Docket:
IMM-7256-11
Citation:
2012 FC 761
Ottawa, Ontario, June 15, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
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ZSOLT MATTE; ERZSEBET ILONA
KEREKES; VIVIEN MATE;
ZSOLT MATE JR
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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
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This
is an application under subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 (Act) for judicial review of the decision of
the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) of the Immigration and Refugee Board,
dated 6 September 2011 (Decision), which refused the Applicants’ application to
be deemed Convention refugees or a persons in need of protection under sections
96 and 97 of the Act.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The
Male Applicant and his common-law partner, the Female Applicant, are citizens
of Hungary. The Secondary Applicants are their son Zsolt, who is twenty years
old, and their daughter Vivien, who is eighteen years old. The Secondary
Applicants are also citizens of Hungary. All of the Applicants are Roma.
Original Narrative
[3]
After
they claimed protection in Canada, the Applicants submitted Personal
Information Forms (PIFs) on 1 June 2009. They submitted a single narrative,
written from the Male Applicant’s perspective, on 17 June 2009 (Original
Narrative). This narrative described how the Secondary Applicants had been
discriminated against in school, where teachers and classmates wanted them to
drop out. The Original Narrative said that Zsolt wanted to get a job as a
waiter, but people told him he would never get such a job because no one wanted
a Roma person to serve them.
[4]
The
Applicants went to the Roma Rights Center (RRC) to complain about the
discrimination the Secondary Applicants had faced at school. The worker there
said the RRC would write a letter to address the discrimination, but the
Applicants did not get a copy of this letter and nothing changed for the
Secondary Applicants at school. The Secondary Applicants were not allowed to
change for their physical education classes in the same rooms as the other
children at school. When non-Roma children lost their possessions, the
Secondary Applicants would always be suspected of theft. On one occasion, Vivien’s
name was chosen as the most unpopular name in her class.
[5]
In
January 2008, the Male Applicant’s friend was attacked by skinheads. The
skinheads forced the friend’s car off the road and killed the friend and his
son. Even though there were witnesses to the crash, the police refused to
investigate; the police ruled the crash was an accident.
[6]
In
February 2009 the Applicants were attacked by skinheads while they were grocery
shopping. The skinheads threw the Male Applicant to the ground and made him and
the Secondary Applicants kneel while the skinheads slapped them. A passing
bus-driver intervened and took the Applicants to the police station to report
the attack. Rather than investigating, the police asked the Applicants what
they had done to provoke the attack. The police did not take the Applicants’
report, even though the Male Applicant and Zsolt had visible injuries.
[7]
The
February 2009 attack led the Applicants to leave Hungary for Canada, as they felt they could not get effective help from the police. The situation they faced in Budapest, where they lived, was bad, and the Applicants believed conditions in the rest of
Hungary would be as bad or worse.
Amended Narratives
[8]
After
submitting the Original Narrative, the Applicants submitted new narratives for
the Male Applicant, Female Applicant, and Zsolt on 1 December 2010 (Amended
Narratives).
[9]
The
Male Applicant’s amended narrative (Narrative 1) said he had grown up with
prejudice in Hungary because he is Roma. He had had to leave his employment as
a bridge builder in February 1997 because of this discrimination.
[10]
Narrative
1 also said the Male Applicant’s cousin had been driven off the road by members
of the Hungarian Guard – a nationalist organization in Hungary – in January 2009. The crash killed the cousin and his son. Although witnesses
spoke to the police, the police did not believe them and ruled the crash an
accident. This incident was publicized on the internet, but witnesses did not
come forward with what they knew.
[11]
The
February 2009 attack also appeared in Narrative 1. In this version, the Male
Applicant said one of the skinheads who attacked the Applicants twisted his arm
and hit him. The skinheads pulled the Female Applicant’s hair to make her
kneel, and slapped Zsolt to make him stop crying “Roma tears.” The skinheads
made the Applicants apologize for making them nervous because they were visibly
Roma. Although the bus driver stopped and took them to the police station, he
said he would not be a witness for the Applicants. At the police station, an
officer asked the Applicants what they had done to invite the beating. Other
officers said the Applicants were lying and called them stinking gypsies.
[12]
On
26 March 2009, the Male Applicant was attacked on a streetcar by several
members of the Hungarian Guard. One of the Hungarian Guards grabbed the Male
Applicant by the arm and beat him. The Male Applicant broke free and ran to a
train station, where he was able to hide in the crowd.
[13]
The
Female Applicant’s amended narrative (Narrative 2) said she was discriminated
against in school. The abuse she suffered as a child was so bad she once
considered committing suicide. The Female Applicant said she could not continue
her education because schools rejected her because she is Roma. Although she
got a job in a garment factory, other workers damaged her sewing machine. She
later got a job as a street car cleaner, but her coworkers often stole money
from her. The coworkers refused to use cleaning tools the Female Applicant had
touched.
[14]
The
Secondary Applicants could not play sports in school because they are Roma.
Zsolt became a waiter, although he was told he would never get a job in his
profession.
[15]
The
Female Applicant’s account of the February 2009 attack in Narrative 2 was
identical to that of the Male Applicant in Narrative 1.
[16]
Zsolt’s
amended narrative (Narrative 3) said he was made a fool of in primary school
because he is Roma. Once, three other students urinated on him while he was on
a school trip. He said Vivien was often beaten at school and he could not protect
her. After Zsolt began seeing a non-Roma girl at school, she was harassed
because he is Roma. This led them to end their relationship. Zsolt wrote that,
during the February 2009 attack, he watched four skinheads beat the Male
Applicant. He also said his cousin and his cousin’s father were forced off the
road and killed some time before the February 2009 attack.
Procedural History
[17]
The
Applicants arrived in Canada on 3 May 2009 and claimed protection on 4 May
2009. The RPD joined all four claims under subsection 49(1) of the Refugee
Protection Division Rules SOR/2002-228 (Rules) and appointed the Male
Applicant as representative for Vivien, because she was a minor at the time.
The RPD heard the Applicants’ claims over three sittings on 25 January 2011, 28
April 2011, and 4 July 2011.
[18]
At
the first sitting, the Applicants affirmed that their PIFs and narratives were
complete, true, and correct. The Male Applicant also testified at this sitting.
At the end of the first sitting, the Applicants made a motion to strike the
Original Narrative from the record because it was prejudicial to their claim.
