Date: 20101124
Docket: IMM-4423-09
Citation: 2010 FC 1175
Ottawa, Ontario, November 24,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Applicant
and
BRANDON
CARL HUNTLEY
Respondent
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
TABLE OF
CONTENTS. 2
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT.. 4
BACKGROUND.. 4
DECISION UNDER REVIEW... 5
ISSUES. 11
STATUTORY PROVISIONS. 12
STANDARD OF REVIEW... 19
ARGUMENTS. 21
The
Applicant 21
Preliminary issues. 21
Affidavits. 21
No abuse of process. 22
Errors in the Decision. 23
State Protection. 24
Assessment of evidence was unreasonable. 26
No evidence of genocide. 27
Affirmative action policies. 28
Focus on white farmers is unreasonable. 29
IFA finding is perverse. 29
Selective use of objective documentary evidence. 30
Random acts of violence are not persecution. 30
Absence of subjective fear. 31
Delay. 32
The
Respondent 33
Abuse of process. 33
Re-weighing evidence. 34
State protection. 35
Factual findings. 35
Persecution. 36
Subjective fear. 36
Costs. 37
ANALYSIS. 37
General 37
The Respondent’s Oral Evidence. 40
Examination by Mr. Kaplan. 46
Objective Evidence of Racial Motivation. 49
Subjective Fear. 56
Reasons for Coming to Canada. 58
Failure to Report to the Police. 62
Delay in Making a Refugee Claim.. 69
Conclusions about the Respondent’s Personal Evidence. 71
The Evidence of Ms. Lara Kaplan. 71
Ms. Kaplan’s Personal Experiences. 76
Ms. Kaplan’s Account of Third Party Attacks. 79
Ms. Kaplan’s General Views. 82
The Documentary Evidence. 85
National
Documentation Package. 93
The RPD’s Findings. 98
Conclusions on Merits. 105
External Considerations. 107
The Evidence of Interference. 108
The Affidavit of Ms. Stefanie Gude. 108
The Affidavit of Ms. Amina Sherazee. 113
The
Jurisprudence. 119
The
Remedy. 125
Certification. 126
REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (Act) for judicial review
of the decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and
Refugee Board (RPD), dated August 27, 2009 (Decision), which granted the
Respondent status as a Convention refugee pursuant to section 96 of the Act.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The
Respondent, Brandon Carl Huntley, is a white, male citizen of the Republic of South
Africa (South
Africa).
He claimed refugee status on the basis of fear of discrimination, harassment
and possible death because of his race. The Respondent reports having been
attacked and assaulted by black South Africans on numerous occasions. His
attackers used racial slurs.
[3]
The
Respondent first came to Canada on a work permit in 2004 to work as an
amusement park attendant. He then returned to South Africa in November
2004 upon the expiration of his first work permit. The Respondent returned to
Canada on another work permit in June 2005. That permit expired in December
2006.
[4]
The
Respondent remained in Canada illegally upon the expiration of his
second work permit. He married Melani Crête, a Canadian citizen, in August
2007. He then applied for refugee status in April 2008. The Respondent’s
application was allowed. However, the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration
(Applicant or Minister) now seeks to quash the Decision.
[5]
The
Respondent brought a motion on March 31, 2010 requesting that this matter be
converted from an application to an action, or that the Minister be ordered to
forward to the Respondent his reasons for commencing judicial review. Justice Yvon
Pinard heard the Respondent’s motion and issued an order on April 16, 2010 dismissing
it.
DECISION
UNDER REVIEW
[6]
The
RPD determined that the Respondent was a credible witness and accepted his
evidence with regard to the attacks he had suffered. Moreover, the RPD
determined that the Respondent’s allegations of persecution of white South
Africans were enhanced by the oral testimony of Ms. Lara Anne Kaplan, who is
also a citizen of South
Africa.
[7]
Ms.
Kaplan stated that “things started to shift to the disadvantage of the white
South Africans” after Nelson Mandela’s release from prison and his election as
president.
She said that part of the shift included an attempt to “get the formally (sic)
underprivileged African-South Africans to move into the business world and
start earning better money.” This was known as Black Economic Empowerment
(BEE). Moreover, Ms. Kaplan suggested that affirmative action in South Africa involves the
use of different standards in order to allow black South Africans to attain
positions of influence and power. According to the RPD Member, “[a]t the time,
[the witness] was at the top of the corporate ladder. But some 12-13 years into
her career, she noticed she was not receiving any further promotions and that
‘a lot of black people were coming in to take our place.’”
[8]
Ms.
Kaplan also noted two incidents in which she was accosted by black South
Africans and threatened with a gun.
[9]
The
RPD noted Ms. Kaplan’s belief that “[black South Africans] believe that all
whites are equally responsible for apartheid and that ‘we should be eradicated
and stomped on like an ant.’” She described the current situation in South Africa as being a
“reverse apartheid”, and claimed that all whites feel the hatred of black South
Africans towards them.
[10]
Ms.
Kaplan alleged that the police in South Africa, who are themselves
mainly Black South African, do not act upon crimes that black South Africans
commit against white South Africans. It was the witness’s view that this occurs
because the police are “corrupt” and “in cahoots with the criminals.” According
to Ms. Kaplan, the police do not want to help white South Africans who are
attacked. Because you are white, “you deserve it. [I]t’s long overdue.”
[11]
Ms.
Kaplan then described what happened to Robert Kaplan, one of her brothers.
While Robert’s son was asleep in the house, four black South African men broke
into his house, apparently intending to harm his child. Robert pleaded with
them not to harm his son and told them they could do what they wanted to him
instead. Robert was then tied up, tortured, stabbed nine times, shot three
times in the chest, burned with a hot iron and “left for dead.” Robert survived
this ordeal, although he required open-heart surgery and long-term intensive
care.
[12]
This
incident was well-documented on the television and radio and in the newspapers.
Ms. Kaplan stated her belief that the attack on Robert occurred because her
brother was both white and wealthy. The RPD described the telling of this
incident by Ms. Kaplan as follows:
During the course of [the witness’]
testimony, she broke down and cried openly. That was to be expected. What I did
not expect was to see counsel, Russell Kaplan, also break down and cry while
she was describing the torture of her brother. It turns out that counsel, Mr.
Kaplan, is also a brother of the witness and Robert’s brother. He was also born
in South Africa and came to Canada some years ago as an
immigrant. I gather from what I took out of the evidence that he left South Africa for the same reasons as his
sister; namely, the reverse apartheid attitude which prevails in that country.
[13]
The
RPD then considered the documentary evidence presented, including Daily Sun article
by Africa Ka Mahamba entitled “‘Taking from whites is not a crime in SA,’”
which reported that a leader of a Pretoria-based youth organization had
condoned stealing from white people in the suburbs because “[t]he whites have
stolen from us since 6 April 1652” and [t]aking from whites is not a crime
because you repossess what belongs to you.”
[14]
Ms.
Kaplan also provided the RPD with accounts of incidents about other people who
had experienced psychological and physical damage as a result of attacks by
black South Africans.
[15]
One
incident involved a woman’s friend who, according to that woman, was shot to
death for no reason “by scum-of-the-earth robbers” while waiting for his son to
finish soccer training at a park. According to her, some black South African
men were trying to rob a second woman of her cellular phone and, as they ran
past, they shot the first woman’s male friend in the neck. The RPD noted that
Ms. Kaplan “has no doubt that he was shot simply because the victim was white
and the black killers knew they would get away with it, scot free.” In the
words of the RPD, Ms. Kaplan opined that, “in any other country, a mass
genocide … on such a scale as is occurring against whites in South Africa would
be considered genocide and crimes against humanity.”
[16]
The
RPD then considered Ms. Kaplan’s upbringing in a well-educated family. It noted:
“[L]ittle did [the Kaplan family] expect that when Nelson Mandela came into
power, that the government policies would shift to the extent that African
South Africans were to become the masters and the white South Africans the
servants, with all of its intended consequences.”
[17]
The
RPD stated in its Decision that the “witness’s evidence was the lifeline for
the claimant’s claim”, and that she brought to the hearing a “vivid and
detailed account” of what is occurring in South Africa with regard to white
South Africans, as well as the indifference of the mainly black South African
police force and its failure to protect them.
[18]
The
RPD then considered the Respondent’s personal circumstances and noted that he
had not sought refugee protection at the first opportunity. The RPD accepted
that, on his first trip to Canada, the Respondent did not seek refugee status
because he was not aware of the refugee system. Furthermore, on his second trip
to Canada, the
Respondent did not claim refugee status because he erroneously believed he was
precluded from doing so because he does not speak French.
[19]
The
RPD noted that the Respondent had tried to join the Canadian Armed Forces to
avoid returning to South Africa. The RPD also noted that “[h]e met his
wife to be and fell in love with her. He married her believing that he could
use her to help him get permanent status in Canada. He was to find out later
that ‘she was not a nice woman.’” Consequently, he separated from her in or
around December 2008.
[20]
Although
the RPD observed that a delay in making a refugee claim may affect the
credibility of the claim, it found that, upon the expiration of the
Respondent’s work visa, he made attempts to solidify his stay in Canada by
attempting to join the Armed Forces and by marrying a Canadian citizen.
Accordingly, the RPD determined that the Respondent’s “subjective fear of persecution
remained constant and consistent up to and including the time he made his
refugee claim.”
[21]
The
RPD then considered country conditions in South Africa. It noted
reports of serious human rights problems, including use of excessive force by
the police, vigilante and mob violence and violence resulting from social,
racial and ethnic tensions. The RPD noted the killings and violent crimes
against white farmers and their families, which continue in rural areas.
[22]
The
RPD then considered some of the “reports” contained in the Respondent’s Index
of Documents, including such articles as M. Riordan-Bull Kleinmond’s “Attacks
have shown most of ANC to be racists” Cape Argus ( 31 May 2008) and
David Bullard’s “Loss of freedom creeps up on us like a face of wrinkles” Sunday
Times (21 October 2007).
[23]
The
RPD went on to consider in more detail the murder of almost 2000 white farmers
in South
Africa,
many of whom had also been brutally tortured. The RPD noted that “[s]ome
victims have been burned with smoothing irons or had boiling water poured down
their throats” and that “[t]his type of torture is consistent with the torture
received by the witness’ brother Robert.” Pictorial evidence of some of these
murders was included in the evidence before the RPD.
[24]
The
RPD found the following facts were proven on the evidence before it:
a.
That
the Respondent was attacked by black South Africans on “at least six or seven
occasions because of his white skin”;
b.
That
the Respondent “has scars on various parts of his body”;
c.
That
Ms. Kaplan was attacked and threatened with guns by black South Africans “on
two separate occasions because of the colour of her skin and perceived wealth”;
d.
That
Ms. Kaplan’s brother Robert, “who was tortured and shot by African South
Africans and miraculously lived, now has major physical and psychological
problems”;
e.
That
Ms. Kaplan’s brother Robert and her father “survived only because of their
wealth, being able to install electronic and guard protection for themselves
both inside and outside their homes.”
[25]
The
RPD also found that the evidence before it demonstrated the “indifference and
inability or unwillingness of the government and the security forces to protect
White South Africans from persecution by African South Africans.” The RPD
determined that the Respondent had presented “‘clear and convincing proof’ of
the state’s inability or unwillingness to protect him.” Furthermore, the RPD
held that “the claimant was a victim because of his race (white South African)
rather than a victim of criminality and that he has established a link between
his fear of persecution and one of the five grounds in the Convention
definition.”
[26]
Moreover,
the RPD determined that no viable Internal Flight Alternative (IFA) existed for
the Respondent in any part of South Africa. It relied on the
Europa World Yearbook 2008 in finding that black South Africans make up about
80% of the population, while white Europeans make up 9% of the population.
Accordingly, the RPD found that the claimant would “stand out like a ‘sore
thumb’ due to his colour in any part of the country.”
[27]
The
RPD determined that the Respondent’s fear of persecution by black South
Africans was justified based on the objective evidence before it. Having
considered the evidence and submissions of counsel, the RPD determined that the
Respondent had satisfied his burden of establishing a serious possibility of
persecution on the Convention ground of race.
ISSUES
[28]
The
issues on this application can be summarized as follows:
1.
Whether
the RPD erred in finding that the Respondent had sufficiently rebutted the
presumption of state protection;
2.
Whether
the RPD erred in its assessment of the evidence;
3.
Whether
the violence and criminality experienced by the Respondent constitutes
persecution;
4.
Whether
the RPD erred in its assessment of the Respondent’s lack of subjective fear of
persecution;
5.
Whether
the Minister’s application for judicial review constitutes an abuse of process
and breaches the Respondent’s rights under the Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, being Schedule B to
the Canada Act 1982 (U.K.), 1982, c. 11 (Charter).
STATUTORY
PROVISIONS
[29]
The
following provisions of the Act are applicable in these proceedings:
72. (1) Judicial review by the Federal Court with
respect to any matter — a decision, determination or order made, a measure
taken or a question raised — under this Act is commenced by making an
application for leave to the Court.
Application
(2) The following provisions govern an application under subsection
(1):
[…]
(d) a judge of the
Court shall dispose of the application without delay and in a summary way
and, unless a judge of the Court directs otherwise, without personal
appearance; ….
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.
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72. (1) Le contrôle judiciaire par la Cour
fédérale de toute mesure — décision, ordonnance, question ou affaire — prise
dans le cadre de la présente loi est subordonné au dépôt d’une demande
d’autorisation.
Application
(2) Les dispositions suivantes s’appliquent à la demande d’autorisation
:
[…]
d) il est statué sur
la demande à bref délai et selon la procédure sommaire et, sauf autorisation
d’un juge de la Cour, sans comparution en personne; ….
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.
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[30]
The
following provision of the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7 is
applicable in these proceedings:
18. (1) Subject to section 28, the Federal Court has exclusive
original jurisdiction
(a) to issue an
injunction, writ of certiorari, writ of prohibition, writ of mandamus or writ of quo warranto, or grant
declaratory relief, against any federal board, commission or other tribunal;
and
(b) to hear and
determine any application or other proceeding for relief in the nature of
relief contemplated by paragraph (a), including
any proceeding brought against the Attorney General of Canada, to obtain
relief against a federal board, commission or other tribunal.
Extraordinary remedies, members of Canadian Forces
(2) The Federal Court has exclusive original jurisdiction to hear
and determine every application for a writ of habeas corpus ad
subjiciendum, writ of certiorari, writ of prohibition or writ of mandamus in relation to any
member of the Canadian Forces serving outside Canada.
Remedies to be obtained on application
(3) The remedies provided for in subsections (1) and (2) may be
obtained only on an application for judicial review made under section 18.1.
Application for
judicial review
18.1 (1) An application for judicial review may be made by the
Attorney General of Canada or by anyone directly affected by the matter in
respect of which relief is sought.
Time limitation
(2) An application for judicial review in respect of a decision or
an order of a federal board, commission or other tribunal shall be made
within 30 days after the time the decision or order was first communicated by
the federal board, commission or other tribunal to the office of the Deputy
Attorney General of Canada or to the party directly affected by it, or within
any further time that a judge of the Federal Court may fix or allow before or
after the end of those 30 days.
Powers of Federal Court
(3) On an application for judicial review, the Federal Court may
(a) order a federal
board, commission or other tribunal to do any act or thing it has unlawfully
failed or refused to do or has unreasonably delayed in doing; or
(b) declare invalid
or unlawful, or quash, set aside or set aside and refer back for
determination in accordance with such directions as it considers to be
appropriate, prohibit or restrain, a decision, order, act or proceeding of a
federal board, commission or other tribunal.
Grounds of review
(4) The Federal Court may grant relief under subsection (3) if it
is satisfied that the federal board, commission or other tribunal
(a) acted without
jurisdiction, acted beyond its jurisdiction or refused to exercise its
jurisdiction;
(b) failed to
observe a principle of natural justice, procedural fairness or other
procedure that it was required by law to observe;
(c) erred in law in
making a decision or an order, whether or not the error appears on the face
of the record;
(d) based its
decision or order on an erroneous finding of fact that it made in a perverse
or capricious manner or without regard for the material before it;
(e) acted, or
failed to act, by reason of fraud or perjured evidence; or
(f) acted in any
other way that was contrary to law.
Defect in form or technical irregularity
(5) If the sole ground for relief established on an application for
judicial review is a defect in form or a technical irregularity, the Federal
Court may
(a) refuse the
relief if it finds that no substantial wrong or miscarriage of justice has
occurred; and
(b) in the case of
a defect in form or a technical irregularity in a decision or an order, make
an order validating the decision or order, to have effect from any time and
on any terms that it considers appropriate.
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18. (1) Sous réserve de l’article 28, la Cour
fédérale a compétence exclusive, en première instance, pour :
a) décerner une
injonction, un bref de certiorari, de mandamus, de prohibition ou de quo warranto, ou pour rendre un jugement déclaratoire contre tout office
fédéral;
b) connaître de
toute demande de réparation de la nature visée par l’alinéa a), et notamment de toute procédure engagée contre le
procureur général du Canada afin d’obtenir réparation de la part d’un office
fédéral.
Recours
extraordinaires : Forces canadiennes
(2) Elle a compétence exclusive, en première instance, dans le cas
des demandes suivantes visant un membre des Forces canadiennes en poste à
l’étranger : bref d’habeas corpus ad subjiciendum, de certiorari, de prohibition ou
de mandamus.
Exercice des
recours
(3) Les recours prévus aux paragraphes (1) ou (2) sont exercés par
présentation d’une demande de contrôle judiciaire.
Demande de contrôle
judiciaire
18.1 (1) Une demande de contrôle judiciaire peut
être présentée par le procureur général du Canada ou par quiconque est
directement touché par l’objet de la demande.
Délai de
présentation
(2) Les demandes de contrôle judiciaire sont à présenter dans les
trente jours qui suivent la première communication, par l’office fédéral, de
sa décision ou de son ordonnance au bureau du sous-procureur général du
Canada ou à la partie concernée, ou dans le délai supplémentaire qu’un juge
de la Cour fédérale peut, avant ou après l’expiration de ces trente jours,
fixer ou accorder.
Pouvoirs de la Cour
fédérale
(3) Sur présentation d’une demande de contrôle judiciaire, la Cour
fédérale peut :
a) ordonner à
l’office fédéral en cause d’accomplir tout acte qu’il a illégalement omis ou
refusé d’accomplir ou dont il a retardé l’exécution de manière déraisonnable;
b) déclarer nul ou
illégal, ou annuler, ou infirmer et renvoyer pour jugement conformément aux
instructions qu’elle estime appropriées, ou prohiber ou encore restreindre
toute décision, ordonnance, procédure ou tout autre acte de l’office fédéral.
Motifs
(4) Les mesures prévues au paragraphe (3) sont prises si la Cour
fédérale est convaincue que l’office fédéral, selon le cas :
a) a agi sans
compétence, outrepassé celle-ci ou refusé de l’exercer;
b) n’a pas observé
un principe de justice naturelle ou d’équité procédurale ou toute autre
procédure qu’il était légalement tenu de respecter;
c) a rendu une
décision ou une ordonnance entachée d’une erreur de droit, que celle-ci soit
manifeste ou non au vu du dossier;
d) a rendu une
décision ou une ordonnance fondée sur une conclusion de fait erronée, tirée
de façon abusive ou arbitraire ou sans tenir compte des éléments dont il
dispose;
e) a agi ou omis
d’agir en raison d’une fraude ou de faux témoignages;
f) a agi de toute
autre façon contraire à la loi.
Vice de forme
(5) La Cour fédérale peut rejeter toute demande de contrôle
judiciaire fondée uniquement sur un vice de forme si elle estime qu’en
l’occurrence le vice n’entraîne aucun dommage important ni déni de justice
et, le cas échéant, valider la décision ou l’ordonnance entachée du vice et
donner effet à celle-ci selon les modalités de temps et autres qu’elle estime
indiquées.
