Docket: IMM-5429-11
Citation: 2012 FC 678
Ottawa, Ontario, June 4, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Gleason
BETWEEN:
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JONATAN GUZMAN PORTILLO
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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]
This
is an application for judicial review in respect of the decision of the Refugee
Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board [the RPD or the
Board], dated July 15, 2011, in which the RPD rejected the applicant's claim
for refugee protection.
[2]
The
applicant is a young man from El Salvador, who was targeted, threatened,
assaulted and stabbed by members of the Mara Salvatrucha [the MS], a notorious
criminal gang that operates in El Salvador. The RPD rejected the applicant's
refugee claim, holding that neither section 96 nor 97 of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA or the Act] applied to his
situation. More specifically, with respect to section 96, the Board held that
the applicant was not persecuted in connection with one of the Convention
grounds listed in section 96 of the Act, and, accordingly, held that he was not
entitled to claim protection as a refugee under that section. With respect to
section 97, the Board determined that the applicant “had been identified personally
as a target” by the MS (decision at para 34) [emphasis added]; however, despite
this finding, the RPD concluded that the risk the applicant faced was a generalized
one since gang-related crime is rampant in El Salvador. Because the
risk was generalized, the RPD concluded that section 97 of IRPA was
inapplicable as paragraph 97(1)(b)(ii) of IRPA provides that those who face
risks that would be “faced generally by other individuals in or from that
country” cannot be persons in need of protection.
[3]
The
applicant argues that the Board’s decision should be set aside for the
following three reasons:
1. The
RPD’s finding regarding the applicant's lack of credibility is not borne out by
the evidence and is contradicted by the Board’s reasons, which accept the
applicant's version of events;
2. The
applicant was a victim of persecution by the Salvadoran police due to his
perceived affiliation with the MS and, thus, the RPD committed a reviewable
error in rejecting the applicant's claim under section 96 of IRPA; and
3. The
risk the applicant faced was directed towards him on a highly personalised
basis and is different from the type of risk faced by others in El Salvador and,
accordingly, the Board committed a reviewable error in determining that section
97 of IRPA was inapplicable to the applicant's situation.
[4]
The
respondent, on the other hand, asserts that the Board's decision was reasonable
and that it was open to the Board to disbelieve the applicant, to hold that
there was no nexus to a ground listed in the Convention refugee definition in
section 96 of IRPA and to conclude that section 97 of IRPA did not apply to the
applicant's situation.
[5]
For
the reasons set out below, I have determined that the RPD’s decision must be
set aside because its determinations regarding section 97 of IRPA are both
incorrect and unreasonable. In addition, its conclusion regarding one aspect of
the applicant's claim under section 96 of IRPA was made without regard to the
evidence before the Board, and, thus, is unreasonable and subject to being set
aside under paragraph 18.1(4)(d) of the Federal Courts Act, RSC, 1985, c
F-7 [FCA]. To appreciate why this is so, it is necessary to review the relevant
facts before the Board as well as the salient points in the decision.
I.
BACKGROUND
[6]
The
applicant grew up on a farm in a small town in a rural area of El Salvador. When he was
a teenager, members of the MS approached the applicant and his best friend,
Carlos, and attempted to convince them to join the gang. Carlos and the
applicant refused, and the gang members then demanded money from them. The
applicant said he had none, and, upon hearing this, one of the MS gang members
stabbed the applicant in the arm with a knife. Carlos had a bit of money and
gave it to the gang members, who then released the boys. As Carlos and the
applicant ran away, the gang members threatened that they were not finished
with the applicant and Carlos.
[7]
The
applicant and his parents reported the attack to the Salvadoran police, but
they did not pursue the issue and, indeed, intimated that they suspected that
the applicant was himself an MS member.
[8]
Due
to the attack, the applicant dropped out of school and spent his time working
on the family's farm, hoping to escape the notice of the MS. A few weeks later,
Carlos called the applicant and told him that he had been beaten up by the MS,
who were threatening to kill him unless he joined the gang. Shortly thereafter,
Carlos’ mother came to speak with the applicant to see if he knew where Carlos
was since he had been missing for a couple of days and his mother feared he had
joined the MS. The applicant was not able to help her as he had not heard from
Carlos.
