Date: 20100416
Docket: IMM-5038-09
Citation: 2010 FC 419
Ottawa, Ontario, April 16, 2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Shore
BETWEEN:
ESMAT
ELYASI
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I. Overview
[1]
In
the case of Cepeda-Gutierrez v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) (1998), 157 F.T.R. 35, 83 A.C.W.S. (3d) 264,
the court held that an administrative agency is presumed to have considered all
of the material placed before it when making a decision. This presumption can
be rebutted by an “agency's failure to mention in its reasons some evidence
before it that was relevant to the finding, and pointed to a different
conclusion from that reached by the agency” (Cepeda-Gutierrez at para.
15).
[2]
In
the case of Canagasuriam v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 175 F.T.R. 285, 92 A.C.W.S. (3d) 118, the
court reviewed a decision of a visa officer which determined the applicant to
not be a Convention refugee. The applicant had been recognized as a refugee by
the UNHCR. The reasons, including the officer’s CAIPS notes, did not indicate
that the officer considered this piece of contrary evidence. As a result, the
court quashed the decision (Canagasuriam at paras. 1, 4 and 11).
II. Judicial Procedure
[3]
This
is an application for judicial review pursuant to section 72(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (IRPA) of a June 25, 2009
decision of a visa officer stationed in Damascus, Syria denying the Applicant a
permanent residence visa as a member of the humanitarian-protected persons
abroad class and the Convention refugees abroad class.
III. Background
[4]
The
Applicant, Mr. Esmat Elyasi, a citizen of Afghanistan. He is a
Hazara, a member of an ethnic minority in that country. He moved to Syria
subsequent to his departure from Afghanistan to the neighbouring
border state of Iran. He has been recognized as a refugee by the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). The Applicant has no
citizenship rights in Syria or Iran. In 2006, the Roman Catholic Diocese of
Calgary had been granted approval with respect to sponsoring the Applicant as a
Convention refugee abroad or humanitarian protected person abroad.
IV. Decision under Review
[5]
The
officer dismissed the Applicant’s claim on the basis that there was no
compelling reason for him to receive refugee protection in Canada.
[6]
The
Computer Assisted Immigration Processing System (CAIPS) notes show that the
officer was not convinced that the Applicant’s fear of the Taliban was grounded
as he is originally from Kabul and Kabul is a place
where Afghanis are safely returning.
V. Issues
[7]
1)
Did the officer provide adequate reasons?
2) Did the officer err by failing to have regard to all of
the evidence?
VI. Standard of Review
[8]
Issues
relating to the adequacy of reasons provided by an administrative
decision-maker relate to the agency’s duty of fairness. These questions are
typically reviewed on a standard of correctness. In Dunsmuir v. New
Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, the Supreme Court of Canada
described the standard of correctness as a non-deferential standard where the
reviewing court may substitute its own view for that of the decision-maker (Dunsmuir
at para. 50).
[9]
The
Applicant raises an issue of whether the officer made an error of fact by
making her decision without regard to the totality of the evidence. Questions
of fact are reviewable on a standard of reasonableness. In Dunsmuir,
above, the Supreme Court of Canada held that the standard of reasonableness is
a deferential standard that is “concerned mostly with the existence of
justification, transparency and intelligibility with the decision making
process” (Dunsmuir at para. 47).
VII. Pertinent Legislative Provisions
[10]
Section
96 of the IRPA states:
Convention refugee
96. A Convention refugee is a person who,
by reason of a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race,
religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political
opinion,
(a) is outside each of
their countries of nationality and is unable or, by reason of that fear,
unwilling to avail themself of the protection of each of those countries; or
(b) not having a country
of nationality, is outside the country of their former habitual residence and
is unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling to return to that country.
|
Définition de « réfugié »
96. A qualité de réfugié au sens de la
Convention — le réfugié — la personne qui, craignant avec raison d’être
persécutée du fait de sa race, de sa religion, de sa nationalité, de son
appartenance à un groupe social ou de ses opinions politiques :
a) soit se trouve hors de tout pays dont
elle a la nationalité et ne peut ou, du fait de cette crainte, ne veut se
réclamer de la protection de chacun de ces pays;
b) soit, si elle n’a pas de nationalité
et se trouve hors du pays dans lequel elle avait sa résidence habituelle, ne
peut ni, du fait de cette crainte, ne veut y retourner.
