Docket: IMM-7518-10
Citation: 2012 FC 47
Ottawa, Ontario, January 13, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
BETWEEN:
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JANAKAN SIVALINGAM
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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 AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
Janakan
Sivalingam [the Applicant] is a young Tamil male from Sri Lanka who seeks
judicial review pursuant to subsection 72((1) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the Act] of a decision of the Refugee
Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board [the Board] dated
November 19, 2010, wherein the Board determined that the Applicant is not
a Convention refugee or person in need of protection [the Decision].
[2]
For
the reasons given below, this application for judicial review has been
dismissed.
BACKGROUND
[3]
The
Applicant fears persecution because, on May 31, 2006, he was detained and
interrogated by the Sri Lankan Army [SLA]. He was asked about
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam [LTTE] but was never suspected of
involvement with that organization. However, during questioning, he was
stripped, hit in the stomach and pushed against a wall. He was released later
the same day after his parents came to the camp but the SLA kept his identity
card. When he asked for the return of his card, he was slapped. However, the
card was returned one week later.
[4]
At
the end of 2006, the Applicant, his family and many others in his community
were taken from their homes to the local temple where they were photographed by
the SLA and
released.
[5]
The
Applicant’s family lived near a SLA camp and moved their home to another
location in Jaffna to avoid the SLA. The Applicant moved to
Columbo in March 2007 accompanied by a friend [the Friend].
[6]
In
August 2007, the Applicant was robbed by a Tamil speaking man and in September
of that year his Friend was shot by government troops in Columbo. However, the
Applicant did not witness the shooting. He fled to Malaysia in November
2007 and stayed there for almost two years. He did not make a refugee claim
there because he overstayed his visitor’s visa and feared deportation. He came
to Canada on
April 18, 2009 and claimed on arrival.
[7]
One
month later, in May 2009, the LTTE was defeated in Sri Lanka.
THE PREHEARING NOTICE
[8]
The
Applicant’s hearing before the Board was scheduled for September 13, 2010.
Six days before the hearing, the Board notified the Applicant’s counsel that,
in addition to the issues which had been identified one year earlier, it would
also be considering changed circumstances and compelling reasons [the Short
Notice].
THE DECISION
[9]
The
Board determined that the Applicant’s fear of persecution was no longer
well-founded because of the changed conditions in Sri Lanka.
[10]
The
Board began by summarizing the recent history. It described the prolonged civil
war and the persecution of young Tamil men. The Board then turned to the
evidence in the National Documentation Package about conditions in Sri Lanka since the
end of the civil war. The Board acknowledged that there is still risk to
persons suspected of having links to the LTTE, but found that conditions have
improved for the rest of the Tamil population. The Board also noted that, although
the human rights situation is improving, there is still much room for
improvement in Sri Lanka’s treatment of the Tamil minority. The Board
noted that the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees [UNHCR] had
amended its guidelines [the Guidelines] so that they no longer recommend that
all Sri Lankan Tamils be presumed to be refugees. As well, the Guidelines do
not list young male Tamils as one of the groups which the UNHCR recommends for
ongoing protection.
[11]
The
Board noted that the Applicant never claimed that he was ever suspected of
having links to the LTTE and found, based on his quick release from detention,
that there was no such suspicion. As well, based on the evidence in the
National Documentation Package, the Board rejected the Applicant’s argument
that there had not been any durable change to the conditions in Sri Lanka.
[12]
The
Board also concluded that the Applicant was not a person in need of protection
because any risk of extortion or other harm was generalized and not
personalized.
[13]
Finally,
the Board considered whether there were compelling reasons not to return him to
Sri
Lanka
even though he no longer has a well-founded fear of persecution and reached a
negative conclusion noting that “[a]ll persecution by definition involves
physical or mental harm or other penalties. What the claimant suffered is not
extraordinary or so exceptional that in the wake of changed circumstances, it
would be wrong to return him to Sri Lanka”.
THE ISSUES
[14]
The
Applicant says that:
1.
The
Board failed to proceed fairly when it gave the Short Notice.
2.