[9]
Two
months later, MS gang members again assaulted the applicant and accused him of
being the homosexual friend of “Licho”. The applicant later learned that “Licho”
was the nickname the MS had given to Carlos. Once again, the applicant and his
parents reported the assault to the police, but the police refused to do
anything and accused the applicant of being associated with the MS.
Approximately two weeks later, members of the gang came to the applicant’s home
and demanded money, which the applicant’s father paid them, as he felt he had
no alternative.
[10]
A
few months later, Carlos called the applicant, told him that he was now an MS
member and demanded that the applicant meet him the following day. The
applicant did not show up and Carlos again called him, fuming, and stated that,
“No one makes fun of Licho”. He again demanded a meeting with the applicant,
and, once again, the applicant refused to attend. Carlos called the applicant
back and told him that he was now an enemy. A few days later, the police came
to the applicant’s home and questioned and assaulted him, seeking to learn
where Carlos was because Carlos had been implicated in the murder of a police
officer. The applicant gave the police Carlos’ mother’s address. The next day,
Carlos called the applicant and told him that he was looking forward to killing
him as a result of the applicant having spoken to the police.
[11]
The
applicant’s parents sent him to work and live on another farm, about two hours
away, to try to protect him. However, the Salvadoran police pursued him there.
The police also went to the applicant’s home, questioned his father as to the
applicant’s whereabouts and assaulted the father. Shortly thereafter, the
applicant fled, first to the United States and then, when he was
being deported from the U.S., to Canada. The applicant did not
make a refugee claim in the United States and alleged that he had
received advice from a lawyer to not make such a claim since it was almost
certain to fail.
[12]
The
applicant’s parents make monthly payments to the MS, who continue to make
threats against the applicant. The Salvadoran police also continue to question
and threaten the applicant’s family, and to link the applicant to the MS.
[13]
There
was evidence before the Board documenting the extent of MS presence in all
parts of El
Salvador
as well as the existence of a certain degree of corruption within the police force,
linking the Salvadoran police to murders and human rights violations. The Board
itself noted that, “[the] evidence … reflects the [MS’] presence in all of El Salvador and their
activities affect all Salvadorans” (decision at para 32).
II.
THE RPD’S DECISION
[14]
The
RPD commenced its analysis by noting that it had identified what it termed
“major credibility concerns” with certain aspects of the applicant's claim.
These centered on discrepancies between the statements the applicant made in
his Personal Information Form [PIF] and to the immigration official at the port
of entry to Canada regarding
the events he claimed took place in El Salvador. The Board concluded on
this point that “… the major inconsistencies and omissions between the
[applicant’s] statement at the port of entry and his story in his PIF
narrative, without a reasonable explanation, undermine the [applicant’s]
credibility” (decision at para 17). However, the Board did not base its decision
on the applicant’s lack of credibility; rather, it went on to analyze his
claims on the basis that it had accepted the applicant’s version of events.
[15]
With
respect to section 96, the RPD held that the determinative issue was the lack
of nexus between the harm feared by the applicant and any ground in the
Convention refugee definition. The Board relied on several decisions from this
Court holding that “victims of crime, corruption or vendettas generally fail to
establish a link between their fear of persecution and one of the Convention
grounds” and concluded that the harm the applicant feared from the MS was not
covered by section 96 of IRPA. The RPD also considered the applicant’s claim to
fear the Salvadoran police, whom the applicant claimed had wrongfully assumed
that he was an MS member. The Board concluded that the applicant “… did not
provide any credible evidence to indicate that the police wanted anything other
than to interrogate him about any possible connection he had to the [MS], his
possible involvement in the police murder and his knowledge of Carlos’s
involvement in the police murder” (decision at para 21). The RPD also noted
that the applicant had not provided “any credible evidence” to suggest that he
would not be absolved from suspicion if questioned by the Salvadoran police,
and concluded that it was unreasonable for him to fear the police.
