Date: 20101021
Docket: IMM-6313-09
Citation: 2010 FC 1029
[UNREVISED ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario, October 21, 2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice
Bédard
BETWEEN:
WILL ALBERTO
GARCIA ARIAS
Applicant
and
MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The applicant seeks judicial
review under subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27, (the IRPA) of a decision of the Refugee
Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (the Board),
dated November 19, 2009, which rejected the applicant’s claim for refugee
protection and found that he was neither a refugee within the meaning of
section 96 of the IRPA nor a “person in need of protection” within the
meaning of section 97 of the IRPA.
Background of the claim for refugee protection
[2]
The applicant is a 24-year
old young man and a citizen of El Salvador. His claim for refugee protection was
based on his fear of being the victim of intimidation and reprisals from the
members of gangs he refused to join. The applicant stated that he had been
subject to repeated pressure from members of two rival gangs, the Mara
Salvatrucha and the Mara 18, and fears that he will again be asked to join a
gang if he returns to El Salvador.
[3]
The applicant explained
that he was accosted by members of both of these gangs on a number of occasions
and pressured to join them. He stated that he was approached by gangs a number of
times since 2004, when he was living in the city of Dolores and going to school. At that time, he was between 16 and 17 years old.
[4]
He left school in 2005,
when his father had an accident and he had to replace him at work on the family
farm in San Vicente, approximately 45 minutes away from Dolores. He stayed
there for a year, during which time the gangs did not bother him.
[5]
In February 2006,
the applicant moved to the city of Villa Colon, where his
cousin asked him to work with her as a corn deliverer. While they were making a
delivery, they were stopped and threatened by the members of a gang, who forced
them to abandon their merchandise because their boss had not paid the [translation] “rent” he owed them. The
gang members told them not to return.
[6]
The applicant then
worked with his cousin, who had a small vegetable business. On April 12,
2006, while accompanying his cousin to make purchases at the market, they were stopped
by five or six gang members who asked them whether they belonged to a rival
gang and encouraged them to join them. The applicant claims that he told the
gang members that they would think about it, after which the gang let them go.
[7]
The applicant then
decided to leave El Salvador. He arrived in the United States in October 2006 and remained there until he presented
himself at the Canadian border on August 27, 2007.
Impugned decision
[8]
The Board first
analyzed the applicant’s claim under section 96 of the IRPA. It is important to
note that the Board did not question the applicant’s credibility. After
acknowledging that gangs mainly recruited young men from impoverished areas and
that the applicant matched this profile, the Board ruled that the applicant was
a member of a particular social group within the meaning of section 96,
that is, that of “young men”. The Board further ruled that the applicant would
not face a serious possibility of being persecuted should he return to El Salvador and, consequently, refused to grant him Convention
refugee status.
[9]
The Board then analyzed
his claim for refugee protection under section 97 of the IRPA and
determined that the applicant was not a “person in need of protection” because
he failed to establish that he was personally more at risk than the general
population.
Issues
[10]
This application for
judicial review raises the following issues:
1. Did the Board err in
applying the wrong standard of proof in its analysis of the objective component
of the fear of persecution invoked by the applicant under section 96 of
the IRPA?
2. Did the Board err in
determining that the applicant would not face a serious possibility of
persecution should he return to El Salvador?
3. Did the Board err in
its application of section 97 of the IRPA by determining that the
applicant had not shown that he was more at risk than the general population of
El Salvador?
Standard of review
[11]
The first issue essentially
raises a question of law that is reviewable on the standard of correctness: Sekeramayi
v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 845, [2008]
F.C.J. No. 1066; and Mugadza v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 122, [2008] F.C.J. No. 147).
[12]
The second issue
involves the assessment of evidence and the findings of fact made by the Board
and will therefore be reviewable on the standard of reasonableness: Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v. Khosa, 2009 SCC 12, [2009]
1 S.C.R. 339, and Dunmsuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190.
[13]
As far as the third
issue is concerned, case law has established that Board decisions on the
application of section 97 of the IRPA are also reviewable on the standard
of reasonableness: Perez v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 345,
[2010] F.C.J. No. 579; Marcelin Gabriel v. Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2009 FC 1170, [2009] F.C.J. No. 1545; and Ventura
De Parada v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 845, [2009]
F.C.J. No. 1021.