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[31]
The
following provision of the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106 is also
applicable in these proceedings:
Content
of affidavits
81.
(1) Affidavits
shall be confined to facts within the deponent’s personal knowledge except on
motions, other than motions for summary judgment or summary trial, in which
statements as to the deponent’s belief, with the grounds for it, may be
included.
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Contenu
81. (1) Les
affidavits se limitent aux faits dont le déclarant a une connaissance
personnelle, sauf s’ils sont présentés à l’appui d’une requête – autre qu’une
requête en jugement sommaire ou en procès sommaire – auquel cas ils peuvent
contenir des déclarations fondées sur ce que le déclarant croit être les
faits, avec motifs à l’appui.
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[32]
The
following provision of the Federal Courts Immigration and Refugee Protection
Rules, SOR/93-22 is also applicable in these proceedings:
12. (1) Affidavits filed in connection with an application
for leave shall be confined to such evidence as the deponent could give if
testifying as a witness before the Court.
(2) Unless a judge for
special reasons so orders, no cross-examination of a deponent on an affidavit
filed in connection with an application is permitted before leave to commence
an application for judicial review is granted.
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12.
(1) Tout affidavit déposé à l’occasion de la demande d’autorisation est
limité au témoignage que son auteur pourrait donner s’il comparaissait comme
témoin devant la Cour.
(2) Sauf ordonnance
contraire rendue par un juge pour des raisons spéciales, le
contre-interrogatoire de l’auteur de l’affidavit déposé à l’occasion de la
demande n’est pas permis avant que la demande de contrôle judiciaire soit
accueillie.
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[33]
The
following provision of the Charter is also applicable in these proceedings:
Life, liberty and security of person
7. Everyone
has the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not
to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of
fundamental justice.
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Vie, liberté et sécurité
7. Chacun a droit à la vie, à
la liberté et à la sécurité de sa personne; il ne peut être porté atteinte à
ce droit qu'en conformité avec les principes de justice fondamentale.
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STANDARD OF REVIEW
[34]
The
Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir
v. New Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9,
[2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 (Dunsmuir) held that a standard of review analysis
need not be conducted in every instance. Instead, where the standard of review
applicable to the particular question before the court is well-settled by past
jurisprudence, the reviewing court may adopt that standard of review. Only
where this search proves fruitless must the reviewing court undertake a
consideration of the four factors comprising the standard of review analysis. In the case at hand, the
appropriate standard of review for each issue has been addressed by judicial
precedent.
[35]
A
standard of reasonableness is appropriate when determining whether the RPD erred
in finding that the Respondent had sufficiently rebutted the presumption of
state protection. See Song v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2008 FC
467, [2008] F.C.J. No. 591 at paragraph 6.
[36]
The
RPD’s assessment of the evidence and its factual findings are owed considerable
deference and are reviewable on a standard of reasonableness. See Legault v.
Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2002
FCA 125, 212 D.L.R. (4th) 139 at paragraph 11; and Dunsmuir, above, at paragraph
51.
[37]
Reasonableness
is also the appropriate standard of review when determining whether the RPD
erred in its assessment of the Respondent’s subjective fear. See Cornejo v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 261, [2010]
F.C.J. No. 295 at paragraph 17.
[38]
The
RPD’s determination of whether the violence and criminality experienced by the
Respondent constitutes persecution is an issue of mixed fact and law.
Accordingly, it will be reviewed on a standard of reasonableness. See Liang
v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 450, [2008] F.C.J. No. 572 at
paragraph 15.
[39]
When reviewing a decision on the standard of reasonableness, the
analysis is concerned with “the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process [and also with] whether the
decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are
defensible in respect of the facts and law”: Dunsmuir, above, at paragraph 47. Put another way, the Court
should intervene only if the Decision was unreasonable in the sense that it falls
outside the “range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in
respect of the facts and law.”
[40]
As
regards the Respondent’s allegation that this application for judicial review
constitutes an abuse of process and a breach of the Respondent’s Charter
rights, the appropriate standard of review is one of correctness. See, for
example, Blake v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2008 FC 572, [2009] 1 F.C.R. 179; and Smith v. Canada (Chief of Defence
Staff),
2010 FC 321, [2010] F.C.J. No. 371.
ARGUMENTS
The
Applicant
Preliminary
issues
Affidavits
[41]
The
Applicant submits that the two affidavits sworn in support of the Respondent’s
position should be struck since they address matters that are not within the
knowledge of the affiants and/or are irrelevant.
[42]
The
Applicant contends that the affidavit of Ms. Stefanie Gude is irrelevant. This
affidavit refers to various reactions to the RPD’s Decision that occurred after
the Decision was made and that do not affect the errors made by the RPD.
Moreover, the affiant expresses opinions and makes assertions that are not
within her knowledge. This is contrary to Rule 81 of the Federal Courts
Rules and Rule 12(1) of the Federal Courts Immigration and Refugee
Protection Rules.
[43]
Similarly,
the affidavit of Ms. Amina Sherazee is irrelevant and argumentative; it is
simply based on her opinions and fails to show that she has any personal
knowledge of the matters to which she deposes. The Applicant submits that Ms.
Sherazee speculates about the Minister’s motives for applying for leave and
judicial review of the RPD’s Decision. However, there is no evidence that she
has been privy to any discussions that may have led the Minister to seek leave
and review. As such, she has no personal knowledge of this matter. Further, Ms.
Sherazee’s affidavit attempts to draw legal conclusions and casts aspersions on
the Court.
[44]
The
Court determined in Ly v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2003 FC 1184, [2003] F.C.J. No. 1496 (Ly) at paragraph 10 that
[e]xcept
on motions, affidavits shall be confined to facts within the personal knowledge
of the deponent: Rule 81(1), Federal Court Rules, 1998. The affidavit must be
free from argumentative materials and the deponent must not interpret evidence
previously considered by a tribunal or draw legal conclusions… If an affidavit
does not meet these requirements, the application can only succeed if an error
is apparent on the face of the record (citations omitted).
[45]
The
Applicant says that the affidavits put forward by the Respondent do not meet
the requirements for affidavits as set out by the Court in Ly, above. As
such, the Applicant submits that they should be either struck from the record
or completely ignored.
No abuse of process
[46]
There
is no merit to the Respondent’s contention that the Minister’s application for
judicial review constitutes an abuse of process. The Respondent is attempting
to argue that the Minister should be precluded from seeking judicial review of
a decision that the Minister considers unreasonable and flawed. Furthermore,
the Respondent alleges that the Court should be deprived of jurisdiction to
hear the application. This ignores the independence of the Court, as well as
its ability to make its own decisions.
[47]
The
Respondent’s allegation that the Minister’s application for judicial review is
the result of political pressure is unfounded. It is open to the South African
government to protest a finding that it is presiding over the genocide of white
South Africans or that all black South African citizens want white citizens
eradicated. The Minister’s decision to seek leave and judicial review, however,
is based on the legal and factual errors in the RPD’s Decision.
[48]
Because
the Minister’s application discloses serious issues, the rule of law dictates
that the Minister – like all litigants before the Court – be given a chance to
be heard. Apart from his baseless speculation, the Respondent has not shown
that there has been any abuse of process or that the Minister’s application
lacks merit and should not be entertained by this Court.
Errors in the Decision
[49]
The
Applicant submits that the RPD erred by:
a.
Finding
that the Respondent had rebutted the presumption of state protection;
b.
Ignoring
evidence that was crucial to the determination at hand;
c.
Equating
random acts of violence and criminality with persecution due to the
Respondent’s race;
d.
Failing
to assess properly the Respondent’s subjective fear in light of his delay in
making a claim for refugee status.
State Protection
[50]
The
onus was on the Respondent in this instance to provide clear and convincing
evidence that the government of South Africa is unable or unwilling to protect him.
However, in the RPD’s reasons, there is no reference to, or consideration of,
the Respondent’s burden in this regard.
[51]
The
Respondent admits that he never reported any of the alleged attacks to the
authorities. While the RPD acknowledged that the Respondent did not seek state
protection, it failed to consider properly the impact of the Respondent’s
failure to seek protection on his onus to rebut the presumption of state
protection.
[52]
Moreover,
the Respondent’s claim that he did not report any of the alleged attacks
because in other instances such reports “got lost in the system” is unsupported
by evidence. The Applicant submits that the RPD erred in simply accepting that
the majority of police in South Africa are black and are not interested in protecting
whites. Indeed, this finding is flawed for a number of reasons.
[53]
First,
the two initial attacks faced by the Respondent occurred in 1991 and 1992 when
apartheid was still occurring in South Africa. As such, the police and other security
services were controlled by the apartheid state whose main goal was to protect
the privileged position of the white minority and suppress the black majority
of the population. There
was no evidence before the RPD on which it could reasonably conclude that the
police powers in South
Africa at
this time would not have been interested in protecting a white person who had
allegedly been assaulted by black people. Consequently, the Respondent’s
failure to report the first attacks on him in 1991 and 1992 should have been
considered by the RPD in its analysis of state protection.
[54]
Moreover,
the Respondent’s contention that the South African police are not interested in
protecting whites does not withstand scrutiny, since the Respondent stated that
his family had reported a robbery in 2005. According to the Respondent’s
testimony, the police both responded to and investigated this complaint. The
failure to lay charges is not evidence of a lack of state protection. As noted
in Zhuravlvev v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2000] 4 F.C. 3,
[2000] F.C.J. No. 507 (T.D.), “[a]ll policing activity is bound to encounter
failures, particularly in a democratic state. Even in Canada, random acts of
vandalism or violence seldom yield convictions” (paragraph 19).
[55]
The complaint of the
Respondent’s own family to the police and the ensuing investigation undermine
the Respondent’s claim – and the RPD’s finding – that the South African police
are not concerned with the protection of white South Africans. Despite the fact
that the police were responsive when his family sought police protection, the
Respondent failed to report any of the attacks he faced. The Applicant submits
that this failure is inconsistent with the Respondent’s onus as set out in Canada (Attorney General) v.
Ward,
[1993] 2 S.C.R. 689, 103 D.L.R. (4th) 1.
[56]
Furthermore,
the RPD’s Decision seems to suggest that if a claimant is not the same
ethnicity as the members of the law enforcement service then the duty to seek
state protection is relaxed or lessened, even where no credible evidence of the
state’s inability or unwillingness to protect has been shown. According to the
Applicant, this view is unsupported by international law or Canadian
jurisprudence; it rests largely on the Board’s flawed assessment of the country
conditions.
Assessment of evidence was unreasonable
[57]
The
RPD noted in its Decision that the Respondent’s claim was enhanced and
supported by the oral testimony of a witness whose evidence was “the lifeline
for the claimant’s claim.” It can be inferred that the RPD found Ms. Kaplan to
be credible and accepted her evidence as true. Within her testimony, Ms. Kaplan
made many assertions which the RPD must be taken to have accepted. These
assertions include the following:
a.
That
the South African police, who are mainly black, are “corrupt” and “in cahoots
with the criminals” who attack whites;
b.
That
Black South
Africans have a hatred and a vendetta against the white South Africans” due to
the injustices of the apartheid regime and that all whites feel this hatred;
c.
That
all blacks
in South Africa hold all whites equally responsible for apartheid and want
whites eradicated and stomped on like ants;
d.
That
a mass genocide of white South Africans by the black majority is occurring in South Africa.
The Applicant submits that the RPD’s
acceptance of these assertions, which have no objective evidentiary foundation,
epitomizes the unreasonableness of the Decision.
No
evidence supporting witness’s opinions
[58]
No
evidence exists to support Ms. Kaplan’s statements with regard to the general
attitude of black South Africans towards white South Africans. The RPD failed
to critically analyze the witness’s statements. As such, the RPD seems to have
taken the witness’s statements as reflective of the feelings and beliefs of all
black South Africans.
[59]
The
country condition evidence before the RPD fails to support Ms. Kaplan’s
statements. According to the Minister,
[i]n
neither the country condition documents from credible and trustworthy sources
such as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, US State Department nor the
newspaper articles submitted on the Respondent’s behalf is there any mention of
a general animus among all blacks towards whites and a
desire to have whites “eradicated and stomped on like ants” [original
emphasis].
[60]
By
characterizing Ms. Kaplan’s evidence as the “lifeline” for the Respondent’s
claim, the RPD gives the impression that it accepted the witness’s
unsubstantiated assertions and based its Decision on those assertions. The
Applicant submits that this is both unreasonable and perverse.
No evidence of genocide
[61]
The
RPD erred further in failing to address Ms. Kaplan’s assertion that the black
majority in South
Africa
is perpetrating genocide against white South Africans. Because the witness’s
testimony was the “lifeline” for the Respondent’s claim, the RPD’s failure to
comment on this assertion must be taken as acceptance of the witness’s evidence
of an ongoing genocide against whites in South Africa.
[62]
Had
the RPD adequately consulted the documentary evidence, it would have realized
that Ms. Kaplan’s evidence was unsupported. Although the evidence shows the
emigration of many white professionals from South Africa in recent years, it
also shows considerable movement of foreign nationals (such as British
citizens) to South
Africa.
Although some of these citizens may not be white, this trend nonetheless
suggests that some white people have no difficulty moving to, or residing in, South Africa. The
Applicant submits that this evidence contradicts the witness’s assertion of
genocide and demonstrates that the RPD’s assessment of the conditions in South Africa was both
incomplete and misleading.
Affirmative action policies
[63]
The
RPD also erred with regard to its appraisal of South Africa’s
affirmative action policy. While the RPD appears to believe that the
affirmative action in favour of blacks and other racial groups constitutes
state-sponsored persecution, this is clearly incorrect. Rather, the affirmative
action policy seeks to ensure that black South Africans and minorities are
adequately represented within the workforce.
[64]
The
RPD’s failure to cite any evidence that suggests that South Africa’s
affirmative action policy reflects animosity towards white South Africans
demonstrates the perversity of its findings. Moreover, the Applicant submits
that the RPD’s focus on South Africa’s affirmative action
policy and its impact on whites is all the more unreasonable because there is
no credible evidence that this Respondent was ever prevented from advancing in
his career due to his race.
Focus on white farmers is unreasonable
[65]
In
its Decision, the RPD implies that the conditions of white farmers support Ms.
Kaplan’s allegations of a racially-motivated genocide. This is not a reasonable
implication; it is unreasonable to conclude that the plight of farmers
demonstrates what will happen to the Respondent upon returning to South Africa. The
Applicant characterizes the situation of farmers in South Africa as being “a
consequence of [a] long history and specific circumstances,” but these are
distinguishable from the circumstances of the Respondent.
IFA finding is perverse
[66]
The
RPD’s finding that the Respondent cannot return to South Africa because he
would “stand out like a ‘sore thumb’ due to his colour in any part of the
country” is unreasonable and perverse. The evidence before the RPD demonstrated
that white South Africans constitute approximately 10% of the country’s total
population and a far higher percentage in major cities and urban centres. The
RPD’s finding that the Respondent will be unable to find refuge because of his
skin colour cannot be reconciled with the population figures that were before
it.
Selective use of objective documentary evidence
[67]
The
“objective” documentary evidence relied on by the RPD consisted of: a) letters
to newspapers; b) the personal opinions of newspaper columnists and other
individuals; and c) reports on the conditions of white farmers. Notably absent
from this evidence is objective documentary evidence from such sources as
Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the US Department of State and the
British Home Office, which are commonly used in asylum cases.
[68]
The
evidence assessed by the RPD gives the impression that the African National
Congress is indifferent towards the plight of the minority white population.
The Applicant contends that this is an incomplete assessment of country
conditions since the black majority in South Africa is at least
equally victimized by criminals. See, for example, “South Africa’s crime
crisis” BBC News (27 May 1999). It is clear that the RPD failed to
examine the evidence before it with a balanced view.
Random acts of violence are not persecution
[69]
The
RPD further erred in equating the random acts of violence and criminality
experienced by South Africans of every background to persecution experienced by
white South Africans. The Applicant submits that crime is prevalent in South Africa and
victimizes all South Africans, regardless of race. Rather, it is more likely
that white South Africans are targeted because they are perceived to be
wealthy.
[70]
There
is no evidence in this instance, other than some equivocal racial slurs, to
prove that the attacks experienced by the Respondent were racially motivated.
Moreover, even if the Court were convinced that the attacks were racially
motivated, these attacks lack the systemic element required to constitute
persecution. The RPD’s Decision is unreasonable and inconsistent with the
principle that random acts of violence or criminality do not constitute
persecution. See Prophète v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FCA 31, [2009] F.C.J. No. 143.
Absence of subjective fear
[71]
The
RPD also erred in failing to consider properly whether the Respondent’s return
to South Africa after his first trip to Canada undermined
his allegation of subjective fear of persecution. The Applicant contends that
the jurisprudence holds that a claimant’s return to the country of alleged
persecution is incompatible with a subjective fear of persecution or negates a
well-founded fear of persecution. See, for example, Caballero v. Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration) 1993, 154 N.R. 345, [1993] F.C.J.
No. 483 (F.C.A.).
[72]
It
was unreasonable for the RPD to accept the Respondent’s explanation that he did
not believe he could make a refugee claim because he did not speak French. However,
the RPD accepted this explanation without any evidence that the Respondent made
any effort to ascertain the truth of this belief by contacting legal counsel,
Citizenship and Immigration Canada, the Refugee Board or a community legal
clinic.
Delay
[73]
The
RPD erred in accepting the Respondent’s explanation for delay simply because it
had not made any other findings of adverse credibility. According to the
Applicant, it is not a prerequisite that there should be an adverse credibility
finding against a claimant in order for the RPD to draw an adverse inference
from his/her delay to apply for protection. Rather, a delay is a relevant
factor that must be considered even in cases where the claimant is found to be
credible.
[74]
Getting
married or seeking employment with a government agency is not an adequate
explanation for a delay. Furthermore, the Respondent sought refugee protection only
after he separated from his spouse. According to the Applicant, this
demonstrates the fallacy of the RPD’s finding that the Respondent attempted to
regularize his status in Canada via marriage to a Canadian citizen.
[75]
What
is more, the Respondent claims to have been the victim of numerous attacks over
the course of a ten-year period. Nevertheless, he left South Africa only in
2004, after he was hired to work in Canada. This conduct is
inconsistent with a subjective fear of persecution.
The
Respondent
Abuse of process
[76]
In
light of the political pressure brought to bear by the South African government
in response to the Decision and the political nature of the Decision, the
Respondent alleges that the Minister’s application for judicial review
constitutes an abuse of process. Accordingly, this application should be
dismissed for reasons set out in United States of America v. Cobb, 2001
SCC 19, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 587 (Cobb). The Respondent submits that the
Court cannot adopt the “executive abuse” of a party such as the Minister
without depriving itself of jurisdiction.
[77]
The
Respondent also says that the Minister’s decision to judicially review this
Decision is most likely based on the pressures placed on the Canadian
government by the South African government. The timing and circumstances of
this application, as well as the “tenor, texture, and non-existent weight or
merit” of the grounds relied upon, have made it politically abusive. This has
resulted in an abuse of process as well as a breach of the Respondent’s section
7 Charter rights.
[78]
Moreover,
the Respondent submits that the “Honorable Court’s (sic) track record as
between applications on behalf of refugee claimants/immigrants versus those by
the Minister” demonstrates a reasonable apprehension of bias on the part of the
Court. Consequently, whether a true loss of independence has occurred, or
whether it is simply apprehended that the Court has acquiesced to pressure
applied by a foreign government, the result is that the Court has been stripped
of its jurisdiction.
Re-weighing evidence
[79]
The
Respondent contends that the Applicant is asking the Court to re-weigh the
evidence that was before the RPD simply because the Applicant is not satisfied
with the RPD’s Decision. However, such an approach is contrary to Dunsmuir,
above, which states that “deference requires respect for the legislative
choices to leave some matters in the hands of administrative decision makers,
for the processes and determinations that draw on particular expertise and
experiences.”
