to comply with the principles expounded in R (Stott) v Secretary of State for Justice [2020] AC 51 at [207]. The claim did not fall within the ambit of one of the Convention rights, as the level of consular assistance to be provided is outside the scope of Article 8; RKC2-7 were not in an analogous or relevantly similar situation to the groups they seek to compare themselves with (the medevac and student cohorts); and, in any event, any difference in treatment was justified: no individualised decision had been taken at the date of the hearing, and the cohort decision was objectively justified. That decision was not "manifestly without reasonable foundation".
Discussion
In considering the various grounds of claim that were presented at the hearing on 12 December 2025, it is necessary to make two preliminary findings of fact. First, I have to decide whether the September Decision specifically envisaged that there would be individualised consideration of the Claimants' case and circumstances. Second, I have to decide whether there was only one decision as contended for by the Defendants (the September Decision) or two decisions as contended for by the Claimants (the September and October Decisions).
With respect to the first of these, I find that the September Decision did not envisage that there would be individualised consideration of the Claimants' circumstances. Rather, the decision of the SSHD was that an onward guarantee would not be provided to RKC2-7 as part of a cohort with others. It was not contemplated that there would be an individualised consideration of their cases at some later point. This finding reflects the wording of the submission of 10 September 2025, as well as the message on behalf of the SSHD sent out on 15 September 2025. It also aligns with the subsequent documentation, including the representations made by the Defendants when applying for a stay of these proceedings on 19 November 2025.
The submission of 10 September 2025 made four recommendations. One of these was to "Agree to not provide assurances for Exceptional Consular cases": the cohort which includes RKC2-7 and the other family units who had been offered support by the SSFCDA in light of the BEL judgment. The clear implication from that recommendation was that none of the cases who fell within that cohort, including RKC2-7, would be provided with assurances. The recommendation to "Agree that individual cases can be raised by FCDO, or other governmental departments via FCDO, to be considered on a case-by-case basis", reads as if it was applying to other cases that do not fall within the other categories that have already been referred to. This is also how the substantive text of the submission reads. At paragraph 19 of the submission, the final paragraph of the section dealing with "Exceptional Consular cases", the question asked is whether the SSHD agrees with the recommendation not to support this cohort. The following section, which is described as "Wider cohorts" includes a paragraph (paragraph 23) which refers to "instances where the FCDO, or other departments, are made aware of individual cases where the Foreign Secretary and you, Home Secretary, may wish to exercise discretion". The clear inference of being "made aware of individual cases" is that this does not include cases of which the Ministers were already aware, which would include the "Exceptional Consular cases".
This understanding of the submission is fortified by the email of 15 September 2025 (see paragraph 42 above), which specifically records the SSHD's decision not to extend assurances to the wider "exceptional" consular cases, which refers specifically to the "36" (which includes RKC2-7). In a separate part of the email there is reference to the "case-by-case approach", with no suggestion that this could include any of the "36".
That was clearly the understanding at the time of Mr Kavanagh, as he sent a submission to Parliamentary Under-Secretary Falconer on 18 September 2025 about the "family" cases who were said not to benefit from onward travel assurances. No suggestion is made by Mr Kavanagh that an exception could be made for any of them, or that they could be looked at on a case by case basis.
Any doubt about this was put to rest by the representations made on 19 November 2025, where the Defendants refer to the fact that the SSHD had not been asked to consider the Claimants' cases on an individualised basis, and no suggestion is made that that was something which had been envisaged as happening anyway.
With respect to the second issue – was there an October Decision? – my finding is that there was. The SSHD had made a decision not to offer assurances to RKC2-7 as they fell within the cohort for whom no such assurances would be offered. The SSFCDA then tested with the Jordanian authorities at the meeting of 1 October 2025 whether the offer of assurances was a requirement. If it was not, then there would have been room for the SSFCDA to explore whether a lesser offer would suffice and whether that could be offered by the SSHD. The clear understanding that was given by the Jordanian authorities at the meeting, however, was that an offer of assurances was a requirement. As a result, the SSFCDA decided not to take the matter any further with the Jordanian authorities, or with the SSHD, but instead to look into other options to facilitate the exit of RKC2-7 from Gaza.
Accordingly, I agree that a decision was taken by the SSFCDA on 16 October 2025 (as set out at paragraph 48(5) of the Amended Statement of Facts and Grounds) "not to continue to try to assist the Claimants to leave Gaza via Jordan (the only option for exit at this time) on the basis that it was "not possible" to implement the August decision via Jordan".
Against this background, I shall consider the various grounds of challenge.
(i) Was there a breach of a legitimate expectation?
In my judgment, the Claimants did have a legitimate expectation that the SSFCDA would try to effect the departure of RKC2-7 from Gaza. A promise to that effect was made by the SSFCDA in a letter to the Claimants' solicitors on 13 August 2025, and this was repeated in a further letter on the following day and in the preamble to the Consent Order entered into on 3 September 2025. That promise was clear, unambiguous and devoid of relevant qualification.
The language "try to effect" their departure from Gaza is made up of ordinary English words. The way in which that wording would reasonably have been understood by the Claimants (see Paponette v Attorney-General of Trinidad and Tobago [2012] 1 AC 1 at [30]), in the context in which the promise was made, is that the SSFCDA would make a bona fide attempt to effect their departure in a reasonable time. The urgency of the situation meant that both the SSFCDA and the Claimants understood that there could not be inordinate delay. As for what "try to effect" entailed, that would be by taking reasonable steps.