[14]
The analytical
framework which the Court must use when applying the standard of reasonableness
is well described by the majority in Dunsmuir, at paragraph 47:
47 Reasonableness is a deferential standard animated by the
principle that underlies the development of the two previous standards of
reasonableness: certain questions that come before administrative tribunals do
not lend themselves to one specific, particular result. Instead, they may give
rise to a number of possible, reasonable conclusions. Tribunals have a margin
of appreciation within the range of acceptable and rational solutions. A court
conducting a review for reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a
decision reasonable, referring both to the process of articulating the reasons
and to outcomes. In judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with
the existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within the
decision-making process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision
falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in
respect of the facts and law.
Analysis
1.
Did the Board err in
applying the wrong standard of proof in its analysis of the objective component
of the fear of persecution invoked by the applicant under section 96 of the IRPA?
[15]
Section 96 of the IRPA
reads as follows:
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.
|
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.
|
[16]
The applicant
acknowledged that it was his responsibility to demonstrate that his fear of
persecution was well founded. To do so, the applicant argued that he had to
establish a [translation] “reasonable
possibility” of persecution should he return to El Salvador. The applicant alleged that although the Board stated
the proper test at paragraph 7 of its decision, it, in fact, placed a much
heavier burden of proof on him by linking its finding about the serious
possibility of persecution to its findings as to whether recruitment to gangs
was systematically forced or not.
[17]
The applicant based his
argument on the following excerpts from the decision. At paragraph 7, the
Board described the applicable test for assessing the applicant’s objective
fear: “Could the claimant face, upon his return to his country of origin, a
serious possibility of being persecuted?” The Board then stated at paragraph 12
of its decision that the issue it was concerned about was the following: “. . .
is the recruitment of young people to gangs in El Salvador systematically forced or not?”
[18]
After having analyzed
the documentary evidence submitted and the applicant’s version, the Board found
as follows:
[13] . . .
The panel is of the opinion that this treatment received by the claimant
confirms the DOS report that the forced recruitment of young men such as the
claimant is not systematic. The panel is of the opinion that there is no
serious possibility that the claimant will be persecuted should he return to
his country of origin.
[19]
The applicant submits that
the Board asked the wrong question: it did not have to determine whether the
recruitment to gangs was systematically forced, but rather whether the
applicant had shown that there was a reasonable possibility of his being
persecuted by gangs if he returned to El Salvador.
[20]
The respondent
submitted that the Board applied the proper test and that the issue regarding
the systematic nature of the forced recruitment methods used by gangs was a question
of fact relevant to determining whether there was a serious possibility that
the applicant would be persecuted.
[21]
I agree with the
respondent.
[22]
Case law has developed
criteria for assessing the objective fear of persecution described at
section 96 of the IRPA.
[23]
In Chan v. Canada (Minister
of Employment and Immigration), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 593, the Supreme
Court, while examining the definition of Convention refugee under the former Immigration
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. I-2, set out the standard of proof applicable
to the objective component of the alleged fear:
120 Both the existence of the subjective fear and the fact that the fear
is objectively well-founded must be established on a balance of
probabilities. In the specific context of refugee determination, it has
been established by the Federal Court of Appeal in Adjei v. Canada (Minister
of Employment and Immigration), [1989] 2 F.C. 680, that the claimant
need not prove that persecution would be more likely than not in order to meet
the objective portion of the test. The claimant must establish, however,
that there is more than a “mere possibility” of persecution. The
applicable test has been expressed as a “reasonable possibility” or, more
appropriately in my view, as a “serious possibility”. . . .
[24]
This same criterion was
applied regarding the interpretation of section 96 of the IRPA in Sekeramayi
v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 845, [2008]
F.C.J. No. 1066.
[25]
In this case, it is my
view that the Board applied the proper test and that whether or not gangs
engaged in systematic forced recruitment was one of the elements which the
Board considered in its assessment of whether there was a serious possibility
of persecution.
[26]
It is clear from
paragraph 7 of the decision that the Board knew which test to apply, since
it described it correctly. It reiterated this test in the conclusion it reached
from its analysis of the evidence at paragraph 13: “. . . The
panel is of the opinion that there is no serious possibility that the claimant
will be persecuted should he return to his country of origin.”
[27]
I consider that in this
case it was not unreasonable for the Board to question whether or not forced
recruiting practices by gangs existed. The applicant’s claim for refugee
protection is specifically based on his fear of being subject to pressure and
intimidation from gang members to join their gang and on his fear of reprisals should
he refuse to join. It therefore does not seem unreasonable to me that the Board
assessed the risk of the applicant’s again being subject to solicitation and
pressure from gangs seeking to recruit him by conducting an analysis of the
documentary evidence on gang recruitment methods and, more specifically, systematic,
forced recruitment.