[80]
The
Respondent submits that it is unfair and inaccurate to confuse the recitation
of viva voce evidence within the Decision (i.e., the evidence of Ms.
Kaplan) with a presumption that the RPD accepted these statements as findings
of fact. Rather, the Decision must be read properly and contextually, without
the assumption that the RPD adopted all of the statements made by Ms. Kaplan
during her testimony. Indeed, the witness’s allegations of persecution were
accepted by the RPD; however, this does not mean that the RPD accepted the
sweeping generalizations made, and conclusions reached, by Ms. Kaplan. The RPD
simply recited her evidence without making findings of fact.
[81]
Moreover,
the Applicant has mischaracterized the RPD’s use of Ms. Kaplan’s testimony. The
RPD makes it clear that it considers the witness’s position and experiences as
similarly situated to those of the Respondent.
State protection
[82]
The
RPD’s findings with regard to state protection were reasonable in this
instance. The Respondent provided credible evidence concerning the attacks he
had experienced and the evidence of a similarly situated witness to rebut the
presumption of state protection. The Respondent rebutted the presumption of
state protection by providing clear and convincing evidence that demonstrated
the inability and/or unwillingness of the South African state to provide
protection. The Respondent was not required to risk his life by seeking
ineffective state protection simply to demonstrate its inadequacy. See Hernandez
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 1211, [2007]
F.C.J. No. 1563 at paragraph 19.
Factual findings
[83]
The
Applicant has misrepresented the factual findings of the RPD as including every
statement made by Ms. Kaplan. Even credible witnesses may draw conclusions that
are unwarranted; however, this does not affect the credibility of their
evidence, nor does it mean that the RPD has accepted as fact each and every
conclusion reached by the witness.
[84]
The
Applicant is mischaracterizing the findings of the RPD in an attempt to have
the evidence re-weighed. According to the Respondent, “the tenor, texture, and
weight of the Applicant’s arguments are to have this Court rehear and
re-determine the claim, based on misguided, politically correct notions and
alarm of potential opening of (white) flood-gates from South Africa.”
Persecution
[85]
The
Applicant also characterizes the persecution faced by the Respondent as “acts
of random violence.” This finding, however, does not follow from the evidence
before the RPD, which indicated that the Respondent was subjected to racial
slurs, such as “white dog”, “settler” and “white fuck,” when he was attacked on
numerous occasions. These attacks were clearly not random. This was confirmed
by Ms. Kaplan and was corroborated by the documentary evidence.
Subjective fear
[86]
It
was open to the RPD to make the finding of subjective fear based on the
evidence and facts before it. Especially in light of the seven serious physical
attacks suffered by the Respondent, as well as the corroborating evidence of
Ms. Kaplan and the documentary evidence.
[87]
The
consideration and assessment of delay was also within the purview of the RPD.
It appropriately assessed this issue as simply one consideration in determining
the existence of a well-founded fear of persecution.
[88]
Moreover,
the Respondent was found to be credible, and the Applicant has not attempted to
take issue with his credibility.
Costs
[89]
The
Respondent submits that he is entitled to solicitor-client costs due to the
circumstances of the case.
ANALYSIS
General
[90]
If
the evidence before the RPD in this case is anything to go by, then the people
of South
Africa
are living through an extremely dangerous and difficult time in the history of
their country. The evidence reveals that crime is widespread and endemic
against South Africans of all races and that racial and ethnic tensions
continue to plague the country in the post-apartheid era. Many people have
found the situation intolerable and have left. Many of those who have stayed,
and who can afford it, have adopted a siege mentality, living in protected
enclaves and/or in heavily secured and monitored houses.
[91]
There
is evidence before me that when the RPD rendered a positive decision in this
case and concluded that the Respondent qualified for refugee protection against
racially-motivated crime in South Africa, the South African authorities labelled
the RPD’s Decision itself as “racist” and “ridiculous” and threatened that, if
allowed to stand, it could “seriously damage relations between the two
countries.” Attempts to exert diplomatic pressure on the Government of Canada
to ensure that the Decision was reversed give rise to complex constitutional,
Charter and jurisdictional issues that the Court will now need to address as
part of this application. If such threats are representative of the attitude of
the South African authorities then they suggest an unfortunate misunderstanding
of the way the rule of law works in Canada and an equally
unfortunate lack of sympathy for South African citizens who find the current
situation in their own country to be intolerable.
[92]
Given
the evidence of endemic, and often horrendous, crime in South Africa that has
been presented in this case, it surely cannot be a surprise to anyone that a
South African such as the Respondent might conclude that he is the victim of
violence directed against white South Africans and that the South African
authorities are either unwilling or unable to protect him. Whatever conclusions
the Court may come to regarding the RPD’s Decision in this case, the
Respondent’s attempts to secure refugee status are, at least, understandable.
The evidence is clear that he has been repeatedly attacked and stabbed by black
assailants in South
Africa.
It is not, therefore, obviously delusional that he might have formed the
impression that his attackers were motivated by the colour of his skin. For the
South African authorities to attack the RPD’s Decision as “racist” and as a
threat to the relationship between Canada and South Africa suggests an
intolerance to criticism from one of its own citizens and an attitude that no
white person should be allowed to claim he or she has been racially targeted
even when repeatedly attacked by black criminals.
[93]
In
the end, however, and notwithstanding the legal ramifications that the actions
of the South African authorities in response to the RPD Decision have brought into
play, this application is not about what the South African government or the
Canadian government, or even this Court, believes is happening in South Africa. The
application is about whether, given the evidence presented at the RPD hearing,
it was unreasonable for the RPD to conclude that this Respondent is a victim of
race-based crime against which the South African authorities cannot, or will
not, protect him. This does not mean that in rendering a positive Decision on
this issue the RPD was correct; the issue is whether the Decision falls within
a range of possible, acceptable outcomes that are defensible in respect of the
facts and law. Just because some people dislike the Decision and do not find it
tenable for political reasons does not make it unreasonable.
[94]
The
Minister says the Decision is unreasonable because, given the facts and the
law, it does not fall within the range of possible, acceptable outcomes. The
Respondent says it is reasonable because, although everyone may not agree that
all crime committed by black people against white people in South Africa is
race-based, the evidence is clear that at least some of it is, that it was in
his case and that the authorities are either unable or unwilling to protect
poor white citizens, such as the Respondent, who find themselves repeatedly
victimized by their black compatriots.
[95]
Generally
speaking, the question of whether the Decision was reasonable or not turns upon
the quality and treatment of the evidence that was placed before the RPD by the
Respondent.
The
Respondent’s Oral Evidence
[96]
My
review of the record suggests to me that there is a significant degree of
ambivalence in the Respondent’s personal evidence about why he came to Canada
and why he did not seek police protection in South Africa when
attacked and robbed by his black assailants.
[97]
The
RPD found the Respondent’s narrative entirely credible and, in terms of the
attacks he suffered and the injuries he sustained, there is nothing to suggest
that this finding was unreasonable. The ambivalence arises from what the
Respondent says about the motivation for the attacks, his reasons for coming to
Canada and his
reasons for not seeking police protection in South Africa.
[98]
When
questioned by the RPD about the seven attacks he suffered between 1991 and approximately
2003, the Respondent’s answers do not suggest anything overtly racial about them
apart from racial insults that were uttered during the attacks. According to
his own evidence, it looks as though the criminals were after his personal property
and money.
[99]
In
1991, when he was stabbed on the train, his evidence was that the attackers said
he was sitting in their chair and they wanted money and they stabbed him
because he did not have any.
[100] In the 1992
attack at the bus stop, his evidence was that the attackers “wanted my shoes
and my money or whatever.” When the RPD asked him what they were after, the
Respondent explained as follows:
You see they want everything we have
because we, how do you say, they don’t have much money because of what we did
to them in the past ….
[101] The incident
itself, as the Respondent explains, suggests that the crime was carried out by
black people who do not have much money because of past injustices. The
Respondent may well have been noticed because of his white skin, but this does
not mean he was attacked because he is white. In the Respondent’s account of
the incident there is nothing to suggest that the attackers wished to rob or injure
him because he is white. His whiteness was simply an indicium of relative wealth,
and they attacked him to try and obtain whatever he had in terms of property
that was valuable to them.
[102] This raises,
of course, a difficult conceptual issue. The Respondent may well have been conspicuous
on the train and at the bus stop because he is white. And this is because, in
the context of South Africa’s culture and history, whiteness connotes
either substantial or relative wealth. In my view, however, this does not
render the attacks racist. The Respondent’s unprompted evidence suggests that the
attacks were made to acquire property and not to punish the Respondent for
being white. There is no evidence that attacks are not made against black
people in South Africa in situations where they also display the trappings of
substantial or relative wealth. In fact, there was evidence before the RPD that
South Africans of every race and ethnic background are robbed and stabbed by
black criminals. As the Respondent explained to the RPD, many robbers are black
because of what happened in the past, and many black people remain poor and are
prepared to resort to criminal means to acquire money and other property.
[103] The
Respondent was also stabbed by black attackers at a nightclub in 1996. Again,
the Respondent’s evidence was that the assailant wanted “shoes and money.”
[104] In 1998, the
Respondent was stabbed in the hand. Again, the Respondent’s account of the
incident was that he was at a bus stop and “they wanted my things again and I
managed to step back and I got stabbed in my hand.”
[105] The fifth
attack occurred in 2000 while the Respondent was playing in a rugby match. The
Respondent’s unprompted account runs as follows:
Yeah, I was playing a rugby match and I
think it’s 2000 and I wasn’t the only who (sic) got stabbed. It was a
shady town kind of thing, industrial town and we were playing a rugby match.
And me and two other guys we never got stabbed, we were more scraped because we
were in the middle of a rugby match and we tried to tell the ref. but all that
he would was (sic) just stop the game.
[106] This time the
assailant “sort of scraped [the Respondent’s] knee with a sharpened screwdriver
sort of thing, home-made knife and two other guys they got one, and it was in
the arm I think and another one in the hand.”
[107] We are not
told at this point whether the “two other guys” who “got one” were black or
white. This is significant because the Respondent says that although the
opposition was an all-black team, there were, besides himself, two other white
players on his team.
[108] What is
interesting and significant, in my view, is that the Respondent obviously had
no fear of playing rugby against an all-black team in a small industrial town
as part of a mixed team that had three white players and 12 black players.
[109] When asked by
the RPD why he was attacked during the rugby game, the Respondent was
definitive in his answer: “Because they were losing.”
[110] The
Respondent was also asked whether he was afraid to play a team of
underprivileged black Africans in “an African area.” His answer was “It depends
where.”
[111] Once again,
there is no indication here that the Respondent was attacked for racial
motives. He says that he, and two others (who he later says were also white),
were attacked because the team they were playing against was losing.
[112] The sixth
incident was recounted by the Respondent as follows:
Yeah. I got, well my friend and I were at
the, like the market you guys have here, we were at our version of one in
Capetown and we were on the way to go home in the car and we seen an African
trying to what looked like steal the car or open the door and when we tried to
stop him about five of them came out from hiding around the cars. And I got, my
hand got, the palm of my hand got sliced and my friend got stabbed in the
buttocks.
[113] There is no
evidence here that the Respondent was targeted because he was white. He appears
to have come upon someone attempting to break into his friend’s car. We are not
told whether his friend was black or white. The RPD asked him about the friend,
but all the Respondent would say was “Well we sort of grew up together back
home.”
[114] In my view,
there is no evidence whatsoever that this attack was racially motivated. There
is no evidence, for instance, that the black perpetrator knew he was trying to
break into the car of a white person or indeed that it was a car belonging to a
white person. The Respondent and his friend came upon a crime in progress,
decided to intervene and were set upon by the gang. That is it.
[115] The seventh
attack occurred some time after 2000 when the Respondent and a friend were
walking home late at night from “the beach area, all the pubs and night life.”
The pair were confronted by black people who “were trying to intimidate” them.
The Respondent says that he was not intimidated because “I was pretty close to
my house.” Here is what he says happened as a result of the confrontation:
And they gave me what they call a smiley,
they hold their lighter upside down so that the flame burns the middle part and
in the (inaudible) it leaves like a smiley thing there.
[116] As for the
Respondent’s friend “he got the lights beaten out of him because he was smaller
than me and they see (sic) he was scared ….”
[117] Once again,
the RPD asked why the Respondent and his friend were attacked. The answer was a
simple: “There is a – that’s life for us.”
[118] The RPD also
asked if the assailants wanted money. The Respondent replied: “Well anything.
You see they like to intimidate us because there is nothing we can do to them
so they do that.”
[119] As well as
the attacks against the Respondent himself, he also referred to an attack upon
a friend called Jamie McAlister whose brother accompanied the Respondent to
Canada in 2004. Jamie was abducted outside a nightclub by “four Africans and one
African woman.” The Respondent is unclear regarding the reasons for this attack
upon his friend Jamie:
I don’t know if they were doing
initiation thing (sic) but she wanted to sexually harass him or rape him
or whatever and after they seen, they had enough, whatever, they dropped him
off in his underpants in the middle of nowhere.
[120] It is not clear
how the Respondent knows what happened to Jamie and how much of it he witnessed
himself. Here again, however, there is no mention of a racial dimension to the
attack. It does not follow that, because Jamie’s abductors happened to be black,
they abducted and beat him up because he was white.
[121] In general,
then, the Respondent’s unprompted evidence cannot reasonably support a finding
of systemic, racially-motivated attacks.
Examination
by Mr. Kaplan
[122] It is
apparent from the record that the racial aspects of the attacks I have referred
to were introduced into evidence when the Respondent was examined by his own
counsel, Mr. Kaplan. Reading over the transcript,
there is a strong impression of Mr. Kaplan attempting to remind the Respondent
that he is involved in a refugee claim and that the racial element is all
important. To do this Mr. Kaplan goes over the attacks again and asks the
Respondent extremely leading questions about racial motivation. Mr. Kaplan’s
questions suggest in an obvious way the answers he requires. In fact, in my
view, Mr. Kaplan prompts and encourages the Respondent to give a particular
answer.
[123] I will use
the rugby game incident to illustrate this. Here is Mr. Kaplan going over the
sequence of events with the Respondent:
Q.
Okay.
Now in the rugby match incident the member asked you, member, the Chairman
there, and he asked you, the judge, he asked you why were you stabbed and you
said because they were losing.
A. Yeah.
It’s also because – you got to remember we got nice rugby jerseys because we
are a club, they, underprivileged town, and so they pick on us. That’s what
they do. When I came home in 2004 there were people on the airplane, when we
walked out there was the security, they recognized our accent and they pick on
us. They want do to (sic) check our bags and that’s outside the airport,
that’s not even in Customs. That’s what they do ---
Q. Okay.
Sorry, Brandon, just one
second. In that rugby match you were on the team, you said there was three
white people.
A. Yeah.
Q. And
12 African people on that team, now is it correct that all 15 people on your
team would have had nicer rugby jerseys, you would be wearing the same jerseys
that your ---
A. Yeah,
but we belong to a club.
Q. Yes.
But the other African players, right?
A. Yeah.
Q. Now
was there any racial motivation in your view regarding that particular
incident?
A. I
mean from our team ---
Q. You
were stabbed, right?
A. Yeah.
Q. With
a screwdriver, and it was by an African person on the other team.
A. Yeah.
Q. And
then another two people were also injured, right? Were those other two people
African or white?
A. They
were white.
Q. So
all three people on that team, on your team who were white were stabbed. Was
there apart – you said that the reason was they did that because you were
losing. Was there any racial motivation for stabbing you and the other two guys
as far as you know?
A. Well
they were, they smirk and they give us comments and we can’t go to the ref.
because he was an African too and all that he did was just stop the game,
nothing else was done about it. Because if there is I mean what are you going
to do when there is about a thousand people watching the game and they get
angry, so.
So,
even though he is our colour he is a referee, he has to be neutral. But you
can’t hold it against him for doing that but what happens to him when he walks
off the field then they get a hold of him because he is taking the side of us
and that’s a no, no.
Q. Do
you think that there was racial motivation in being attacked?
A. There
had to have been.
[124] Not only does
the Respondent have to be reminded of the racial dimension and prompted to give
an answer that will bring him within the definition of a Convention refugee,
but the answer he gives reveals that, in fact, he does not really know whether
the attack was racially motivated or not. The answer “There had to have been”
is speculation. He has told the RPD previously that the attack was made
“Because they were losing,” but at this point, and only after his counsel has
prompted him with the words “racial motivation,” does he answer “There had to
have been.”
[125] The
Respondent is similarly led by his counsel when he is asked to go over other
incidents. As revealed elsewhere in the transcript, the Respondent appears to
equate racial persecution with affirmative action and the difficulties he has
experienced in finding a job in South Africa. Hence, what the
Respondent means by racial motivation and persecution is never made entirely
clear. He believes that the general situation in South Africa is now
racially prejudicial to white South Africans like himself. This is why, in his
view, the physical attacks against him “had to have been” racially motivated.
Objective Evidence of Racial Motivation
[126] In fact, the
only objective evidence offered by the Respondent to suggest that the attacks
were racially motivated is that his assailants were always black and they
uttered racial insults. It seems to me that if you live in a country where
black people make up 80% of the total population, and where the white European
population is only 9%, and if, like the Respondent, you do not live in a
predominantly white enclave and choose to go to nightclubs, pubs and beaches
frequented by black people and to play in rugby games against teams that are
totally composed of black players, then the chances of the perpetrators being
black if you are robbed or assaulted must be pretty close to 100%. Hence, the
fact that the assailants in each instance were black cannot, per se, be equated
with racial motivation. Black people who live in and/or frequent the same areas
as the Respondent, or engage in the same pastimes, are pretty well assured
that, if they are robbed, the perpetrators will be black, and for the same
demographic reasons.
[127] As for racial
insults and epithets, it would be passing strange if they were not a common
occurrence in a country where racial tensions and racial disparities have been
so much a part of that country’s political and social history, and where those
tensions have yet to be resolved fully even though the apartheid era has
passed. The fact that the Respondent’s black assailants called him a “white
dog,” a “boer,” a “settler” or a “witnai” when they attacked him does not mean
that they attacked him because he was white or because they considered
him a “white dog” or a “witnai.” Verbal and racial abuse is a form of
aggression and a means of denigrating or frightening the victim. Such terms are
not, in themselves, an objective indicator that the Respondent was attacked
because he was white. In my view, this is not like being deprived of property,
attacked or rounded up and killed because you happen to be Jewish or Tutsi; nor
is it like being lynched because you happen to be black. The use of racial
slurs is not, in my view, in itself supportive of systemic racially-motivated
attacks against the Respondent.
[128] Mr. Galati,
Respondent’s counsel at the hearing before me, astutely drew my attention to
the fact that the motives behind a crime might well be mixed and that, even if
there was only an element of racial motivation behind what white South Africans
might suffer at the hands of black South Africans, our jurisprudence does not
exclude refugee protection just because the motives are mixed. He referred me
to the cases of Shahiraj v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2001 FCT 453, [2001] F.C.J. No. 734 and Flores v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2002 FCT 893, [2002] F.C.J. No. 1167, which
make it clear that a nexus sufficient to sustain a claim to Convention refugee
status may be established where the motivation for persecution is mixed,
provided it can be partially related to a Convention ground. In both of these
cases, the decision under review was set aside because the Refugee Board failed
to consider evidence that linked the targeting of the victim to a Convention
ground. In Shahiraj there was reason to believe that the applicant had
been targeted for extortion by the police in India at least
partially due to his association with his brother, who was a militant Sikh. In Flores,
the Board erred because it failed to examine documentary evidence that state
officials in Mexico often
asserted false charges of weapons and drug trafficking to prosecute alleged
Zapatistas.