Looking at the steps that were taken, I find that the SSFCDA did take some steps to try to effect the departure of RKC2-7 from Gaza: permission was sought for RKC2-7 to leave Gaza from the Israeli authorities on 19 August 2025, a matter of days after the promise was made. Permission was obtained on 2 September 2025. Nevertheless, until 20November 2025 or thereabouts, the SSFCDA had not asked the SSHD whether she would be willing to provide the assurances that would be needed for RKC2-7 to exit Gaza and transit through Jordan. This was confirmed in the evidence of Mr Kavanagh.
Whilst the promise made to the Claimants was not to guarantee the exit of RKC2-7, it is difficult to see how the SSFCDA could be said to have tried to effect their exit without even asking the SSHD if she was willing to provide the assurances that the Kingdom of Jordan was now requiring. That was a step which it would have been reasonable for the SSFCDA to take, even if the likely answer of the SSHD (that it would be negative) was contemplated.
I do not consider that there were good reasons for the SSFCDA to depart from the legitimate expectation. There was no suggestion that making the request would cause any particular difficulty for the SSFCDA. Furthermore, the very fact that the request was subsequently made indicates that there were no real obstacles to making such a request.
I find, therefore, that the SSFCDA failed to comply with the legitimate expectation that had been engendered by failing to make the request to the SSHD before 18 November 2025.
(ii) Was the treatment of the Claimants unlawfully inconsistent with the treatment of other groups: medevac and student cohorts?
In my judgment, it was not unlawful to treat the Claimants differently from the other groups - the medevac and student cohorts – when looked at on a cohort basis. There were clear, rational, reasons for the difference in treatment between the cohort of exceptional consular cases and the medevac and student cohorts. As I explain below (see paragraph 193 below), there were foreign policy objectives relevant to the latter cohorts that did not apply to the exceptional consular cases of which RKC2-7 were a part. As for the treatment as an individual unit within that cohort, I deal with that under the following heading.
(iii) Was the treatment of the Claimants irrational, and procedurally unfair?
I consider that the initial failure of the SSHD to consider the individual circumstances of RKC2-7, treating them alongside all of the other exceptional consular cases, was unlawful. Whilst the cohort decision itself could be justified (and this was not actually challenged by the Claimants), it was irrational not to give the Claimants' individual consideration. What the SSHD had done was to apply a policy decision to all of that cohort, and in doing so failed to consider all relevant considerations.
I also consider that it was unlawful to fail to inform the Claimants about the decisions that had been taken. Whilst the Claimants did not have a right to make representations about the decision that had been taken, it was irrational not to inform them of the outcome. The particular circumstances of the Claimants called for them to be told about what decision had been taken in their case or which affected their case: as already discussed, a promise had been made by the SSFCDA to try to effect their departure from Gaza; and there was no rational reason to keep from them the fact that departure would not be taking place, especially as that resulted from a decision that had been taken by the SSHD.
(iv) Was there a breach of Article 8 of the Convention
I do not consider that the Claimants' Article 8 rights were engaged in the decisions, or omissions, of the Defendants in this case. Whilst the facilitation of the Claimants' family reunion could give rise to positive obligations under Article 8 on the part of the United Kingdom, those obligations would not be unlimited. They would not, in my judgment, extend to the provision of onward travel guarantees to the Kingdom of Jordan which is the focus of the Claimants' challenge. The reason why onward travel guarantees were not provided to the cohort of whom RKC2-7 were a part involved the SSHD's decision-making around biometric information and risks to national and border security, but the substantive assistance that was being sought by RKC2-7 was that the United Kingdom Government would guarantee to the Kingdom of Jordan that they would be permitted to travel on to the United Kingdom whatever the result of their biometric enrolment.
In BEL , Chamberlain J held that positive action in the form of diplomatic and consular assistance to persons outside of the territory of the United Kingdom was outwith the scope of the Convention, and I see no reason to depart from Chamberlain J's analysis, or to distinguish it on the facts of the present case.
BEL was concerned with whether the United Kingdom government was obliged under Article 8 to provide consular or diplomatic assistance to individuals residing in Gaza but wished to be reunited with family members lawfully resident in the United Kingdom. In the course of his judgment, Chamberlain J explored the contours of the Convention principles as they applied to assisting an individual to exit a third country.
I consider that this analysis is equally applicable here. The positive obligation that the Claimants call for would apply extra-territorially as it applies to the treatment of non-British nationals resident in Gaza. Furthermore, the positive obligation that the Claimants call for would involve the provision of diplomatic and consular assistance involving the Kingdom of Jordan. Whether or not to provide onward travel assurances to the Kingdom of Jordan with respect to RKC2-7 is not the same or substantially similar to the provision of "travel documents to enable an individual to get to the border" with the United Kingdom: an example provided by Chamberlain J in BEL as falling within the positive obligation under Article 8.
If I am wrong about this, and Article 8 did give rise to a positive obligation on the United Kingdom to at least consider providing the onward travel guarantee with respect to RKC2-7, then I would have found that the failure even to consider the individual circumstances of the Claimants would have been a contravention. Whilst the decision not to grant onward travel guarantees to all of those within the cohort could be justified, there is no proper reason, let alone, objective justification for failing to consider individual cases within that cohort.
(v) Was there a breach of Article 14 of the Convention?
I do not consider that there was any breach of Article 14 of the Convention in the failure to offer onward travel guarantees to RKC2-7. The primary reason for dismissing this aspect of the challenge is that Article 14 only applies to matters which fall within the ambit of a Convention right. I have already explained that the failure to offer onward travel guarantees does not fall within Article 8. Accordingly, Article 14 has nothing to bite on.
If, however, Article 8 was engaged in some way, then I would have found that Article 14 had been contravened by failing to consider whether to provide onward travel assurances for the family unit of RKC2-7, rather than treating them as part of a cohort with other exceptional consular cases.