|
[11]
Section
145 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227
(Regulations) states:
Member of Convention refugees abroad class
145. A foreign national is a
Convention refugee abroad and a member of the Convention refugees abroad
class if the foreign national has been determined, outside Canada, by an officer to be a Convention
refugee.
|
Qualité
145. Est un réfugié au sens de la
Convention outre-frontières et appartient à la catégorie des réfugiés au sens
de cette convention l’étranger à qui un agent a reconnu la qualité de réfugié
alors qu’il se trouvait hors du Canada
|
[12]
Section
11 of the IRPA states:
Application before entering Canada
11. (1) A foreign national must, before
entering Canada, apply to an officer for a visa or for any other document
required by the regulations. The visa or document may be issued if, following
an examination, the officer is satisfied that the foreign national is not
inadmissible and meets the requirements of this Act
|
Visa et documents
11. (1) L’étranger doit, préalablement à
son entrée au Canada, demander à l’agent les visa et autres documents requis
par règlement. L’agent peut les délivrer sur preuve, à la suite d’un
contrôle, que l’étranger n’est pas interdit de territoire et se conforme à la
présente loi.
|
VIII. Positions of the Parties
Applicant’s Position
[13]
The
Applicant submits the officer erred by failing to refer to Mr. Elyasi’s refugee
status from the UNHCR. The Applicant cites the cases of El Bahisi v. Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1994), 72 F.T.R. 117, 45 A.C.W.S. (3d) 946 and
Canagasuriam v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (1999), 2 Imm. L.R.
(3d) 84, 92 A.C.W.S. (3d) 500, for the proposition that UN refugee documents
are pieces of relevant, material evidence which should be considered when
determining whether a claimant fits the definition of a Convention refugee.
[14]
The
Applicant also submits the officer provided inadequate reasons. The Applicant
notes the standard-form refusal letter merely cites the applicable statutory
provisions and state that Mr. Elyasi has not provided a compelling reason for Canada to extend protection to
him.
Respondent’s Position
[15]
The
Respondent submits it is inappropriate for the Applicant to argue that the
reasons given were inadequate because he was under an obligation to obtain
further reasons where decision letters are thought to be insufficient. The
Respondent cites the case of Gaoat v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2007 FC 440, 157 A.C.W.S. (3d) 622 where the court held that a failure of
an Applicant to ask for further reasons bars him or her from claiming on
judicial review that adequate reasons were not provided.
[16]
The
Respondent also submits the Applicant is asking this Court to re-weigh the
evidence that was before the officer. The Respondent contends the officer did
not ignore, misconstrue or misunderstand any of the material before him. The
Respondent argues the officer was not under an obligation to make the same
refugee determination as was made by the UNHCR. Rather, the officer was only
required to assess the Applicant’s claim with regard to Canadian legislation.
IX. Analysis
[17]
The
Court notes the case of Gaoat, above, where Justice Yvon Pinard held,
after citing earlier cases, the fact that an applicant does not request further
reasons bars him or her from claiming on judicial review that the reasons
provided were inadequate (Gaoat at para. 13).
[18]
The
Court notes that the Applicant’s Record only contains the refusal letter and
does not include the CAIPS notes. In Gaoat, above, Justice Pinard
reiterated that it is the letter as well as the CAIPS notes which constitute
the reasons for a decision (Gaoat at para. 12).
[19]
That
being said, the full decision is currently before this Court and the Applicant
alleges a second ground for review, namely, that the officer made a decision
without regard to the totality of the evidence.
[20]
In
the case of Cepeda-Gutierrez, above, the court held that an administrative agency
is presumed to have considered all of the material placed before it when making
a decision. This presumption can be rebutted by an “agency's failure to mention
in its reasons some evidence before it that was relevant to the finding, and
pointed to a different conclusion from that reached by the agency” (Cepeda-Gutierrez
at para. 15).