[16]
As
concerns section 97 of IRPA, as noted, the RPD found that the applicant had
“been identified personally as a target” by the MS and “accepted that the
[applicant] was subjected personally to a risk to his life”. However, despite
these findings, it characterized the risk faced by the applicant as a risk of
being recruited to join the MS and of being threatened and assaulted by them.
The Board found that such risk is generally faced by all men of the applicant’s
age in El
Salvador.
The Board then concluded that protection was not available to the applicant
under section 97 of IRPA because that section excludes from the definition of a
“person in need of protection” those who face risks that would be faced
“generally by other individuals in or from that country” (IRPA at para
97(1)(b)(ii)).
III.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[17]
Both
parties submitted that the applicable standard of review in respect of each of
the alleged errors was reasonableness. I concur that the reasonableness
standard applies to the first and second of the alleged errors, namely, the
challenge to the Board’s credibility findings and to its determinations
regarding the treatment the applicant received and would be likely to receive
from the Salvadoran police. These are both factual determinations, and it is
firmly settled that review of such determinations is to be conducted on the
reasonableness standard (see e.g. Aguebor v Canada (Minister of Employment
and Immigration) (1993), 160 NR 315, [1993] FCJ No 732 (FCA) at para 4;
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at para 58,
[2009] 1 S.C.R. 339 [Khosa]; Rahal v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration),
2012
FC 319 at para 22, [2012]
FCJ No 369
[Rahal]).
[18]
As
concerns the third alleged error regarding section 97 of IRPA, given the
Board’s reasoning in the decision, it is less certain that the applicable
standard of review is that of reasonableness. While it is well-settled that the
determination of whether an applicant faces a generalized risk is typically one
of mixed fact and law and, thus, reviewable on a reasonableness standard (see
e.g. Acosta v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009
FC 213 at paras 9-11, [2009] FCJ No 270; Pineda v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 493 at para 5, [2012] FCJ No 520 [Pineda
(2012)]), in the case at bar the RPD found there to be both a
unique personalized risk of being targeted for death and a generalized
risk faced by the applicant. Arguably, such a finding engages a question of the
interpretation to be afforded to section 97(1)(b) of IRPA as a matter of law.
If so, the applicable standard of review might well be correctness as opposed
to reasonableness.
[19]
There
are conflicting decisions from this Court regarding the appropriate standard of
review to be applied to RPD decisions interpreting the meaning to be given to
sections 97 (or 96) of IRPA. Some recent cases have held that the correctness
standard is applicable (see e.g. Chalita Gonsalez v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1059 at para 29, [2011] FCJ No 1278 (Kelen) and
Innocent v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC
1019 at para 37, [2009]
FCJ No 1243 (Mainville), where the correctness standard was found to be
applicable to reviewing the Board’s articulation and application of the
requirements enshrined in paragraph 97(1)(b) of IRPA and Begum v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 10 at para 22, [2011] FCJ No 8 (Russell),
where the correctness standard was found to be applicable to the review of the
RPD’s determination under section 96 of IRPA regarding the existence of a nexus
between the grounds for fear of persecution and one of the Convention grounds).
On the other hand, several other cases have come to the opposite conclusion
(see e.g. Guifarro v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2011 FC 182 at paras 18-19, [2011] FCJ No 222 (Crampton) [Guifarro],
where the reasonableness standard was found to be applicable to reviewing the
RPD’s articulation and application of the requirements enshrined in paragraph
97(1)(b) of IRPA and Salvagno v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2011 FC 595 at para 11, [2011] FCJ No 794 (Pinard) and Chekhovisky
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 970 at
para 18, [2009]
FCJ No 1180 (de Montigny), where the reasonableness standard was found
to be applicable to the review of the RPD’s determination under section 96 of IRPA
regarding the existence of a nexus between the grounds for fear of persecution
and one of the Convention grounds).