[129] In the
present case, we are not dealing with the mixed motivations of state officials
and the police who may be using criminal pretexts to target political
militants. The Respondent’s refugee claim was that he had been physically
attacked by fellow citizens because he was white. Hence, in terms of mixed
motivation, there would have to be evidence that the Respondent was attacked
and robbed not just because the assailants wanted money and property but
because they also wanted to harm and punish him for being white. I agree with
Respondent’s counsel that such mixed motivation is conceivably possible. What
is lacking in the present case, in my view, is objective evidence that the
attacks, at least in part, were made to persecute the Respondent for being
white. One of the attacks relied upon by the RPD occurred in a car park when it
was the Respondent who took the initiative to intervene when black men were
attempting to break into his friend’s car. The Respondent was not even targeted
in this incident.
[130] Mr. Galati’s
argument is, intuitively, that surely in a country where so much crime is
perpetuated by black assailants upon white victims some of it must be racially
motivated, and surely this means that at least part of the motivation for the
attacks upon the Respondent had to be racial.
[131] My answer to
these perceptive arguments is that surely in a country where the black
population amounts to 80% of the whole, and where the white European population
only 9%, then most of the crime perpetuated against white people must, of
necessity, be perpetrated by black people, just as most of the crime against
black people must also, of necessity, be perpetrated by black people. This must
be even more inevitable when economic and class factors are taken into account.
[132] But more
importantly in the Respondent’s case, which is the only case before me, it was
almost inevitable that his assailants would be black because of where he lives
and because of some of the activities he was engaged in when the attacks
occurred. If you play rugby against a team composed of 15 black players then
your assailant must inevitably be black. The Respondent’s unprompted evidence
about why his black assailants attacked him was that they wanted to rob him or
because, in the case of the rugby game, because they were losing. The
Respondent may have been targeted for robbery because he was white (and,
therefore, presumably better-off than most blacks), but he was not robbed or
stabbed for being white, at least as far as his unprompted evidence goes.
[133] It may be, of
course, that a black South African could decide to rob or stab a white South
African because he is white and because of the injustices practised by white
South Africans against black South Africans in the past. That would make the
attack racist in my view because its purpose would be to punish and harm the
victim for being white, rather than to acquire the victim’s property or to
injure the victim in a personal confrontation. The Respondent’s unprompted
evidence was that he was robbed and stabbed not to punish and harm him for
being white but to purloin his shoes, money and “things.” I agree with
Respondent’s counsel that, conceptually at least, it is possible to rob and
stab someone to obtain their property and to punish and harm them for
being white. This would obviously be the case in a situation where black perpetrators
attacked and robbed white victims only. In this case, however, the Respondent’s
unprompted evidence did not suggest that mixed motives were present, and even
his responses to his counsel’s leading questions do not make clear how we could
know that a racial element was present, other than by way of speculation. In
addition, there is no evidence to suggest that those who attacked and robbed
the Applicant attacked and robbed white South Africans only.
[134] Mr. Galati
has also drawn my attention to the Respondent’s Personal Information Form (PIF)
where the Respondent asserts racial motivation for the attacks. He argues that
the PIF is evidence before the RPD, so that the RPD was quite reasonable to
overlook the discrepancies in testimony between the Respondent’s unprompted evidence
when questioned by the RPD and his evidence when questioned by Mr. Kaplan.
[135] The
Respondent’s Personal Narrative does say that he fears being killed and/or
persecuted for being white:
I am afraid of being killed by African
South Africans who will kill me because I have a white skin. At a very minimum,
I believe I will be discriminated against because I am white. This type of
discrimination has affected me on all levels of life and will continue – if not
worse – if I return to South
Africa. I
believe I have been persecuted as well and that my life is at risk if I were to
return to South
Africa because I
am a Caucasian South African. In addition to the discrimination, I have been
attacked for having a white skin no fewer than 6 times and I have been
threatened as well because of my white skin.
[136] The
Respondent is clear that “at a very minimum” he has been discriminated against,
but persecution remains a matter of belief. He does, however, state that he has
“been attacked for having a white skin no fewer than 6 (sic) times and I
have been threatened as well because of my white skin.”
[137] As regards
the sixth incident at the market (which he says in the transcript occurred in
2000), he says in his PIF that this occurred in 2002. He makes it clear that it
was his friend’s car that was being broken into:
We approached and tried to prevent this
person (who was African) at which moment about 5 other Africans appeared from
nowhere (I think they were hiding behind other vehicles) and tried to stab us.
I raised my hands to protect myself and was stabbed in the hands. My friend was
also stabbed (in the buttocks).
[138] Once again,
we are not told if the friend was black or white, but what is clear is that the
Respondent was not even personally targeted in this incident. The assailants
were trying to break into someone else’s car and the Respondent attempted to
intervene.
[139] As regards
the other incidents recounted in the Personal Narrative, there is nothing
inherent in the attacks themselves to suggest that they were racially motivated
except that the assailants were always black and racial insults and epithets
were used. I have discussed these issues above. All we are left with in the
Personal Narrative are the Respondent’s beliefs and views which are not grounded
on objective evidence of racial motivation:
My view of these incidents: they like to
pick on “big white boys” because it is their time. They believe that it was
“big white boys” who picked on them before and therefore it is “payback from
wayback.”
[140] This is put
forward as a concept or a theory. It is not objective evidence. The RPD’s job
was to assess whether the Respondent’s theory was founded upon objective
evidence.
[141] In other
words, I do not think that what the Respondent says in his Personal Narrative
brings any objective evidence to support his view that the attacks were
racially motivated. In fact, it is difficult to see how the attack at the
market even involved the targeting of a white person. How could the assailants
have known that they were breaking into the car of a white person? That attack
was obviously motivated by the intervention undertaken by the Respondent and
his friend.
[142] In addition,
there is nothing in the Personal Narrative to dispel the general impression
created by the transcript of the RPD hearing that the Respondent had to be
prompted by his legal counsel, Mr. Kaplan, to claim that all of the attacks
involved “racial discrimination” and that this remains an opinion unsupported
in an objective way by the Respondent’s personal evidence. This is why it seems
to me that the evidence of Ms. Kaplan became the “lifeline” for the
Respondent’s claim. The RPD, as I will discuss later, obviously felt that the
Respondent’s refugee claim could not live, and would drown, if left to the
Respondent’s own evidence.
[143] The reasons
in the Decision appear to suggest that the Respondent’s evidence of his
personal experiences was not sufficient to support his opinion that the attacks
were racially motivated. I have gone over the Respondent’s own, unprompted
account of those attacks in some detail to make it clear why this should be so.
In so far as the RPD concludes that the Respondent’s personal account was not
sufficient to establish racial motivation in order to bring the Respondent
within the definition of a Convention refugee, then, in my view, the RPD
reached a reasonable conclusion. In so far as the RPD may have felt, as the
Respondent’s present counsel Mr. Galati feels, that the Respondent himself
provided sufficient evidence to support racial motivation (a view which I do
not think is found in the Decision) then I would have to say that such a
finding is unreasonable for the reasons given above.
[144] If we go back
to the PIF of May 27, 2008 – the Respondent’s sworn statement of what he fears
in South
Africa
and why he claims refugee status on the basis of race – the explanation is much
more about economic discrimination than black violence:
With the new government in power, us
white people are struggling. The jobs go to the people of colour because of “Affirmative
Action.” It is easier for us people to get work in other countries. They have
the law on their side. The are (sic) singing songs to the white people.
Crime is at the highest. The farm killings are climbing. Its (sic)
called land reformation. So far nothing has been done.
[145] Significantly,
this statement says nothing about the personal attacks that the Respondent has
faced and upon which he based his refugee claim. The narrative appears to have
evolved in this regard, as I will discuss later, as the Respondent fell under
the influence of the Kaplan family and their view of what is happening in South Africa.
Subjective
Fear
[146] In reading
the record in detail I am also struck by a recurrent note of pride on the part
of the Respondent that he was not intimidated by what happened to him. There
are references to his size and strength. This is a “big white boy” – to use his
own phrase – who had no fear of going into a black industrial district to take
on the all-black local side in a team of which he was one of only three white
men. When he sees someone attempting to break into his friend’s car at the
market he has no fear of immediately intervening. When the Respondent and his
friend were attacked while walking home from the beach area at night, he says he
was not intimidated. His friend got beaten because “they see (sic) he
was scared.” In other words, the Respondent clearly was not scared. When the
RPD asked him why he and his friend were attacked, the Respondent’s answer was
“that’s life for us.”
[147] The overall
impression is that the Respondent has not been scared by the physical attacks
because he is strong and cannot be intimidated and because confrontations of
this kind are just a way of life for him. Even when he does not have to, he
jumps into the fray to take on a black man who is breaking into his friend’s
car at the market. This is something he can handle.
[148] This note
also becomes clear when the Respondent is asked why he did not go to the police
about any of the attacks. His oral evidence suggests that the Respondent fears
his father more than he fears his assailants. He appears to be someone who has
grown up in a white environment where real men handle black aggressors
themselves. He is a “big white boy” and “that’s life for us.”
[149] This becomes
important when considered against the RPD’s treatment of the Respondent’s
returning to South
Africa
and his delay in making a refugee claim.
Reasons
for Coming to Canada
[150] Further
undermining the subjective fear element are the reasons that the Respondent has
given for coming to Canada.
[151] When asked by
the RPD why he came to Canada, the Respondent’s answer is unequivocal
and it has nothing to do with a fear of race-based violence:
I came here to look for work because I
can’t find work in my country and it’s easier finding work overseas so I jumped
at the opportunity to – I didn’t pick Canada, it was just they advertised in
the newspaper for the carnival work so I put my name down and I was off because
they paid for our way to come here. Otherwise I could never leave.
[152] Nothing could
be clearer from this answer than that the Respondent’s reasons for coming to
Canada were economic and had nothing to do with being a refugee.
[153] Once again,
the Respondent has to be reminded in examination by his lawyer, Mr. Kaplan, that
coming to Canada to seek work
is not enough:
Q. When
you were asked this morning by the (RPD) member when you came to Canada and you
were looking for a job, were you really wanting to look for a better life or to
save your life. So the member asked you ---
A. Well
it’s both.
Q. ---
when you came, just let me finish my question, Brandon, first.
A. Sorry.
Q. So
he asked you when you came were you looking for a better life or were you
looking to save your life. This morning you said it was to save your life and
okay, now you said it was both. I would like you just to clarify what, your
answer please. So when you came to Canada what was your
motivation to come to Canada?
A. Well
I couldn’t find a job and I am tired of living in fear, I am tired of the people’s
attitude. I mean I am born there and it’s like they don’t want me there. So I
jumped to leave my country and I didn’t pick Canada. I applied
for many other jobs but this company they paid for our trip to come over to (sic)
I jumped to it. And I wanted to stay. And the lady that did our paperwork said
we had to go home in order to come back.
Q. Okay,
well I am going to ask you about that because that was an important part of
today’s case. But you said two things, you were tired of living in fear.
A. Yeah.
Q. Okay.
Just tell me exactly the fear you were feeling?
A. I
mean you can be anywhere, anywhere, it’s a problem walking home because – at
night or even if you go to the store, I mean we don’t even let our children
walk alone anywhere. The same as we take the car, the car high-jackings, you
can write the letter to the police, if you got flashed with a camera after 12
o’clock you just write a letter and say well it was a couple of Africans
standing there and what they are doing there that time of night standing on the
road and by the traffic light. Because we got people that sell newspapers, they
run around the cars and they are selling newspapers but if it’s late at night
what are they doing there.
And
women, they don’t even find the women of, well you could just write a letter
and they will scrap that because we know we have got a problem like that and
what do you do.
Q. You
commented just a few seconds ago “I am born there but they don’t want me
there”. Just explain that part, I am born there but they don’t want me, who is
they and why do you feel they don’t want you there.
A. Yeah,
the Africans and the government has taken all our – they made our hands tied.
It’s like the farm killings, they done away with the commandos, the people that
the reservist, the reserve guys that patrol the farms, they done away with it
because they know that just like they done away with the death penalty and all
that. So now they just see us as a link to the past and why they are like that.
But like that, they don’t have anything because we got (inaudible) shanty towns
or informal settlements and the problem is now the cities and suburbs are
getting bigger and they are starting to get closer. So it’s like you – I mean
how do you go away, you go away on a Friday and the guy can jump over the wall
and sit there for 48 hours and you can’t chase him away, that’s his piece of
land, he can do what he wants. Now who protects us from that, nobody. Who
protects the people dying on the farms or for land reformation and it’s not a
question about get off the land. They kill the granny’s (sic), the
mothers, the children, the dogs, the animals, the cows, they go like that.
Because
the farm doesn’t have anyone else to go to in the family it goes to the
government, but that farmer is giving a hundred job opportunities so the land
goes back and it goes to waste.
[154] Besides the
prompting in this sequence and the obvious attempt by Mr. Kaplan to have the
Respondent say that he came to Canada to escape the racial violence directed
against him, it is obvious that although the Respondent does not like the
situation in South Africa he does not abandon his original answer that his
primary motivation in coming to Canada was to find a job.
[155] Even when Mr.
Kaplan waves the verbal cue card marked “FEAR” in front of him, the Respondent
expresses no objective bases to support personal fear. He talks about the white
people – the farmers, the women, the grannies and the mothers. Even when
prompted, it is obvious that the Respondent wants to talk about his (and the Kaplan)
view of what is generally happening in South Africa. At some
points in the transcript (p. 43, for example) he talks about being afraid to go
to some parts of South Africa, but he claims not to have been afraid when he
was attacked because “that’s life for us” (p. 46) The fact that the Respondent
may fear to live in South Africa does not make the attacks against him
race-based. The evidence is that many people in South Africa, white and
black, are the victims of crime and that crime is endemic. I think we can
safely assume that black South Africans also live in fear of this widespread
crime.
[156] Once again, in
my view, there is no objective foundation for a finding in the Respondent’s
personal evidence that he left South Africa because he fears
race-based crime. He finds the lack of economic opportunities intolerable and
he is looking for a better way of life. He is also, perhaps, fearful of the
prevalent crime that exists in South Africa, but this is not, in my
view, a sufficient objective basis to support a claim for persecution.
Failure to Report to the Police
[157] The
Respondent failed to report to the police any of the attacks he now relies upon
to support his claim for refugee status. This becomes an important factor for
the RPD’s analysis of state protection, but it also confirms the Respondent’s
lack of subjective fear.
[158] The
transcript reveals the following:
Q. So, okay. So why didn’t you go to
the police?
A. Because nothing will be done. You
get lost in the system.
Q. Nothing will be done. How do you
know that?
A. Well
if you could wait up to three, four years just to go to court because they are
full of crime and violence, the courts are too full. We still got our
fingerprinting on paper (inaudible), we are still behind the time and ---
Q. So
it takes three to four years to get to court?
A. Till
you finally get a decision or any – you see they make an example of us because
we are educated as we have had our chance so you will get nowhere unless you
have lots and lots of money.
Q. So
the courts are too full of crimes.
A. Yeah.
BY
THE COUNSEL (to the person concerned)
Q. Just
pause for a second, sir. Sorry, could you repeat what you said, Brandon, when you
said they want to make an example of us, can you repeat what you said please?
A. For
example if you don’t pay for a parking ticket you – they come and get you. But
somebody else that commits a murder he just needs to say they killed my father
in the old days and no one can teach me right from wrong and nothing happens to
him. Our prisons are too full.
Q. Can
you just, this part you are speaking with pronouns.
A. Oh,
sorry.
Q. Pronouns,
do you know what pronouns are like him, them, can you be more specific. So you
said if you don’t pay a parking ticket they will come and get you, who is they
and who is you?
A. Me
is the white people and the African police, South African police because it’s a
government job and we (inaudible) apply for that.
Q. And
when you said about the murder, can you just tell me the colours, who is
talking, somebody committed a murder.
A. Yeah.
If an African commits a murder they feel sorry for you because he doesn’t know
right from wrong because the white people were bad in the old day so they just,
it’s like pay back from way back. They make an example out of us in everything.
BY
THE PRESIDING MEMBER (to the person concerned)
Q. So
if a white – a black person kills a black person what do they do?
A. It
depends where it is because if it’s in the rural areas somebody might even get
to the police, the police are very on demand. It’s a dangerous job so there is
not (inaudible) like when there is a riot they just close off the roads and
wait for it to stop.
Q. You
say you don’t go to the police because your lack of confidence.
A. Yeah.
Q. Where
the claims get lost in the system et cetera and there is nothing that can be
done.
A. And
you don’t want to go to jail as a white person, you get – it’s just – we are
the minority so there is nothing we can do, absolutely nothing.
Q. So
do you mean to say that every crime in South African (sic) involving
white people nobody ever ---
A. No,
no, they are white people, yes.
Q. Nobody
reports to the police?
A. Well
it depends if it’s (inaudible) in the police because that’s in the open but we
don’t, you can’t – it’s even scary going to the police station because they
ransack post offices, police stations, hospitals, they are undermanned, the
police. And they would rather help their kind than ---
Q. The
police are undermanned you say, right?
A. Yeah.
And it’s 90 percent, 80 percent of the police are all Africans because it’s a
government job.
Q. Yeah.
A. For
example I can’t join the army, I don’t fit the colour criteria, that’s just an
example.
Q. So
is the other 20 percent of the police force white?
A. Maybe
the guys with authority, maybe even less.
Q. But
if 80 percent of the police are Africans is the other 20 percent white?
A. Yeah.
BY
THE COUNSEL (to the person concerned)
Q. Did
you say 80 or 90?
A. I
said 80 or 90. It’s very little white policemen because they, I don’t know what
the name is called but what they do is like take my dad for example. He worked
with the municipality for the government for 15 years so what they do is they
give – if you are an African you can just pick what you want to do and they
will give you the job and he has to train someone what he has been doing for 15
years. He has to teach this guy in a couple of months and the guy might be, he
could sort of read or write and then after that they tell my dad bye, bye, you
have to go now. Because it’s called affirmative action, the government jobs go
to the other people to make it right. Affirmative action means to make it
right. And the jobs too, they implement laws in the legislation that has to be
– they can’t say you open up a company and you want five people, you can’t just
hire your sister or your mother and your cousin, you can’t do that.
You have to
give them a position and that’s the way it works.
[159] There is a
great deal in this sequence that is simply irrelevant to the issue of why the
Respondent did not report the attacks to the police. Once again, he falls back
upon general opinions about what is happening in South Africa. What little
he does say on point suggests that the Respondent did not go to the police
because he thinks the police are undermanned and prosecutions can take some
time. It also reveals that he believes affirmative action to be a problem. In
one sense, this is also irrelevant because the Respondent’s refugee claim was
based upon seven personal attacks involving physical violence. He appears to be
suggesting, however, that he did not go to the police because affirmative
action has resulted in more black police officers, who will look after their
own kind but are not likely to do anything for him.
[160] Applicant’s
counsel attempted to clarify the situation with the Respondent. The result was
as follows:
Q. They
did, yes. Just a little bit about the police. This morning you said, I think it
was 80 to 90 percent of the police are black and the other 10 to 20 percent are
white. Can you repeat once more why you did not go to the police?
A. Because
it’s scary because all the government jobs, every government job police or
anything, they get it because it’s their chance. So now if I go to the police
station and I make a statement like I just got stabbed, they took my shoes, they
are going to sort of like okay, well, you know, now you know what we have been
through and et cetera. So, and if you go it’s going to – you’ll get lost in the
system. It’s so full of – and it’s not that I say it’s only them, there is a
lot of bad white people there still but we are totally outnumbered. And they
see (sic) the white people also, we have got two kinds, the English and
Afrikaans and they also, like in the hostel because I had a English last name,
they Afrikaans and the English people they also don’t like to, how do I put an
example, like the French and English they don’t see eye to eye, the same with
us back home. Because the Afrikaans people want to do things their way and the
English people want to do things their way.
Q. Do
you think from your experience the police wanted to help?
