Docket: IMM-7216-10
Citation: 2012 FC 49
Ottawa, Ontario, January 13, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
BETWEEN:
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HUGO HENRY PABON MORALES,
NANCY ALVAREZ PARRA,
AMALIA PABON ALVAREZ,
SOFIA PABON ALVAREZ,
SELENE PABON ALVAREZ
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Applicants
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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 AND
JUDGMENT
PROCEEDING
[1]
Hugo
Henry Pabon Morales, Nancy Alvarez Parra, Amalia Pabon Arvarez, Sofia Pabon
Alvarez and Selene Pabon Alvarez [the Applicants], seek judicial review
pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001, c 27 [the Act] of a decision of a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment [PRRA] Officer
dated October 26, 2010 wherein the Applicants’ PRRA was refused [the PRRA
Decision].
[2]
For
the following reasons, the application for judicial review will be allowed.
BACKGROUND
[3]
The
Applicants are a Colombian family who fear the Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia [FARC]. The Applicants are two parents, Hugo [the Principal Applicant]
and Nancy, and their three minor children. The three minor Applicants were born
in the United
States
and are therefore American citizens as well as Colombians.
[4]
The
Principal Applicant is 35 years old and is a former detective with Colombia’s
Administrative Department of Security [the DAS]. In 2003, he investigated a
bombing at the Nogal Club and determined that FARC was responsible.
[5]
During
his investigation of the bombing, he was unexpectedly transferred to another
office in the Department. Some time thereafter, he learned that the prosecutor
on the case had left Colombia suddenly and under
suspicious circumstances. The Principal Applicant began to fear that FARC had
been behind his transfer and the prosecutor’s flight, so he began to keep a low
profile.
[6]
In
July 2003, his family received two phone calls. In the first call, the caller
hung up after asking for the Principal Applicant. In the second, the caller
claimed to be a member of FARC and warned the Principal Applicant that FARC had
declared him to be a military target and that he must stop “poking his nose
into their business”. The Principal Applicant suspects that FARC obtained his
unlisted phone number from the DAS.
[7]
On
August 5, 2003, the adult Applicants fled Colombia for the
United States and five years later, on April 7, 2008, they came to Canada and claimed
refugee protection.
[8]
On
October 22, 2009, the Immigration and Refugee Board [the Board] refused the
Applicants’ claim [the Refugee Decision] and leave to apply for judicial review
of that Decision was subsequently denied.
[9]
On
June 22, 2010, the Applicants filed their PRRA application under sections
96 and 97 of the Act [the PRRA Application] and on January 24, 2011, a
judge of the Federal Court granted the Applicants’ motion for a stay of removal.
THE REFUGEE DECISION
[10]
The
Principal Applicant and his family were found not be to convention refugees or
persons in need of protection because, in part, the Board found it implausible
that the Principal Applicant would be at risk given that his family members,
who had remained in Colombia, had not been contacted by the FARC in the eight
years since he left Colombia.
[11]
The
Board also concluded that the Applicants had an Internal Flight Alternative [IFA]
in Bogota.
THE PRRA DECISION
[12]
The
Applicants submitted two new documents with their PRRA Application. Both were
prepared after the decision was released of the Refugee Decision and included
information that would not have been available to the Board. The two documents
will be referred to collectively as the New Evidence.
[13]
The
first document in the New Evidence is a report dated May 27, 2010 titled
UNHCR Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing International Protection Needs of
Asylum Seekers from Colombia [the UNHCR Report].
[14]
The
UNHCR Report speaks about the possibility of an IFA for individuals fleeing
persecution by illegal armed groups and says that it “considers an internal
flight or relocation alternative is generally not available in Colombia…” and
recommends that further consideration be given to, among other things, “the
reach and ability of the network of the illegal armed groups to trace and
target individuals including [in] large cities such as Bogota, Medellin and
Cali;”
[15]
A
footnote to this quotation reads as follows:
Reportedly, the guerrillas and
paramilitary groups often employ highly sophisticated databases and computer
networks and are able to trace people even years after their initial search,
see Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, Colombia: Availability of state protection to
those who fear harassment threats or violence by armed groups since the
election of President Alvaro Uribe Vélez
[16]
The
UNHCR Report lists “Present and Former Members and Supporters of one of the
Parties to the Conflict” as the first category under the heading “Main Groups at
Risk”. Under this heading, it specifically mentions that Colombian policemen
and security forces that interfere with the illegal activities of various illegal
armed groups or investigate their criminal acts are, along with their families,
at risk of deadly attacks and kidnappings. The supporting footnotes for this
conclusion include material dated in February 2008, and March and September
2009.
[17]
The
second document in the New Evidence is a letter dated June 29, 2010, from
a Refugee Coordinator with the Toronto Office of Amnesty International [the AI
Letter].