[21]
In
the case of Canagasuriam, above, the court reviewed a decision of a visa
officer which determined the applicant to not be a Convention refugee. The
applicant had been recognized as a refugee by the UNHCR. The reasons, including
the officer’s CAIPS notes, did not indicate that the officer considered this
piece of contrary evidence. As a result, the court quashed the decision (Canagasuriam
at paras. 1, 4 and 11).
[22]
In
this case, the CAIPS notes relating to the officer’s decision does not mention
the UNHCR’s recognition of the Applicant as a Convention refugee. Based on the
ruling in Canagasuriam, above, the Court finds the Applicant’s status to
be a highly relevant, material piece of contrary evidence which should have
been considered by the officer.
X. Conclusion
[23]
The
officer’s decision is unreasonable because it lacks proper analysis of the
Applicant’s claim.
[24]
The
officer erred by stating that “[d]uring [the] interview, you were not able to
provide a compelling reason for not returning to Afghanistan” without
providing any evidence that the totality of the Applicant’s claim was analyzed.
It is apparent from the evidence before the officer that the Applicant’s claim
is multifaceted and complex and therefore deserves greater analysis, especially
regarding the continued discrimination against Hazaras in light of the unstable
situation in Afghanistan.
[25]
The
UNHCR’s Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Determining Refugee Status
under the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of
Refugees (Geneva, January 1992) (UNHCR Handbook) gives the following guidance
when determining the grounds of a claim:
66.
In order to be considered a refugee, a person must show well-founded fear of
persecution for one of the reasons stated above. It is immaterial whether the
persecution arises from any single one of these reasons or from a combination
of two or more of them. Often the applicant himself may not be aware of
the reasons for the persecution feared. It is not, however, his duty to analyze
his case to such an extent as to identify the reasons in detail.
67.
It is for the examiner, when investigating the facts of the case, to
ascertain the reason or reasons for the persecution feared and to decide
whether the definition in the 1951 Convention is met with in this respect.
It is evident that the reasons for persecution under these various headings
will frequently overlap. Usually there will be more than one clement combined
in one person, e.g. a political opponent who belongs to a religious or national
group, or both, and the combination of such reasons in his person may be
relevant in evaluating his well-founded fear. (Emphasis added).
[26]
In
the case at bar, the Applicant’s narrative speaks of discrimination against the
Hazara ethnic group in Afghanistan throughout his life and
he would be immediately and easily identifiable as a Hazara if returned (AR at
pp. 75-76). The UNHCR Handbook gives further guidance to officers when
assessing claims based on a cumulative persecution:
53.
In addition, an applicant may have been subjected to various measures not in
themselves amounting to persecution (e.g. discrimination in different forms),
in some cases combined with other adverse factors (e.g. general atmosphere of
insecurity in the country of origin). In such situations, the various
elements involved may, if taken together, produce an effect on the mind of the
applicant that can reasonably justify a claim to well-founded fear of
persecution on “cumulative grounds”. Needless to say, it is not
possible to lay down a general rule as to what cumulative reasons can give rise
to a valid claim to refugee status. This will necessarily depend on all
the circumstances, including the particular geographical, historical and
ethnological context. (Emphasis added).
[27]
It
is incumbent on officers to be sensitive to the fragility of the human
condition when “compelling reasons”, as legally defined in subsection 108(4) of
the IRPA, may exist for refugee protection. The UNHCR Handbook states:
136. … It is frequently recognized that a person who--or whose
family--has suffered under atrocious forms of persecution should not be
expected to repatriate. Even though there may have been a change of regime in
his country, this may not always produce a complete change in the attitude of
the population, nor, in view of his past experiences, in the mind of the
refugee.
…
198. A person who, because of his experiences, was in fear of the
authorities in his own country may still feel apprehensive vis-à-vis any
authority. He may therefore be afraid to speak freely and give a full and
accurate account of his case.
[28]
The
Supreme Court of Canada has commented on the usefulness of the UNHCR Handbook
in Canada (Attorney General) v.
Ward,
[1993] 2 S.C.R. 689:
While
not formally binding on signatory states, the Handbook has been endorsed by the
states which are members of the Executive Committee of the UNHCR, including Canada, and has been relied upon by the courts of signatory
states.
[29]
In
this case, based on the background material specifically on the Hazara minority
in Afghanistan, the Applicant fits the
profile of a person at risk of persecution and the officer had the duty to
examine all the evidence of the claim. The officer did not appear to have
regard to all of the evidence and, more particularly, key elements of that
evidence.