The
Board erred in law when it undertook a selective review of the evidence about
changes in country conditions and failed to mention crucial evidence.
3.
The
Board erred when it failed to conclude that there were compelling reasons.
4.
His
counsel was so incompetent that there was a failure of natural justice because
he was effectively denied representation.
5.
The
Board’s decision to treat this as a persuasive decision should be set aside as
a breach of procedural fairness because he was not given prior notice of the
Board’s intention to make the designation.
Issue 1 – The Short Notice
[15]
The
Board is the master of its own procedure and, in my view, it is entitled to
give late notice of issues as long as such notice does not cause prejudice. I
assume, given the Short Notice, that the Board would have granted the Applicant
an adjournment had one been requested. However, no such request was made. In my
view, this is not surprising since the LTTE’s defeat had been well publicized.
I think it is reasonable to infer that counsel knew that changed country
conditions would be an important issue long before the Board sent the Short
Notice.
Issue 2 – Was
Crucial Evidence Overlooked?
[16]
In
July 2009, the UNHCR issued a document entitled “Note on the Applicability of
the 2009 Sri Lanka Guidelines” [the Note]. Those guidelines were issued in
April 2009 just before the defeat of the LTTE in May of that year. The Note
said that notwithstanding the end of hostilities, Tamil men and women of all
ages from northern Sri Lanka should be recognized as refugees absent clear
evidence that they do not meet the criteria. The Note, which was part of the
certified Tribunal record, concluded with the following statement:
Future Revisions
When it can be determined that
substantial and durable changes have clearly emerged in the country, UNHCR will
undertake a thorough review of the situation in Sri Lanka, and will update the Guidelines. Until
such time, the April 2009 Guidelines will continue to be considered valid and
applicable.
[17]
Further
to the Note, the guidelines were updated and issued on July 5, 2010 [the
New Guidelines]. This meant that the UNHCR had decided that substantial and
durable changes had taken place.
[18]
In
reaching its Decision, the Board relied primarily on the New Guidelines which
removed the presumption of eligibility for refugee status for all Tamils from
the North, including young Tamil males, and profiled five categories of Tamils who
were still at risk. The Applicant did not fall within any of the categories.
[19]
The
New Guidelines showed that the Applicant - who in fact had no links to the LTTE
and who had never been perceived to have such links - was not a person who, at
the time of the hearing before the Board, was presumed to be at risk.
[20]
In
my view, the Board was entitled to rely on this document and was only obliged
to refer to other materials if they (i) presented a timely and reliable
alternative view of the risks faced by young Tamil males in 2010 or (ii)
presented cogent evidence that hostilities or systemic human rights abuses
would resume in the near term. The following review of the documents at issue
shows that, contrary to the Applicant’s submission, they do not meet this test.
[21]
The
first such document is entitled “Sri Lanka – a bitter peace” and
was issued by the International Crisis Group on January 11, 2010. It
showed that by the end of 2009, most of the Tamils who had been displaced and
interned had returned home and those that remained in camps had greater
freedom. The article expressed the view that at the end of 2009, the victory
over the Tamils and the resulting peace was fragile and would remain so until
reforms of the kind it recommended addressed the many grievances of the Tamil
people and other Sri Lankans. However, the report concluded that it was
“unlikely” that any successor to the LTTE as a Tamil militant group would
emerge in the near term.
[22]
This,
in my view, meant that there was no risk of renewed civil war. Since this did
not contradict the UNHCR’s New Guidelines it was not, in my view, necessary for
the Board to refer to it on the issue of changed country conditions.
[23]
The
Applicant also said that, although it mentioned the document, the Board ignored
important information in the US Department of State Report on Human Rights
practices in 2009 in Sri Lanka. It was dated
March 11, 2010 but it spoke of the situation during the conflict both
inside and beyond the conflict zone and confirmed that young male Tamils were
at particular risk. However, in my view, the findings in this report were out
of date by the time the Board heard the Applicant’s refugee claim. In those
circumstances, the Board was not required to refer to it in detail.