They said the Male Applicant spoke to an interpreter (Farkas) who recorded his
answers in English as the Original Narrative. Farkas made mistakes in the
interpretation which were detrimental to the Applicants’ case. The RPD
adjourned the hearing to decide whether to exclude the Original Narrative. The
RPD asked the Applicants to provide a letter from the Roma Community Center
(RCC) in Toronto – where they said they had met Farkas – to show they had
complained about the quality of interpretation she provided.
[19]
At
the second sitting on 28 April 2011, the RPD noted it had received a letter
from the RCC (RCC Letter). The letter said the RCC could not give the
Applicants Farkas’s contact information. The RPD told the Applicants it had
decided not to exclude the Original Narrative.
[20]
After
the third sitting on 4 July 2011 the RPD considered the Applicants’ claims. It
rejected them on 6 September 2011 and notified the Applicants of the Decision
on 27 September 2011.
DECISION
UNDER REVIEW
[21]
The
RPD rejected the Applicants’ claims because they had not rebutted the
presumption of state protection. It also found there was not a serious
possibility they would face persecution on the basis of their Roma ethnicity in
Hungary.
Motion to Strike
[22]
The
RPD denied the Applicants’ request to strike the Original Narrative from the
record. It found their explanation for how their PIFs and the Original
Narrative were created was not reliable.
[23]
At
the first sitting of the RPD hearing, the Applicants said there were problems
with the translation of the Original Narrative and the errors in translation
would unduly prejudice them. Applicants’ counsel said that Farkas came to his
office and the Applicants introduced her to counsel as a friend. They also told
counsel the RCC recommended Farkas as a translator. Although Farkas had good
intentions, it became clear over the course of their dealings that she and the
Applicants did not understand one another. The Male Applicant, however, said he
understood Farkas.
[24]
The
Applicants also said that, because she had moved, they had been unable to
contact Farkas after they discovered errors in the translation. They said the
RCC was unable to give them her current telephone number. The RCC Letter said
“we have no contact with [Farkas] and do not know who she is.” The Applicants
said they met Farkas at the RCC as she was leaving the RCC office one day, but
they did not know if she actually worked there. The RPD found the Applicants’
explanation unreasonable because it was inconsistent with the RCC Letter.
[25]
The
RPD also found the Applicants could not have met Farkas at the RCC. The RCC
Letter said the Applicants had volunteered there in approximately February
2010. The Applicants submitted the Original Narrative in June 2009, after
completing it with Farkas’s help. The RPD concluded it was impossible for the
Applicants to have met Farkas at the RCC in 2009 because they had only started
going to the RCC in 2010.
[26]
The
RPD said it had no reason to believe Farkas would not have written down what
the Applicants had told her to. Farkas told Applicants’ counsel she was their
friend, so she would have accurately written down what they said. The
Applicants had also signed the Original Narrative to indicate the statements in
it were their own. The declaration they signed in their PIFs said the forms and
any attachments were interpreted to them. Farkas had also signed declarations
on the Applicants’ PIFs saying she had interpreted the PIFs and any attached
documents accurately. Although the RPD received the Original Narrative two
weeks after the PIFs, it found Farkas would have followed the same procedure as
she did with the PIFs.
Merits of the
Claims
[27]
After
dealing with the Applicants’ motion to strike the Original Narrative, the RPD
dealt with the merits of their claims. It found the Applicants had established
their identity and citizenship through oral and documentary evidence.
Credibility
[28]
The RPD found the Applicants’ evidence was not credible
because there were inconsistencies between their oral testimony, the Original
Narrative, the amended narratives, and form IMM 5611 – the port of entry notes
the Male Applicant completed on arrival in Canada.
[29]
First, the Applicants’ evidence showing their
cousin was driven off a road and killed was unreliable. Narrative 1 said the
cousin and his son were forced off the road in January 2009. The Original
Narrative said this event occurred in January 2008 and it was the Male
Applicant’s friend and his son who were killed. It was reasonable to expect the
Male Applicant to know if it was a friend or a cousin who was killed.
[30]
Before the hearing, the Male Applicant had
spoken with Dr. Judith Pilowsky – a psychologist practicing in Toronto – who produced a report he submitted to the RPD (Pilowsky Report). The Pilowsky
Report said the Male Applicant became frightened when he saw a car like the one
involved in the crash which killed the cousin. Because he did not actually see
the crash occur, the RPD could not understand why this kind of car would
frighten the Male Applicant.
[31]
The Original Narrative said the Hungarian police
responded to the 2009 crash and ruled it an accident even though witnesses saw
what happened. Narrative 1 said the police ruled the crash was an accident
because they did not believe the witnesses. At the RPD hearing, the Applicants
said the witnesses were afraid to talk to the police, so the police could only
conclude this was an accident. All of this evidence was inconsistent.
[32]
In light of its credibility concerns, the RPD
expected the Applicants to produce evidence to corroborate their story about
the crash. However, they could not provide any documentary evidence to show
this event had occurred as they said it did. The RPD drew a negative inference
from the Applicants’ failure to provide corroborating evidence and found there
was no evidence this incident was caused by the Hungarian Guard. The RPD
concluded the January 2009 car crash had not occurred as the Applicants had
described it.
[33]
The Applicants said Farkas was responsible for
the inconsistencies on this point, but the RPD rejected this explanation. It
found there was no evidence Farkas did anything other than write what she was
told to.
[34]
Second, the RPD found inconsistencies in the
Applicants’ story about the February 2009 attack. In IMM 5611, the Male
Applicant said members of the Hungarian Guard kicked grocery bags out of the
Applicants’ hands, forced them to kneel, and spat on them. The Original
Narrative said the Applicants were forced to kneel and were slapped. It also
said skinheads kicked the Male Applicant when he complained about them kicking
the grocery bags around. In Narrative 1, the Male Applicant wrote that the
skinheads twisted his arm and punched him until he lost his breath. He also
said the skinheads pulled the Female Applicant’s hair to force her to kneel and
slapped Zsolt. The RPD found these were three escalating versions of the
attack.
[35]
The Applicants’ evidence about the injuries they
suffered in the February 2009 attack was also inconsistent. At the hearing, the
Male Applicant said he was injured from kicks and Zsolt was slapped. The
Original Narrative said he and Zsolt both had visible injuries. The RPD
rejected the Applicants’ argument that these inconsistencies arose from
inaccurate translation.
[36]
The evidence with respect to the bus driver’s
role in the attack was also inconsistent. The Original Narrative said the bus
driver left his bus to rescue the Applicants and the police would not take his
statement. Narrative 1 said the bus driver told the skinheads to stop or he
would call the police. At the hearing, the Applicants said the driver told the
skinheads he would call the police if they prevented him from doing his job.
