Date: 20101119
Docket: IMM-988-10
Citation: 2010 FC 1162
Vancouver, British Columbia, November 19, 2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
BETWEEN:
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LUCAS GABOR
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
[1]
Mr. Gabor seeks to
set aside a
decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee
Board that found him to be neither a Convention refugee nor a person in need
of protection.
[2]
He submits that the
Board’s decision was unreasonable in that the Board made capricious findings of
fact and failed to canvass objective country conditions for Roma in the Czech Republic.
He further submits that recent comments made by the Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration created an apprehension that the Board was biased in assessing
claims made by Roma from the Czech
Republic.
[3]
He has failed to
persuade me of any of his submissions and this application must be dismissed.
Background
[4]
Mr. Gabor is a 21-year-old
man. He claims that he has been persecuted in the Czech Republic
because he is Roma. In his Personal Information Form (PIF), he outlines his
belief that Roma are in danger in the Czech
Republic, states that he
has been attacked by skinheads on many occasions, and specifies that the most
dangerous incident involved him being attacked on a bus while he was on his way
to see his friends.
[5]
The applicant was
self-represented at his hearing before the Board. The Board Member rejected the
applicant’s claim, specifically finding that Mr. Gabor did not suffer a serious
attack from skinheads in the Czech Republic and further finding that while the
treatment of the applicant in the Czech Republic may amount to discrimination, it did not
rise to the level of persecution.
[6]
In its reasons, the
Board reviewed the applicant’s allegations of mistreatment at school and at
work. The Board then considered the applicant’s allegation that he was
attacked by skinheads in December 2008 while he was shopping with his mother.
The applicant said that he was seriously beaten and had to go to the hospital,
but that he had forgotten the medical report he had received in the Czech Republic. The applicant explained that he had
tried to get the report for the hearing but that his mother could not find it.
The applicant said that he went to the police to report the incident but they
told him that because there were no witnesses they could not do anything. His
mother’s attempts to approach more senior police officers were unsuccessful.
[7]
At the hearing the
applicant stated that he was subjected to other attacks by skinheads but that
they were not as serious as the incident involving him and his mother. The
Board took note of his testimony that he went to the police and reported
the attacks and that sometimes they would write reports, but that there was no
follow-up and it was difficult to get the police reports for the hearing.
[8]
The Board’s ultimate
conclusion that Mr. Gabor did not suffer a serious attack by skinheads stemmed
from the fact that in his PIF narrative, he stated that the most serious attack
occurred on a bus, whereas at the hearing he stated that the most serious
attack happened while he was shopping with his mother. At para. 13 of his
reasons, the Board Member wrote that:
When he was asked for an explanation as
to this inconsistency, he said he did not know why he did not tell the
Board about the attack on the bus. If the claimant had been attacked in either
of these incidents he would have remembered them and related both of them in
his testimony and in his PIF narrative. The claimant was unable to provide a
medical report of either incident. He said that he forgot a medical report when
he left the Czech Republic and he said that his mother could not find it when he asked
for it. I do not accept this explanation. I conclude that he did not suffer a
serious attack by skinheads in the Czech Republic.
[9]
The Board determined
that while the applicant may have suffered discrimination in the Czech Republic because he was Roma, the examples he
presented were not persuasive evidence of a sustained or systemic
violation of basic human rights demonstrative of a failure of state
protection. Accordingly, the Board determined that there was no serious
possibility that he would be persecuted or would be at risk to life, cruel and
unusual treatment or punishment, or torture if returned to the Czech Republic.
[10]
No allegation of bias
or a perception of bias was raised by the applicant with the Board. However,
he has raised the issue in this application with respect to comments made by
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Jason Kenney during the spring of
2009. The Minister made public comments relating to refugee claims from the
Czech Republic, including a statement that “it is hard to believe that the Czech Republic is an island of persecution in Europe.” The applicant says that these comments, in combination
with a decline in the number of successful refugee claimants from the Czech Republic, raise a reasonable apprehension of bias.
Alleged
Errors by the Board
[11]
I do
not accept the applicant’s submission that the Board made capricious and thus
unreasonable findings of fact by concluding that he did not suffer beatings
from skinheads and by doubting his credibility because his identification
of the most serious incident varied from his PIF narrative to his oral
testimony.
[12]
Contrary
to the applicant’s submissions, the Board did not make its negative credibility
finding because of any categorization issue, or because of a failure of the
applicant to identify one incident as the “most serious.” Rather, the Board
did not accept the applicant’s allegations because the applicant described
different events on his PIF and at his oral hearing. On his PIF he described
the alleged bus attack but not the alleged attack while he was with his mother;
before the Member he described only the attack while he was with his mother,
even after probing by the Member. During the hearing, after discussing the
attack that allegedly occurred while the applicant was with his mother, the
Board Member and the applicant had the following exchange:
MEMBER: Any other times, that you were
attacked?