[20]
The
Federal Court of Appeal has often applied the correctness standard to the
Board’s interpretation of IRPA in appeals made to that Court (see e.g. Li v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2010 FCA
75 at para 20, [2010] 3 FCR 347; Idahosa v Canada (Minister of Public Safety
and Emergency Preparedness), 2008 FCA 418 at paras 16-19, [2009] 4 FCR 293;
Nazifpour v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FCA
35 at paras 21-22, [2007] 4 FCR 515; Singh v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2005 FCA 417 at para 23, [2006] 3 FCR 70; Poshteh v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FCA 85 at para 23,
[2005] 3 FCR 487; Williams v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2005 FCA 126 at para 18, [2005] 3 FCR 429). Indeed, the
application of the correctness standard by the Federal Court of Appeal may well
be foreseen by section 74 of IRPA, which provides that appeals lie only if a
judge of this Court in his or her decision certifies that the case raises “a
serious question of general importance”. In Prophète v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FCA 31, 78 Imm LR (3d) 163, the
Federal Court of Appeal declined to answer a generally-framed question regarding the meaning to
be ascribed to section 97 of IRPA because the question was framed too broadly.
In so doing, Justice Trudel, writing for the Court, noted at para 7 that, “[t]he examination of a claim under
subsection 97(1) of the Act necessitates an individualized inquiry, which is to
be conducted on the basis of the evidence adduced by a claimant “in the context
of a present or prospective risk” for [the claimant]…”. The Court
of Appeal has not otherwise commented on section 97 of IRPA or on the standard
of review applicable to decisions of the RPD made under section 97.
[21]
While
several recent decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada indicate that, in most
instances, the standard of review applicable to a tribunal’s interpretation of
its constituent statute will be that of reasonableness, the Supreme Court also
held in these recent decisions that, exceptionally, the correctness standard
may be applicable where the provision in the tribunal’s constituent statute at
issue is of central importance to the legal system as a whole and falls
outside the specialized area of expertise possessed by the tribunal.
[22]
In
this regard, in Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, the seminal case
of the Court in setting the framework for the current approach to judicial
review, Justices Bastarache and Lebel, writing for the majority of the Court,
noted at para 54 that “… deference will usually result where a tribunal is
interpreting its own statute or statutes closely connected to its function,
with which it will have particular familiarity”. Justices Bastarache and Lebel
went on to note at para 60 that the correctness standard, conversely, is applicable
to questions of law which are “both of central importance to the legal
system as a whole and outside the adjudicator’s specialized area of
expertise” [emphasis added]. They also confirmed at paras 58-61 that the
correctness standard of review applies to constitutional issues, the drawing of
jurisdictional lines between two or more tribunals and true questions of
jurisdiction or vires.
[23]
These
principles were reiterated in several subsequent decisions from the Supreme
Court of Canada. For example, in Khosa (cited above), a case
arising under IRPA, Justice Binnie, writing for the majority, stated at para
44:
Errors of law are generally governed by a correctness
standard. Mugesera v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration),
2005 SCC 40, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 100, at para. 37, for example, held that the general
questions of international law and criminal law at issue in that case had to be
decided on a standard of correctness. Dunsmuir (at para.54), says that
if the interpretation of the home statute or a closely related statute by an
expert decision-maker is reasonable, there is no error of law justifying
intervention.
In result in Khosa, the Supreme
Court applied the reasonableness standard to review of the Board’s
discretionary determination of whether Mr. Khosa was entitled to humanitarian
and compassionate relief from the strict application of the requirements of IRPA,
which required his deportation for engaging in a criminal offence.
[24]
The
Supreme Court reaffirmed the principles applicable to determining the standard
of review when a tribunal interprets its constituent statute in Nolan v
Kerry (Canada) Inc, 2009 SCC 39 at para 34, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 678; Celgene
Corp v Canada (Attorney General), 2011 SCC 1, at para 34, [2011] 1 S.C.R. 3; Smith v Alliance
Pipeline Ltd,
2011 SCC 7 at para 26, [2011]
1 SCR 160; Canada (Canadian Human Rights Commission) v Canada (Attorney
General),
2011 SCC 53 at paras 18, 23 and 24, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 471 [Canadian
Human Rights Commission]; Alberta Information and Privacy Commissioner) v
Alberta Teachers' Association, 2011 SCC 61 at para 30, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 654;
and Doré
v Barreau du Québec,
2012 SCC 12
at paras 46-47, 343 DLR (4th) 193.