[30]
For
all of the above-reasons, the application for judicial review is allowed
and the matter is remitted for redetermination by a differently constituted
panel.
Obiter
It is
important to specify that the information package from the Canadian Immigration
and Refugee Board (IRB) on country conditions demonstrates that the Hazara ethnic
group has continuously fought or been persecuted by the Taliban. (As per the National
Documentation Package,
Afghanistan – 18 March
2009 of the IRB). Although the new constitution gives the Hazaras equal rights,
a significant margin of difference exists between the theory and reality on the
ground. It is recognized that the Hazaras are not only considered the traditional
enemy of the Taliban but the Pashtuns also consider them as outcasts. It is
important also to note that the Allied forces in Afghanistan often employ
the Hazaras for their knowledge of the country, language and fierce loyalty to
values other than those opposed by the Allied forces. (Not to belabour the
point but simply to mention that in popular best selling literature such as in
The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini, the Hazara minority is witnessed as an
ethnic group that has been separate and apart from Pashtun society:
HAZARAS
20.16 The Minority
Rights Group International further noted that:
“The
Hazaras speak a dialect of Dari (Persian Dialect) called Hazaragi and the vast
majority of them follow the Shi’a sect (twelve Imami). A significant number are
also followers of the Ismaili sect while a small number are Sunni Muslim.
Within Afghani culture the Hazaras are famous for their music and poetry and
the proverbs from which their poetry stems … The Hazaras are reported to have
nuclear families with the husband considered the head of the family except in
the case of husband’s death, when the woman becomes the head. In the latter
case the older wife in polygamous marriages succeeds the deceased husband until
the eldest sun [sic] reaches maturity. At national level Hazaras tend to
be more progressive concerning women’s rights to education and public
activities. Educated Hazara women, in particular ones who returned from exile
in Iran are as active as men in civic and
political arenas. Hazara families are eager to educate their daughters. U.N.
officials in Bamian, 20 miles to the east, said that since the collapse of
Taliban rule in late 2001, aid agencies have scrambled to build schools and
have succeeded in attracting qualified female teachers to meet the demand.” [76a]
20.17 Minority Rights
Group International also noted:
“Hazaras
are one of the national ethnic minorities recognized in the new Afghan
constitution and have been given full right to Afghan citizenship. Their main
political party, Hizb-e Wahdat gained only one seat in the cabinet. Hazaras are
concerned about the rising power of the warlords, who they feel pose a direct
threat to their community. Also, given the suppression suffered by Hazaras
under the Mujaheedin, the power of Northern Alliance (Mujaheedin leadership of
10 years ago) in the new leadership is a cause for worry.” [76a]
From a recent historical
perspective, as the situation in Afghanistan is in continuous flux, it is recognized
that the information package of 18 May 2007 of the IRB contained the following
perspective which it appears should not be ignored:
20.20 A
Minority Rights Group (MRG) briefing dated November 2003 stated that Hazaras
have been traditionally marginalised in Afghan society. MRG reported:
“The Hazaras are thought
to be descendants of the Mongol tribes who once devastated Afghanistan, and are
said to have been left to garrison the country by Genghis Khan. The Hazaras
have often faced considerable economic discrimination – being forced to take on
more menial jobs – and have also found themselves squeezed from many of their
traditional lands by nomadic Pashtuns. Starting at the end of the nineteenth
century, successive Pashtun leaders pursued active policies of land
colonization, particularly in the northern and central regions, rewarding their
supporters, often at the expense of the Hazaras. This policy was partially
reversed during the Soviet occupation, but started again under the Taliban.” [76] (p6)
20.21 On 29
July 2004, the Pakistan Tribune reported on the position of Hazaras in Bamian
[Bamiyan]:
“Armed
with a new constitution that guarantees equal rights to minority groups,
Hazaras are engaged in an intense campaign to grasp some power and lift
themselves from the bottom of Afghan society. The Hazaras have a great stake in
seeing that the Taliban does not return to power. When the extremist Islamic
movement controlled Afghanistan in the 1990s, its fighters killed
hundreds – by some estimates thousands – of Hazaras in an effort to break the
back of resistance to Taliban rule.” [30a]
20.22 In a
report dated 21 September 2004, the UN-appointed independent expert of the
Commission on Human Rights in Afghanistan commented on a case of
human rights violations, which the UNHCR had verified and brought to his attention.