CLAIMANT: Those were attacks of much
smaller attitudes, that I don’t even – I was basically, most of the time,
spending at home, behind closed doors because I was worried about my mom.
…
MEMBER: Did you go for medical attention
after any of these attacks?
CLAIMANT: No.
However, in his PIF, the applicant stated that
after the attack on the bus he received medical attention from a friend who was
a nurse.
[13]
It
was not unreasonable for the Board to expect that the applicant would have
described both of these evidently serious incidents in his PIF and at the
hearing. The Board had the advantage of hearing directly from the applicant
and coming to a conclusion on his credibility based on his live testimony.
Furthermore, the Board also considered the very serious failure of the
applicant to provide either medical reports or police reports, a failure for
which the applicant was not able to provide any satisfactory explanation.
[14]
The applicant submits
that a “long line of decisions” (Sivalingam v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2006 FC
773; Balasubramaniam v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2003] F.C.J. No. 1438 (F.C.); Satkunarajah v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2004] F.C.J. No. 28 (F.C.); and Mylvaganam
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2000] F.C.J. No. 1195
(T.D.)) from the Federal Court have held that once the Board accepts that a
claimant is who they claim to be, the Board has an obligation to canvass
objective country condition materials notwithstanding a negative credibility
finding. The applicant says that since the Board accepted that he was of Roma
ethnicity, it was an error not to consider country condition evidence.
[15]
The applicant’s
submission must fail in light of the decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in
Sellan v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2008 FCA
381, wherein, in answering a certified question, the Court stated:
[W]here the Board makes a
general finding that the claimant lacks credibility, that determination is
sufficient to dispose of the claim unless there is independent and credible
documentary evidence in the record capable of supporting a positive disposition
of the claim. The claimant bears the onus of demonstrating there was such
evidence.
[16]
The applicant did not
present any “independent and credible documentary evidence” to the Board,
and as the onus rested upon him, the Board had no duty to canvass country
condition evidence.
[17]
The
applicant reproduces parts of another decision by the Member who decided his
claim in which the Member allowed the claims of Roma persons fleeing the Czech Republic. In that decision, the
Member engaged in an analysis of country condition reports; the applicant
submits the same should have been done here.
[18]
I
agree with the respondent with respect to the inappropriateness of comparing
Board decisions. It is trite law that the Board’s decisions are based on the
specific facts of each case and are not binding. In any case, the decision
partially reproduced by the applicant has significant differences from the case
before the Court.
Allegations
of Bias
[19]
The
applicant submits that the comments made by the Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration create an apprehension of bias and raise an issue of procedural
fairness.
[20]
The respondent
submits that the applicant was unfair to the respondent in bringing this
evidence “at the last minute” and not bringing it to the attention of the Board
when it heard his application. Allegations of bias are to be raised at the
first instance: Geza
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration),
2006 FCA 124, Re Human
Rights Tribunal and Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, [1986] 1 F.C. 103 (C.A.) leave to
appeal to the Supreme Court refused. The respondent made an identical
submission in Dunova v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 438. It was rejected by Justice Crampton because
there was no evidence that the applicant was aware of the comments at the time of
her hearing. The same is true here and the respondent’s submission is
rejected.
[21]
The
applicant bases his submissions on bias on two statements made by the Minister.
The first was made in Paris in April 2009: “Although, like every other democracy, it has its challenges
and its shortcomings, it’s hard to believe that the Czech Republic is an island of persecution in Europe.” The second statement was made in June 2009 with
reference to an IRB report on the Czech Republic: “If someone comes in and says
that the police have been beating the crap out of them, the IRB panelists can
then go to their report and say, ‘Well actually, there’s been no evidence of
police brutality’.”
[22]
The applicant submits
that the drop in accepted refugee claims from the Czech Republic is evidence of the negative impact the Minister’s
statements have had. The Board’s statistics show that such refugee claims had
a 94% acceptance rate in 2008 and an 81% acceptance rate between January and March
2009, the first full quarter prior to the impugned statements. The acceptance
rate in the quarter after the statements were made (July to September 2009)
dropped to 30%, and the rate dropped to 0% in the last quarter of 2009.
[23]
An
allegation of apprehension of bias based on these same comments and referring
to these same statistics was recently considered by Justice Crampton in Dunova.
The applicant urges me not
to follow Dunova; he submits that the facts before me are
distinguishable.
[24]
Dunova involved an application for judicial
review of a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) application, not a refugee claim;
however, like Mr. Gabor, Ms. Dunova is a citizen of the Czech Republic and a Roma.