As I will explain at paragraph 191 below, I consider that the "other status" requirement of Article 14 was met, and RKC2-7 are in an analogous or relevantly similar situation to the groups they seek to compare themselves with (the medevac and student cohorts). Furthermore, the failure to take an individualised decision with respect to the family unit of RKC2-7 could not be objectively justified. This is demonstrated by the fact that an individualised decision has now been taken.
II. The 18 December 2025 decision
Following the decision of 18 December 2025 to refuse to provide the Kingdom of Jordan onward travel assurances with respect to RKC2-7, the Claimants produced an amendment to the Grounds. They contend that:
(1) the refusal decision is irrational; it fails to take into account properly or at all the SSHD's previous decisions of April and May 2025, and the Defendants' obligations under Article 8 of the Convention, and is inconsistent with them; it also fails to take into account other relevant matters in assessing compelling circumstances, the public interest, and does not justify the difference in treatment with others who were provided with onward travel assurances;
(2) the decision does not comply with the Defendants' positive obligation to facilitate the Claimants' exercise of their Article 8 Convention rights to family reunion; and
(3) the decision discriminates against the Claimants in breach of Article 14 of the Convention in conjunction with Article 8 of the Convention, by treating them less favourably than others who have been provided with onward travel assurances, without proper justification.
Submissions
(i) Irrationality
Miss Kilroy KC, for the Claimants, accepted that the reasons for refusing to grant onward travel assurance were to be found in the arguments presented in the submissions sent by officials on 9 December 2025, and supplemented by the Information To Note on 16 December 2025. Those reasons, however, needed to be viewed with great caution as it was evident that, in the submissions, there was an attempt to shore up the earlier decision-making about the cohort and this was something that the courts have repeatedly warned against: see R v Secretary of State for the Home Department ex p Turgut [2001] 1 All ER 719 at 729G; and R (Caroopen) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2017] 1 WLR 2339 at [94]-[95], and [99]-[100]. There was, at least, a real risk that the decision in December 2025 had not been approached with an "open mind".
Miss Kilroy KC submitted that there were a number of obvious flaws in the submissions, which therefore fed into the decision. First, there was no acknowledgment that the SSHD has an obligation under Article 8 of the Convention to facilitate the reunion of the Claimants in the United Kingdom. It had already been accepted by the official in April and May 2025 (decisions which are treated to have been made by the SSHD herself under the Carltona principle) that the Claimants' circumstances were sufficiently compelling under Article 8 of the Convention to grant a positive predetermination under the Unsafe Journey Policy , and it was accepted that the Claimants meet the criteria for refugee family reunion in the Immigration Rules which are based on Article 8 of the Convention. Powerful reasons would, therefore, be needed to refuse the onward assurance guarantees given that the Claimants can only exercise their accepted Article 8 rights if those guarantees were granted. No such reasons were provided.
Second, the central reason given for refusing the onward travel assurances was that the Claimant's circumstances were "not considered sufficiently compelling to outweigh the border/national security interests in requiring biometrics before a decision is taken to allow travel to the UK". However, this was inconsistent with the decision in April 2025; the submission of 9 December 2025 wrongly advised that a decision to refuse would not be "inconsistent" with that decision (see last sentence of footnote 1) and that error was not corrected by the Information To Note of 16 December 2025; and not only should the Minister have taken into account that previous decision, but any departure from it required reasons to be provided.
Third, the Minister had erred in his assessment of the application in the Claimants' case of the public interest in biometrics. There was no acknowledgment that, as a result of the decision in April 2025, the identities of RCK2-7 had been accepted, and further checks could be conducted on their passports before a decision is taken to grant onward travel assurances, so that any risk to national security and the public interest will be significantly reduced.
Further, Miss Kilroy KC submitted that it was irrational for the submission to state that "independent assurances" had been carried out by universities and the World Health Organisation which would mitigate the biometric risk in respect of the medevac and student cohorts. The independent assurances of the universities and the WHO went to identity and their assessment as to eligibility for meeting the criteria under the Immigration Rules (for the students) or policy (for the medevac cohort). In the Claimants' case, by contrast, the SSHD had carried out that assessment: there had been identity checks and then further checks of their biographical details. Furthermore, RKC2-7 had offered for their passports to be checked before exiting Gaza, which would provide more assurance to the SSHD than was provided by the medevac or student cohorts.
Whilst the Minister relied on the fact that the medevac and student cases had "foreign policy" objectives, Miss Kilroy KC contended that there had been no consideration of the foreign policy objective in the Claimants' case: that is, adhering to the United Kingdom's obligations imposed by international and domestic human rights law.
It was also irrational to discount, or downplay, the fact that RKC2-7 had passed stringent Israeli checks when concluding there was a risk to national security because they come from 'a territory where terrorists operate'. Miss Kilroy KC observed that it was not pointed out in the submission that no investigation had been carried out as to what the Israeli checks include, or that those checks do provide some assurance. The evidence before the Court, and which could have been shared in the submissions, was that the Israeli authorities carry out an extensive array of checks using a whole range of surveillance devices. Miss Kilroy KC suggested that it was far-fetched to think that the Israeli authorities would fail to identify that someone who was being considered to exit Gaza was a terrorist given the range of surveillance and checks that they applied.
Further, there was no acknowledgment that RKC2-7 pose a lowered risk, especially when compared with student cohorts, because they are family members of individuals living in the United Kingdom all of whom have given biometrics and had been subject to security checks, and that the family unit includes two minors. In addition, by the time of the decision more than 350 individuals had been admitted (via the medevac and student cohorts) without biometric checks and there had been no security risk posed by any of them. This was relevant to the assessment of the level of risk that might otherwise be the case, in the context of the checks made by the Israeli authorities.