[25]
In
Canadian Human Rights Commission, Justices Lebel and Cromwell, who wrote
for the Court, expressed the applicable principles as follows at paras 21 to
23:
[G]iven the recent developments in the law of
judicial review since Dunsmuir and its emphasis on the deference owed to
administrative tribunals, even in respect of many questions of law, we must
discuss whether all decisions on questions of law rendered by the Tribunal and
similar bodies should be swept under the standard of correctness. At this
point, we must acknowledge a degree of tension between some policies
underpinning the present system of judicial review, when it applies to the
decisions of human rights tribunals.
The nature of these tribunals lies at the root
of these problems. On the one hand, Dunsmuir and Khosa, building
upon previous jurisprudence, recognize that administrative tribunals are
generally entitled to deference, in respect of the legal interpretation of
their home statutes and laws or legal rules closely connected to them. On the
other hand, our Court has reaffirmed that general questions of law that are
both of central importance to the legal system as a whole and outside the
adjudicator’s specialized area of expertise, must still be reviewed on a
standard of correctness, in order to safeguard a basic consistency in the
fundamental legal order of our country. The nature of the “home statute”
administered by a human rights tribunal makes the task of resolving this
tension a particularly delicate one. A key part of any human rights legislation
in Canada consists of principles and rules designed to combat
discrimination. But, these statutes also include a large number of provisions,
addressing issues like questions of proof and procedure or the remedial
authority of human rights tribunals or commissions.
There is no doubt that the human rights
tribunals are often called upon to address issues of very broad import. But,
the same questions may arise before other adjudicative bodies, particularly the
courts. In respect of some of these questions, the application of the Dunsmuir
standard of review analysis could well lead to the application of the standard
of correctness. But, not all questions of general law entrusted to the Tribunal
rise to the level of issues of central importance to the legal system or fall
outside the adjudicator’s specialized area of expertise. Proper distinctions
ought to be drawn...
In result in Canadian Human Rights
Commission, the Supreme Court held that the Tribunal’s interpretation of
the remedial provisions in the Canadian Human Rights Act, RSC 1985, c H-6 (in the context
of the Tribunal’s determination regarding its jurisdiction to award costs) was
reviewable on a reasonableness standard. However, as the above-cited passage
demonstrates, the Court also indicated that other questions – possibly related
to the definition of discrimination – might be reviewable on a correctness
standard.
[26]
The
foregoing may well lead to the conclusion that the RPD’s interpretation
of sections 96 and 97 of IRPA - as opposed to its application of the
legal requirements enshrined in them to a particular set of facts – is
reviewable on a correctness standard. Arguably, both sections involve
interpretation of Canada’s obligations under international treaties (the
Convention
Relating to the Status of Refugees and the Convention Against Torture
and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment), which are
matters of general law that could be considered to be beyond the unique
expertise of the RPD. There is authority to support the proposition that
interpretations of provisions in IRPA that flow from or involve Canada’s obligations
under international treaties are reviewable on a correctness standard. In Pushpanathan
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 982 at paras 42-50
[Pushpanathan], the Supreme Court of Canada held that the correctness
standard applied to the Board’s interpretation of the Convention refugee
definition contained in the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of
Refugees, as implemented by sub-section 2(1) of Immigration Act,
RSC, 1985, c I-2, which is now captured by section 96 of IRPA, in
part because of the nature of the questions involved and the Board’s lack of
expertise in respect of them.
[27]
Thus,
it is arguable that the correctness standard is applicable to the third error
alleged by the applicant. For the reasons that become apparent below, however,
this case does not turn on what standard of review is applicable to the Board’s
interpretation of section 97 of IRPA, as, in addition to being incorrect, the
Board’s interpretation of section 97 of IRPA is also unreasonable.
IV.
ANALYSIS
A.
Does the RPD’s credibility finding provide any basis for
intervention?
[28]
Turning
to the first alleged error advanced by the applicant, the Board’s statements
about the applicant’s lack of credibility do not provide any basis for
intervention by this Court because the decision does not turn on these
statements. While the RPD does commence its decision by negatively commenting
on the applicant’s credibility, it accepted his version of events regarding the
actions of the members of the MS, which form the heart of the applicant’s
claims under both sections 96 and 97 of IRPA. The RPD's comments regarding the
applicant’s credibility, therefore, were largely obiter dicta. As the decision
was not based on the credibility findings, any errors made in respect of
assessing the applicant’s credibility are irrelevant to the outcome and,
therefore, cannot provide any basis for intervention.