[18]
The
AI Letter addresses the possibility of an IFA in Colombia in the
following terms and endorses the UNHCR Report. It says:
Capacity to pursue victims and Flight
Alternatives
A recent information note from the
immigration and Refugee Board [of Canada] discusses the likelihood and ability
of the FARC, ELN or AUC to pursue victims in Colombia.14 The
majority of sources consulted in this note are of the opinion that these groups
have a capacity to pursue victims throughout Colombia.
Amnesty International shares the view
that the FARC, ELN and successor groups to the AUC have the capacity to pursue
victims throughout many regions of the country and may do so where the
individual is of particular interest to warrant such effort. This is also true
for those who have fled the country and return after a period of time.
Amnesty International is also of the view
that while there have been some military advances against paramilitary and
guerrilla groups in Colombia, these advances do not translate into state
protection for those who have been targeted by the FARC, ELN or former AUC.
Similarly, UNHCR’s 2010 eligibility
guidelines notes the following when assessing internal flight alternatives for
individuals fleeing persecution at the hands of non-state agents such as
illegal armed groups:
“…the reach and ability of the network of
the illegal armed groups to trace and target individuals, both in rural areas
and in urban centres, including large cities such as Bogota, Medellin and Cali”
[19]
Footnote
14 in the above quotation refers to a Canadian Immigration and Refugee Board
document dated February 23, 2010.
THE PRRA DECISION
[20]
Against
this background, the impugned portion of the PRRA Decision reads as follows:
The applicants’ remaining submissions
include country documentation regarding the human rights situation in Colombia. These documents include
current, objective reports such as the 2010 Human Rights Watch report,
the 2010 UNHCR Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International
Protection Needs of Asylum Seekers from Colombia and the 2010 Amnesty
International report. Subsection 161(2) of the IRPA Regulations requires
that, “a person who makes written submissions must identify the evidence
presented that meets the requirements of paragraph 113(a) of the Act and
indicate how that evidence relates to them”. The applicants’ submissions
describe the general country conditions in Colombia, and they have not linked this evidence
to their personalized, forward-looking risks. It is a well-recognized principle
that it is not enough simply to refer to country conditions in general without
linking such conditions to the personalized situation of an applicant (Dreta,
2005; Nazaire, 2006). The assessment of the applicants’ potential
risk of being persecuted or at risk of harm if they were sent back to their
country must be individualized. The fact that the documentary evidence shows
that the human rights situation in a country is problematic does not
necessarily mean there is a risk to a given individual (Ahmad, 2004; Gonulcan,
2004; Rahim, 2005). I am aware that the applicants may fear for their
safety in Colombia; however the evidence before
me does not support that they face a personalized risk or harm if they were to
return.
While not determinative, the evidence
submitted by the applicants does not lead me to a different conclusion than
that of the RPD. Therefore, the determinative issue in this assessment is
whether there has been a material change in country conditions in Colombia since the decision of the RPD
in October 2009 to the extent that the applicants would now be Convention
refugees or persons in need of protection.
THE ISSUE
[21]
The
Applicants say that, although the PRRA Officer mentioned the New Evidence, he
failed to appreciate that it was linked to the Principal Applicant’s
circumstances as a former police officer who had been targeted by FARC
following an investigation of its illegal activities.
DISCUSSION
[22]
In
Raza v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FCA 385, 289 DLR (4th)
675, the Federal Court of Appeal held that a PRRA application is to be allowed
if, at the time it is made, the applicant meets either the definition of a
“Convention refugee” under section 96 of the Act or the definition of a “person
in need of protection” under section 97 of the Act.
[23]
The
New Evidence included information about risks faced by similarly situated
individuals such as former police officers who investigated the criminal
conduct of illegal groups. Accordingly, in my view, the PRRA Officer was
obliged to consider it in that light. This, the Officer failed to do.
CERTIFIED QUESTION
[24]
No
question was posed for certification under section 74 of the Act.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that
the application for judicial review will be allowed
and the Applicants’ PRAA application is to be reconsidered by a different
officer. The Applicants may file fresh material on the reconsideration.
“Sandra
J. Simpson”
FEDERAL
COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-7216-10
STYLE OF CAUSE: HUGO
HENRY PABON MORALES et al v MCI
PLACE OF HEARING: Toronto,
Ontario
DATE OF HEARING: June 28, 2011
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: SIMPSON
J.
DATED: January 13, 2012
APPEARANCES:
D. Clifford Luyt
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FOR THE APPLICANT
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Suranjaran Bhattacharyya
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FOR THE RESPONDENT
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SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
D. Clifford Luyt
Toronto, Ontario
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FOR THE APPLICANT
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Myles J. Kirvan
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
Toronto, Ontario
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FOR THE RESPONDENT
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