Fourth, Miss Kilroy KC pointed out that the Information To Note accepted that it was relevant that the initial (and unlawful) decision of the SSFCDA to refuse to provide consular assistance meant that RKC2-7 had lost the opportunity to leave Gaza when no onward travel assurance was required by the Kingdom of Jordan, but there was no mention of this in the submission. Further, whilst the Information To Note accepted that it was relevant that the Claimants qualified for refugee family reunion under the Immigration Rules, it was said that this was of "limited weight" and yet the same factor was relied upon when the SSHD gave an onward travel assurance to a young child on 3 December 2025. There was also criticism of the assessment that "relatively limited weight" should be attached to the point made at the earlier hearing that the positive predeterminations for RKC2-7 was issued under the Immigration Rules rather than "LOTR" (Leave outside the immigration rules). That point was significant as it distinguished RKC2-7 from others in the cohort, was the same as for the young child who was granted onward travel assurance, and was a point of importance. The Courts had repeatedly said that weight should be given to the Immigration Rules which were, "statements of the practice to be followed, which are approved by Parliament, and are based on the Secretary of State's policy as to how individual rights under article 8 should be balanced against the competing public interests", per Lord Reed in R (Agyarko) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department , [2017] 1 WLR 823 at [46].
Fifth, a major concern expressed in the submission was that of setting a precedent for other predetermination cases, and that there may be pressure to provide onward travel assurances in other locations if the assurance was made for RKC2-7. There was no recognition that the situation in Gaza was unique: the borders were closed and the only means to exit is with governmental support.
Sixth, there was no real individualised assessment of risk carried out in the case of RKC2-7. The generic risks were presented, and no exercise was carried out to see whether that risk might be reduced in their particular circumstances. This was contrary to the approach that had been applied by Lieven J in R (JZ) v Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs [2022] EWHC 771 (Admin) , in a case concerning a failure to defer biometrics. In that case, a generic harm had been applied when on the specific facts there was "no risk" that the claimant a known and documented individual would be rejected for Leave Outside the Rules and then present himself again in a different guise. In the instant case, the SSHD had not identified anything that was in reality capable of being a problem that would be picked up by the biometric check.
Seventh, the submissions had improperly described the circumstances of RKC2-7 which should have been weighed in the balance against the residual risk: it was wrong to say that the adults could meet the care needs of the minor children. It was wrong to say that they had access to humanitarian aid.
Miss Kilroy KC also submitted that the Minister who actually took the decision did not have regard to all the documentation that was presented to him. No reference was made in the "read out" of his decision to the Minister considering Annex B to the 9 December 2025 submission: this concerned the young child who was granted onward travel assurances (see paragraph 65 above). Miss Kilroy KC contended that the factors affecting the young child and the Claimants were the same, apart from the age of the child, and this should have been drawn to the Minister's attention.
Miss Kilroy KC also drew the Court's attention to the wording in paragraph 18 of the 9 December 2025 submission. This made it clear that the decision would be a cohort decision, as it implied that if onward travel assurance was provided to this family group it would also need to apply to those others who held positive predetermination decisions. Furthermore, Miss Kilroy KC pointed out that it was stated in that paragraph that if onward travel assurances were granted, "we would look to make representations to FCDO Ministers making it clear that they should not agree to provide consular support where there is a dependency on Home Office assurances without consulting with Home Office Ministers." It was striking that what was not said was that at the time when the offer was made to provide consular support, Home Office assurances were not required.
When asked whether the decision maker could have looked at each of RKC2-7 individually rather than as a group, Miss Kilroy KC stated that this could have been done in principle. However, the evidence was that they needed to come together, and so on the facts of this case they had to come together.
These contentions were resisted by the Defendants. Mr Dunlop KC submitted that there was no basis to the suggestion that the decision made on 18 December 2025 was not made with an open mind. This was not a decision which was taken in relation to the same issue as the 10 September 2025 decision: that was a cohort decision, and this was a decision based on consideration of the individual circumstances of the Claimants. Further, Mr Dunlop KC invited the Court to apply a benevolent approach to the wording of the submission in accordance with the observations of Stuart Smith J in Stagecoach East Midland Trains Ltd v Secretary of State for Transport [2020] EWHC 1568 (TCC) at [73].
With respect to the status of the 16 April 2025 decision, Mr Dunlop KC submitted that any errors or ambiguity in the final sentence of footnote 1 of the 9 December 2025 submission ("We therefore do not consider that our recommendation on onward travel assurance is inconsistent with that decision") were resolved by the Information To Note of 16 December 2025. Moreover, it was open for the Minister to take a different view than the official, because a decision to depart from the biometric policy is a decision for a Minister to make, not an official. The Minister is part of the democratically elected Executive, and is personally accountable to Parliament for decisions on border security. The basis for the Minister's decision is set out in the recommendations, and in particular at paragraph 15 of the submissions. There was no need for a written decision to have been provided by the Minister.
Mr Dunlop KC submitted that there were no mandatorily relevant considerations that had not been taken into account by the Minister when taking the decision. Whilst there is an acceptance that RKC2-7 are the children of RKC1, without biometric checks there is still a risk of 'alias travel' (that is, someone else using RKC2-7's identities to travel to Jordan and then to the United Kingdom). There is also still a risk that their fingerprints would reveal information that name checks alone cannot reveal: one or more of them may have links (including under an alias) to terrorist activities, serious criminality or an adverse immigration history.
Mr Dunlop KC countered Miss Kilroy KC's criticism of the sentence in paragraph 13 of the 9 December 2025 submission that RKC2-7 do not have "independent assurance" in contrast to the medevac and student cohorts. First, he said that this was an additional factor and so not decisive. Second, in any event, the contrast with those cohorts was rational: the checks performed by the WHO and the universities of the individuals that they sponsor provides an additional layer of reassurance. Further, for those groups the risk of providing onward travel assurances was outweighed by the foreign policy objectives.