[28]
In addition, the Board
did not restrict its analysis to the documentary evidence on the systematic
nature of gangs’ forced recruitment practices. It also assessed both the
circumstances in which the applicant was approached by gang members and his profile.
On this point, the Board noted that the period during which the applicant was persistently
approached coincided with the period when he attended school and was under 18.
[29]
The Board also
determined that the two incidents described by the applicant after he had left school
had been random and that during the first incident there had been no question of
recruitment, and during the second, the applicant had managed to leave “without
being constrained or threatened”. After analyzing the evidence and referring to
these last two incidents, the Board reached the following conclusion:
[13] . . .
Thus, once outside the school and his neighbourhood, the claimant was allegedly
subject to a fortuitous recruitment request and could have left the scene
without being constrained or threatened. The panel is of the opinion that this
treatment received by the claimant confirms the DOS report that the forced
recruitment of young men such as the claimant is not systematic. The panel is
of the opinion that there is no serious possibility that the claimant will be
persecuted should he return to his country of origin.
[30]
I therefore consider
that the Board applied the proper test and that it did not place a heavier
burden of proof on the applicant than that developed in case law.
2.
Did the Board err on
the basis of the evidence in determining that the applicant would not face a
serious possibility of persecution should he return to El Salvador?
[31]
The applicant essentially
faulted the Board’s decision on three grounds. First, he claimed that the Board
erred in its assessment of the documentary evidence regarding recruitment
practices and that a reasonable analysis of the evidence would have led it to
the conclusion that forced recruitment did exist and that the applicant was
likely to be the target of such practices.
[32]
With respect, I
consider that the Board’s analysis of the evidence is not unreasonable. The
Board acknowledged that the evidence regarding gang recruitment methods and the
existence of forced recruiting practices was contradictory. The Board clearly
referred to the documentary evidence that differed from the findings of the
report of the United States Department of State (DOS), but it preferred the findings
of the DOS report, which it considered to be consistent with the applicant’s
own experience. The Board found that “this forced recruitment [was] not
systematic across all of El Salvador, but it [could] occur in certain regions”.
I find that the Board’s determination was based on the evidence and that it is one
of the possible, acceptable outcomes considering the evidence.
[33]
The applicant also criticized
the Board for acknowledging that forced recruitment existed in certain regions
of El Salvador, without specifying in which ones. In my
view, the Board conducted a macroscopic analysis of the situation by asking whether
gangs in general engaged in systematic forced recruitment, and to answer that
question, it did not have to identify the regions in which forced recruitment
systematically took place.
[34]
The applicant also
submitted that through its decision, the Board acknowledged that the applicant
would be persecuted if he returned to school. Counsel for the applicant
submitted that the applicant had left school because of the pressure from gangs
and that the Board’s decision effectively confirms that he had to leave school
to avoid persecution. This suggestion seems incorrect to me.
[35]
First, in his testimony
before the Board, the applicant stated that he left school because his father
had had an accident and he had had to replace him, not because he was fleeing
gang harassment, although he did describe the unrelenting pressure he was under
at school.
[36]
Second, the Board did
not infer anything other from the fact that the applicant was no longer attending
school than that he had been subject to the most persistent pressure while he
attended school and that the incidents he described that had occurred after he
left school were restricted to two random encounters.
[37]
The applicant also
criticized the Board for erring in stating that during the last incident with
gang members, he had managed to leave “without being constrained or threatened”.
Counsel for the applicant submitted that the applicant had managed to leave by
promising to join the gang. With respect, this suggestion is not quite correct.
[38]
In his interview at the
port of entry, the applicant stated that he had told the gang members who accosted
them that they would think about the gang members’ proposal to join them. At
his hearing before the Board, the applicant described his encounter with the
gang members as follows:
[translation]
So we were
asked: what are you doing here? What would we do (inaudible). Lift your shirts,
you belong to the 18. So I lifted my shirt. Come on, where do you come from?
Give me your wallet. Ah, Dolores, where’s that? I said Cabanias. Ah, the MS is
strong too. I said, yes, I’m with them there, but here, I’m with you. Why don’t
you stay here, you filthy (. . . inaudible . . .). I said,
no, I’m working with my cousin. You see, he’s here, because they separated us
back there.
Where does your
cousin live? I said that he lived in Colon. Why don’t you stay here with us? The police—here, we give the
orders. We give the orders in this area.
MEMBER (to the claimant)
Q. And
then what?
