Manjit Singh Gill KC > Chambers of Adrian Keeling KC and Jonathan Jones KC > London, England > Barrister Profile

Chambers of Adrian Keeling KC and Jonathan Jones KC
No5 Barristers' Chambers
Fifth Floor, 7 Savoy Court
London
WC2R 0EX
England

Position

Head of international human rights law. Specialist in public law, human rights, immigration, and public/private international law, discrimination, regulatory law, international crime, and international commercial and arbitration law. He has dealt with cases on the return of terror suspects to foreign regimes where torture is feared, the use human rights in bilateral investment treaties, international family law involving the adoption and movement of children, extradition, consular law, internal armed conflict, the arrest abroad of war crimes suspects, advising corporations on large scale international movement of labour. He has argued many of the leading immigration cases over the last 16 years and also represented various interveners. Also works in property, employment, privacy and media, prison law, sports law. He has conducted numerous cases in the House of Lords and Supreme Court and represented clients abroad and in international courts. His leading cases include: Bibi and Ali, UKSC (2015), discriminatory requirement on foreign spouses to learn English; MM (Lebanon), CA (2014), minimum income requirements and family life; Re A (Children), UKSC (2013), child abduction and conflict of laws; New London College, UKSC (2013), administrative powers in support of legislative powers; AA (Somalia), UKSC (2013), adoption of refugee children; HH v Italy, UKSC (2012), children’s best interests in extradition; Stopyrah and Debreceni (2012) extradition, legality of legal aid system in extradition; McAuley v Coventry Crown Court, [2012] 1 WLR 2766, custody time limits; Cart and MR (Pakistan), UKSC (2011), limitation of judicial review of Upper Tribunal; ZH (Tanzania), UKSC (2011), landmark decision on domestic implementation of art 3 of UN Convention on Rights of the Child; ZN (Afghanistan) UKSC (2010) refugee family reunion; Mahad, UKSC (2009), third party support; Mucelli and Moulai, HL (2009), extradition appeal time limits; O’Donoghue v UK (ECtHR 2010) Acted for Equality and Human Rights Commission on UK’s sham marriage laws contravening the right to marry; TB (Jamaica), CA (2009), on abuse of process; EN (Serbia), [2010] QB 633, quashing of Particularly Serious Crimes Order; Baiai, HL (2008), first case on art 12 ECHR right to marry in UK; JJ v SSHD, HL (2007), first case on control orders; Secretary of State v S, CA (2007), effect of delay and fettering of discretion and conspicuous unfairness; NH (India), CA (2007), East African Asians and righting historical wrongs; Januzi, Hamid et al, HL (2006) internal relocation; Carson and Reynolds, HL, (2005) discrimination in awards of benefits; Hoxha and B v SSHD, HL, (2005) rape as a weapon of war; the Belmarsh indefinite detention case, HL (2004); Sritharan v Law Society, CA (2005), human rights in interventions; E and R v SSHD, (2004) QB 1044 CA, distinction between errors of fact and errors of law; Ullah and Do, HL (2004), leading case on extra-territoriality and human rights; Krotov, CA (2004), internal armed conflict and conscientious objection; Anufrijeva, CA (2002), notice of decisions; Manjit Kaur, ECJ (2001) effect in international law of UK’s declarations on nationality; Butt v Foreign Secretary (1999) International Law Reports, consular protection of British nationals abroad.

Career

Called 1982; junior counsel to the Crown 1992-2000; QC 2000 Master of the Bench (Grays Inn); honorary Professor, Birmingham University; chair of Strategic Legal Fund’s expert Panel. Publications of note: founder and editor of ‘Immigration and Nationality Law Reports’; contributor to several editions of ‘Jackson & Warr’s Immigration Law and Practice’. Regular speaker at various international conferences.

Lawyer Rankings

London Bar > Immigration (including business immigration)

(Leading Silks)Ranked: Tier 1

Manjit Gill KCNo5 Barristers’ ChambersManjit’s knowledge of the law is amazing.’

No5 Barristers’ Chambers brings both a national presence through its offices around the country and experience in appearing before the First-Tier Tribunal up to the Upper Tribunal, Court of Appeal, and Supreme Court to its representation of a wide range of claimants. Manjit Singh Gill KC was part of the team representing a Sudanese individual in the wider Rwanda litigation of R (AAA and others) v Secretary of State of the Home Department, alleging unlawful transfer of personal data and failure to investigate data protection concerns involved in the scheme. Abid Mahmoud represented a refugee appellant in the Court of Appeal in SR (Sri Lanka) v SSHD regarding the impact of anti-government activities (in this case, support for the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam during the Sri Lankan Civil War) on the likelihood of ill-treatment on return to his home country.

London Bar > Administrative law and human rights

(Leading Silks)Ranked: Tier 4

Manjit Gill KCNo5 Barristers’ ChambersA silk with amazing legal knowledge and an analytical eye.’