[24]
The
United Kingdom’s Home Office Country of Origin Information Report on Sri Lanka dated
February 18, 2010 was also cited by the Board. It spoke of serious human
rights violations, and general lawlessness in the form of extortion and
widespread theft. However, it did not address the durability of the peace or
the risk faced by young Tamil males. In these circumstances, the Board’s
failure to refer to it was not unreasonable.
[25]
An
earlier report prepared by the United Kingdom Home Office in August 2009 noted
that young Tamil males from the north faced discrimination and profiling and
were often suspected of being members of the LTTE. However, in my view, this
report was also out of date by the time of the Applicant’s refugee hearing.
Accordingly, it was reasonable that it was not mentioned in the Decision.
[26]
A
final report cited was a BBC article dated February 1, 2010 entitled “Fear
and Anxiety in Battered Tamil City” which noted that
approximately 80,000 Tamils were still displaced and in camps in the north and that
40,000 troops were still present on the Jaffna peninsula.
However, it did not suggest that human rights abuses were occurring or that
there was a risk of renewed civil war. In these circumstances, it was
reasonable for the Board not to mention it in the Decision.
Issue 3 – Compelling
Circumstances
[27]
It
is very unfortunate that the Applicant was abused during his brief detention
and it is also very sad that his Friend was killed in Colombo but, in my view,
this evidence was not sufficient to support a conclusion by the Board that
there were compelling reasons why the Applicant should not be returned to Sri
Lanka even if his applications for refugee status and protection were
dismissed.
Issue 4 –
Competence of Counsel
[28]
The
Applicant submits that his counsel at the hearing was incompetent because he:
(i)
Failed
to seek an adjournment when he received the Short Notice;
(ii)
Failed
to file documents on current country conditions to update the Board’s National
Document Package which was current to August 13, 2010;
(iii)
Failed
to submit translations of the documents his client provided showing extortion
of Tamils in Jaffna;
(iv)
Failed
to have a psychological report prepared in an effort to support submissions on
compelling reasons;
(v)
Failed
to prepare his client to testify about changed country conditions and
compelling reasons and failed to explain the significance of those issues.
[29]
The
Applicant cites the decision of the Supreme Court in R v B (GD), 2000
SCC 22, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 520, which set out a two-step test for determining whether
counsel is competent. First, the party must demonstrate that the service
provided fell short of what he or she could reasonably expect from competent
counsel. Second, the party must demonstrate a miscarriage of justice as a
result of this incompetence.
[30]
This
Court is not in a position to reach a detailed conclusion about the adequacy of
the service provided by the Applicant’s counsel. However, I have no reason to
conclude that there was a miscarriage of justice. The Decision appears to have
been based on the following facts:
(i)
The
Applicant was never actually or perceived to be involved with the LTTE;
(ii)
The
evidence did not support a finding of compelling circumstances; and
(iii)
There
was compelling and timely evidence in the form of the New Guidelines which
showed that a durable change had occurred in country conditions.
[31]
The
Applicant has not shown that the Board erred or that there was material
evidence on these issues which his counsel failed to adduce. Accordingly, the incompetence
of counsel is not a basis for granting this application.
Issue 5 – Procedural
Fairness
[32]
It
is my view that the Applicant has no standing to question the Board’s decision
to designate the Decision in this case as one that is persuasive for its own
internal administrative purposes. Accordingly, the Applicant was not entitled
to receive notice of the Board’s intention to make the designation.
CERTIFIED QUESTION
[33]
No
question was posed for certification under section 74 of the Act.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that, for the reasons given above, this
application for judicial review is hereby dismissed.
“Sandra
J. Simpson”
FEDERAL
COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-7518-10
STYLE OF CAUSE: JANAKAN
SIVALINGAM v MCI
PLACE OF HEARING: Toronto, Ontario
DATE OF HEARING: June 29, 2011
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: SIMPSON
J.
DATED: January 13, 2012
APPEARANCES:
Jacqueline Swaisland
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FOR THE APPLICANT
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Jaime Todd
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FOR THE RESPONDENT
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SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Lorne Waldman
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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