[25]
In Dunova,
Justice Crampton found that the evidence presented failed to meet the
“applicable standard of the well-informed individual considering the matter in
depth in a realistic and practical way” articulated by Justice Tremblay-Lamer
in Zrig v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2001 FCT
1043, aff’d 2003 FCA 178. Justice Crampton’s reasons for his finding included
the following:
(i)
The Board released a
report on conditions faced by Roma in the Czech
Republic in the period
between the Minister’s two statements and “it is entirely possible that the
content of the report affected the number of accepted, rejected, abandoned and
withdrawn refugee claims.”
(ii)
The statistics
adduced are those of the Immigration and Refugee Board and the PRRA unit from
which the decision was made is not a part of the Board.
(iii)
The statistics cited
are for all claims from the Czech
Republic and other than
counsel’s “bald statement that 99% of such claimants are Roma, no evidence was
adduced on this point.”
(iv)
The PRRA officer was
completely independent of
the circumstances giving rise to the alleged apprehension of bias, unlike in Geza
where the Member who heard the case was involved in the planning of the “lead
case” strategy.
(v)
Unlike
Geza where an “explicit strategy” was adopted by the Board, Minister
Kenney’s comments were “spontaneous and not made pursuant to or in relation to
any strategy.”
(vi)
No
evidence was adduced to show that the PRRA officer was influenced by the
comments.
(vii)
The
decision-maker must be presumed to be impartial.
[26]
The applicant’s
response to Justice Crampton’s findings in Dunova is as follows:
(i)
The statements
contained in the reports of the Board released in June and July 2009
cannot reasonably be said to have led to the “free-fall” in acceptance rates
from the Czech Republic.
(ii)
The statistics
adduced are those of the Immigration and Refugee Board which is the decision-maker
in this case, unlike in Dunova.
(iii)
While the Board’s
statistics are for all claims from the Czech
Republic, counsel repeats the
assertion he made in Dunova that the vast majority of such claimants are
Roma.
(iv)
It
is irrelevant whether the Minister’s comments were spontaneous or not; what is
relevant is whether they lead to a reasonable apprehension of bias.
(v)
The
applicant submits, more forcefully perhaps than in Dunova, that comments
from experts support the submission of an apprehension that the Board is biased.
[27]
I agree with the
applicant that the fact that statements are made spontaneously does not mean
that they can never be used to establish an apprehension of bias; however,
Justice Crampton did not say otherwise. His observation that the comments were
made spontaneously meant, he said, that they “were less potentially
problematic than had they been made in a different context or as statements of
official policy” [emphasis added].
[28]
I cannot accept the
applicant’s submission that the release by the Board of “Czech Republic: Fact-Finding Mission Report on State Protection” (June
2009), and “Czech Republic: Fact-Finding Mission Report on the
Situation and Treatment of Roma and Potential for Internal Relocation” (July 2009)
could not have led to the dramatic decrease in accepted claims from the Czech Republic. At the hearing the applicant offered the Court
selected pages from one of these reports and asked me to assess whether the
statements contained therein could reasonably lead one to the view expressed by
Justice Crampton that the Reports could have led to the drop in acceptance
rates. Since the hearing I reviewed both reports in their entirety.
[29]
It must be noted that
Justice Crampton asserted only that it was “entirely possible” that the reports
affected the number of claims accepted, rejected or withdrawn. He did not
assert that the reports did impact the success rate of the claims.
[30]
In my view, it is not
for the Court to weigh these reports to reach the conclusion the applicant
urges unless it is clear on the face of the documents that they support only
that view. For example, if the reports unambiguously stated or supported
the conclusion that there is persecution of Roma in the Czech Republic
and there is no adequate state protection available to them, then one would
conclude that these reports could not lead to the increased rejection rate for refugee
claims. However, the reports say nothing of the kind. They are a fair and
balanced reporting of facts, comments and observations from both the state
authorities and non-governmental organizations as to the treatment of Roma and
state protection measures that are available to them in the Czech Republic. Absent evidentiary support divorcing these
reports from the acceptance rate for refugee claims, the submission of the
applicant is mere speculation and insufficient to warrant the conclusion he
urges upon the Court.
[31]
The applicant submits
that he has evidentiary support for his allegation of an apprehension of bias in
addition to the statistics from the Board. He says that he has “expert evidence”
of the alleged bias and referred the Court to comments from “many prominent
immigration advocates and critics” contained in the July 22, 2009 edition of Embassy
magazine.
Peter Showler, a former chairman of the IRB and director of the Refugee
Forum at the Human Rights Research and Education Centre at the University of Ottawa, said Mr.
Kenney has absolutely introduced institutional bias into the refugee board's
decision-making. He said Mr. Kenney's comments have caused a "significant
amount of damage" to individual refugee claimants from Mexico and the Czech Republic, as well as to the judicial process.