Further, the Original Narrative said the police would not take the bus driver’s
statement, but the Applicants testified at the hearing that he was unwilling to
give a statement. The Applicants’ evidence on this point was unreliable because
it was inconsistent.
[37]
At the RPD hearing, the Applicants said they
waited hours at the police station after the attack before the police told them
their complaint was a waste of time. After the RPD asked if they thought to ask
for help, they said they asked for help every half hour. This testimony was
contradictory and adapted to show they had made stronger efforts to obtain
assistance from the police, so it too was unreliable.
[38]
The Applicants also added a detail at the
hearing which was not in the Original Narrative. They testified they had gone
to the RRC for help, but were told the RRC had no authority over the police.
The Male Applicant told the RPD he had mentioned this to the immigration
officer when he was completing IMM 5611, but this detail did not appear in that
form. The Applicants also said the Original Narrative was incorrect on this
point because of Farkas’s improper interpretation. The RPD found the Male
Applicant had an interpreter when he completed IMM 5611 and the Applicants
could not blame Farkas for all the problems in their evidence. They had not contacted
her to allow her to respond to their allegations and their challenge to the
accuracy of her interpretation should have allowed for this.
[39]
The RPD also found inconsistencies in the
Applicants’ evidence about their experience at the RRC in the Hungary, where they went to complain about the police response to the February 2009 attack. The
Female Applicant said the RRC could not do anything about the police response
without an official report, but the Male Applicant did not say this. The
Applicants also did not provide any documents to show they had approached the
RRC for help, though they should have been able to provide this evidence.
[40]
The RPD found the events surrounding the
February 2009 attack were not as the Applicants had described.
[41]
Third, the RPD found inconsistencies in the Male
Applicant’s testimony about his education which could not be explained by
Farkas’s inaccurate translation or attributed to the immigration officer who
completed IMM 5611 for the Male Applicant. Narrative 1 said the Male Applicant
has only eight years of education, but IMM 5611 says he has ten years of
education, including two years at a trade school. At the RPD hearing, the Male
Applicant said the Hungarian government paid for his trade school education
after he lost his job. The Male Applicant’s statement that he had only eight
years education was an embellishment intended to exaggerate the harm the
Applicants face in Hungary.
Section 96 Risk
[42]
Although
the RPD found the Applicants’ evidence was generally unreliable because it was
inconsistent, it also analysed whether they faced a risk of persecution in Hungary because they are Roma. It found they did not face such a risk because nothing they
faced would deny them their fundamental rights in a way that threatened their
lives.
[43]
The
RPD found much of the evidence which spoke to the risk the Applicants faced was
unreliable. However, it examined whether they faced a risk of persecution based
on the discrimination they might suffer because they are Roma. Although the
Male Applicant and Female Applicant had experienced discrimination in Hungary, this discrimination had not seriously impacted their ability to earn a livelihood;
both had become leaders in their jobs. The Secondary Applicants had experienced
discrimination in school, but they were not denied access to education and
their fundamental rights were not infringed.
[44]
The
RPD found the February 2009 attack, if it actually occurred, had only amounted
to being spat on and forced to kneel. This kind of attack was not serious,
persistent, or systemic.
[45]
The
RPD noted that discrimination can become so serious as to threaten lives or
fundamental rights. In this case, the discrimination the Male Applicant
suffered led him to attempt suicide, as the Pilowsky Report showed. Dr.
Pilowsky diagnosed the Male Applicant with post-traumatic stress disorder. The
RPD found this diagnosis was based on the same evidence it found was
unreliable, so the cause of his condition was unknown. The RPD also found the
Male Applicant would be able to access treatment for his condition in Hungary.
[46]
Although
discrimination against Roma people in Hungary occurs, and it often results in a
lower standard of living for them, this did not result in a denial of
fundamental rights which threatened the Applicants’ lives.
State Protection
[47]
The
determinative issue in the Applicants’ claim was state protection. The RPD
reviewed the law on state protection, first noting that Canada (Attorney General) v Ward, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 689 establishes a
presumption of adequate state protection. This presumption can only be rebutted
with clear and convincing evidence of the state’s inability to protect. See Carillo
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FCA 94. Further, Zhuravlvev
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2000] FCJ No
507 teaches that local failures to provide effective policing do not amount to
a lack of state protection unless they are part of a larger pattern of the
state’s inability to protect.
Applicants’ Experience
[48]
The
RPD found the Applicants’ evidence regarding their attempts to seek state
protection was not reliable. However, it also found that, even if it accepted
these events had occurred as the Applicants described them, they did not rebut
the presumption of state protection. The Applicants’ stories, if believed,
showed only that police in Hungary are not always able to arrest perpetrators
of violence, which is not enough to rebut the presumption of state protection.
[49]
The
Hungarian police were unable to arrest the people who attacked the Applicants
in February 2009 because the bus driver was either unwilling to provide a
statement or the police were unwilling to take his statement. The evidence the
Applicants used to show what happened when they reported to the police was
unreliable. The Applicants’ claim that the police turned them away after they
waited for five hours amounted only to a local failure in policing. The
Applicants had also not sought additional redress for the failure of the police
to take their complaint, so their experience at the police station could not
rebut the presumption of state protection.
[50]
For
the purpose of its state protection analysis, the RPD accepted that the Male
Applicant’s story about the attack on the train in March 2009 was true.
However, it noted he had not approached the police for assistance after this
attack, so this experience could not rebut the presumption of state protection.
Further, even accepting that the cousin and the cousin’s son were forced off a
road in 2009, the police could only conclude this was an accident because the
witnesses were not forthcoming about what they saw.
[51]
The
Applicants also testified that the Female Applicant’s mother found anti-Roma
graffiti in the Applicants’ apartment in Hungary after they left for Canada. The police investigated this incident, but suspended their investigation when they
could not identify the perpetrator. This event did not rebut the presumption of
state protection, as the police said they would pursue the investigation
further if new information came to light. The RPD could not find the Hungarian
police were not willing and able to respond to calls from Roma people.
[52]
The
RPD concluded the Applicants’ experience in Hungary was that police will take
action when they are called. Although they are not always able to prevent
attacks or solve crimes where there is a lack of evidence, this does not show a
lack of state protection.
Documentary
Evidence
[53]
Against
the Applicants’ experiences in Hungary, the RPD examined other documentary
evidence which showed the steps which the Hungarian government is taking to
improve the situation of Roma people. The RPD found the Hungarian government is
making serious efforts to reduce the discrimination Roma people face. Even
though progress is slow, positive change is occurring.