[29]
The
wording of section 18.1(4)(d) of the FCA requires that an impugned factual
finding must meet three criteria for relief to be granted: first, it must be
truly or palpably erroneous; second, it must be made capriciously, perversely
or without regard to the evidence; and, finally, the tribunal’s decision must
be based on the erroneous finding (Rohm & Haas Canada Limited v Canada
(Anti-Dumping Tribunal) (1978), 22 NR 175, [1978] FCJ No 522 at para 5 [Rohm
& Haas]; Buttar v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 1281 at para 12, [2006] FCJ No 1607 [Buttar]).
Thus, findings that are inconsequential or that amount to obiter cannot
provide a basis for review. Accordingly, the first of the alleged errors raised
by the applicant provides no basis for intervention.
B.
Were
the RPD’s determinations regarding the conduct (past and future) of the
Salvadoran police unreasonable?
[30]
Turning,
next, to the RPD’s section 96 analysis, the applicant alleges that the Board’s
characterization of the treatment the applicant suffered at the hands of the
Salvadoran police was unreasonable and that its conclusion regarding what was
likely to happen to the applicant in the future at the hands of the police was
likewise unreasonable because that conclusion was premised on an unreasonable
factual finding regarding the actions of the police. In my view, there is
considerable force in this argument.
[31]
The
RPD characterized the Salvadoran police force’s actions towards the applicant
in the following terms:
Although police in El Salvador
took some aggressive actions in searching for the claimant, believing that he
may have ties to the gang that murdered a police officer, insufficient credible
evidence was presented to indicate that police acted inappropriately in their
investigation of the murdered police officer. … The claimant did not provide
any credible evidence to indicate that police wanted anything other than to
interrogate him about any possible connection he had to the Maras, his possible involvement in the police
murder and his knowledge of Carlos’ involvement in the police murder. … As
such, I find that it is unreasonable for the claimant to fear the police
officers investigating the murder of a fellow police officer by purported gang
members. (Decision at para 21)
[32]
These
conclusions are unreasonable in light of the evidence from the applicant, to
the effect that the Salvadoran police assaulted him and assaulted his father.
The Board’s general statement regarding the applicant’s lack of credibility, in
my view, cannot provide a basis for disbelieving that these assaults occurred,
because the Board accepted the applicant’s version of events regarding the
actions of the MS and, in terms of credibility, drew no distinctions between
the applicant’s claims regarding what he alleged occurred at the hands of the
MS as opposed to at the hands of the Salvadoran police. Simply put, there is no
reason for the Board to have believed large parts of the applicant’s version of
events but to have not accepted what he alleged occurred with the Salvadoran
police. An assault is much more than “some aggressive action” and is
inappropriate behavior for a law enforcement official to engage in. Given the
assaults the police engaged in (and their continued search for the applicant),
it was not unreasonable for the applicant to have feared further assaults from
the police. Thus, the RPD’s conclusions that Salvadoran police did not act
“inappropriately” and that it was unreasonable for the applicant to fear the
police were contrary to the evidence before the Board. Factual determinations
that are contrary to the evidence before a tribunal are subject to being set
aside as unreasonable under section 18.1(4)(d) of the FCA (see e.g. Rahal
at para 38; Cepeda-Gutierrez
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (1998), 157 FTR 35,
[1998] FCJ No 1425 at para 14).
[33]
Had
the RPD properly accepted that the assaults occurred, it would have been
necessary for it to analyze whether or not the fear of the Salvadoran police
claimed by the applicant would entitle him to protection under section 96 of IRPA.
The Board did not conduct this analysis in the decision. Accordingly, this
matter must be remitted back to it, in order for the requisite analysis to be
undertaken by the RPD (the matter being one for the Board and not this Court to
decide).
C.
Was
the RPD’s interpretation of section 97 of IRPA unreasonable and/or incorrect?