"I am not aware of a single previous minister of immigration who has
made such remarks, who has intruded on the judicial process in this way; not
one," Mr. Showler said. "This is extraordinary and I think he
has overstepped the line, and I think the courts are going to tell him that
he's overstepped the line."
The Refugee Lawyers' Association of Ontario has also spoken out against
Mr. Kenney's comments, which they say undermines the IRB's independence and
tarnishes its integrity.
"The Canadian public should be shocked that a minister would
interfere so blatantly in the work of an independent body," Geraldine
MacDonald, president of the association, said in a July 13 press release.
…
Experts say Mr. Kenney's disrespect of the principle of independence is of
grave concern because it introduces external political factors into the members'
decision-making process.
"The people who are members of the IRB ultimately depend on the
minister of citizenship and immigration, and more generally the government, to
keep them in their jobs," said Audrey Macklin, an associate professor at
the University of Toronto's Faculty of Law. "When the minister pronounces on the validity, or
lack thereof, of refugee claimants from any country without having heard
the particular case and knowing the individual circumstances, there is the risk
that individual decision makers whose jobs ultimately depend on the minister's
decision to appoint and reappoint them, will be unduly influenced. They might
be fearful when their time comes up for reappointment that he will examine
their acceptance rates from the countries where he has deemed refugee claimants
to be bogus, and penalize them."
…
Errol Mendes, a professor of international law at the University of Ottawa, said Mr. Kenney's "blanket
statements" about claimants from other countries, such as Mexico and the Czech Republic, are dangerous. As the most senior person in
the immigration department, the onus is on Mr. Kenney to respect the 1951
Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, Mr. Mendes said, adding there is
nothing in the '51 convention which suggests claimants from democratic
countries, such as the Czech Republic and Mexico, are not entitled to a fair
hearing.
"Given all that, at least in terms of the spirit of the rule of law,
I think he has abdicated his responsibility to be a responsible minister
of immigration and citizenship," Mr. Mendes said. "And we could add
to that multiculturalism too, because this certainly goes against the spirit of
multiculturalism, to basically stereotype entire peoples as potential
fraudsters."
[32]
This evidence was put
before the Court as an exhibit to the affidavit of the applicant and was also
before Justice Crampton in Dunova. Justice Crampton did not deal with
this “expert evidence” directly as he found that the observations of these
experts related to the Board and not to the PRRA officer who made the decision
under review before him.
[33]
I find that the
introduction of the alleged “expert evidence” upon which the applicant relies
is unfair to both the respondent and to the Court and I give it little weight
for the following reasons:
(i)
The persons who are
reported to have made these comments have not and cannot be cross-examined
because they have not sworn affidavits in this proceeding.
(ii)
The Embassy
report largely provides a summary of the experts’ views; verbatim quotes are
limited. As a consequence, it is impossible to determine whether the report is
an accurate summary of the views of the individuals quoted.
(iii)
The Embassy
report and the experts’ remarks are not directed solely to the two comments of
the Minister at issue here. The article refers to statements made by the
Minister concerning U.S. war deserters and refugee claims of
Mexicans in addition to refugee claims of Czech Roma. As a consequence, it is
uncertain whether the purported views of these experts would be the same if
they were speaking only to the two statements that are at issue here.
(iv)
Only one of the
alleged experts, Audrey Macklin, provides any rationale for the conclusion that
the Minister’s statements may unduly influence the decision-makers at the
Board. However, even her rationale that Board Members are dependent on the
Minister for reappointment and may thus be fearful if they fail to rule as the
Minister wishes is speculative and unsupported.
[34]
Allegations of the
possibility or apprehension of bias by an independent decision-maker are
serious allegations. I agree with the respondent that the allegations in this
case “call into question the professionalism of the panel member, the
functioning of the administrative tribunal and the impartiality of
decision-making. They should be made in only the clearest of cases where the
grounds for the apprehension are substantial.” I find no substantial grounds
here for the allegations raised by the applicant. His allegations are speculative
and there is no evidence before the Court that the Board was or could be
influenced by the Minister’s statements.
[35]
In my view, an
informed person, viewing the matter realistically and practically and having thought
the matter through, would not think it more likely than not that the Board
would consciously or unconsciously decide a refugee claim of a Czech Roma
unfairly.
[36]
For these reasons the
application is dismissed.
[37]
At the close of the hearing of this application, the Court reserved
its decision and undertook to distribute reasons to counsel and to provide them with an
opportunity to make representations on certification of a question before Judgment issues. The
applicant will have ten (10) days
to serve and file any submissions on certification of a question only. The respondent will
have seven (7) days thereafter to serve and file any responding submissions. After the Court has had an opportunity to consider any
submissions, Judgment will issue.
“Russel W. Zinn”