[54]
The
RPD noted that social attitudes toward Roma people had to change for
discrimination against them to be reduced. In Hungary, a recent economic
downturn had increased extremism and discrimination against Roma people. Roma
people are often deprived of social housing and schools are segregated because
of discrimination. However, the Hungarian Government had banned the Hungarian
Guards and the Hungarian Supreme Court had upheld this ban. After a gathering
by the Hungarian Guards in 2007, the Hungarian police had taken action against
many people for being involved in a banned organisation. In 2008, in response
to a wave of violence, the Hungarian National Police Chief increased the number
of detectives assigned to investigate violence against Roma people.
[55]
Hungary’s
Ministry of Justice and Law enforcement currently operates the Roma
Anti-discrimination Customer Service Network. This organization provides legal
aid to Roma people who encounter discrimination based on their ethnicity and
has helped more than 7,200 people since 2004. The Equal Treatment Authority
also provides Roma people with a direct avenue to assistance for dealing with
discrimination against them. People who experience discrimination can also seek
compensation in the courts.
[56]
The
RPD concluded that the Applicants had access to programs in Hungary which would allow them to defend their rights against discrimination.
[57]
The
RPD also found Hungary does not condone, and generally does not allow,
discrimination against Roma people. There are laws in place to combat
discrimination against Roma people and the Department for Roma Integration
coordinates government efforts to include Roma people in society. In 2007, the
Hungarian Government adopted the Strategic Plan of the Decade of Roma
Inclusion. Like other minority groups in Hungary, Roma people can elect their
own Minority Self Government to handle cultural and educational affairs.
[58]
Although
under-employment is a problem for Roma people, the Hungarian Government has
dedicated significant resources to employment and opportunity programs to
address this issue. In 2008, a company was fined for refusing to hire people
because of their Roma ethnicity. Government programs have given many Roma
people employment.
[59]
The
RPD found progress with respect to education was slow, but there were positive
signs of improvement. Roma children are often segregated in schools, which
contributes to under-employment and poverty. However, there are programs in
place to address segregation. In 2010, the Hungarian Supreme Court awarded compensation
to children who had been segregated, which showed the justice system is sending
a message that discrimination cannot continue without costs.
[60]
With
respect to housing for Roma people, the authorities have a goal of reducing
Roma ghettos. The Hungarian Government instituted a program to encourage Roma
people to move into refurbished homes in towns and villages near where they
reside. In 2009, the Budapest Court fined the 2nd District of
Budapest for evicting 40 Roma people from housing they were occupying.
[61]
With
respect to prevailing racist attitudes, the Hungarian Supreme Court has ruled
that radio stations erred by refusing to air an advertisement from the Jobbik
political party that referred to “Gypsy Crime.” This showed the court upholding
a political party’s right to equal time for campaigning, and that broadcasters
are not responsible for content.
[62]
The
RPD found that, although slow, progress was occurring in Hungary and there was no clear and convincing evidence that Hungary would not be reasonably
forthcoming with adequate protection. Although the Applicants had been
mistreated in Hungary, there were avenues available for them to address this
mistreatment.
[63]
The
RPD found the Applicants were not Convention refugees and that they had not
rebutted the presumption of state protection. These findings disposed of their
claims under both sections 96 and 97 of the Act.
ISSUES
[64]
The
Applicants raise the following issues in this application:
a.
Whether
the RPD erred by not excluding the Original Narrative from the record;
b.
Whether
the RPD erred by relying on the Original Narrative;
c.
Whether
the RPD failed to make a necessary finding of fact;
d.
Whether
the RPD’s reasons are adequate;
e.
Whether
the RPD’s state protection finding was unreasonable;
f.
Whether
the RPD applied the incorrect test for state protection.
STANDARD
OF REVIEW
[65]
The
Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v New Brunswick 2008 SCC 9 held that
a standard of review analysis need not be conducted in every instance. Instead,
where the standard of review applicable to a 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.
[66]
The
first issue challenges the RPD’s decision to admit evidence. In Lai v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2005 FCA 125, the Federal Court of
Appeal held at paragraph 43 that the standard of review with respect to the
admissibility of evidence is reasonableness.
[67]
The
second issue challenges the RPD’s reliance on documentary evidence which the
Applicants submitted. It is well established that the RPD has expertise in
assessing evidence and that its findings are to be given deference. The
standard of review on the second issue is reasonableness. See Hassan v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1992] FCJ No 946 (FCA) and Ched v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2010 FC 1338 at paragraph 19.
[68]
On
the third and fourth issues, the Supreme Court of Canada recently held, in Newfoundland
and Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board)
2011 SCC 62 at paragraph 14, that the adequacy of reasons is not a stand-alone
basis for quashing a decision. Rather, “the reasons must be read together with
the outcome and serve the purpose of showing whether the result falls within a
range of possible outcomes.” The Court must examine whether the reasons and the
record together support the RPD’s findings. See also Lezama v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 986, at paragraph 22 and Niyonzima v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2012 FC 299 at paragraph
24.
[69]
In
Carillo, above, the Federal Court of Appeal held at paragraph 36 that
the standard of review on a state protection finding is reasonableness. Justice
Leonard Mandamin followed this approach in Lozada v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 397, at paragraph 17 as did Justice
Danièle Tremblay-Lamer in Chaves v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2005 FC 193. The standard of review on the fifth issue is
reasonableness.
[70]
When
reviewing a decision on the standard of reasonableness, the analysis will be
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.” See Dunsmuir, above, at
paragraph 47, and Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
v Khosa 2009 SCC 12 at paragraph 59. 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.”
[71]
The
standard of review on the sixth issue is correctness. In Ramotar v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2009 FC 362 Justice Michael Kelen held
at paragraph 12 that the standard of correctness applies where an applicant
asserts that a decision maker applied the wrong test. Justice Yves de Montigny
held at paragraph 35 in Saeed v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2006 FC 1016, the correctness standard applies when examining
the RPD’s application of the test for state protection. Justice Paul Crampton
made a similar finding in Cosgun v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2010 FC 400 at paragraph 30.