Mr Dunlop KC submitted that there were no errors in the Minister's assessment of the compelling circumstances. It was factually accurate for the 9 December 2025 submission to state that the "family unit consists of adult males and females who will be able to support the day-to-day care of younger teenage children". What was being said was consistent with RKC1's own evidence. Further, they are a family which includes adults who can provide care to their minor siblings by, for example, seeking out such food as is available. Further, there was evidence that they had access to humanitarian aid, via charities linked to mosques and churches.
The distinction between this family unit and the situation of the young child who had been granted onward travel assurance had been appropriately pointed out in the 9 December 2025 submission to the Minister: the age of the child was referred to and, as she was very young, it was unlikely that she posed any risk in the United Kingdom.
Further, Mr Dunlop KC argued that there was nothing improper for the submission of 9 December 2025 to make reference to other individuals who held predetermination, or that the SSHD may come under pressure to provide onward travel assurances in other situations if such assurances were granted to RKC2-7.
(ii) Breach of Article 8 of the Convention
Miss Kilroy KC submitted that the decision to refuse to give the Kingdom of Jordan onward travel guarantees for RKC2-7 clearly interfered with and violated the Claimants' Article 8 rights. A decision had already been taken that the family should be reunited. The decision was neither in accordance with the law, nor proportionate. The Claimants' circumstances were exceptionally compelling – reference was made to the mental health of RKC1, the dire circumstances experienced by his children in Gaza and the impact on their health, as well as their ability to continue their relationship with their father. It was submitted that powerful public interest reasons would be needed to justify the extreme interference with their Article 8 rights caused by their continued separation; and such reasons were not present here. Miss Kilroy KC repeated a number of points made under the irrationality ground, including that the SSHD had already accepted the Claimants' compelling circumstances when making the decision in April 2025. There was no reasonable justification to depart from this decision.
Miss Kilroy KC submitted that the public interest was protected somewhat by a number of matters: (i) the identity of RKC2-7 had already been established, and could be corroborated by making full biographical and passport checks prior to their exit from Gaza. I was told that their passports were already in Ramallah, and so outside of Gaza. (ii) Israel had already approved their exit from Gaza and transit through Israel in circumstances where Israel uses tools of mass-surveillance in Gaza, so that any risks related to terrorism activity in the region would have been identified. RKC2-7 had never left Gaza, so there was no real prospect of their data being held or showing risk to the public interest in biometric checks. In any event, they will give biometrics and full checks can be made before their travel to the United Kingdom and mitigation steps can be taken. It was also notable that biometrics had been waived in the medevac and student cases where the security risks were no less, but probably higher, than those posed by RKC2-7.
Miss Kilroy KC also submitted that there was also no real concern about setting a precedent as the Claimants' case has many distinguishing features: (i) an agreement was made to assist them as part of an order from the Court; (ii) their need to exit with onward travel assurances had arisen as a result of the delay caused by the unlawful decision made by the SSFCDA; (iii) they have the right to enter the United Kingdom under the Immigration Rules; and (iv) the circumstances in Gaza are unique.
For the Defendants, Mr Dunlop KC disputed that Article 8 was engaged at all, but if it was it could only be as a positive obligation to facilitate reunion. The decision to refuse onward travel assurances did not violate the Claimants' Article 8 rights. First, even if Article 8 was engaged, this would be by way of a positive obligation to facilitate reunion, and the 'in accordance with the law' requirement does not apply in a positive obligation case: see R (FWF) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2021] EWCA Civ 88 at [143]-[144].
Second, considerable reliance was placed on the recent decision of the Court of Appeal in IA v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2025] EWCA Civ 1516 , where the Court stated (in obiter remarks, having found that the relationship between the applicants did not give rise to Article 8 rights in any event) that considerable weight should be given to the SSHD's policy on immigration; that was a question of respect for the United Kingdom's laws and democratic processes. Further, there was no resettlement policy for Gaza and, in the absence of such a policy, the fact that an individual in Gaza is at risk and suffering from the consequences of living in the warzone of Gaza should not "distort the balance" or outweigh immigration policy.
In the instant case, the relevant immigration policy is the general biometric policy not to admit foreign nationals into the United Kingdom unless they have provided biometrics which have been checked. Applying this policy, an application for entry clearance is not valid until the individual has provided biometrics. RKC2-7 have not met the validity requirements of the Immigration Rules as they have not provided biometric information and that requirement had not been waived, and there may be other aspects of the Rules – such as the suitability criteria – which might not be met. Every exception to the biometric policy carries risk to national and border security, and that is especially so here where some of the Claimants are adults living in an area where there has been significant terrorist activity. The biometric policy should, according to Mr Dunlop KC, be given very strong weight: it is a policy which protects national and border security. Those are issues that are quintessentially for the democratically elected executive, not the courts.
Mr Dunlop KC addressed the more granular points made by Miss Kilroy KC. Full biographical and passport checks do not provide the same level of protection as biometric checks: they would not identify whether there is a record of the fingerprints of RKC2-7, or of persons holding themselves out to be them, under a different name. It cannot be said that if RKC2-7 posed national security risks in the United Kingdom, they would have been refused permission by Israel to transit through their territory. Even if they gave biometrics when they got to Jordan, the United Kingdom would still be obliged to allow them to enter the country whatever risks were highlighted and, given the situation in Gaza, there was not a likelihood that these risks could be mitigated by returning them there. Whilst it was correct that risks were taken for the medevac and scholar cohorts, it had been decided that the risks were outweighed by foreign policy benefits which do not apply to the Claimants.