A. Well
they have to help us (inaudible) police station and opened up the case and all
that but – like I’ll give an example. One of my friends got caught smoking
drugs in a public place and they had to wait three years before it got thrown
out of court, three years for something that – and it was their first time. I
know that smoking is bad but I’m using that as a real example.
Or
the famous Mark Yeoman (ph) he got in trouble for having, I think it was he had
a pirate, not pirated DVD’s but he had all the copies at his house, then he
made like his own personal mix when he drives in the car and the policeman
asked him right there but this is whatever, and he had to go to court and he
stands next to a guy that’s committed murder and he is African and he gets bail
and he has to pay or he spends a couple of days in jail. Because all they need
to see oh the victim of the system, so that’s the way it works. I mean there is
a lot of South Africans that do vigilante because they have to see their
children’s rapist walked past him and our hands our (sic) tied. It’s
like a normal thing. There was a big thing two years ago of a little girl of
three years old getting raped by four Africans and their excuse was the witch
doctor told them that if they do that then the curse of the AIDS gets taken
away because we got two laws. We got tribal law and the government can’t do
nothing because it’s their community. It’s just – and it got thrown out of
court because the policeman that wrote in the file he was semi illiterate so it
got thrown out of court because the file is corrupt now. And then this poor guy
has to live with that and they had a big thing because they could, it’s going
to sound bad, but they could look into her body because she was damaged so bad
and absolutely nothing happened to them because I’m a victim of the system. And
that works for them.
But
if we do something wrong we get the law-law (sic). It’s like our
government can’t even stop the tribes from circumcizing (sic) the girls
and boys and a thousand die from infection but we can’t do nothing because it’s
the tribal law. But if they come into the city and they can do the same it
still doesn’t matter.
[161] This attempt
at clarification by Mr. Kaplan, it seems to me, yields more about the
Respondent’s perceptions about general problems in South Africa, and the
difficulties faced by black people, than about the Respondent’s failure to go
to the police when he was attacked. There was no evidence before the RPD that
the Respondent either asked for help from the police or was denied help in any
shape or form. Delay in prosecuting cases can occur anywhere. This will become
particularly important when the RPD’s state protection analysis is examined,
but it also adds to the impression that the Respondent had little in the way of
subjective fear and that he knew how to take care of himself in a world where
racial tension and confrontation is a way of life. Very telling in this regard
is the fact that the Respondent did not go to the police following the 1991 and
1992 attacks which occurred at a time when the white apartheid regime was in
full control and intent upon subduing black South Africans. Whatever the
Respondent may say about present police practices, there is no evidence that he
would have suffered any kind of delay or other problems had he gone to the
police in 1991 and 1992. The fact that he chose not to do so suggests to me
that he did not feel he needed police protection, and this adds to the general
impression that he felt quite up to handling personally the physical threats
and attacks that he says he suffered at the hands of black assailants. The RPD
does not reasonably address in its Decision the Respondent’s failure to seek
police protection.
Delay
in Making a Refugee Claim
[162] The
Respondent first came to Canada on June 9, 2004, but he did not make a claim
for refugee status until April 3, 2008.
[163] In the
interim, the Respondent returned to South Africa in November 2004 and
lived with his father until June 2005, at which time he returned to Canada with
another work permit which was renewed until December 31, 2006.
[164] After
December 2006, the Respondent remained in Canada illegally
and made his refugee claim on April 3, 2008.
[165] In the usual
case, such an extensive delay in making a refugee claim, although not fatal,
would have counted against an allegation of subjective fear. In this case, the
RPD excused the delay because it accepted the Respondent’s explanation that, at
least when he returned to South Africa, he did not know he
could make a refugee claim and, subsequently, for the following reasons:
In this particular claim, the claimant’s
work permit gave him validity until its expiry. He subsequently made attempts
to solidify or justify his stay in Canada by attempting to join the Armed
Forces and by marrying a Canadian citizen.
[166] The
Respondent’s work permit ran out on December 31, 2006. His attempts to join the
Armed Forces and his marriage to a Canadian citizen in August 2007 did not
prevent the Respondent from making a refugee claim. The RPD found as a fact
that the Respondent “tried to join the Canadian Armed Forces to avoid having to
go back to South
Africa
….” The RPD also found that he “married [his wife] believing that he could use
her to help him get permanent status in Canada.” The
marriage did not work and the Respondent eventually moved out before Christmas
2008.
[167] Hence, it is
clear that, after December 2006, the Respondent was actively looking for ways
to remain in Canada but did not make a refugee claim until April 2008. No
reasonable explanation exists as to why someone who wanted to stay in Canada and who was
actively seeking ways to remain in the country would try joining the Armed
Forces and marriage but would not consider a refugee claim. There is nothing to
suggest that the Respondent lacked the intelligence or the wherewithal to
explore refugee protection if he felt that he truly qualified.
[168] In my view,
it is plain from both the Decision and the record that the RPD excused the
Respondent’s extensive delay in making a refugee claim because the RPD bought
into what I will, for the sake of convenience, refer to, and later explain, as
the “Kaplan view” of what is happening in South Africa. If the
delay factor were the only questionable aspect of the Decision, I would have no
hesitation in saying that the RPD weighed the evidence and exercised its
discretion in a way that the Court should not question. However, when taken in
conjunction with other aspects of the Decision, the RPD’s handling of the delay
adds to the impression of imbalance and an unreasonable lack of objectivity.
Conclusions
about the Respondent’s Personal Evidence
[169] In my view, the
Respondent’s personal evidence provides no reasonably acceptable grounds to
support his speculative assertions (often prompted by his legal counsel, Mr.
Kaplan) that the attacks he suffered were racially motivated (even if mixed
with other motives), or that he has a subjective fear of persecution in South Africa. I think the
RPD was fully aware of this, which is why so much is made of the other evidence
to bolster what was obviously, when the Respondent’s own evidence is
considered, a weak claim for refugee protection. Even accepting as credible the
Respondent’s account of what happened to him (and I do not question the RPD’s
credibility finding in this regard) there was insufficient objective evidence
of racial motivation behind the attacks, or of subjective fear by the
Respondent, to support the Respondent’s claim.
[170] This
conclusion is supported by the RPD’s treatment of the evidence provided by Ms.
Lara Kaplan, which obviously played a crucial role in the RPD’s Decision to
grant the Respondent refugee status.
The
Evidence of Ms. Lara Kaplan
[171] A reading of
the Decision as a whole reveals that the RPD was captivated by the Kaplan view
of what is happening in South Africa generally. This caused
the RPD to lose sight of the specifics of the Respondent’s case and to suspend
its objectivity when dealing with general conditions and state protection.
[172] There are a
number of revealing comments in the Decision that should be mentioned. Before I
do that, however, I think a few general comments are in order.
[173] As the RPD
makes clear, it regarded the evidence provided by Ms. Lara Kaplan as “the
lifeline for the claimant’s claim.”
[174] Lara Kaplan
is the sister of Mr. Russell Kaplan, who was the Respondent’s counsel before
the RPD. It was Mr. Kaplan who decided to call his own sister to bolster the
Respondent’s claim.
[175] This is very
significant because the RPD found as fact that the Kaplan family is “a
close-knit one with a deep concern for each other’s welfare.”
[176] This
close-knit and mutually-concerned family, which includes Mr. Russell Kaplan,
the Respondent’s counsel, and Ms. Lara Kaplan, the “lifeline for the
[Respondent’s] claim,” has suffered a horrendous tragedy in South Africa for which its
members deserve both my and everyone else’s deepest sympathy. I have no doubt
that the family feels devastated by what has happened to a second brother, Robert
Kaplan, and by what it sees as happening to the country generally. The RPD
acknowledges that both Lara and Russell Kaplan have come to Canada because of
what they perceive to be “the reverse apartheid attitude which prevails in that
country.”
[177] The depth of
the family’s emotion concerning what has happened since apartheid ended in South Africa is more than
evident in the excesses of Lara’s testimony.
[178] Lara believes
that the horrendous and deplorable attack upon her brother Robert, by black
assailants in South
Africa
occurred because Robert was perceived to be “both white and wealthy.” Quite
naturally, Lara is highly emotional about the whole situation. So is her
brother Russell, who is the Respondent’s counsel. This caused the RPD to
comment as follows in its Decision:
During the course of her testimony, she
(Laura (sic)) broke down and cried openly. That was to be expected. What
I did not expect was to see counsel, Russell Kaplan, also break down and cry
while she was describing the torture of her brother.
[179] I have to say
that I am less surprised than the RPD that Russell Kaplan broke down and cried
when reminded of what had happened to his brother. The Kaplan family is, as
found by the RPD, “a close-knit one with a deep concern for each other’s
welfare.”
[180] As indicated
in the evidence of Lara Kaplan, the Kaplan family believes that a situation of
“reverse apartheid” now exists in South Africa and that the family has
suffered horrendously because of it. In other words, and to put it bluntly,
Russell Kaplan was not the most objective counsel that the Respondent could
have chosen, and Ms. Lara Kaplan was not the most objective witness to call to
bolster the Respondent’s claim for refugee protection. The hearing was
obviously – and understandably – highly emotional for them. Naturally they
wanted to ensure that the RPD received the Kaplan family version of the
situation in South
Africa
and to demonstrate that what has happened to the Respondent supports their
interpretation of the general situation there.
[181] This is why,
in the end, the Respondent’s account of what motivated the attacks and why he failed
to inform the police is an ambivalent one. It is part Brandon Huntley’s story
and in part the Kaplan family view. This also explains why Mr. Kaplan was a little
heavy-handed with his questions and his verbal cues about “racial motivation.”
The Kaplan family obviously has a heavy emotional investment in the outcome of
this case. They want to assert their view of “reverse apartheid” before the
world. I am not saying that Russell and Lara Kaplan were wrong to do this or
that their view of the situation in South Africa is unreasonable, but it
certainly behoved the RPD to take care in handling the evidence brought forward
in this case so that objective fact was clearly distinguished from the highly
emotional, even if understandable, views of the Kaplan family.
[182] Mr. Galati
argues that objectivity was achieved because the RPD’s Decision clearly
distinguishes between a recounting of the evidence that Lara Kaplan gave and
the findings of fact that were distilled from that evidence.
[183] Ms. Kaplan
witnessed none of the attacks upon the Respondent. Her role as a witness was to
provide evidence of what had happened to similarly situated persons, including
herself, and whether the South African authorities are either able or willing
to provide protection to someone in the Respondent’s position.
[184] I agree with
Mr. Galati that the RPD does recite Ms. Kaplan’s evidence before it makes its
findings of fact based on that evidence. However, a crucial passage occurs at
paragraph 73 of the Decision:
This witness’ [Ms. Kaplan’s] evidence was
the lifeline for the claimant’s claim. She brought to the hearing, from her own
personal experience, a vivid and detailed account of what is taking place in
South Africa today vis-à-vis the African South Africans and the white
South Africans and the indifference of the mainly African South African police
force to protect them. White South Africans, she alleges, are no longer welcome
in South Africa.
[185] This passage
is not without its ambiguities. The final sentence is referred to as an
allegation rather than a finding of fact, but the import of the rest of the
paragraph cannot be ignored. A “lifeline” is a rope or line for saving or
safeguarding life; it is something indispensable for the maintenance and protection
of life. All common dictionary definitions define it in similar terms. So what
is it in Ms. Kaplan’s evidence that was indispensable to save, protect or
maintain the Respondent’s claim? Inevitably, I think the RPD has to mean her
“vivid and detailed account of what is taking place in South Africa today
vis-à-vis the African South Africans and the white South Africans and the
indifference of the mainly African South African police force to protect them.”
[186] In other
words, the RPD is indicating in this passage that the Respondent’s refugee
claim would be dead in the water without the lifeline provided by Ms. Kaplan’s
evidence. Certainly it could not be maintained on the basis of the Respondent’s
evidence alone or any other evidence before the RPD. Moreover, the lifeline
does not consist of what Ms. Kaplan says about the particular attacks suffered
by the Respondent or his failure to seek state protection; it consists of what
she says about what happened to her and her view of the general situation in South Africa. It is clear
to me that, at this point in the Decision, the RPD has accepted the Kaplan
family view of what is happening in South Africa and has decided that
this view allows the Respondent to claim refugee status in Canada.
[187] The Kaplan
family view of “what is taking place in South Africa today vis-à-vis the Black
South Africans and the white South Africans and the indifference of the mainly
Black South African police force to protect them” is a grim view. It is driven
by the unquestionably horrendous experiences of Robert Kaplan in particular. Although
it is articulated by Lara Kaplan, I do not doubt that it is sincerely held by
the whole of the Kaplan family and by many other South Africans. For all I
know, it may be entirely accurate. What I have to decide, however, is whether,
on the evidence before it, it was reasonable for the RPD to accept the Kaplan
family view as supporting the Respondent’s claim which, in my view and, I
believe, in the view of the RPD, could not stand on its own and so required a
“lifeline.”
[188] In her
evidence Ms. Kaplan described incidents that she herself had experienced,
incidents suffered by third parties and a general view of the situation in South Africa.
Ms.
Kaplan’s Personal Experiences
[189] In her
evidence, Ms. Kaplan related two specific incidents in which she was personally
accosted by black South African men. Neither incident is inherently racist in
nature. Ms. Kaplan was driving a BMW and was inevitably identified as a
prosperous person who might yield money or valuable property.
[190] As regards
the August 2008 incident, Ms. Kaplan says she did go to the police:
a.
Oh,
you did report that to the police?
A. Yes, and I have the paperwork if
you need that.
Q. Okay. I am just curious did the
police do anything?
A. No,
they never do anything. What police, there is no law and order there, there is
no proper police force. It’s free reign in South Africa, kill who
you want and get away with murder.
Q. Okay.
So just before we go on to your other family members I just want to spend a few
minutes on this because this is an important part of the case.
A. Right.
Q. You
said no they never do anything. Can you just elaborate on that statement?
A. The
crime in South
Africa
is so completely out of control it is anoki (ph), it’s in free fall. There are
50 murders a day, that is a busload of people are murdered in South Africa every single
day. The police force cannot cope with the amount of crime. Most of the time
the police force are corrupt. They are in cahoots with the criminals. They are so
poorly paid they get backhands, it’s full of fraudulent (sic) and corruption
and there is no proper police force like there was prior to 1994.
They
could not handle it even if they wanted to and to be honest I don’t think they
want to. They don’t care, if you are white South African and you report a case
it’s like, you know, sorry, I’m busy, I’m on my tea break. That’s the
perception.
Q. Why
do you say that you don’t even think they would even want to?
A. Because
they – everybody including the police force seems to believe that if you are a
white South African and you are attacked it’s because you deserve it. It’s
coming to you, it’s due to you, it’s long overdue
[191] Ms. Kaplan’s
evidence shows that she relies upon what she perceives to be the general situation
in South
Africa.
We are not told what happened to her particular report of the attack against
her and what consequences followed. We are not told if she followed up and
attempted to find out what was happening. We are not told if the police did
nothing in her case or simply could not trace the perpetrators. The RPD in its
Decision simply relies upon her general statements and makes no reference to
the specifics of her experiences with the police.
[192] As regards
the 1997 incident where Ms. Kaplan says that the assailant wanted her vehicle,
there is no evidence that she went to the police.
[193] This is not a
sufficient objective basis for a finding that the South African police did
nothing in Ms. Kaplan’s case or that they would not have assisted the
Respondent had he reported the attacks against him. It is noteworthy that,
instead of providing specifics about what happened in her case, Ms. Kaplan
takes refuge in general, unsubstantiated assertions about what she sees as the
overall situation in South Africa. We are never told what
happened, or failed to happen, as a result of her report, or why.
[194] This Court
has noted the difficulties faced by the police in investigating and prosecuting
random and isolated criminal acts by anonymous individuals. See Ramirez
Tenorio v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2007 FC 63,
[2007] F.C.J. No. 98 at paragraph 25; Mejia v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2003 FC 1180, [2003] F.C.J. No. 1493 at
paragraph 12; Syed v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2000] 195 F.T.R. 39, [2000] F.C.J. No. 1556 at paragraphs 17-18; Danquah v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2003 FC 832, [2003]
F.C.J. No. 1063 at paragraph 22.
[195] In Smirnov
v. Canada (Secretary of State), [1995] 1 F.C. 780, [1994] F.C.J. No. 1922
(T.D.), at paragraph 11, the Court pointed out that it is a “reality of
modern-day life that protection offered is sometimes ineffective” and that
anonymous harassment and random assaults are difficult to investigate and protect
against:
In all such circumstances, even the most
effective, well-resourced and highly motivated police forces will have
difficulty providing effective protection. This Court should not impose on
other states a standard of “effective” protection that police forces in our own
country, regrettably, sometimes only aspire to.
[196] It is also
noteworthy that the RPD does not make a finding that Ms. Kaplan went to the
police as a basis for its Decision. The Respondent says that I must make a
careful distinction between the RPD’s recitation of Ms. Kaplan’s evidence and
the findings which are the basis of the Decision. Following this advice, I have
to say that there is no finding that Ms. Kaplan went to the police although
there is a recitation of her evidence to that effect.
Ms.
Kaplan’s Account of Third Party Attacks
[197] Ms. Kaplan
also provided evidence as to what had happened to her brother Robert. Robert
suffered appalling torture at the hands of black assailants in his own home. He
was tied up, tortured, stabbed nine times, shot in the chest three times,
burned with a hot iron and left for dead. He survived the open-heart surgery to
remove the bullets from his chest. He continues to live in South Africa with his
father, who has fortified their living quarters to provide some protection.
Another brother, David, has installed an electric fence around his home in South Africa, but there
is no evidence that he had been attacked. Ms. Kaplan believes that both she and
Robert were targeted because they were perceived as wealthy and white.
[198] Mr. Galati
points out that, surely, when white people are tortured in such a horrendous
way by black assailants the motives for the attack have to be more than
robbery. The viciousness of the treatment meted out to the victim suggests racial
revenge and hatred. It seems to me that to assess this argument properly it
would be necessary to review evidence concerning what happens to black victims
of crime in South
Africa
when they are assaulted and robbed either by black or white assailants. On the
evidence of what happened to Robert, it is not possible to say whether the
viciousness of the attack had a racial basis or whether certain human beings
are just sadistic enough to enjoy mutilating and killing. Viciousness and
sadism during the commission of a crime are not necessarily concomitant with
racial hatred.
[199] It might be
different if Robert had been targeted simply because he was white and there was
no other purpose for breaking into his house than to torture and kill him
because he was white.
[200] In any event,
the Respondent was not tortured and sadistically abused in a way that has had a
detrimental effect upon his health. He has been stabbed and cut various times
but there is no objective evidence in my view to support a racial component to
what he had suffered. A BBC News Report entitled “South Africa’s Crime
Crisis” reveals that black South Africans are also the victims of violent
crime. It is not only white South Africans who are murdered.
[201] Ms. Kaplan
also recounted stories about what had happened to her friend, Liza Chinn, who
was attacked by a black South African while she was out jogging. The man
attempted to rape her but did not succeed. There is no objective evidence,
however, to suggest that the attempted rape was racially motivated.
[202] Ms. Kaplan
also had received a fax from her cousin, Liz Marcus, describing how one of her
friends was shot to death by black robbers while waiting for his son to finish
soccer training at a park. Ms. Marcus reported that the black men were trying
to rob a woman of her cellular phone and, for no reason, shot Ms. Marcus’s
friend in the neck as they ran past him, simply because he was white. There is
no objective evidence to support this conclusion or to explain how Ms. Marcus
knew that her friend was shot simply because he was white. Random killings
occur in Canada, and there
is no reason to think that they must inevitably be racially motivated.