STATUTORY
PROVISIONS
[72]
The
following provisions of the Act are applicable in this proceeding:
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;
[…]
Person in Need of Protection
97. (1) A person
in need of protection is a person in Canada whose removal to their country or
countries of nationality or, if they do not have a country of nationality,
their country of former habitual residence, would subject them personally
(a) to a danger, believed on substantial grounds
to exist, of torture within the meaning of Article 1 of the Convention
Against Torture; or
(b) to a risk to their life or to a risk of cruel
and unusual treatment or punishment if
(i) the person is unable or, because of that risk,
unwilling to avail themself of the protection of that country,
(ii) the risk would be faced by the person in every part
of that country and is not faced generally by other individuals in or from
that country,
(iii) the risk is not inherent or incidental to lawful sanctions,
unless imposed in disregard of accepted international standards, and
(iv) the risk is not caused by the inability of that
country to provide adequate health or medical care
[…]
|
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;
[…]
Personne à
protéger
97. (1)
A qualité de personne à protéger la personne qui se trouve au Canada et
serait personnellement, par son renvoi vers tout pays dont elle a la
nationalité ou, si elle n’a pas de nationalité, dans lequel elle avait sa
résidence habituelle, exposée :
a)
soit au risque, s’il y a des motifs sérieux de le croire, d’être soumise à la
torture au sens de l’article premier de la Convention contre la torture;
b)
soit à une menace à sa vie ou au risque de traitements ou peines cruels et
inusités dans le cas suivant :
(i) elle ne
peut ou, de ce fait, ne veut se réclamer de la protection de ce pays,
(ii) elle y
est exposée en tout lieu de ce pays alors que d’autres personnes originaires
de ce pays ou qui s’y trouvent ne le sont généralement pas,
(iii) la
menace ou le risque ne résulte pas de sanctions légitimes — sauf celles
infligées au mépris des normes internationales — et inhérents à celles-ci ou
occasionnés par elles,
(iv) la menace ou le risque ne résulte pas de
l’incapacité du pays de fournir des soins médicaux ou de santé adéquats.
[…]
|
[73]
The following provisions of the Rules are also
applicable in this proceeding:
5. (1) The claimant must complete the Personal Information Form and
sign and
date the included
declaration that states that
(a) the information
given by the
claimant is complete,
true and correct; and
(b) the claimant knows
that the declaration is of the same force and effect as if made under oath.
[…]
(3) If the claimant
completes the Personal Information Form with an interpreter, the interpreter
must sign and date the included declaration that states
(a) the interpreter is
proficient in the languages or dialects used, and was able to communicate
fully with the claimant;
(b) the completed form
and all attached documents were interpreted to the claimant; and
(c) the claimant assured
the interpreter that the claimant understood what was interpreted.
[…]
6. […](4)
If a claimant wants to change any information given in the Personal
Information Form, the claimant must provide to the
Division three copies of each page of
the form to which changes have been made.
The claimant must sign and date each new
page and underline the change made. This subsection does not apply to a
change in the choice of language for the proceedings or the language of
interpretation.
|
5. (1) Le demandeur d’asile remplit le formulaire sur les
renseignements personnels
et signe et date la
déclaration figurant sur le formulaire portant :
a) que les
renseignements qu’il fournit sont complets, vrais et exacts;
b) qu’il sait que la
déclaration a la même force et le même effet que si elle
était faite sous
serment.
[…]
(3) Si le demandeur
d’asile remplit le formulaire sur les renseignements personnels
avec l’aide d’un
interprète, ce dernier signe et date la déclaration y apparaissant
attestant:
a) qu’il maîtrise les
langues ou dialectes utilisés et qu’il a pu communiquer parfaitement avec le
demandeur d’asile;
b) qu’il a interprété
pour le demandeur d’asile le formulaire rempli et tout document joint à
celui-ci;
c) que le demandeur d’asile lui a assuré
qu’il avait bien compris ce qui avait été interprété pour lui.
[…]
6. […]
(4) Pour modifier un renseignement fourni sur le formulaire sur les
renseignements personnels, le demandeur d’asile transmet à la Section trois
copies de toute
page du
formulaire qui doit être modifiée. Il date et signe chaque page ainsi modifiée
et souligne
la modification. Le présent paragraphe ne s’applique pas dans le cas
d’une modification du choix de la langue des procédures ou de celle de
l’interprétation.
|
ARGUMENTS
The Applicants
Failure
to Strike the Original Narrative
[74]
The
Applicants argue that the RPD should have excluded the Original Narrative
because this document contained errors in translation. By relying on this
document, the RPD breached their right to procedural fairness.
[75]
The
Applicants discovered errors in the translation of the Original Narrative and
submitted amended narratives to the RPD. They had a right to submit amended
narratives under the Rules. However, the RPD violated their right to procedural
fairness by accepting the Original Narrative and relying on it to make negative
credibility findings.
[76]
The
translation of the Original Narrative contained significant errors, but the RPD
focussed on irrelevant or minor considerations when it chose not to strike this
evidence from the record. Rather than acting as it should have, the RPD blamed
the Applicants for not being able to find Farkas. The RPD was also overzealous
when it analyzed the RCC Letter, even though the RPD had led the Applicants to
believe that this letter would address its concerns with the translation issue.
Although the RCC Letter confirmed the relevant facts, the RPD based its
decision not to strike the Original Narrative on irrelevant sentences. The RPD
did not consider how significant the errors in translation were.
Failure to Make Necessary Findings of Fact
[77]
The
RPD was obligated to make clear findings with respect to the events the
Applicants alleged, but it did not do so. Its finding that the events they
described had occurred, “but not as the [Applicants] would have me believe,” is
not a proper finding of fact. The RPD failed to accept or reject the evidence
in a way that allows a meaningful review of the Decision. The Applicants
alleged they had been attacked by members of the Hungarian Guard in February
2009, but the RPD only found that this did not happen in the way the Applicants
described it.
[78]
The
RPD also failed to make clear credibility findings for all of the Applicants.
It should have assessed Zsolt’s claim separately because he was an adult at the
time the RPD heard the Applicants’ claims.
Reasons
Inadequate
[79]
The
RPD’s failure to make necessary findings of fact shows that its reasons are not
adequate. The reasons do not show why the RPD concluded the events experienced
by the Applicants do not amount to persecution. The reasons are also inadequate
because they do not show what standard for persecution the RPD applied.
Conclusions
Unreasonable
[80]
When
it concluded there was adequate state protection available to the Applicants in
Hungary, the RPD selectively relied on evidence which supported its conclusions.
It also minimized evidence which went against its conclusions. Further, the RPD
applied the incorrect test for state protection when it looked at Hungary’s willingness to protect rather than the adequacy of the protection Hungary provides. The RPD did not analyse whether the changes Hungary has implemented are
meaningful, effective, or durable.