Mr Dunlop KC submitted that the decision to refuse onward travel assurances struck a fair balance between the interests of the State and the interests of the Claimants. This was within the range of decisions open to the Minister in the field of border and national security, and the Court did not have the institutional competence to second-guess this decision.
(iii) Discrimination contrary to Article 14 of the Convention
Miss Kilroy KC submitted that there was a violation of Article 14 of the Convention applying the well-known taxonomy in In re McLaughlin [2018] 1 WLR 4250 at [15]: that is (1) Do the circumstances "fall within the ambit" of one or more of the Convention rights? (2) Has there been a difference of treatment between two persons who are in an analogous situation? (3) Is that difference of treatment on the ground of one of the characteristics listed or "other status"? (4) Is there an objective justification for that difference in treatment?
Miss Kilroy KC argued that the Claimants' circumstances brought them within the ambit of Article 8 of the Convention. There was a difference of treatment between them and others in a relatively similar situation who had been granted onward travel assurance: the young child, but also the medevac patients and the students. They fell within the grounds of "other status", an element of Article 14 which is to be given a generous meaning: they had refugee status, had predeterminations and had had consular assistance, but did not fall within the rules applying to the students or the medevac patients. The difference in treatment was not justified. The objectives in their case – to uphold their Article 8 rights – was at least as important as the objectives in the other cases; and the situation of RKC2-7 had actually been prejudiced by the hardening of Jordan's position given the numbers transferring through that country for the medevac and student schemes.
Against this, Miss Reeves, for the Defendants, submitted that RKC2-7 were not in an analogous position to the medevac or student cases. The provision of assurances to those cohorts was a decision taken and agreed across the United Kingdom Government. The medevac cohort consisted of critically ill or injured children selected by the WHO. Supporting them assists the WHO in a vital mission. As for the students, providing onward travel assurances for this cohort supported a foreign policy objective that was not engaged by RKC2-7: that is, to enable Gaza's brightest students to continue their education and contribute to future reconstruction efforts.
Discussion
I do not consider that the decision of 18 December 2025, refusing to give onward travel guarantees for RKC2-7 was unlawful in any of the ways contended for by the Claimants. In large part, I agree with the submissions made on behalf of the Defendants.
(i) Was the decision of 18 December 2025 irrational?
First, the decision was not irrational . The reasons for refusing to grant onward travel assurance were to be found in the arguments presented in the submissions sent on 9 December 2025, and supplemented by the Information To Note on 16 December 2025, as no independent reasons were provided by the Minister, and so those reasons have to be examined and evaluated against public law and Convention law principles.
I do not consider that the submissions and Information To Note need to be read with great caution, however. My reading of those documents is that they were a genuine attempt by the relevant official to set out the background and to provide the Minister with material to make the decision with respect to onward travel assurance. I do not consider that these documents were designed to shore up the earlier decisions. Rather, those earlier decisions were provided as background and context. Furthermore, whilst a strong recommendation was made as to the outcome that the official considered the Minister should reach, the alternative decision was not ruled out. There was nothing in the materials to suggest that the Minister should not approach the matter with an open mind, and no other evidence to suggest that he had not approached the matter in that way.
As for the specific flaws contended for by Miss Kilroy KC, it is correct that the submission makes no mention of the SSHD's obligation under Article 8 of the Convention to facilitate the reunion of the Claimants in the United Kingdom but, for the reasons already provided and discussed further below, that obligation did not extend to the provision of onward travel assurances to the Kingdom of Jordan. There was also no requirement to have, or to provide, powerful reasons to refuse onward guarantees. As the obligation under Article 8 did not need to be referred to, there was also no error in failing to refer in the submissions to the requirement, as a "foreign policy" objective, that the United Kingdom should adhere to its obligations imposed by international and domestic human rights law.
It was also open to the Minister to refuse to make the onward travel assurances despite what had been decided by the official when making the predetermination decision in April 2025. That decision was properly drawn to the Minister's attention, and it was not an error to state that a decision to refuse would not be "inconsistent" with that earlier decision. It is clear from a perusal of the Unsafe Journeys Policy that an official cannot make a decision to waive the enrolment of biometric information without involving a Minister.
Thus, where there is a request to excuse the requirement for an individual to attend a Visa Application Centre to enrol their biometric information, the Unsafe Journeys Policy provides that:
(Emphasis added). Similarly, the Unsafe Journeys Policy provides that:
(Emphasis Added).
Accordingly, even if an official considers that there are "compelling circumstances" to justify a predetermination decision, the ultimate decision-maker with respect to the waiver of biometrics is a Minister.
It was not, in my judgment, an error for the Minister not to acknowledge that, as a result of the decision in April 2025, the identities of RCK2-7 had been accepted, and further checks could be conducted on their passports before a decision was taken to grant onward travel assurances so that any risk to national security and the public interest will be significantly reduced. One of the key reasons for the use of biometrics is to assure the SSHD that the person who is seeking to enter the United Kingdom is the person that they claim to be. A passport check cannot guarantee that, as there is always the possibility of so-called alias 'alias travel': someone else using RKC2-7's identities to travel to the Kingdom of Jordan and then to the United Kingdom.
I do not agree with Miss Kilroy KC that it was an error for the submission to state that "independent assurances" had been carried out by universities and the World Health Organisation which would mitigate the biometric risk in respect of the medevac and student cohorts. Third parties had carried out identity checks of those who would be coming to the United Kingdom which were different to the checks that had been carried out on RKC2-7, and could provide some mitigation of risk. As explained in the witness statement of Sabrina Pickering:
In any event, it is clear from the way in which this point was expressed that it was an "additional" matter for distinguishing RKC2-7 from the student and medevac cohorts. There is no basis to suggest that a different decision would have been reached with respect to RKC2-7 had this "additional" matter not been present. The key distinction was that there were foreign policy objectives with respect to the student and medevac cohorts that were regarded by His Majesty's Government as outweighing the security risks that those cohorts otherwise posed. In the circumstances, therefore, even if there was an error in placing any reliance on the checks for the medevac and student cohorts, that error was not material, or it was highly likely that the same outcome would have been achieved had the error not been made: see section 31(2A) of the Senior Courts Act 1981.