[203] Once again,
horrendous as the stories related by Ms. Kaplan are, there is nothing, in my
view, to suggest an obvious racial motivation. Ms. Kaplan’s opinions on what
prompted the crimes recounted are simply her opinions and these opinions are
driven by what has happened to her and to her family and the conclusions that
she and her family have come to about what is taking place generally in South
Africa. As I read the Decision, these are views that the RPD accepted and which
became the “lifeline” for the Respondent’s refugee claim.
Ms.
Kaplan’s General Views
[204] Ms. Kaplan’s
general views are recounted by the RPD in its Decision. Ms. Kaplan, according
to the RPD, holds the following views about what is taking place in South Africa:
1.
She
believes that black South Africans hate white South Africans for historical
reasons and that “all” whites are regarded as being equally responsible for
apartheid and that “we should be eradicated and stomped on like an ant.”
2.
She
describes the present situation as being “reverse apartheid, which is in 200
percent of all the minds of white South Africans”;
3.
She
believes that all whites in South Africa feel the hatred of
black South Africans towards them;
4.
She
believes that black South Africans have “no regard” for the lives of white
South Africans and that South African society is “brutal”;
5.
She
believes that most crimes in South Africa are committed by black
South Africans against white South Africans;
6.
She
believes that the police will do nothing about the crimes committed against
white South Africans;
7.
She
believes that the mainly black South African police are “corrupt” and are “in
cahoots” with black criminals;
8.
She
believes that the police will not help white South Africans because the whites
deserve what is happening to them for historical reasons and that, in the words
of the RPD, it is “payback time for the blacks”;
9.
She
believes that what is happening to whites in South Africa at the hands
of black South Africans is some kind of genocide;
10.
She
believes that since the end of apartheid the South African government has
adopted and promoted policies aimed replacing white South Africans with black
South Africans in positions of influence and power.
[205] Contrary to
what the RPD says in paragraph 73 of its Decision, Ms. Kaplan’s evidence does
not provide “a vivid and detailed account of what is taking place in South
Africa today” based upon “her own personal experience.”
[206] Ms. Kaplan’s
personal experience is extremely limited, and it can hardly be said to equate
to the Respondent’s experiences. Ms. Kaplan has personally experienced two
incidents that do not provide objective evidence of racial motivation, and she
recounts stories of a few other people, none of which can reasonably be said to
contain a racial dimension in terms of the motivation for the crimes that were
committed against white victims.
[207] So Ms.
Kaplan’s “vivid and detailed account of what is taking place in South Africa
today vis-à-vis the African South Africans and the white South Africans and the
indifference of the mainly African South African police force to protect them”
can only tenuously be connected to her own personal experiences. Her account is
little more than a personal view propagated from within a prosperous and
successful white South African family that, since the end of apartheid, finds
the “good life” they lived before 1994 not as good as it was and that regards
affirmative action as a form of “reverse apartheid.”
[208] In other
words, Ms. Kaplan’s view is highly partial and based upon her membership in a
particular racial and socio-economic class. Notwithstanding Robert’s brutal
experiences, the evidence shows that the Kaplan family remain prosperous and
successful. They have the power and the wealth to decide whether to remain in South Africa (Robert and
his father have) or to make successful careers for themselves abroad. Most
black South Africans remain poor and have no choice but to remain in South Africa and to face
on a daily basis the rampant crime to which the objective documentation says
they are subjected. This does not mean that Lara Kaplan’s views cannot be
accurate. Reasonably speaking, however, they cannot be relied upon by the RPD
to provide a “lifeline” to the Respondent’s refugee claim because her personal
experiences provide no objective basis for her general opinions, and her
general opinions need to be tested against impartial and objective evidence.
[209] In this respect,
then, the RPD’s conclusions regarding the value of Ms. Kaplan’s evidence are
unreasonable and the “lifeline” use that it makes of her evidence to support
the Respondent’s refugee claim is equally unreasonable. A similar lack of
objectivity can be found in the RPD’s treatment of the documentary evidence.
The
Documentary Evidence
[210] In reviewing
the documentary evidence, the RPD refers to South Africa’s affirmative
action policy or Black Economic Empowerment (BEE). It is not clear whether the
RPD regards this as a form of racial persecution against white people. The RPD
comments as follows:
The new phenomena of white poverty is
often blamed on the government’s Affirmative Action legislation, which reserves
80 percent of new jobs for blacks and favours black-owned companies (i.e. BEE).
[211] I do not see
what this has to do with the physical threats that form the basis of the
Respondent’s refugee claim, except that it appears to confirm that the
Respondent’s real purpose in coming to Canada was to find a job. Nor do I see
any evidence that this kind of affirmative action policy could be regarded as a
form of, or even evidence of, persecution in a country faced with the
gargantuan task of rectifying the racial, social and economic inequities of the
apartheid era.
[212] The RPD also
refers to documentation about the killing of “mostly white farm owners by black
assailants” that has created a concern “among white farmers that they … [are]
being targeted for racial and political reasons.” Given the situation in Zimbabwe, this concern
by white South African farmers is entirely understandable, but that issue was
not before the RPD and it is not before me. The Respondent is not a farmer. He
claims to be a poor white South African. Evidence that some white South African
farmers have been targeted is not evidence that all white South Africans are
being targeted or that the Respondent has been, or may be, targeted for racial
reasons.
[213] The balance
of the documents referred to by the RPD were drawn from Mr. Kaplan’s “Index of
Documents.” The RPD refers to these documents as “reports,” but they are
personal and somewhat idiosyncratic pieces that, as might be expected, are
submitted to support the Kaplan family view of the general situation for whites
in South
Africa.
There is nothing unreasonable about the Board considering these so-called
“reports,” but the RPD does not reveal an awareness of the highly personal and
partisan nature of these documents; nor does it balance them with a review of
more objective and authoritative reports of the current state of affairs in
South Africa in so far as they relate to the Respondent’s refugee claim.
[214] Mr. Galati
has helpfully referred me to various passages in the documentation which he
believes provide a reasonable, objective basis for the RPD’s findings regarding
the race-based risks faced by the Respondent and the inability and/or
unwillingness of the South African authorities to provide adequate protection
to poor white South Africans such as the Respondent.
[215] There is no
doubt that these documents can be used to portray a grim picture of racial
persecution against white South Africans which the state can do nothing about
or, in some cases, that the state actively encourages. However, I think it is
important to bear in mind the nature of the documentation to which the RPD
itself refers in order to support its positive Decision. Consideration of the
documentation occurs in paragraphs 96 to 118 of the Decision.
[216] When these
paragraphs are viewed together we can see which aspects of the documentation
were used by the RPD for its final findings of fact:
a.
Paragraph
106: The RPD quotes from an article asserting that the ANC’s “policies of
affirmative action have destroyed many businesses and jobs, leading to an
exodus of skills and expertise.” In my view, this has nothing to do with the
Respondent’s claim for refugee status. There is no evidence that affirmative action
and BEE are a form of persecution. The persecution relied upon by the
Respondent is physical violence against which the state cannot or will not
protect him. The Respondent portrays himself as a “poor” white South African.
He worked as a bartender (1998-2001), a cleaner, a parking lot attendant and a
technician in South Africa and came to Canada as a
carnival worker. It is difficult to see what his refugee claim has to do with
the destruction of “businesses and jobs” and “an exodus of skills and
expertise”;
b.
Paragraphs
107-108: The RPD relies upon this article for its references to “police
corruption and the chance if you report such corruption to another police
officer, of ever seeing daylight again.” Whether the Respondent and Ms. Kaplan
have ever been the victims of police corruption is unclear. The Respondent has
never reported any of the attacks made against him to the police and, although
Ms. Kaplan says she reported one attack made against her, it is not made clear
why there may have been no police response. The Respondent’s principal concern
about reporting was that prosecutions in South Africa take a long
time. We are not told by the RPD how corruption relates to the treatment of
race-based crime;
c.
Paragraphs
109-110: The RPD relies upon this document to show that the hijacking of
vehicles is prevalent in South Africa, and the document
“gives instructions how to avoid them and how to recognize what is a suspicious
vehicle or person.” There is no indication as to why the RPD considered the
hijacking of vehicles as relevant to racial violence suffered by the Respondent
or to state protection issues;
d.
Paragraphs
111-112: The RPD refers to this document because it comments on “the wave of
attacks targeting foreigners near Johannesburg and of people set alight by
angry mobs who roamed townships looking for foreigners and looting their shops
and homes.” This article, in fact, is about violence against black migrant
workers who came from other African states. The Respondent and Ms. Kaplan do
not claim to have suffered violence as black migrant foreign workers. They are
both white South Africans who say they have been attacked because they are
white;
e.
Paragraphs
113-114: The RPD makes use of this document for its guidance as to who is
regarded as a “white South African.” This is not an issue in the present case.
There is no doubt that the Respondent and Ms. Kaplan are white South Africans.
[217] So when the
RPD’s reliance, as expressed in the Decision, is examined, I think it has to be
said that, apart from the police corruption issue, it is difficult to see what
relevance that reliance has for the Respondent’s refugee claim of having
suffered racially-motivated violence at the hands of black attackers against
which the state could not, or would not, protect him. Even with respect to
police corruption, it is difficult to see how this can apply to the facts of
the Respondent’s case.
[218] The RPD then
goes on to make some general statements based upon, presumably, its reading of
the documentation:
a.
Paragraph
115: “The new phenomena (sic) of white poverty is often blamed on the
government’s Affirmative Action legislation, which reserves 80 percent of new
jobs for blacks and favours black-owned companies (i.e. BEE).” Affirmative action
and its consequences for white South Africa is what appears to lie
behind the complaints of the Respondent and Ms. Kaplan. They do not think affirmative
action is fair to white people. The Respondent came to Canada to work and find
a better life. Ms. Kaplan came to Canada to continue “the good
life” her family had enjoyed in South Africa before the end of
apartheid. None of this has anything to do with the refugee claim in this case,
but it does reveal, in my view, that the RPD has become sidetracked by
irrelevancies;
b.
Paragraph
116: This paragraph deals with the plight of white farmers in South Africa:
“close to 2,000 farmers have been murdered in tens of thousand (sic)
farm attacks in South Africa, many brutally tortured and slashed or
raped. Some victims have been burned with smoothing irons or had boiling water
poured down their throats. This type of torture is consistent with the torture
received by the witness’ brother Robert.” These are indeed horrendous and
disturbing statistics but their relevance for the Respondent’s refugee claim is
tenuous at best. The farmers are white and the Respondent is white, but he is
not a farmer and he will not be going back to South Africa as a farmer.
Robert Kaplan has the means to continue living in South Africa, even if he
has chosen to protect himself inside a domestic fortress. The Respondent is a
poor white South African who was born in Cape Town but who has
most recently lived in Pringle Bay;
c.
Paragraph
118: “However, white South Africans in predominantly wealthy white suburbs have
been affected by the 2008 13.5 percent rise in house robberies and associated
crime.” So crime is on the rise in South Africa and even wealthy white
South Africans are feeling the effect. The evidence reveals that black South
Africans are feeling it too. The fact that crime is on the rise and is an
endemic and serious problem is not disputed in this claim. In my view, however,
that fact tells us nothing about whether the Respondent and/or Ms. Kaplan were
attacked for being white, or whether the state can or will protect the
Respondent.
[219] Respondent’s
counsel correctly pointed out to me at the review hearing that it is not my job
to re-weigh evidence or to re-decide the Decision. My job is to judicially
review the RPD’s Decision and decide whether it falls within a “range of
possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and
law” as directed by the Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir, above, and
related cases. However, the necessary correlative to this position must also be
observed. It is not my job to review the decision that Respondent’s counsel
would, or could, have written had he been fixed with that task. I have to look
at the use made by the RPD of the documentation it cites and bear in mind the
reliance which the RPD says it placed upon that documentation.
[220] So my first and
most general observation on this issue is that the RPD’s Decision cites and
relies upon documentation for facts and information that have very little to do
with the basis of the Respondent’s refugee claim and very little to do with the
kind of white South African that the Respondent claims to be.
[221] In reviewing
the documentation cited by the RPD, I also note the following specifics:
a.
United
States Department of State (DOS) Report, 25 February 2009
Although the US DOS
report can be a very valuable source of information, in this case the RPD used
this evidence selectively. Indeed, the report states that the “continued
killings of mostly white farm owners by black assailants created concern among
white farmers that they were being targeted for racial and political reasons.”
However, elsewhere the report notes that “[d]espite concern among the farmers
that they were targeted for racial and political reasons, studies indicated
that the perpetrators generally were common criminals motivated by financial
gain [emphasis added].” When considered in its full context, then, it is
clear that the US DOS report does not support the RPD’s conclusions;
b.
“Time
for the Truth,” 2009
The RPD clearly erred in
relying on this opinion article as objective evidence. This article is based on
opinion and was written by someone using the pseudonym “The Pied Piper.” The
RPD’s reference to this article as a “report” and its contention that this is
objective documentary evidence as to the current state of affairs in South Africa are misleading. Indeed,
it is misleading to suggest that this article is anything but an opinion;
c.
“Race-Fuelled
Myopia Driving Skills out of South Africa,” 2009
This newspaper article
asserts the existence of a skills-drain of white South-Africans and says why
this could be occurring. The article also describes what the government and
other political parties think about this phenomenon. In my view, this has
nothing to do with the Respondent’s refugee claim, which is based upon
racially-motivated physical attacks;
d.
“South Africa – the Next Zimbabwe” 3 February 2009, the Trumpet.com, by Robert Morley
This opinion article
cannot be considered objective evidence. The author opines that in South Africa
“the rule of law” is “the rule of organised crime,” and he refers to a biblical
prophecy that the curses South
Africa
“increasingly finds itself under” are going to get worse. The purpose of this
article appears to be to encourage readers to read a booklet entitled “The
Wonderful World Tomorrow – What It Will Be Like”;
e.
“Attacks have
shown most of ANC to be racists” by
M. Riordan-Bull Kleinmond, Cape Points, Cape
Argus, 31 May 2008
The RPD again errs in
referring to this article as a report. This article is a comment on the
government. It demands that people of integrity be placed in power and
forecasts that Jacob Zuma will fail as president;
f.
“Loss of freedom
creeps up on us like a face of wrinkles” by David Bullard Sunday Times,
21 October 2007
Again, the RPD refers to
what is clearly an opinion article as a “report.” The author gives his opinion
on how South
Africa has
changed, and on the quality of judges, the police and the justice system in
general. It describes the entire judiciary as “sycophantic drunks and rogues
who are so desperate for a job that they will do anything the government tells
them to”;
g.
“Hijacking
Awareness Guide” prepared
by Inspector Riaan Steenkamp, Silica Fund Administration Systems, 2 August 2006
In considering this
report, the RPD seems to be inferring that hijacking is prevalent. While this
report has been generated by an agency, there is no information provided on the
agency;
h.
“South Africa: Burning the welcome mat”
by IRIN,
30 April 2009
This report considers
xenophobia and attacks targeting foreign nationals. This article makes no
mention of white foreigners but focuses on illegal migrants from other parts of
Africa;
i.
“Quite
(sic) South African” 30 April 2009
The RPD erroneously
relied on this as a “report.” In reality, it is a Wikipedia entry defining
“White South African” and the RPD has quoted directly from it
[222] It is clear that most of
the “objective evidence” relied on by the RPD in this instance was anything but
objective. Indeed, the RPD relied on a number of articles and editorials that are
strong on opinions but not on facts.
National
Documentation Package
[223] The RPD fails to balance
the evidence referred to above against the more objective evidence found in the
Immigration and Refugee Board’s National Documentation Package.
[224] It is noteworthy that
the National Documentation Package’s List of Documents provides no sources or
overt mention of racism, discrimination or violence targeted against white
South Africans. Indeed, the only source found under the Nationality, Ethnicity
and Race section of the package is an article entitled “Societal treatment of
foreigners from other African countries, in particular from the Democratic
Republic of Congo.”
[225] However, an examination of some of the
sources under the Human Rights portion of the package reveal some concern with
regard to racial tensions in South Africa.
a.
US DOS Report
Under the section of the DOS Report
entitled National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities, the only mention of white South
Africans concerns the continued killings of “mostly white farm owners by black
assailants.” However, the Report notes, as I do above, that studies show these
killings to be financially motivated. The Report notes both concern that some
white employers have been accused of killing black farm labourers and
complaints that white employers receive preferential treatment from the
authorities. Other racial concerns include the under-representation of blacks
in the workforce, particularly at professional and managerial levels. The
section on internally Displaced Persons notes:
“[i]n mid-May xenophobic attacks
against foreign African migrants and ethnic minorities by South African
civilians in the townships in Johannesburg escalated into a national wave of
violence in which 62 people were killed …. Of these, 21 were South African
citizens, 11 were Mozambican, five were Zimbabwean, and three were Somali…. The
perpetrators blamed the immigrants for job and housing losses and increasing
levels of crime…. The estimated 80,000 migrants who were displaced by the
violence fled to 72 temporary shelters ….”
b.
Amnesty
International Report 2008 – South
Africa
Highlighted issues in this report include
widespread poverty and unemployment, use of excessive violence by police, the
failure of authorities to respect the principle of non-refoulement, violence
against women and a high prevalence of HIV. There is no mention whatsoever of
discriminatory treatment against white South Africans;
c.
Human Rights Watch
–World Report 2008 – South
Africa
Human Rights Watch notes that
widespread poverty, unemployment, gender inequality and persistently high
levels of violent crime remain significant barriers to human rights in South
Africa. Large numbers of Mozambican and Zimbabwean migrants seek employment in
South Africa’s commercial agricultural sector. Although foreign migrant
workers have legal rights, many farmers disregard laws governing minimum wage
and paid overtime. We are told that “Undocumented migrants are also frequently
harassed by police and immigration officials and are subject to assault and
extortion during farm raids.” Other issues noted in this report include
excessive use of force by the police, issues with refugees and migrants, and women’s
and children’s rights;
d.
BBC Report, “South Africa’s Crime Crisis,” 27 May 1999
This article, discussed in the
Applicant’s materials, is concerned with criminality in South Africa. Indeed, according to the article, “[a]
serious crime is committed every 17 seconds in South Africa
….” This article notes, however, that
[f]or
a people so traumatised, the fact that there has been so little revenge since
the first all-race elections five years ago, is nothing short of miraculous. But
nothing can excuse the unnecessary loss of life every day in this country
through violent crime. It adds new traumas onto the old – for black people as
well as whites are the victims [emphasis added].
The article then recounts the following
story:
The
other day, one of my colleagues returned from the bank. He had been queuing up
inside when outside on the pavement a security guard delivering cash was
murdered by a gang of armed robbers.
The
guard had already handed over what he was carrying; he was lying face down in
supplication. But one of the robbers shot him at point blank range.
The
guard was black – forced no doubt by unemployment levels into this dangerous
job – and his family may have lost their only breadwinner.
This article seems to demonstrate that the loss
of life and criminality that is occurring in South Africa transcends racial boundaries and is
affecting all South Africans.
[226] In my view, the
objective documentary evidence not only fails to support, but rather
contradicts, the Respondent’s allegations of systemic criminality based on
racial discrimination against white South Africans. Indeed, the documentary
evidence that discusses racial issues mainly focuses on the xenophobia against
immigrants from other African states.
[227] There is little
discussion of violence against white people in these reports and articles, and
the discussion that exists is limited to the killing of white farmers, which
has been attributed more to financial rather than racial motivation. The
Respondent is not a white farmer.
[228] Furthermore, the
documentary evidence in the National Documentation Package paints a picture of
a South Africa in which black South Africans are under-represented in the
workforce and have a hard time “climbing the ladder” into professional and
managerial levels. In essence, this is the opposite story from the experiences
claimed by the Respondent and his witness.