The case involved approximately 200 Hazara families (about 1,000 individuals)
displaced from Daikundi over the last decade by local commanders and now living
in Kabul. The
independent expert noted:
“Some
members of the community arrived during the past year, having fled ethnically
based persecution, including the expropriation of land and property, killings,
arbitrary arrests and a variety of acts of severe intimidation perpetrated by
warlords and local commanders who control the Daikundi districts and who are
directly linked to a major political party whose leader occupies a senior
governmental post.”
[39k] (para. 72)
20.24 The
US State Department Report 2005 (USSD 2005), published on 8 March 2006, noted
that “The Shi’a religious affiliation of the Hazaras historically was a
significant factor leading to their repression, and there was continued social
discrimination against Hazaras.” [2a] (section
2c) The USSD 2005 Report also recorded that; “Ethnic
Hazaras prevented some Kuchi nomads from returning to traditional grazing lands
in the central highlands, in part because of allegations that the Kuchis were
pro-Taliban and thus complicit in the massacres perpetrated against Hazaras in
the 1990s. Hazaras also found difficulty in returning to the country. In
December 2004 a local leader from Karukh district in Herat blocked the
return of approximately 200 Hazara refugees from Iran.” [2a] (section 2d)
20.25 On
21 July 2005, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported that:
“Suspected Taliban
guerrillas attacked an ethnic Hazara village in the southcentral province of Uruzgan
on Monday, killing 10 villagers, provincial governor Jan Mohammad Khan told
AFP. A day later, Hazara tribesmen from Uruzgan’s Kejran district—blaming the
attack on their neighboring Pashtun-dominated village—launched a raid that
killed four people, the governor said…
“The governor said that
tensions between the two tribes ceased after elders from the two villages
launched an investigation and found that Monday’s attack was carried out by Taliban
fighters.” [40u]
The volatile situation
in Afghanistan requires consideration as to whether “a change in
circumstances”, as juridically described by Justice Marc Nadon in Mahmoud v.
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1993] F.C.J. No. 1442
(QL), 69 F.T.R. 100, has occurred:
[25] I have concluded that the Board
erred in law by not applying the proper test for a consideration of changing
country conditions. I have also concluded that the Board, in finding that the changes in circumstances
were of an enduring nature, made a finding which it could not possibly have
made based on the evidence before it. In other words, this finding was made
without consideration of the material before it.
[26] In so concluding, I have adopted
as the proper test of changing country conditions the one proposed by James Hathaway in The Law
of Refugee Status, Butterworths, Toronto, 1991, at pages 200-203. Hathaway writes as
follows:
First,
the change must be of substantial political significance, in the sense that the
power structure under which persecution was deemed a real possibility no longer
exists. The collapse of the persecutory regime, coupled with the holding of
genuinely free and democratic elections, the assumption of power by a
government committed to human rights, and a guarantee of fair treatment for
enemies of the predecessor regime by way of amnesty or otherwise, is the
appropriate indicator of a meaningful change of circumstances. It would, in
contrast, be premature to consider cessation simply because relative calm has
been restored in a country still governed by an oppressive political structure.
Similarly, the mere fact that a democratic and safe local or regional
government has been established is insufficient insofar as the national
government still poses a risk to the refugee.
Secondly,
there must be reason to believe that the substantial political change is truly
effective. Because, as noted in a dissenting opinion in Ruiz Angel Jesus
Gonzales, "...there is often a long distance between the pledging and the
doing...", it ought not to be assumed that formal change will necessarily
be immediately effective:
...
there were free elections [in Uruguay] on March 1, 1985 that put an end to 12
years of military government. According to [the U.S. Country Reports], the
reestablishment of democracy is complete. I may be permitted to express doubts
that in a period of one or two years it would be possible to recover completely
from the abuses of a military dictatorship. Good intentions may have existed, of
course, but I refuse to believe that there were no chance mishaps.
