Date: 20100902
Docket: IMM-6718-09
Citation: 2010 FC 873
Toronto, Ontario, September 2,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Hughes
BETWEEN:
DANICA NEE RANDJELOVIC STOJMENOVIC
(a.k.a. DANICA STOJMENOVIC)
DUSAN STOJMENOVIC
AND LAZAR STOJMENOVIC
Applicants
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The
applicants are a mother and two of her sons, all Serbian citizens. They made a
claim for protection as convention refugees. The claim was rejected by a
decision of a member of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada dated
December 14, 2009. Judicial review of that decision is now sought. For the
reasons that follow, this application for judicial review is dismissed. No
question is to be certified.
[2]
The
applicant mother, though not a Roma by birth, married her husband who was a
Roma and a vocal advocate for the Roma cause in Serbia. The
applicant had a married daughter who became a Canadian citizen. The daughter, together
with the daughter’s husband sought to sponsor the applicants and applicant’s
husband to enter Canada. Initially the applicants, including the husband,
came to Canada under
visitors visas. A series of events transpired, the applicant mother’s husband
died, the daughter and her husband went through a marital breakdown meaning
that no funds were available for sponsorship. The applicants extended their
visitors’ visas then sought status in Canada on humanitarian and
compassionate grounds, which was unsuccessful. At the end, the applicants made
a claim for refugee protection. This claim was said to have been suggested by
someone at the Refugee Protection Division but there is nothing on the record
to reflect this suggestion.
[3]
The
Member rejected the applicants’ claim on two grounds. First, the Member found
that the reasons given for the delay in making a refugee claim were lacking in
credibility and that the basis for alleging fear of persecution in Serbia,
attacks by skinheads on Roma, lacked credibility. Secondly, the Member found
that adequate state protection was available to the applicants in Serbia.
[4]
Applicants’
counsel argued, as to the first ground, that the applicants were entitled to
seek out various means by which they might enter Canada and it was
reasonable for them not to burden the Refugee Protection Division with a
refugee claim if other grounds that were available proved to be successful.
Only if unsuccessful, as was the case here, would it be reasonable to make a
refugee claim it was argued. Here the delay was14 months, a matter that the
Member found seriously impugned the credibility of the claim.
[5]
The
Member’s determination in this respect was reasonable. As Simpson J. said in Cruz
v. Canada (MCI), June 16, 1994, [1994] F.C.J. No. 1247 at paragraph 10,
delay is an important factor in the assessment of a refugee claim because it
addresses the existence of a subjective fear of persecution which is an
essential element of a convention refugee claim. A refugee claim should not be
looked at simply as one of many choices as to how best to seek status in Canada.
[6]
As
to the second ground, state protection, applicants’ counsel made no serious
argument as to the legal test applied by the Member. Rather, the argument was
directed to whether the Member had given adequate weight to a lengthy
memorandum filed by applicants’ counsel after the hearing before the Board in
which many references were cited so as to support a conclusion that state
protection in Serbia,
particularly for Roma, was inadequate.
[7]
In
the reasons, the Member indicates that the applicants’ counsel’s memorandum was
reviewed. The Member referred in particular only to one document a UK Home
Office report, which was a compendium of other reports, in supporting a
conclusion that there was adequate state protection.
[8]
The
law is clear that a Member in giving reasons is not required to discuss every
document and piece of evidence in the record nor is the Member required to
consider every argument raised so long as it is clear that the relevant
documents, evidence and arguments were considered. In the present case the
Member states that the counsel’s material, identified as exhibit C-5, was
reviewed and noted that there were many problems facing Roma in Serbia. However,
the Member preferred to rely on the UK Home Office report in concluding that Serbia offered
adequate state protection regarding the treatment of Romas.
[9]
I
find no basis for setting aside the Member’s decision. No party requested
certification and none will be made.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1.
The
application is dismissed;
2.
There
is no certified question;
3.
No
Order as to costs.
“Roger
T. Hughes”
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-6718-09
STYLE
OF CAUSE: DANICA NEE RANDJELOVIC STOJMENOVIC, (a.k.a.
DANICA STOJMENOVIC), DUSAN STOJMENOVIC
AND LAZAR STOJMENOVIC v. THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
PLACE OF HEARING: Toronto,
Ontario
DATE OF HEARING: September 2, 2010
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT: HUGHES
J.
DATED: September 2, 2010
APPEARANCES:
Dorothy Fox
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
Ladan Shahrooz
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Dorothy Fox
Barrister & Solicitor
Toronto, Ontario
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
Myles J. Kirvan
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|