[229] My general
conclusion on the RPD’s handling of the documentation, as revealed by the
Decision itself, is that reliance was, for the most part, based upon factors
that have little relevance to the refugee claim made by the Respondent. The
package of documents prepared by Mr. Kaplan, whose emotional involvement in
these issues was acknowledged by the RPD, is highly reflective of the Kaplan
family view of what is happening in South Africa. Indeed, it was
prepared to support that point of view using sources who hold the same opinions
about present-day life in South Africa. This partial approach
to evidence should have been identified by the RPD. The RPD should have taken
the precaution of checking it against more objective and authoritative sources.
The Kaplan family point of view, and the picture painted by those documents
submitted by the Respondent to show both the fate of white South Africans in
South Africa and the failure of the state to protect them, cannot be
discounted, but it was unreasonable of the RPD – given its own identification
of Mr. Kaplan’s emotional involvement; the fate of his brother; and the
close-knit, mutually-supportive nature of the Kaplan family – not to have
rounded out its assessment with a review of more authoritative, objective and
less emotionally partial sources than the ones upon which it chose to rely.
The
RPD’s Findings
[230] Having
assessed the Respondent’s personal evidence, the evidence of Ms. Kaplan and the
documentary evidence, the RPD then came to its conclusions and findings. These
findings occur at paragraphs 119 to 130 of the Decision. They are worth
commenting upon in some detail because of what they reveal about the
unreasonable errors that underlie the Decision:
a.
“The
claimant was attacked personally by African South Africans on at least six or
seven occasions because of his white skin”.
The factual
evidence is clear that the Respondent was attacked by black South Africans.
There is little objective evidence, however, to support a conclusion that the
Respondent was attacked “because of his white skin.” The Respondent’s own
evidence is that his attackers often had a purpose in attacking him other than
his white skin: either they wanted to rob him or, in the case of the rugby
match, because “they were losing the game.” In the market car-park attack it
was the Respondent who confronted the black man attempting to break into his
friend’s car. The attack while he was walking home with his friend from the
beach at night does appear to have a systemic racial element. It looks like an
attempt by black males to intimidate a “big white boy.” The Respondent says,
however, that he was not intimidated and that “that’s life for us.” It is also
noticeable that the kind of racial intimidation evident in this attack took
place in a setting – they were walking from “the beach area, all the pubs and
night life” – where tensions can result in racial violence in any country.
Racial tension is not persecution. This incident hardly supports a general
conclusion that the Respondent has been repeatedly attacked because of his skin
colour. There is a possibility of mixed motives in some of the attacks, but the
RPD does not grapple with this and there is no additional evidence of racial
motivation other than the racial insults and epithets used during the attacks.
The RPD does not adequately address the issue of whether the Respondent’s
whiteness was an indicium of relative wealth or whether the Respondent was
attacked for being white. There is also little to suggest that the
Respondent had, or has, any subjective fear of attacks by black males. His
stated purpose in coming to Canada was economic. The “racial discrimination”
aspect of the claim appears to have been suggested and played up so that he
could claim a Convention ground rather than being an explicit or inherent
aspect of the attacks;
b.
“He
has scars on various parts of his body, stomach, right eye, right side of his
body and hands”.
These facts
are not in dispute, but they do not, in themselves, support racially-motivated
attacks and a lack of state protection so as to make the Respondent a refugee;
c.
“Multiple
attacks. The witness, Laura (sic) Kaplan, was attacked and threatened
with guns by African South Africans on two separate occasions because of the
colour of her skin and perceived wealth”.
Being
attacked because you are perceived to be wealthy is not a ground for refugee
protection. The RPD is undermining the reasonableness of its own Decision by
relying upon “wealth” as a basis for protection. More importantly, however,
there is no objective evidence to support a conclusion that Ms. Kaplan was
attacked “because of the colour of her skin” other than skin colour being an
indicium of wealth. The evidence is that she was driving a BMW on both
occasions. A BMW is also an indicium of relative wealth. Black South Africans
are also attacked and threatened with guns by black South Africans. Ms.
Kaplan’s opinion of why she was attacked is based upon the Kaplan family’s
general view of what is happening in South Africa. This view includes a
belief that all crimes are committed by black South Africans and that a
situation of “reverse apartheid” and genocide exists in South Africa. There was
no objective evidence before the RPD to support these extreme views. What is
more, there is no clear evidence as to whether Ms. Kaplan’s experiences were
fully reported to the police or that the police failed to respond for the
general reasons she gave as opposed to particular difficulties with her case;
d.
“Laura’s
(sic) brother Robert who was tortured and shot by African South Africans
and miraculously lived, now has major physical and psychological problems”.
What happened
to Robert, horrendous as it was, cannot support a general conclusion that the
Respondent suffered and will suffer racial persecution in South Africa. As well as
being tortured and left for dead, Robert was robbed by his black assailants.
And even assuming that, at least in part, Robert was shot and tortured for
being white, this in itself does not demonstrate that the Respondent is at risk
of racial persecution against which the state cannot, or will not, protect him.
Having suffered significantly more than the Respondent, Robert is still living
in South
Africa;
e.
“Laura’s
(sic) brother Robert and her father survived only because of their
wealth, being able to install electronic and guard protection for themselves
both inside and outside their homes”.
There is no
evidence that Ms. Kaplan’s father personally suffered and survived any attacks.
The building of domestic fortresses is not, per se, an indicator of
race-based attacks against the occupants. It merely shows that the wealthy have
ways of protecting themselves against endemic crime in South Africa. Many black
South Africans, who make up the majority of the poor, do not have this option.
They are constantly attacked, robbed, murdered and raped by black South
Africans who are, for obvious demographic and socio-economic reasons, the
majority of the perpetrators;
f.
“The
evidence of the claimant and the witness [Ms. Kaplan] and the documentary
evidence which I accept as credible show a picture of indifference and
inability or unwillingness of the government and the security forces to protect
White South Africans from persecution by African South Africans”.
The
Respondent has provided no reasonable explanation as to why he did not seek state
protection. The RPD overlooks entirely that the 1991 and 1992 attacks relied
upon by the Respondent took place before the 1994 end to apartheid and the coming
to power of the ANC. The Respondent’s failure to seek state protection at a
time when it was reasonable to expect that a white South African would have no
problem in securing it should have alerted the RPD to the evidence in the
Respondent’s testimony that he has no subjective fear. Furthermore, it should
have prompted the RPD to examine more objective and authoritative sources of
information concerning the availability of state protection in South Africa for white
South Africans such as the Respondent. The Court cannot say that adequate state
protection does exist, but the RPD must undertake a more objective assessment
of this issue. The documentation quoted by the Respondent is relevant and
cannot be overlooked, but it is personal, partial and political and it needs to
be examined against a broader background of more independent sources;
g.
“I
find that the claimant has presented “clear and convincing” proof of the
state’s inability or unwillingness to protect him”.
The
Respondent has never asked the state for protection and he has provided no
reasonable explanation for his failure to seek help from the state, even when
the state was a white-ruled apartheid state. Ms. Kaplan’s evidence is equally
lacking in this regard. The documentary assessment is incomplete in the ways I
have already described, and the use made of the documents (e.g. to cite the
position of white farmers) is often not relevant to the Respondent’s position
or to the nature of his refugee claim;
h.
“I
find that the claimant was a victim because of his race (white South African)
rather than a victim of criminality and that he has established a link between
his fear of persecution and one of the five grounds in the Convention
definition”.
As explained
above, I do not think it was reasonable for the RPD to conclude that the
Respondent, on the evidence he gave, established even subjective fear of
persecution based upon racially-motivated attacks. Also for reasons given
above, I think that the RPD’s assessment of the objective situation was equally
unreasonable;
i.
“I
find that there is no viable IFA (Internal Flight Alternative) for the claimant
in any part of South
Africa.
According to the most recent statistics, African South Africans make up about
80 percent of the population; white Europeans approximately 9 percent and the
remainder are other coloured and Asians …. I find that the claimant would
stand out like a “sore thumb” due to his colour in any part of the country”.
It is not
clear what the RPD is using as the basis for this conclusion. The 9% of white
South Africans are not all dispersed throughout the 80% black population. White
enclaves exist where white South Africans continue to live and work. White
people are moving to South Africa to live, so it must be
possible for a white South African to live safely in some areas at least and
not to stand out like a sore thumb. So it is not accurate to say that the
Respondent would stand out “due to his colour in any part of the
country” (emphasis added).
Counsel for
the Respondent has argued that the Respondent cannot go to a white enclave or a
city where a substantial number of white South Africans continue to live and
work because the Respondent is “poor.”
It is true
that the Respondent did allege a lack of money in connection with an IFA. The
RPD refers to this in paragraph 77 of the Decision:
The claimant alleges there is no internal
flight alternative (IFA) for him in South Africa because the African South Africans are everywhere and most
of them have the same hatred against white South Africans. The only way he
could live safely, if he had the money, would be to hire security guards and
construct security features around his home like the witness’ father and
brother have done.
The problem
with accepting counsel’s argument is that I am hamstrung by another argument by
the same counsel which I have accepted.
Mr. Galati
has asserted (and I agree) that I must make a very careful distinction when
reviewing the Decision between those earlier parts of the Decision where the
RPD is summarizing the evidence of the Respondent and Ms. Kaplan (indicated by
the use of such words as “the claimant alleges”) and those parts of the
Decision where the RPD makes findings based upon that evidence.
If I follow
Mr. Galati’s advice, as I think I must in order to be consistent, then I must
treat paragraph 77 as a recital of the Respondent’s evidence and not as a
finding upon which the Decision is based.
Paragraph
129, on the other hand, is clearly the RPD’s finding with regard to an IFA and
it makes no mention of the Respondent’s alleged lack of money. The finding is
that he would stand out like a “sore thumb” “in any part of the country”
“due to his colour” (emphasis added). Clearly this is untenable because he
would not stand out “due to his colour” in those parts of the country where
white South African’s congregate.
In any event,
the Respondent’s allegation, as summarized in paragraph 77 of the Decision was
not that there are white enclaves where he cannot go. His allegation was that “African
South Africans are everywhere and most of them have the same hatred
against white South Africans” (emphasis added). He alleged that “the only way
he could live safely, if he had the money, would be to hire security guards and
construct security features around his home like the witness’ father and
brother have done.”
So the issue
of an IFA, and whether a poor white South African such as the Respondent can go
and live safely somewhere else where white South African’s congregate is never
fully canvassed in the Decision. The Decision itself deals with an IFA in
paragraphs 128 and 129. It is clear that, when these paragraphs are read
together, the RPD is saying that the Respondent would stick out “due to his
colour in any part of the country” (emphasis added) because black South
Africans make up 80% of the population and whites only 9%. The availability of
a white enclave where white South African’s congregate and make up a more
significant portion of the local population is never addressed. Hence, this
finding on an IFA is also unreasonable;
j.
“I
find that the claimant’s fear of persecution by African South Africans is
justified considering the objective evidence referred to”.
As already
discussed, the “objective evidence” is identified and dealt with in paragraphs
91 to 118 of the Decision. This objective evidence is partial and incomplete.
In addition, of course, the objective evidence could not overcome other
conclusions about the Respondent’s lack of subjective fear and the unreasonable
treatment of an IFA.
Conclusions on Merits
[231] There are
numerous errors in this Decision that, either individually or cumulatively,
render it unreasonable within the meaning of Dunsmuir, above, and
require that it be returned for reconsideration by a differently constituted
RPD.
[232] As I hope I
make clear in the reasons, my principal concerns with the Decision are the
RPD’s heavy reliance upon the evidence and views of Ms. Kaplan regarding the
general situation for white South Africans and the RPD’s failure to consider
the Respondent’s documentation package against broader and more independent
sources of general information.
[233] I am not
saying that the South African state is either willing or able to protect
persecuted white South Africans. What I am saying is that this is an issue that
remains to be determined on a much more objective evidentiary basis than the
RPD referred to and relied upon in this case.
[234] In addition,
and as I have indicated, I have serious reservations about why this particular
white South African came to Canada and, after a considerable delay, opted to
claim refugee status. Once again, however, just because the Respondent’s
circumstances may not qualify as persecution under section 96 of the Act does
not mean that I am saying that other white South Africans could not so qualify.
[235] I wish to
emphasize again that all I am dealing with is a particular decision about one
white South African within the narrow confines of Canadian jurisprudence on
reviewable error. This decision cannot, and should not, be taken as either a
personal or a political opinion or assessment about the plight of white South
Africans in the post apartheid era.
[236] Having said
that, however, I am now compelled to deal with certain constitutional, Charter,
rule of law and jurisdictional issues that arise in this case because of
alleged attempts by the South African authorities to assert political and
diplomatic pressure to subvert the rule of law in Canada in so far as the facts
of this case are concerned.
External
Considerations
[237] Counsel for
the Respondent has, quite rightly in my view, brought to the Court’s attention
what he regards as chilling and coercive attempts by the South African
authorities to subvert the rule of law in this case. The legal implications of
these attempts at political and diplomatic interference are extremely serious.
It could mean, for instance, that, notwithstanding the merits of this judicial
review application, the Court should decline to entertain it because the
Government of Canada has acted unconstitutionally and the Court should not encourage
or condone such behaviour. It could mean that the Court itself has lost the
jurisdiction to hear the application. Or it could mean, notwithstanding the
unreasonable errors I have identified on the merits, that I should decline to
send the Decision back for reconsideration because the matter is now so tainted
that a legally independent decision is no longer possible.
[238] Let me say,
at the outset, that I do not regard these concerns as entirely groundless or
vexatious and I believe that counsel had both a responsibility to his client
and to the Court to raise them.
The
Evidence of Interference
[239] The Respondent
has filed two affidavits to support his allegations of interference and loss of
jurisdiction by the Court.
The
Affidavit of Ms. Stefanie Gude
[240] Ms. Gude is
Mr. Galati’s assistant. Mr. Galati is the Respondent’s counsel who argued the
case for the Respondent at the hearing before me.
[241] Ms. Gude did
a Google search and discovered that, following the RPD’s positive Decision in
this case, approximately 113,000 articles and stories appeared on the Internet
and that considerable debate ensued around the implications of the Decision.
[242] Based on this
Internet search, Ms. Gude points out that, immediately following the Decision,
the reaction of the South African government was “swift and hostile” and that
the South African government “threatened that diplomatic relations would be
threatened, if the decision were not reversed.”
[243] Ms. Gude has
provided the Court with some sample articles. They report, for instance, that
the African Nation Congress (ANC) labelled the RPD’s Decision as “racist,”
“sensationalist” and “alarming” and that “Canada’s reasoning
for granting Huntley [the Respondent] a refugee status can only serve to
perpetuate racism.”
[244] It was
reported in the Agence France-Presse on September 2, 2009 that “South
Africa’s top diplomat in Canada” was “shocked” by the Decision and said
that if the ruling was left to stand it could “seriously damage relations
between the two countries.”
[245] It was also
reported that Mr. Abraham Sokhaya Nkomo, South Africa’s high commissioner in Canada, dismissed
the Decision as “outrageous” and that Mr. Nkomo “vowed to pursue every avenue
to the Harper government to appeal the ruling – made last week by a one-man
refugee board – to the Federal Court.”
[246] The same
article also reported Mr. Nkomo as saying that he had “already met with
officials from the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade” and
was “seeking a meeting with Immigration Minister Jason Kenney in a bid to get
the ruling appealed.” Mr. Nkomo was reported as saying: “We will pursue all
avenues.”
[247] On September
3, 2009 the National Post reported that the Decision had “ignited
diplomatic tensions between Canada and South Africa” and that
“the South African government [had] asked Canada to appeal the ruling on the
grounds that there is no factual basis for it.”
[248] On September
11, 2009 Macleans reported Mr. Nkomo as vowing “to leave no stone
unturned in the effort to get the Harper government to appeal the ruling … to
the Federal Court.”
[249] The above is
a sampling, but I think the implications are clear that the South African
government was highly displeased with the Decision and brought diplomatic
pressure to bear on the Canadian government to appeal the Decision to this
Court.
[250] The
government of Canada has no
control over how or when the government of South Africa might decide
to take umbrage and bring diplomatic pressure to bear. The reports suggest
that, at least at a diplomatic level, it was understood that the RPD was not
the government of Canada and that the only way to challenge the Decision would be
to appeal it to the Federal Court.
[251] Based upon
the articles that have been placed before me, I think it can only be said that,
perhaps, the pressure from the South African government had something to do
with the decision of the Minister to bring judicial review proceedings before
this Court.
[252] However,
there is no evidence whatsoever that the government of Canada paid any
heed to diplomatic pressure in deciding whether or not to commence these
judicial review proceedings. In her affidavit, Ms. Gude attempts to make up for
this deficiency by referring the Court to articles that appeared after the
decision to apply for leave and judicial review had been taken. However, these
articles simply point out that the decision to appeal was made after South Africa raised its
concerns and that the South African high commission was pleased with the
decision to have the RPD Decision reviewed.
[253] Ms. Gude also
refers to articles that cite the wording used in the judicial review
application itself, but such wording is standard and says nothing whatsoever
about what may have prompted the judicial review proceeding.
[254] Based upon
the articles presented in Ms. Gude’s affidavit, I have no evidence before me to
support a proposition that the government of Canada was influenced in any way
by the South African government to bring these judicial review proceedings. Even
if diplomatic pressure caused the government of Canada to inquire
into the Decision, there is no evidence that the Minister brought this
application for any reason other than that, having examined the Decision, he
decided to seek judicial review because of reviewable errors in the Decision
itself.
[255] In written
argument, the Respondent asks me to find that “it is more probable than not
that the Minister made his decision to commence the application as a result of
pressure(s) from the South African government (against whom the Respondent made
his claim), namely on improper political interference ….”
[256] To support
such a ruling based upon political abuse, the Respondent cites: (a) “the timing
and circumstances of this application”; and (b) “the tenor, texture, and
non-existent weight or merit of this application.”
[257] Using the
Respondent’s own criteria, I think I have to say that the tenor, texture, and
weight and merit of the application, as I have pointed out in my reasons on the
merits, suggest nothing more than a decision by the Minister to have a
seriously flawed RPD decision reviewed. The timing of the decision proves
nothing. The South African government was bound to react as soon as the
Decision was made, and the Minister had to decide whether or not to commence
judicial review proceedings within the relatively short time allowed. The timing
could not have been otherwise, and it says nothing about why the Minister decided
to proceed with judicial review.
[258] So there is
no evidence to support a finding that political or diplomatic pressure or
interference prompted or caused the Minister to seek judicial review. Not
content with this, the Respondent argues that it is the perception of
abuse and interference that matters, and that the Court must examine the issue
from this perspective.
[259] Based upon
Ms. Gude’s affidavit, there is no evidence to support any kind of perception
other than the following:
a.
The
government of South Africa did not like the RPD Decision and asked the
government of Canada to have it
appealed to the Federal Court;
b.
The
government of Canada reviewed the Decision and commenced judicial review
proceedings in the Federal Court because the Decision was seriously flawed and
contained reviewable errors as defined by Canadian law.
[260] Ms. Gude’s
affidavit provides no evidence upon which the Court could conclude that the
Applicant has brought these judicial review proceedings for any other reason
than that the Decision contains reviewable errors and should be considered by
the Court.
The
Affidavit of Ms. Amina Sherazee
[261] In order to
enhance his argument based upon perception, the Respondent has introduced a
second affidavit. This one is sworn by Ms. Amina Sherazee, a barrister and
solicitor who practises exclusively in the area of Immigration and Refugee Law
and who says that much of her practice is in the Federal Court.
[262] Ms. Sherazee
provides the Court with the following evidence and guidance:
I can state, without hesitation, from
personal experience, professional experience, and expert opinion, as well as
the discussion of my immigration barrister colleagues at the bar, based on
conversations and the monitoring of such list-serves (sic) as the RLA
(Refugee Lawyers’ Association) list, the CCR (Canadian Council of Refugees)
list, and the like, and based on the grounds of review, and the “issue(s)” set
out by the Minister, that had it not been for the explosive, hostile, and
“racist”-allegation-ridden pressure of the South African government, and the
public diplomatic threats made, and allegations of “racism”, that the Minister
would not seek judicial review of such a decision, which rests on anemic factual
complaints on evidence and factual issue(s) of effective state protection,
tied to the extreme, conceded facts of Mr. Huntley’s ordeal, in what he
suffered by way of physical attack(s).