With respect to the fact that RKC2-7 had passed Israeli checks, there was no public law error in failing to point out in the submissions what those checks were. The decision-maker did not need to know the detail of those checks so as to reach a decision. Furthermore, it was implicit in the submissions that the Israeli checks did provide some assurance as that is reflected in paragraph 13 where it was stated that "In addition, . . . there is no independent assurance undertaken, over and above the Israeli clearance process".
The submissions specifically addressed the argument that there was "no real prospect" of RKC2-7 failing UK biometric tests because they have obtained Israeli exit clearances. At paragraph 14, it was explained that UK biometric checks differ from the Israeli biographic checks, and the reasons for refusing to allow entry to the UK differ from the reasons that Israel would refuse exit from Gaza. Further, it was said that "Israel will focus on their own national security assessment rather than HMG national and border security risks". This is a judgment for which a considerable degree of deference must be shown, and it is not possible for the Court to gainsay as there is some rational basis for it.
It was not, in my judgment, an error for the submissions to fail to acknowledge that RKC2-7 pose a lowered risk, especially when compared with student cohorts. The basis for this contention is not made out in the evidence. Further, the fact that by the time of the decision a large number of individuals had been admitted without biometric checks and no security risk had been posed did not mean that it could be inferred that the same would apply to RKC2-7, or that the assessment of risk was irrational.
The fact that the Information To Note accepted that RKC2-7 had lost the opportunity to leave Gaza when no onward travel assurance was required, made good the absence of this point in the earlier submissions. The recommendation that "limited weight" should be ascribed to the fact that the Claimants qualify for refugee family reunion under the Immigration Rules, and that "relatively limited weight" should be attached to the point made at the hearing on 12 December 2025 that the positive predetermination decision for RKC2-7 was issued under the Immigration Rules rather than "LOTR" (Leave outside the immigration rules), does not make the decision irrational. It is a matter for the decision-maker what weight to ascribe to different factors, and that should only be interfered with when the weighting is itself irrational. That is not the case here.
It was not an error for the submission to observe that providing the onward travel assurance could set a precedent for other predetermination cases, and from other locations than Gaza. As a matter of principle, it is entirely rational for a submission to inform the decision-maker of the consequences of their decision. Furthermore, the way in which the "precedent" point was made was not as a warning not to make that decision. The observations that are complained about were set out in the submission at paragraph 18. That paragraph expressly referred to the fact that it was "open" to the Minister to provide onward travel assurance to this family group on the basis of their circumstances, but then sought to explain how that decision could be justified as an "exceptional approach" and might possibly be limited to "this family and others who hold valid positive predetermination".
I reject the contention that there was no real individualised assessment of risk carried out in the case of RKC2-7. The submission to the Minister pointed out that "The family units consists of individuals who are of an age where they could conceivably fail biometrics and they are from a territory where terrorists operate". Whilst that description could apply to others, it does not mean that the assessment was not pertinent to RKC2-7 as well. It cannot be ruled out that something untoward would be picked up by the biometric check.
I disagree with the contention that the submissions had improperly described the circumstances of RKC2-7, and therefore failed to weigh up the relevant considerations. What was said was consistent with the evidence that had been presented by RKC1. Whilst the situation for RKC2-7 in Gaza remained extremely difficult, the family unit consists of both male and female adults who have some ability to support the care of younger teenage children. Furthermore, humanitarian aid and medical care was available.
As for the contention that the Minister did not have regard to all the documentation that was presented to him, the evidential basis for this was that the "read out" of the Minister's decision referred merely to the "Submission" but not to the Annexes thereto, but did refer to the Information To Note "and Annex A" to that document. I do not consider that this gives rise to the inference that the Minister was not presented with the Submission and the Annexes thereto, or that he did not read them. It ignores the fact that the email which attached the Information to Note specifically stated that it should be read alongside the Annex to that document (this was the Claimants' skeleton argument for the hearing on 12 December 2025), and so this explains why the Annex to that document was explicitly referred to in the "read out". That does not mean that the Annexes to the submission were not provided to the Minister or read by him.
In any event, some of the content of Annex B was specifically referred to in the submission. Paragraph 17 of the submission stated that assurance had already been provided to "a young child who meets the student dependant rules" and the details of this were contained in Annex B. Accordingly, even if the Minister only had regard to the material contained in the submission, and not to Annex B, the submission informed him that an assurance had been provided to a "young child who meets the student dependant rules". On its face, the Minister could discern that there were distinctions from RKC2-7: first, that an assurance had been provided to one person and not a family unit of six persons; that the assurance had been provided to a "young child", whereas the youngest of RKC2-7 was 14; and the "young child" was associated with a student, where different policy considerations applied.
With respect to paragraph 18 of the submission of 9 December 2025, this made it clear that the Minister could decide to provide onward travel assurance to this family group on the basis of their circumstances. In doing so, it was entirely rational for the submission to set out the consequences of doing so: that this would set a precedent, but it was possible that this could be limited to others who held positive predeterminations. There was also nothing irrational about the observation that if onward travel assurances were granted, "we would look to make representations to FCDO Ministers making it clear that they should not agree to provide consular support where there is a dependency on Home Office assurances without consulting with Home Office Ministers." That was a matter of inter-governmental mechanics which was a proper basis for the relevant Ministers to discuss.