A. I
said, what do you think? So, so, as if everything returned to normal. They
calmed down. So we continued. So I said, if I wanted to contact you to belong
to this area? So we continued making purchases. They were still in the area. So
we, we left, we left, and I contacted my sister who’s in the United States so I could travel to the United States and then to Canada.
[39]
Although it is accurate
to say that the applicant succeeded in calming matters down through his nuanced
answers, the Board’s finding that the applicant managed to leave “without being constrained or
threatened” does not seem unreasonable to me, considering the evidence.
[40]
Therefore, in my view,
as a whole, the Board’s findings of fact are reasonable, justified and supported
by the evidence. The Board ruled that, on the basis of the documentary evidence
regarding forced recruitment practices by gangs, the applicant’s experiences and
his current profile, there was no serious possibility that he would be
persecuted if he returned to El Salvador. The Court must show deference to the
Board’s analysis, and no intervention is warranted in this case.
3. Did the Board err
in its application of section 97 of the IRPA by determining that the
applicant had not shown that he was more at risk than the general population of
El Salvador?
[41]
The applicant submitted
that the fact that his profile matches the group of individuals targeted by gangs,
combined with his experiences, show that his risk of being persecuted if he
returns to El Salvador is greater than that faced by the
population in general.
[42]
The Board based its finding
that the applicant’s risk was generalized on Prophète v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 331, [2008]
F.C.J. No. 415, and on the evidence. The Board’s reasoning can be
found at paragraph 16 of its decision:
[16] Furthermore,
the panel is of the opinion that the claimant did not establish that he was
more at risk than the general population. After finishing school, the claimant
was reportedly randomly approached by the gangs while he was delivering food
for his job. On one occasion, they allegedly tried to extort money from his
cousin and then they took the goods; the second time, they reportedly checked
whether they belonged to the opposing gang, while stating that he and his
cousin should join the gang. The claimant did not demonstrate that he was
personally targeted and that he was at greater risk than the general
population. Since his departure from El Salvador, the evidence does not indicate that he is being sought. Thus,
following the analysis in Prophète the claimant’s risk, upon returning
to his country of origin, of facing gangs and being a victim of criminality is
a generalized risk that is shared by the entire population.
[43]
In my view, the Board’s
finding is based on the evidence and consistent with the current state of the
law on the issue of personalized risk.
[44]
Paragraph 97(1)(b)
of the IRPA does not confer any protection on persons who face a risk faced
generally by the other persons in a country:
Person in need of
protection
97.
(1) A person in need of protection is a person in
Canada whose removal to their
country or countries of nationality or, if they do not have a country of
nationality, their country of former habitual residence, would subject them
personally
. . .
(b) to a risk to their
life or to a risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment if
(i)
the person is unable or, because of that risk, unwilling to avail themself of
the protection of that country,
(ii)
the risk would be faced by the person in every part of that country and is
not faced generally by other individuals in or from that country,
(iii)
the risk is not inherent or incidental to lawful sanctions, unless imposed in
disregard of accepted international standards, and
(iv)
the risk is not caused by the inability of that country to provide adequate
health or medical care.
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Personne à protéger
97. (1) A qualité de personne à
protéger la personne qui se trouve au Canada et serait personnellement, par
son renvoi vers tout pays dont elle a la nationalité ou, si elle n’a pas de
nationalité, dans lequel elle avait sa résidence habituelle, exposée :
[…]
b) soit à une menace à sa vie ou au risque de traitements ou peines
cruels et inusités dans le cas suivant :
(i)
elle ne peut ou, de ce fait, ne veut se réclamer de la protection de ce pays,
(ii)
elle y est exposée en tout lieu de ce pays alors que d’autres personnes
originaires de ce pays ou qui s’y trouvent ne le sont généralement pas,
(iii)
la menace ou le risque ne résulte pas de sanctions légitimes — sauf celles
infligées au mépris des normes internationales — et inhérents à celles-ci ou
occasionnés par elles,
(iv)
la menace ou le risque ne résulte pas de l’incapacité du pays de fournir des
soins médicaux ou de santé adéquats.
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[45]
The Court has had
several occasions to rule on the concept of personalized risk in a context in
which the risk in question is faced by the population in general or by a
significant portion of the population. In Prophète, Justice
Tremblay-Lamer stated, as follows, the applicable principles:
[18] The
difficulty in analyzing personalized risk in situations of generalized human
rights violations, civil war, and failed states lies in determining the
dividing line between a risk that is “personalized” and one that is “general”. . . .
. . .
[23] . . .
the applicant does not face a personalized risk that
is not faced generally by other individuals in or from Haiti.