The
formal political shift must be implemented in fact, and result in a genuine
ability and willingness to protect the refugee. Cessation is not warranted
where, for example, de facto executive authority remains in the hands of the
former oppressors:
The
facts that there were "above board" elections in Peru in 1980-81,
which sent members of various parties and factions to the parliament, does not
prove that the applicant does not have a well-founded fear of returning to his
country, which is still, as far as executive authority is concerned, a military
dictatorship which tolerates no opposition. It is just another case of old wine
in new bottles.
Nor
can it be said that there has truly been a fundamental change of circumstances
where the police or military establishments have yet fully to comply with the
dictates of democracy and respect for human rights:
It
was argued that the applicant need no longer be afraid of returning to his homeland
as there has been a change in the government since he left. The applicant,
however, adduced evidence to show that although the government has changed,
members of the Peruvian police and armed forces are still violating human
rights and as yet do not appear to be under control by the new government.
In
other words, the refugee's right to protection ought not to be compromised
simply because progress is being made toward real respect for human rights,
even where international scrutiny of that transition is possible. Two mid-1989
judgments of the Immigration and Refugee Board, relating to Poland and Sri
Lanka respectively,
demonstrate an appropriate concern to see evidence of the real impact of a
formal transition of power:
...Solidarity
calculates that the Communist Party directly or indirectly controls about
900,000 appointments...the nomenklatura casts its own shadow. In other words,
changing the government does not [necessarily] change much. The panel is of the
view that the claimant's fear that the changes in Poland are still too uncertain is supported by the documentary
evidence.
Although
it is alleged that the scale of military confrontation between the Indian
Peacekeeping Force and the Tigers has diminished in recent months, there is
still an intense rivalry between the Tamil militant groups for the control of
the territory and the population. We agree with the points made by counsel,
that the normalization process has not yet achieved political stability and
peace for Sri Lanka.
Third,
the change of circumstances must be shown to be durable. Cessation is not a
decision to be taken lightly on the basis of transitory shifts in the political
landscape, but should rather be reserved for situations in which there is
reason to believe that the positive conversion of the power structure is likely
to last. This condition is in keeping with the forward-looking nature of the
refugee definition, and avoids the disruption of protection in circumstances
where safety may be only a momentary aberration.
[27] Although the author discusses
changing country conditions in the context of cessation, the nature of the
changing circumstances of a country must nonetheless be considered in the
context of an application seeking convention refugee status. (See M.E.I. v. Obstoj,
File No. A-1109-91, May 11, 1992 (F.C.A.) [Please see [1992] F.C.J. No. 422],
and M.E.I. v. Paszkowska (1991) 13 Imm. L.R. (2d) 262
(F.C.A.).)
[28] Two decisions of the Federal
Court of Appeal support the position which I have taken with regard to changing
country conditions by adopting the essence of Hathaway's test. The two decisions were rendered for the
Court by Marceau J.A. In Cuadra v. The Solicitor General of Canada (A-179-92,
July 20, 1993) [Please see [1993] F.C.J. No. 736],
Marceau J.A. was faced with changing country conditions in Nicaragua. The
Applicant was a former contra who was seeking Convention refugee status in Canada.
The Board refused the Applicant's claim primarily because of a change of
circumstances in Nicaragua and more particularly the election of Mrs. Chamaro.
Although the brother of the former Sandinista President of Nicaragua, Daniel
Ortega, remained the Chief of the military, the Board concluded that the
oppressive Sandinista regime did not remain in place. Although the Board
recognized that the Applicant had received harsh treatment from the military in
which the Sandinistas continued to play a leading role, the Board was of the
view that the Chamaro government had taken "positive steps" to
diminish the influence of the Sandinistas. As a result, the Board held that the
Applicant's claim did not have an objective basis. At page 3 of his decision,
after having decided that the Board's decision could not stand, Marceau J.A.
writes as follows:
Again,
a more detailed analysis of the conflicting evidence in respect of a change in circumstances
was necessary to meet the requirement that the change be meaningful and
effective enough to render the genuine fear of the Appellant unreasonable and
hence without foundation.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS that the
application for judicial review be allowed and the matter be remitted for
redetermination by a differently constituted panel.
“Michel M.J. Shore”