Miss Kilroy KC contends that paragraph 18 should have referred to the fact that at the time when the offer was made to provide consular support, Home Office assurances were not required. That omission was corrected, however, in the Information To Note which referred to this point as part of its explanation of the Claimants' case at the hearing on 12 December 2025.
Whilst it is correct that it would have been open to the Minister to have looked at each of RKC2-7 individually, that was not what was being asked of the Minister and did not form part of the claim that had been made. The representations that were advanced were that the family unit needed to come together, and so it was not irrational for them to be considered as a unit.
(ii) Did the decision of 18 December 2025 contravene Article 8 of the Convention?
In my judgment, there was no breach of Article 8 of the Convention in the decision to refuse to provide onward travel assurance. That is a decision which falls outside of the scope of Article 8 for the reasons explained at paragraphs 120-123 above. In any event, even if the decision fell within Article 8, I would have found that no contravention had occurred.
Even if had found that there was a public law error associated with the decision, which I have not, such an error would not mean that the decision was not "in accordance with the law". In FWF [2021] EWCA Civ 88 , it was pointed out by Elisabeth Laing LJ at [143-4] that the "in accordance with the law" criterion would not apply to the discharge of a positive obligation under article 8 – which is what the present case would involve.
Furthermore, any breach of Article 8 would have been justified. The basis for the decision was the SSHD's policy towards biometric testing, as explained in the Introduction to the Unsafe Journeys Policy (see paragraphs 11-12 above), and the judgment made by the Minister that the circumstances of the Claimants' case were not sufficiently compelling to outweigh the border/national security interests in requiring biometrics before a decision is taken to allow travel to the United Kingdom. That is a matter which relates directly to border and national security and is quintessentially a matter where the Courts will afford considerable deference to the relevant government department.
In Shvidler v Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs [2025] 3 WLR 346 , Lord Sales and Lady Rose pointed out at [128] that the issue of national security was:
The relevant Ministers will also have "institutional competence" in making such decisions, given their access to experts (and on some occasions secret information).
This does not mean that the Court can never intervene, but the Court will be slow to do so, according a substantial degree of weight to the decision-maker and taking an approach to proportionality that accords the same margin to as the formulation of "manifestly without reasonable foundation" which has frequently been used by the Strasbourg Court: see R(SC) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2022] AC 223 at [160-[161].
It cannot be said that there is simply no risk to border security and/or national security in the instant case. As was stated in the submissions, "The family unit consists of individuals who are of an age where they could conceivably fail biometrics and they are from a territory where terrorists operate". In my judgment, this assessment is sufficient to raise a genuine issue of border security and national security, which the Court cannot properly gainsay.
(iii) Did the decision of 18 December 2025 contravene Article 14 of the Convention?
In my judgment, there was no discrimination contrary to Article 14 of the Convention. Using the taxonomy of McLaughlin and Stott , the circumstances do not fall within the ambit of a Convention right for the reasons already explained; and, in any event, there is objective justification for the difference in treatment to those with whom the Claimants seek to compare themselves with.
I accept that the difference in treatment is on the ground of "other status". That element of Article 14 has been read generously by the Courts, and would in my judgment encompass the situation of the Claimants in that they had refugee status, they were in receipt of a predetermination decision and were in receipt of consular assistance, but did not fall within the rules applying to the student or medevac cohorts.
I also accept that the Claimants are in an analogous situation to those persons who have been treated differently. There is not such an "obvious, relevant difference" between the Claimants and their comparators that "their situations cannot be regarded as analogous": see R (Carson) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2006] 1 AC 173 at [3]. RKC2-7 are resident in Gaza and have been given permission to enter the United Kingdom which they wish to exercise; they are unable to provide their biometric information without traveling to Jordan, but cannot do so due to the policy of the Jordanian government; as a result they require an onward travel assurance from the SSHD. That is the same or broadly similar to those Gaza residents who have come to the United Kingdom under the medevac or student schemes.
I consider that if Article 14 applied there would be objective justification for the difference in treatment. That is, the United Kingdom Government has adjudged that the risks associated with biometric waiver are warranted for foreign policy reasons with respect to the medevac and student cohorts, and the same does not apply to the Claimants. The foreign policy objectives are not trivial on their face, but of real substance. With respect to the medevac cohort, this was designed as part of arrangements made by the World Health Organisation (to which the United Kingdom is a signatory) "to assist very sick children who are currently exposed to immense suffering". For the student cohort, this will align with the foreign policy objectives of the United Kingdom to enable Gaza's brightest students to continue their education and development; contributing to future reconstruction efforts in the territory.
Conclusion
I consider that the Claimants raised an arguable case with respect to each of their Grounds of Claim, and so permission is granted for their challenge to the initial decisions in September and October 2025, and to the refusal decision of 18 December 2025.
On the merits, I find that the Defendants acted unlawfully with respect to the initial decisions in September and October 2025:
The other challenges to the initial decisions in September and October 2025, and all of the challenges to the decision of 18 December 2025, are dismissed.
Note 1 You should note that we have taken into account that in the positive predetermination decision of 16 April 2025, the family was held to satisfy limb 3 of the Unsafe Journey policy circumstances that go beyond simply joining relatives who are living in the UK and that they outweigh the interests of national and border security. This limb applies the same threshold for both predeterminations and biometric excusals. However, the Claimants did not satisfy limb 4 for a biometric excusal satisfactorily explaining how they can travel to the UK, but not to any VAC including any on route to the UK. That limb adopts a high threshold in recognition of the public interest in obtaining biometrics before a decision in made on entry to the UK. That decision was considered to be in accordance with Art 8 ECHR and was not challenged by the Claimants. We therefore do not consider that our recommendation on onward travel assurance is inconsistent with that decision. [This was the original footnote]. [Back]