[34]
Turning,
finally, to the third error alleged, as noted, the RPD held that the applicant
faced a unique personalized risk of death but that this risk was a generalized
one within the meaning of paragraph 97(1)(b)(ii) of IRPA because gang-related
crime is rampant in El Salvador. In this regard, the Board stated that it “…
accepted that the [applicant] was subjected personally to a risk to his life” (decision
at para 33). It then concluded that “the fact that the [applicant] has been
identified personally as a target, does not necessarily remove him from the
generalized risk category…” (decision at para 34). The Board reasoned that the
MS, who run rampant in El Salvador, posed a risk of attempts to recruit, extort or
assault to many Salvadorans. The Board thus concluded that the risk the
applicant faced was generalized because the “nature of the crimes faced by the
[applicant] is widespread in El Salvador and not specific to
him” (decision at para 34).
[35]
Section
97 of IRPA provides:
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.
Person
in need of protection
(2) A
person in Canada who is a member of a class of
persons prescribed by the regulations as being in need of protection is also
a person in need of protection.
|
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
Personne
à protéger
(2) A
également qualité de personne à protéger la personne qui se trouve au Canada
et fait partie d’une catégorie de personnes auxquelles est reconnu par
règlement le besoin de protection.
|
[36]
As
noted, in my view, the interpretation given by the RPD to section 97 of IRPA in
the decision is both incorrect and unreasonable. It is simply untenable for the
two statements of the Board to coexist: if an individual is subject to a personal
risk to his life or risks cruel and unusual treatment or punishment, then that
risk is no longer general. If the Board’s reasoning is correct, it is unlikely
that there would ever be a situation in which this section would provide
protection for crime-related risks. Indeed, counsel for the respondent was not
able to provide an example of any such situation that would be different in any
meaningful way from the facts of the present case. The RPD’s interpretation
would thus largely strip section 97 of the Act of any content or meaning.
[37]
In
recent years, this Court has been called upon to review a multitude of RPD decisions
interpreting the notion of generalized risk enshrined in paragraph 97(1)(b) of IRPA.
To a large extent, these decisions turn on their own particular facts,
including the reasoning from the RPD that the Court was called upon to review.
The cases may be divided into two groups.
[38]
On
one hand, in several cases similar to the present, the Court has overturned RPD
decisions where the claimant had been personally targeted for violence by one
of the criminal gangs operating in Central or South America (see e.g. Pineda
(2012); Lovato v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012
FC 143 at para 7, [2012]
FCJ No 149
(Rennie) [Lovato]; Guerrero v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2011 FC 1210, [2011] FCJ No 1477 (Zinn) [Guerrero];
Dias v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 705, [2011] FCJ No 914 (Beaudry); Gomez
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1093, [2011] FCJ No 1601 (O’Reilly) [Gomez];
Uribe v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1164, [2011] FCJ No 1431 (Harrington); Vasquez
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 477, [2011] FCJ No 595 (Scott) [Vasquez];
Barrios Pineda v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011
FC 403, [2011]
FCJ No 525
(Snider) [Barrios Pineda]; Zacarias v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2011 FC 62, [2011] FCJ No 144 (Noël) [Zacarias];
Munoz v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC
238, [2010]
FCJ No 268
(Lemieux) [Munoz]; Pineda v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2007 FC 365, [2007] FCJ No 501 (de Montigny) [Pineda
(2007)]).
[39]
Opposite
conclusions were reached in the other group of cases, where the Court upheld
the RPD’s decisions in situations where gangs made threats of future harm to
the claimants but the threats were found to be insufficient to place the
claimant at any greater risk than others in the country (see e.g. Rodriguez
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 11, [2012] FCJ No 6 (Russell); Rajo
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1058, [2011] FCJ No 1277 (Kelen); Chavez
Fraire v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 763, [2011] FCJ No 967 (Zinn); Baires
Sanchez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 993, [2011] FCJ No 1358 (Crampton); Guifarro;
and Carias v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC
602, [2007]
FCJ No 817
(O’Keefe)). In several of these cases, however, the RPD did not make a
determination like it did in the present case to the effect that the applicant
had been personally targeted and was at risk of death. Thus, the two
lines of cases do not necessarily conflict with each other.