The risk of all forms of criminality is general and felt by all Haitians. While
a specific number of individuals may be targeted more frequently because of
their wealth, all Haitians are at risk of becoming the victims of violence.
[46]
The applicant argued that
the Board erred in determining that the risk he faced was comparable to that facing
the general population since the evidence clearly showed that he was part
of the subgroup of “young men” which is more at risk than the general
population. Although the Board referred to the “general population”, it is
obvious that its analysis of the risks faced by the applicant was conducted
within the context of the file, that is, the risks related to gang recruitment methods
among the subgroup of young men. The case law of this Court has recognized that
the risk facing a large subgroup of a population corresponds to a generalized
risk within the meaning of section 97 of the IRPA. Justice Pinard wrote
the following in Marcelin Gabriel v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 1170, [2009] F.C.J. No 1545:
[20] A generalized risk need not be one experienced by every
citizen. A subgroup can face a generalized risk. This was clear to Madam
Justice Judith Snider in Osorio v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration,
2005 FC 1459. The Court was asked to consider parents in Colombia as a specific group that is targeted as victims of crime,
specifically, child abduction. The Court noted that the category of “parents”
is significantly broad and the risk is a widespread or prevalent risk for all
Colombian parents (at paragraph 25). The applicants in that case could not
personalize the risk beyond membership to that subgroup and this did not
satisfy the Court. Thus, a generalized risk could be one experienced by a
subset of a nation’s population thus, membership in that category is not
sufficient to personalize the risk.
[47]
The fact that the
applicant was solicited by gangs when he was in El Salvador is not sufficient to show that his risk was personalized
or greater than the risks faced by all other young men in El Salvador. In Innocent v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2009 FC 1019, [2009] F.C.J.
No. 1243, the applicant also invoked the fact that the risk to
which she was subject was personalized because she had been personally targeted
by a gang of thugs. The Court refused to infer from the applicant’s experience
that the risk of violence which she was subject to was therefore greater than
that faced by all other Haitian citizens perceived as rich. Justice Mainville
wrote the following:
[66] However, there remains the alternative argument
advanced by counsel for the applicant, i.e., that the applicant was directly
targeted by a gang of thugs who attacked her three times. Thus, according to
her counsel, the applicant would be subject to a personalized risk that goes
beyond the risk faced by those who are perceived as rich since, in her
particular case, she was personally and directly targeted.
[67] A person victimized by crime is not, based on that
fact alone, a person in need of protection under section 97 of the Act. It
depends on the circumstances of each case: Cius v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), above, at paragraphs 3, 4 and 23, Acosta v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), above.
[68] Moreover, the personalized risk analysis must be
prospective. In the circumstances of this case, it is unlikely that the
applicant will be subject to a personalized risk by the same band of thugs
almost 4 years after the incidents in question. However, it is not the
Court’s task to carry out this prospective analysis, but the panel’s. The panel
found that “according to the evidence adduced before it, the risk to which the
claimant could be subjected is a generalized risk affecting the entire
population of the country and not a personalized risk . . .”
(decision, at para. 18).
[48]
Perez v. Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2010 FC 345,
[2010] F.C.J. No. 579, involved facts similar to those in this case: the
applicant was a young Honduran who had also been accosted and intimidated by
gangs who wanted him to join them, and who feared being persecuted by these
gangs should he return to his country. Justice Boivin wrote the following
regarding the generalized nature of the risk facing the applicant:
[36] The fact that the recruitment is personal does not
necessarily mean that the risk is personalized. It does not mean that the
activity is not one which is not faced generally by other individuals since, as
mentioned by the Board, “the very nature of recruitment is putting individual
people into organisation”.
[37] The documentary evidence demonstrates that gangs
are a serious problem in Honduras and that most people are at some risk from
them. As for recruitment faced by the applicant, the Court is of the view that,
based on the evidence, a large subset of the population, basically all young
men, are at risk of recruitment strategies similar to that alleged by the
applicant and this was considered by the Board.
. . .
[49]
I agree with these
principles and find them to be entirely applicable in this case.
[50]
I therefore conclude
that the Board conducted an analysis based on the evidence and that it did not
make any errors warranting an intervention by the Court. The Board’s
conclusions fall within the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are
defensible in respect of the facts and law (Dunsmuir and Khosa).
[51]
For these reasons, the
application for judicial review is dismissed. The parties posed no question for
certification.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS that the application for judicial review
be dismissed. No question is certified.
“Marie-Josée Bédard”
Certified true
translation
Johanna Kratz