[81]
The
RPD also unreasonably ignored several pieces of documentary evidence which were
before it. The United States Department of State’s Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices for 2006: Hungary shows that Roma people in Hungary generally fear police abuse and there is widespread discrimination against them. A
report from Amnesty International also shows there is a prevailing attitude of
xenophobia toward Roma people. Further, a report from the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, UN Expert on Minority Issues Concludes Visit
to Hungary with Call for Continued Efforts to Address Problems Faced by Roma
Minority, reveals that discrimination and violence against Roma persists in
Hungary even in the face of the State’s efforts to stop it.
[82]
The
RPD did not explain why Hungary’s status as a democracy and its efforts to
include Roma people were enough to overcome the Applicants’ clear and
convincing evidence that Hungary is unable to protect them.
The Respondent
Refusal to Strike was Reasonable
[83]
The
RPD did not err when it refused to strike the Original Narrative from the
record. In coming to this decision, the RPD identified significant
inconsistencies in the evidence provided by the Applicants to show that the
translation of the Original Narrative was faulty. They said the RCC recommend
Farkas to them and they had seen her coming out of the RCC office. When the RPD
asked what efforts the Applicants made to contact Farkas, they said she had
moved but they had tried to contact her at the RCC. Although the Applicants
said they tried to get Farkas’s telephone number from the RCC, the RCC Letter
said it did not know who Farkas was and had not been in contact with her. This
directly contradicted the Applicants’ testimony.
[84]
The
Applicants also claimed they had met Farkas at the RCC in 2009. However, the
RCC Letter showed they had not volunteered at the RCC until February 2010. The
Male Applicant also testified he had not gone to the RCC before 2010. The RPD
reasonably found the Applicants had not been at the RCC in 2009, so they could
not have met Farkas there as they claimed.
[85]
It
was reasonable for the RPD to find there was no reliable evidence that Farkas
would have done anything other than write down precisely what the Applicants
told her. They signed the declarations on their PIFs and declared the forms and
any attachments had been translated to them. Farkas also signed the
interpreter’s declaration affirming that she had interpreted the PIFs and
attachments to the Applicants.
[86]
It
was reasonable for the RPD to refuse to strike the Original Narrative on the
basis of the evidence before it.
Credibility Findings Reasonable
[87]
Hilo
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1991]
FCJ No 228 (FCA) establishes that the RPD can make negative credibility
findings, so long as it does so in clear and unmistakeable terms. In this case,
the RPD noted the following inconsistencies in the Applicants’ evidence which
led it to conclude their evidence was not reliable:
a.
Narrative 1 said the cousin and his son were
killed in a car crash in January 2009, but the Original Narrative said a friend
and his son were killed in January 2008;
b.
Narrative 1 said the police ruled the crash was
an accident because they did not believe the witnesses, but the Applicants’
oral testimony was that the witnesses who saw the crash were afraid to give the
police evidence;
c.
The Applicants said the crash was reported in
the news and on the internet, but could not give the RPD documentary evidence
to show this was actually the case;
d.
The Applicants provided escalating versions of
the February 2009 attack;
e.
The Original Narrative said the bus driver took
them to the police station where the police refused to take his statement, but
the Applicants’ oral testimony was that the bus driver was not willing to be a
witness;
f.
The Applicants initially testified they sat and
waited for several hours at the police station, then changed their story to say
they got up every half hour to ask for help.
[88]
It
is open to the RPD to test a claimant’s credibility by comparing different
versions of their testimony at different points in the refugee claim process.
The RPD can properly draw negative inferences from any inconsistencies between
evidence given at various times along the way. See Eustace v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2005 FC 1553, and RKL v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2003 FCT 116.
[89]
Although
the Applicants have claimed otherwise, the RPD made clear findings on all the
evidence it found was not reliable. Because the Applicants’ claims were based
on the same incidents, the RPD was not required to make a separate credibility
finding with respect to Zsolt. Zsolt raised no separate claims from the other
Applicants except his claims of discrimination at school, and the RPD accepted
this had occurred.
Discrimination
did not Amount to Persecution
[90]
The
RPD accepted the Applicants had suffered mistreatment in Hungary, but concluded this mistreatment did not amount to persecution because their fundamental
rights were not breached. This is a conclusion the RPD is entitled to draw from
the evidence and the Court should defer to this finding. See Sedigheh v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2003 FCT 147 at paragraphs 29 to 36.
The Male and Female Applicants were able to find employment and the Secondary
Applicants were able to remain in school. The events the Applicants experienced
did not deprive them of their fundamental rights. This was a reasonable
conclusion for the RPD to draw based on the evidence before it.
State
Protection Finding Reasonable
[91]
The
RPD also drew a reasonable conclusion that state protection was available to
the Applicants in Hungary. This conclusion was dispositive of their claims
under sections 96 and 97. The RPD thoroughly reviewed the evidence before it
which showed how Hungary has responded to crimes committed against Roma people.
The RPD found that, even though violence against Rome people continues in Hungary, the Hungarian government is committed to protecting them. The RPD also found that
police protection and other resources are available to Roma people in Hungary. The Applicants’ arguments on this point amount only to asking the Court to reweigh
the evidence which was before the RPD. This is not appropriate on judicial
review. See Camacho v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2007
FC 830 at paragraph 10.
[92]
The
Applicants have said the RPD did not consider some of the documentary evidence
which was before it. However, the evidence the RPD relied on – which shows
significant progress has occurred in Hungary in recent years – is more recent
than the evidence the Applicants have pointed to. The Applicants may be able to
point to evidence on the record which shows that state protection is not
available, but the RPD is entitled to choose which evidence it prefers so long
as it does not make factual findings which are perverse or capricious.
Consideration of
Evidence on Police Response was Reasonable
[93]
The
RPD assumed the events the Applicants alleged had actually happened to them
when it analysed how the Hungarian police responded to their complaints. It
reasonably concluded that the police in Hungary are willing and able to respond
to requests for assistance from Roma people. It was not clear on the evidence
what the police could have done in response to the January 2009 car crash other
than rule it was an accident. It was also reasonable for the RPD to conclude
the police could not have done anything more about the graffiti in the
Applicants’ apartment when they could not identify the perpetrator. Further,
even though the RPD accepted that the police had responded as the Applicants
alleged after the February 2009 attack, it reasonably concluded this was a
local failure in policing which did not rebut the presumption of state
protection.
The
Applicants’ Reply
[94]
The
Applicants argue it was an error for the RPD to rely on the Original Narrative
because they replaced it with their Amended Narratives. They followed the Rules
in submitting these documents before the hearing, so the RPD should not have
held the inconsistencies between the Original Narrative and the Amended
Narratives against them. This makes the right to make corrections under the
Rules meaningless. It would mean that any correction in a PIF could later be
held against a claimant as an inconsistency.