It is clear to everyone, that this is a
“political” decision to bring judicial review, and not one based on any visible
legal principle, which in my respectful view brings the administration of
justice into disrepute, in that it compromises the underlying constitutional
principles of the Rule of Law, Constitutionalism, and the Independence of the Judiciary.
This is compounded and aggravated given
the leave ratio granted by this Honourable Court. It is generally gauged that
in ‘bad years’, the Court grants leave to 2 to 3%, and in ‘good years’ 5 to 6%,
of all applications for judicial review brought by immigration/refugee
applicants to the Court. It is virtually unheard of that the Minister’s
applications are ever refused. The difference, for the immigration bar, is
slanted and inexplicable.
With the greatest of respect, this
further raises more than a palatable apprehension of bias, and an abuse of
process by the Minister, with respect to this Court’s adjudication of the
within “application for leave and judicial review” [original emphasis].
[263] Given her
professed experience in the Federal Court on Immigration and Refugee Law, it
comes as a surprise to the Court that Ms. Sherazee would swear an affidavit
that does not comply with the Court’s rules for the swearing of affidavits.
[264] The relevant Federal
Courts Rules on the swearing of affidavits provide as follows:
81. (1) Affidavits shall be confined to facts within
the deponent’s personal knowledge except on motions, other than motions for
summary judgment or summary trial, in which statements as to the deponent’s
belief, with the grounds for it, may be included.
(2) Where
an affidavit is made on belief, an adverse inference may be drawn from the
failure of a party to provide evidence of persons having personal knowledge
of material facts.
|
81. (1) Les affidavits se limitent aux faits dont le
déclarant a une connaissance personnelle, sauf s’ils sont présentés à l’appui
d’une requête – autre qu’une requête en jugement sommaire ou en procès
sommaire – auquel cas ils peuvent contenir des déclarations fondées sur ce que
le déclarant croit être les faits, avec motifs à l’appui.
(2) Lorsqu’un affidavit contient
des déclarations fondées sur ce que croit le déclarant, le fait de ne pas
offrir le témoignage de personnes ayant une connaissance personnelle des
faits substantiels peut donner lieu à des conclusions défavorables.
|
[265] Ms. Sherazee’s affidavit
is problematic for the following reasons :
a.
In
the first quoted paragraph above, she does not really reveal how she comes by
her “knowledge” that “had it not been for the explosive, hostile, and ‘racist’
- allegation-ridden pressure of the South African government, and the public
diplomatic threats made, and allegations of ‘racism’, … the Minister would not
seek judicial review of such a decision … .” She says that she bases her
“knowledge” of this fact upon “personal experience, professional experience,
and expert opinion, as well as the discussion of my immigration barrister
colleagues at the bar, based on conversations and the monitoring of such
list-serves (sic) as the RLA (Refugee Lawyers’ Association) list, the
CCR (Canadian Council of Refugees) list, and the like … .” However, Ms.
Sherazee neither recites nor attaches as exhibits the substance, or even the
gist, of the personal or other experience upon which she is relying. It looks
as though she is simply asking the Court to accept her assertion that she knows
what prompted the Minister’s decision, even though she is not prepared to
reveal how she knows this;
b.
Ms.
Sherazee also says that she bases her knowledge on the “grounds of review, and
the ‘issue(s)’ set out by the Minister” and the fact that the application rests
on “anemic factual complaints on evidence and factual issue(s) of
effective state protection, tied to the extreme, conceded facts of Mr.
Huntley’s ordeal, in what he suffered by way of physical attack(s).” This is
nothing but argument and legal opinion, which it is Mr. Galati’s role to
provide. It has no place in an affidavit;
c.
The
second paragraph is, likewise, nothing but argument and opinion and, if it is
clear to “everyone,” I am left wondering why Ms. Sherazee cannot make it clear
to me by providing the facts upon which she relies and allowing me to make up
my own mind. As an officer of this Court I trust that Ms. Sherazee, in
representing to the Court that it is “clear to everyone,” has indeed taken
appropriate steps and consulted with “everyone” or, if “everyone” means all of
the Immigration bar, that she has indeed consulted with “everyone” who practises
at that bar. Without an explanation, I cannot possibly understand how she
appears to know in such detail what “everyone” thinks. This matter goes beyond
professional courtesy. Members of the Immigration bar, in particular, may take
exception to Ms. Sherazee presuming to represent their views before the Court
in this way;
d.
As I
read the third paragraph of the quoted portion of Ms. Sherazee’s affidavit together
with the fourth paragraph, she is attempting to suggest that the Court’s
decisions on leave applications create an apprehension of bias if the Court decides
this application in favour of the Minister. The source of Ms. Sherazee’s
assertions is not revealed to the Court and it is not clear who she means by
the “Immigration bar.” I think she must mean the side of the Immigration bar
that represents claimants because my reading of Mr. Assan’s materials
(Minister’s counsel in this application) is that he understands the process
very well and does not find it “slanted and inexplicable.” Once again, there is
nothing here that rightly belongs in an affidavit. Ms. Sherazee is providing
argument and opinion rather than facts within her knowledge that the Court can
assess and use to reach its own conclusions.
[266] As Justice Konrad von
Finckenstein stated in Ly, above, at paragraph 10,
[e]xcept on motions, affidavits shall be confined to facts within
the personal knowledge of the deponent: Rule 81(1), Federal Court Rules,
1998. The affidavit must be free from argumentative materials and the
deponent must not interpret evidence previously considered by a tribunal or
draw legal conclusions (Deigan v. Canada (A.G.) (1996), 206 N.R. 195
(Fed. C.A.); West Region Tribal
Council v. Booth (1992), 55 F.T.R. 28; First Green Park Pty. Ltd. v. Canada (A.G.), [1997] 2 F.C. 845). If an
affidavit does not meet these requirements, the application can only succeed if
an error is apparent on the face of the record (Turcinovica v. Canada
(M.C.I.), 2002 FCT 164).
[267] Moreover, according to Deigan
v. Canada (Minister of Industry) (1996), 206 N.R. 195, 66 A.C.W.S. (3d) 837
(Deigan) at paragraph 2, the Court ought to reject portions of
affidavits that are “tendentious, opinionated,
argumentative or improper.”
[268] To determine if an
affidavit is proper, I have to consider whether the facts deposed to are within
the knowledge of the affiant. To make this determination, the Court may
consider the affiant’s office or qualifications and whether it is probable that
a person holding such office or qualifications would be aware of such facts.
See Smith Kline & French Laboratories Ltd. v. Novopharm Ltd. (1984),
2 C.I.P.R. 205, [1984] F.C.J. No. 223 (C.A.). However, no matter how
experienced an affiant may be, he or she is not entitled to speculate, makes
legal arguments or draw conclusions of law. See First Green Park Pty. Ltd.
v. Canada (Attorney General), [1997] 2 F.C. 845,
[1997] F.C.J. No. 257 (T.D.).
[269] Indeed, the general
requirement under Rule 81(1) is that affidavits ought to be confined to the
personal knowledge of the deponent. This embodies the common law rule against
hearsay. See Bressette v. Keettle and Stony Point First Nations Band Council
(1997), 137 F.T.R. 189, [1997] F.C.J. No. 1130 (T.D.). This does not
necessarily exclude hearsay evidence. Rather, a principled approach must be
considered when determining the admissibility of hearsay evidence. See, for
example, Éthier v. Canada (RCMP Commissioner), [1993] 2 F.C. 659,
[1993] F.C.J. No. 183 (C.A.).
[270] Sub-Rule 81(2) of the Federal
Courts Rules allows the Court to draw an adverse inference from a party’s
failure to provide evidence from persons having personal knowledge. As such, an
affidavit based on information and belief should provide an explanation as to
why the best evidence is not available. See Split Lake Cree First Nation v.
Sinclair,
2007 FC 1107, 320 F.T.R. 1. This rule is consistent with the principle that the
failure to provide the best evidence will affect the weight given to the
affidavit. See Lumonics Research Ltd. v. Gould, [1983] 2 F.C. 360 (C.A.).
[271] Ms. Sherazee’s affidavit
is unacceptable because it contains:
1.
Facts
outside of her personal knowledge;
2.
Unsubstantiated
opinion evidence;
3.
Argumentative
material; and
4.
Conclusions
of law.
[272] Any portions of the Sherazee affidavit containing factual statements
cannot be dissociated from the numerous statements of opinion offered by Ms.
Sherazee. As such, the affidavit is struck and is assigned no weight. See, for
example, Deigan, above, and Kassab v. Bell Canada, 2008 FC 1181,
[2008] F.C.J. No. 1503.
[273] Moreover,
pursuant to sub-Rule 81(2), the Court may draw an adverse inference from the
affiant’s failure to provide the sources for the information upon which she
relies and an explanation of why the best evidence was not available in this
instance.
[274] In general, then, there
is nothing in Ms. Sherazee’s affidavit that is either relevant or admissible
with regard to the issues that are presently before the Court. Nor does the
Court have any evidence before it to support the Respondent’s constitutional
and abuse arguments.
The
Jurisprudence
[275] The
Respondent has offered the following factual basis for his allegation of a
constitutional breach and abuse of process:
1.
The
Respondent is a white South African;
2.
The
Respondent was granted refugee status from the Board; and
3.
The
Minister commenced judicial review due to “political considerations and
complaints from the South African government.”
While (1) and (2) are not disputed, the
third statement of fact, upon which the allegation hinges, has not been proven.
While the Respondent claims that the Minister began his application for
judicial review because of pressure from the South African government, the only
alleged evidence to this effect is contained in the Gude and Sherazee
affidavits. However, these affidavits do not meet the standards set out in Ly,
above, and are full of irrelevant considerations, facts outside of the personal
knowledge of the deponents, argumentative statements and legal conclusions. As
such, I give these affidavits no weight and they cannot be used to uphold the
allegations they are intended to support.
[276] The only
other evidence which the Respondent believes supports his political influence
allegation is the proximity in timing of the alleged meeting between
Canadian and South African officials and the start of the Minister’s
application for judicial review.
[277] However, we
have no knowledge of what was said in the alleged meeting between South African
and Canadian officials. Moreover, we have no reliable evidence or knowledge
that this meeting (or any discussion that occurred during this meeting) was the
impetus for the Minister’s decision to bring an application for judicial
review.
[278] The
Respondent brought a motion to have the Minister justify the application for
judicial review. This motion was dismissed by the Court. As a result, the
Minister has not had to justify the purpose for bringing this application for
judicial review. Although the Respondent has attempted to use this as proof
that the Minister’s application for judicial review was based on undue pressure
by the South African government, I do not believe that this has been proven. It
is the Respondent’s duty to prove this fact, and not the Applicant’s onus to
disprove it.
[279] The
Respondent’s allegations of political interference and abuse have an extremely
weak factual basis and hinge primarily on flawed affidavits as well as an
inference the Respondent would have me draw with regard to the timing of the
application for judicial review. I do not believe that this weak factual basis
adequately supports the Respondent’s claim.
[280] Not only is
the premise of the Respondent’s allegations flawed, but the Respondent would
have me take a step further and find that the Court cannot consider the
application for judicial review because to do so would result in a reasonable
apprehension of bias and a lack of judicial independence, which in turn would result
in the Court losing its jurisdiction over this matter.
[281] In support of
this allegation, the Respondent compares the case at hand to that of Cobb,
above. However, an examination of the facts of Cobb makes it clear that
there is little to no similarity on the facts.
[282] At issue in Cobb
were threats made by both a trial judge and a prosecutor against Canadians who
were challenging extradition to the United States. The trial judge
commented to a co-accused: “I want you to believe me that as to those people
who don’t come in and cooperate and if we get them extradited and they’re found
guilty, as far as I’m concerned they’re going to get the absolute maximum jail
sentence that the law permits me to give” (paragraph 7).
[283] Meanwhile,
the prosecutor in Cobb threatened the appellants with homosexual rape in
jail by stating on national television: “You’re going to be the boyfriend of a
very bad man if you wait out your extradition” (paragraph 8).
[284] On this basis
alone it is clear that the situation is Cobb is highly distinguishable
from the case at hand. Cobb dealt with the potential extradition to the US of
appellants who had been threatened by parties in the legal process itself in an
effort to influence the appellants to relinquish their right to challenge
extradition. According to the Supreme Court of Canada, these statements “were an
attempt to influence the unfolding of the Canadian judicial proceedings by
putting undue pressure on the appellants to desist from their objections to the
extradition request” (paragraph 43). This is clearly distinguishable from the
case at hand.
[285] Another
factual consideration that distinguishes Cobb from the case at hand is
that in Cobb the statements made by the American judge and prosecutor could be
directly linked to the requesting state, who was a party before the court
(albeit represented by Canada). As noted by the Court, the statements made by
the American judge and the US attorney may properly be visited
upon the requesting state itself, who was a party before the Court. In the case
before me, the alleged requesting state would be South Africa; however,
South Africa is clearly not a party before the Court and, as previously noted,
there is no reliable evidence to demonstrate that the Minister is acting in the
interest of South Africa.
[286] In Cobb,
clear threats were made against the appellants by people taking part in the
judicial process. This is clearly not the case at hand. Rather, South
Africa has expressed its displeasure with regard to the finding of a
Canadian tribunal. There is no proof that the government of Canada began its
application for judicial review as a result of any threats. Similarly, if the
South African government was found to be pressuring the Canadian
government in any way, such pressure was not to relinquish a right but rather
to exercise a right granted to the Minister by statute.
[287] The
Respondent has also raised the case of Mackin v. New
Brunswick (Minister of Finance); Rice v. New
Brunswick, 2002 SCC 13, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 405 in this instance. I do
not believe that the facts of that case are relevant or comparable to
the case at hand. The portion of Mackin cited by the Respondent simply
discusses the law of judicial independence.
[288] While the
Respondent alleges that the Court’s judicial independence has been compromised
because of the Minister’s motivation in bringing this application for judicial
review, I do not believe there is any merit to this argument and there is
certainly no evidence before me to support such an allegation. I have already
examined the motive imputed to the Minister by the Respondent, and I have
determined that it is based not on evidence but rather on speculation.
[289] As quoted in
Mackin, above, at paragraph 35:
Judges individually shall be free, and it shall be their duty, to
decide matters before them impartially, in accordance with their assessment of
the facts and their understanding of the law without any restrictions,
influences, inducements, pressures, threats or interferences, direct or
indirect, from any quarter or for any reason.
[290] In this instance,
neither the Minister nor the government of Canada has placed any pressure on
the Court. As such, there is no reason why I cannot consider the matter before
me impartially and in accordance with my assessment of the facts and the law as
noted in Mackin.
[291] Mackin enumerates three
essential characteristics of judicial independence: financial security,
security of tenure and administrative independence. Both the existence in fact
of these essential characteristics as well as the maintenance of the perception
that they exist are important.
[292] The test for
determining the judicial independence of the Court is similar to that for a
reasonable apprehension of bias, that is, “whether a reasonable person who is
fully informed of all the circumstances would consider that a particular court
enjoyed the necessary independent status.” See Mackin at
paragraph 38 and Committee for Justice and Liberty v. (Canada) National
Energy Board, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 369 (Committee for Justice and Liberty).
However, the Court must emphasize the appearance of impartiality as well.
According to the Court in Mackin, “[e]mphasis is placed on the existence
of an independent status, because not only does a court have to be truly
independent but it must also be reasonably seen to be independent” (paragraph
38).
[293] I do not
believe that judicial independence is an issue in this application before me.
While Ms. Sherazee alleges that there is a perception of bias with regard to
the Court’s decisions to grant leave applications, this allegation is based upon
unsubstantiated statistics, speculation and personal opinion. I do not think it
can be said that any reasonable, well-informed person would believe that there
is a concern with regard to judicial independence in this instance. Moreover,
as stated by the Federal Court in Geza v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FCA 124, [2006] F.C.J. No.
477, “the reasonable person in the rule against bias is not to be equated with
either the losing parties or the unduly suspicious.”
The Remedy
[294] At the hearing of this
matter, Respondent’s counsel suggested that, even if I found a reviewable error
in the Decision, I should not quash it and return it for reconsideration
because the RPD cannot now fairly, and impartially, re-determine the Respondent’s
refugee claim. However, there is no evidence whatsoever before me to suggest
that the RPD cannot fairly and impartially consider the claim in accordance
with my reasons. As the Applicant points out, the RPD has heard, and will
continue to hear, highly publicized and controversial refugee claims.
[295] There is simply no
evidence before me to support the bald assertion – made by a party who is not
disinterested – that the comments by the South African government, the
controversy surrounding this case, or the fact of these proceedings and the way
they have progressed could have any impact upon the independence of the RPD or
any individual member who re-hears this refugee claim.
[296] The test for a
reasonable apprehension of bias in this context is “what would an informed
person, viewing the matter realistically and practically – and having thought
the matter through – conclude.” See Committee for Justice and Liberty, above, at 394.
[297] As the Applicant points
out, no reasonable bystander would conclude that the RPD has lost its
independence as a result of anything that has happened in this case. There is
no evidence that the RPD either is predisposed towards the Minister or has in
any way been influenced, or could be influenced, by what has been written or
said about this case in the media.
[298] In addition, all of the
Respondent’s arguments on this issue are premature. If bias or a reasonable
apprehension of bias arises upon reconsideration of this case then the
Respondent will have ample opportunity to raise it and seek judicial review
before this Court.
[299] In my view, the
Respondent is simply attempting to immunize his case against judicial review
and re-hearing. He cannot become a Convention refugee by default and by mere
assertions of partiality or institutional bias on the part of the RPD.
Certification
[300] The Respondent has
suggested two questions for certification. The first one is:
Does
the SCC decision in USA v. Cobb, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 587, and its
principles, apply in cases of political interference with the (quasi) judicial
process under the IRPA?
[301] Questions for
certification must be serious questions of general importance that would be
determinative of the appeal. See Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v. Liyanagamage (1994), 176 N.R. 4, [1994] F.C.J. No. 1637, (C.A.); and Zazai v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FCA 89, [2004]
F.C.J. No. 368 at paragraph 11. In addition, the question must not be
hypothetical and “must … invite the Federal Court of Appeal to deal only with
the specific decision under appeal and not with broad issues for which no
factual basis or, at best, no adequate factual basis is provided by the matter
under appeal.” See Pillai v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2001 FCT 1417, [2001]
F.C.J. No. 1944 at paragraph 32.
[302] The most obvious problem
with the first question is that it is purely hypothetical. I have found as a
fact that there is no evidence of “political interference,” either actual or
perceived, before the Court in this application. Hence, the question cannot be
certified.
[303] The second question
raised by the Respondent reads as follows:
Does
the Federal Court, in granting the Minister a remedy on an application for
judicial review, where the genesis of that review can be reasonably seen to be
external political interference with the process under review, lose
jurisdiction:
i.
constitutionally, by
losing its judicial independence by being “reasonably perceived” as
(institutionally) biased, as set out by the SCC in, inter alia, Mackin
v. New Brunswick (Minister of Finance), [2002] 1 S.C.R. 405; and
ii.
statutorily, under
ss. 18-18.1 of the Federal Courts Act?
[304] Once again, the obvious
problem with this question is that, on the facts of this case, it remains
purely hypothetical. I have made a factual finding that there is no evidence
before me to suggest that the genesis of this review could reasonably be seen
to be external political interference with the process under review.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES that
1.
The
application for judicial review is allowed. The Decision is set aside and the
matter is returned for reconsideration by a differently constituted RPD in
accordance with my reasons;
2.
There
is no question for certification.
“James
Russell”