[95]
The
Applicants corrected their narratives as soon as they became aware of the
errors in translation. The mistakes in the translation of the Original
Narrative were in English, so they could not have known about them before they
had it translated to them by a professional translator. They point to Mohammadian
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2000] FCJ No
309 where Justice Denis Pelletier held at paragraphs 27 and 28 that
[Complaints] about the quality of interpretation
must be made at the first opportunity, that is, before the CRDD, in those cases
where it is reasonable to expect that a complaint be made.
It will be a question of fact in each case whether
it is reasonable to expect a complaint to be made. If the interpreter is having
difficulty speaking the applicant's own language and being understood by him,
this is clearly a matter which should be raised at the first opportunity. On
the other hand, if the errors are in the language of the hearing, which the
applicant does not understand, then prior complaint may not be a reasonable
expectation.
[96]
Even
if the RPD did not breach the Applicants’ right to procedural fairness by relying
on an inaccurate translation of the Original Narrative, it was overzealous in
searching out inconsistencies between this narrative and the amended
narratives. In Malala v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2001
FCT 94, Justice Jean-Eudes Dubé held at paragraph 24 that “[the] applicant must
be afforded an opportunity to explain fully the alleged inconsistencies.”
[97]
The
RPD also failed to make clear factual findings upon which to base its
credibility findings. This prevented it from making a reasonable credibility
finding.
The
Respondent’s Further Memorandum
[98]
It
was open to the RPD in this case to reject the Applicants’ assertion that
Farkas translated their Original Narrative incorrectly. It was also open to the
RPD to rely on inconsistencies between the Original and Amended Narratives to
find the Applicants were not credible. The Applicants had counsel at the time
they completed their Original Narrative and they declared the document had been
translated to them. It was open to the RPD to find Farkas was not responsible
for the discrepancies between their narratives.
[99]
The
RPD’s conclusion that state protection is available to Roma people in Hungary was a reasonable one and the Court has upheld similar findings in the past.
ANALYSIS
[100] The
Applicants raise three grounds for reviewable error. I will deal with each in
turn. As a general point, the Applicants cite very little authority for the
positions they take. This is because much of what they say involves a
particular reading of the Decision, which reading is not born out when it is
read as a whole.
Striking the Original Narrative
[101] The
Applicants say that the RPD should have struck the Original Narrative as
requested and should not have relied upon it when assessing their credibility.
They provide no authority for their position. In the end, the allegation that
the Original Narrative contains translation mistakes is not supported by any
objective evidence. The Applicants were not able to establish that the
translator had any connection with the RCC and their claim they met her there
in 2009 was undermined by evidence that they did not attend the RCC until the
summer of 2010 at the earliest.
[102] The
evidence before the RPD on this point included the Applicants’ PIFs with the
declarations and the Original Narrative, the Applicants’ attestations that the
Original Narrative was their own, and the translator’s declaration that the
translation was accurate. On this evidence, there is nothing unreasonable about
the conclusion the RPD came to in the exercise of its discretion on this issue.
Other conclusions may have been possible, but that does not mean the RPD was
unreasonable in not accepting the Applicants’ bald allegations (contradicted by
the documentation) that the inconsistencies between their narratives should be
attributed to errors in translation.
[103] It
was reasonable for the RPD to rely upon these factors to reject the Applicants’
explanation that the earlier PIF contained translation errors. As Justice Yvon
Pinard pointed out in Begolli v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2005 FC 1289 at paragraph 6
The applicant stated in his PIF that his brother-in-law helped his
brother to check his house and they were shocked when they saw the condition it
was in, yet the applicant alleges that his brother was out to kill him. It does
not make sense that his brother, who was out to kill him, would want to go to
his house to get some of his things and would be shocked to see it that way. The
applicant blames this contradiction on an error by the translator, however the
translator declared and certified that she has accurately interpreted the
entire content of the form and that the applicant fully understood the entire
content of this form. It was reasonable for the Board to conclude that
these explanations were implausible. [Emphasis added]
[104] The
Applicants also argue that the RPD fettered its discretion by deciding that it
could not strike the earlier PIF. They direct the Court’s attention to an
exchange on this point at pages 546 and 547 of the transcript. The relevant
passage appears to be as follows:
Member: You
see … I think there is a … I mean as I think about why amendments are necessary
there could be errors in dates perhaps a little bit, there could be information
that was not previously available, there could be things that happened since
they filed their personal information form. [But] you know for things that
happened at the same time… and again I have to weight whether things are
important or not, but it seems to me that is not what an amendment for a
personal information form was intended to be. Again we are back to the same
thing that under your theory, the only thing would count… do not tell me
anything, just come in and give me your final personal information form and we
should go by that. So I do not think that is the case.
Counsel: I
agree with you that should not be taken as so rightly. I will give you two
paragraphs just to start off the personal information form and thin I will come
in thirty days or twenty days before hearing with a new personal information
form. That is not the case here Mr. Member. I would not say that is abuse of
that.
Member: I
do not think so in this case but I am just following your theory, it does not…
Counsel: My
theory is not, in this case, and I usually avoid to file late minute amendments
and you probably know me from dealing with me, I could have amended a lot of
personal information forms in case that were before you, but I did not because
that is not appropriate. In this case, it happened that we depended on a person
who is speaking English and Hungarian, so I depended on the Hungarian Person,
it was translated to me in English and I put it in. What she told them in
translating back of the personal information form, I really do not have idea
[sic], but obviously they did not know what she said to me in English. So when
we, when that came to light in preparation for… for the hearing and everything,
when I used another interpreter that is what prompted grounds for amended
personal information forms and then trying to amend them properly this time.
And that is how we arrived to this new signed page, or page of the personal
information form where the new interpreter is, and that is why I put it in.
Otherwise, I would just put an amendment in.
Member: Well,
I appreciate what you are saying and I have written down the submission that
you have made. I have to weigh that given all the other evidence that I have.
Counsel: But
I see your point in how it can be abused…
Member:
I think you will… I do not know that you will find any Member that
says let us just use the final personal information form that is sent in, but…
Counsel: Well
are we going to call the … maybe also it will be dependent… I think as counsel
I can strike the old narrative and just put the new one in or I can add on to
the amendment.
Member: I do
not think you can strike the old one. Once you…
Counsel: So
in this case I thought I would be replacing.
Member: There
is… I have never heard of replacing…
Counsel: There
is not such a thing that you think that is a legal issue, definitely we can
argue about that. <inaudible>.
Member: Well
again…
Counsel: I
think that was my intention to replace the whole, the old one with the new one.
Member: I
think you would be hard to find a Member that would accept that kind of
reasoning because… but I do understand the issue that you are saying was with
the interpreter and again, I would have to weigh that with all the other things
I hear to see if … how reasonable or unreasonable and…
[105] I do
not think that in this passage the RPD is saying that the RPD cannot strike the
earlier PIF if it chooses to exercise its discretion to do so. The RPD is
simply saying that the Applicants cannot just automatically replace one PIF
with another. The RPD makes it clear that it would be hard to convince a member
“to accept that kind of reasoning” and it is something that has to be weighed “with
all the other things.” Saying it would be hard to convince the RPD to strike or
disregard an earlier PIF in its entirety is not the same thing as saying the
RPD cannot do this. In any event, as the Decision makes clear, the RPD did not
refuse to strike the earlier PIF in this case because it felt it had no
jurisdiction or power to do so. It provided cogent reasons for denying the
motion to strike at paragraph 8 of the Decision and no mention is made of lack
of jurisdiction or lack of a power to strike. The RPD did not accept the
Applicants’ reasons why it should strike the narrative and this was a
reasonable outcome on the evidence before it: “Based on all the above, counsel’s
request to strike the original PIF and narrative from the record is denied.”
Failure to Make Clear Finding of Fact
[106] The
Applicants allege that the RPD failed to make clear findings of fact “about
which events alleged by the Applicants have occurred and which did not.”
[107] The
basis for this assertion is the terminology used by the RPD when it finds that
events did not happen “as the claimants would have me to believe.”
[108] In my
view, the Applicants are attempting to use form over substance. If the Decision
is read as a whole and the impugned phrases are examined in their full context,
it is clear that the RPD is saying that the episodes as recounted by the
Applicants cannot be relied upon as evidence of section 96 persecution or
section 97 risk.
[109] The
Decision also explains why the experiences that were accepted did not reach the
level of persecution.
[110] In
addition, Zsolt’s claim relied upon his parents’ claim, so that it was denied
for the same reasons. Further, given the mandatory wording of subsection 49(1)
of the Rules, it was not an error for the RPD to hear these claims together.
[111] However,
I do not need to make a finding on this issue because the Decision contains a
stand-alone alternative finding of adequate state protection in which the Applicants’
narrative is assumed to be true.
Selectively Reading Evidence for State
Protection Finding
[112] Having
concluded that the Applicants’ personal evidence was not enough to support a
claim for section 96 persecution or section 97 risk, the RPD then appropriately
turned its mind to “whether there is a serious possibility the claimants will
be persecuted simply because they are Roma?” As the RPD makes clear in deciding
this question, the “determinative issue is whether the claimants have rebutted
the presumption of state protection.”
[113] The
RPD then goes on to provide a detailed and extensive analysis of what Roma
people face in Hungary and the state’s willingness and ability to protect them.
The Applicants disagree with the RPD’s conclusions.
[114] First
of all, the Applicants say that the RPD made selective use of the evidence and
they point to documents which they believe support their position that adequate
state protection for Roma people in Hungary does not exist.
[115] There
is no evidence that the RPD did not review all of the available evidence on
state protection. The fact that the Applicants can point to documents and
excerpts which support their case is not evidence of unreasonableness. See Hassan
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1992] FCJ No
946, Florea v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1993]
FCJ No 598, and Wijekoon v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
2002 FCT 758. The RPD fully acknowledges the difficult situation faced by Roma
people in Hungary and acknowledges failures of the state to protect in the past
and even more recent failures.
[116] But
this is an evolving situation in which the RPD was obliged to identify and
weigh competing factors and incidents. The Court cannot re-weigh the evidence
to oblige the Applicants. See Suresh v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2002 SCC 1 at paragraph 29. A review of the Decision suggests
to me that the RPD addressed this difficult task thoroughly and with an open
mind and took into account all of the evidence. Its conclusions are not out of
line with other decisions on point that this Court has reviewed and found it
reasonable. See, for example, Horvath v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2012 FC 253, Balogh v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2012 FC 216, and Banya v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration) 2011 FC 313.
[117] Nor
can it be said that the RPD only looked at the state’s willingness to protect
and failed to examine what Justice Richard Mosley has referred to as “operational
adequacy.” See E.Y.M.V. v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2011
FC 1364 at paragraph 16.
[118] The
RPD acknowledges that “effectiveness of the protection is a relevant
consideration.” It also says that “even if I were to accept the allegations of
attacks, the evidence shows that the authorities did act to assist the
claimants.” The Applicants have not questioned this finding, so it must stand.
[119] This
means, in effect, that the state protection finding in this case is a separate
and independent ground for refusing the claim and is based upon an acceptance
of the Applicants’ narrative of the attacks they experienced. Consequently,
even if the Applicants were able to establish that the Original Narrative
should have been struck and/or that the RPD was unreasonable in its credibility
findings, this Decision must still stand because the state protection finding
is based upon a notional acceptance of the Applicants’ own narrative and a
reasonable assessment of the operational adequacy of the state’s willingness to
protect.
[120] The
RPD is clear that it must go beyond the legal framework that exists in Hungary:
I need to examine what efforts the state as a whole
is making to positively affect the lives of the Roma. Are these efforts serious
and what effect do these efforts have? Can claimants reasonably avail
themselves of the state protection and reasonably expect adequate protection?
[121] The
RPD then goes on to examine extensive evidence in detail and to answer these
questions. It is possible to disagree with its conclusions but it is not
possible to say they were unreasonable and fall outside the Dunsmuir
range.
[122] The
Applicants have suggested the following question for certification:
Did the RPD fetter its discretion and commit a legal
error by deciding that it could not allow a PIF to be struck and replaced with
a new PIF?
[123] As my
reasons explain, such a question does not arise on the facts of this case. The
RPD dismissed the motion to strike through a reasonable exercise of its
discretion and not upon a legal assumption that it had no discretion to strike
the earlier PIF.
[124] In
addition, the answer to such a question would not be determinative of the
appeal because the whole Decision can rest upon the stand-alone, alternative
adequate state protection finding. This question is therefore not appropriate
for certification. See Zazai v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2004 FCA 89 at paragraph 11.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT’S JUDGMENT is that
1.
The
application is dismissed.
2.
There
is no question for certification.
“James
Russell”