[40]
In
my view, the essential starting point for the required analysis under section
97 of IRPA is to first appropriately determine the nature of the risk faced by
the claimant. This requires an assessment of whether the claimant faces an
ongoing or future risk (i.e. whether he or she continues to face a “personalized
risk”), what the risk is, whether such risk is one of cruel and unusual
treatment or punishment and the basis for the risk. Frequently, in many of the
recent decisions interpreting section 97 of IRPA, as noted by Justice Zinn in Guerrero
at paras 27-28, the “… decision-makers fail to actually state the risk
altogether” or “use imprecise language” to describe the risk. Many of the
cases where the Board’s decisions have been overturned involve determinations
by this Court that the Board’s characterization of the nature of the risk faced
by the claimant was unreasonable and that the Board erred in conflating a
highly individual reason for heightened risk faced by a claimant with a general
risk of criminality faced by all or many others in the country.
[41]
The
next required step in the analysis under section 97 of IRPA, after the risk has
been appropriately characterized, is the comparison of the correctly-described
risk faced by the claimant to that faced by a significant group in the country
to determine whether the risks are of the same nature and degree. If the risk
is not the same, then the claimant will be entitled to protection under section
97 of IRPA. Several of the recent decisions of this Court (in the first of the
above-described line of cases) adopt this approach.
[42]
For
example, in Lovato, Justice Rennie set aside the RPD’s decision for
being unreasonable because the RPD inappropriately characterized the nature of
the risk faced by the claimant as the risk of gang violence. On the facts, the
applicant and his family members were victims of extortion by the MS, one of
his uncles had been killed by them, and the applicant received threats that his
family would be killed should he fall short in making the extortion payments.
Justice Rennie noted at para 13 that the evidence demonstrated that “the MS was
specifically targeting the applicant to an extent beyond that experienced by
the population at large.” He continued at para 14:
[S]ection 97 must not be interpreted in a manner that strips
it of any content or meaning. If any risk created by “criminal activity” is
always considered a general risk, it is hard to fathom a scenario in which the
requirements of section 97 would ever be met. Instead of focusing on whether
the risk is created by criminal activity, the Board must direct its attention
to the question before it: whether the claimant would face a personal risk to
his or her life or a risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment, and
whether that risk is one not faced generally by other individuals in or from
the country.
[43]
Similarly,
in Guerrero, Justice Zinn found that the RPD had mischaracterized the
risk faced by the claimant as a risk of general criminality, even though the
gang members, who were trying to recruit the claimant, had violently killed his
grandmother before his eyes. Justice Zinn held that the RPD had seriously
minimized the nature of the threat faced by the claimant and quashed the Board’s
decision. In so doing, he noted at para 34 that “where a person is specifically and
personally targeted for death by a gang in circumstances where others are
generally not, then he or she is entitled to protection under s. 97 of the Act
if the other statutory requirements are met”.
[44]
To
somewhat similar effect, in Gomez at para 38, Justice O’Reilly set aside
a decision of the RPD in circumstances where the claimants were victims of
extortion, threatened kidnapping and assault. He noted:
The applicants were originally subjected to threats that are
widespread and prevalent in El
Salvador. However,
subsequent events showed that the applicants were specifically targeted
after they defied the gang. The gang threatened to kidnap [one of the
applicant’s] wife and daughter, and appear determined to collect the applicants’
outstanding “debt” of $40,000. The risk to the applicants has gone beyond
general threats and assaults. The gang has targeted them personally.
[Emphasis added]
[45]
Likewise,
in Vasquez at paras 31 and 32, Justice Scott quashed a decision of the
RPD in a case where the claimant, who had been a member of a military task
force charged with eradicating the MS 13 and MS 18 gangs, was savagely beaten
and threatened with death by gang members. Justice Scott held:
[T]he applicant has been personally targeted in the past,
and will be in future … contrary to what the Board found, [the risk is] …
personalized in that the participation of the applicant in the Antimaras task
force significantly heightened his risk relative to that of young men in El
Salvador.
The Board cited documentary evidence about the influence of
the Maras gangs throughout the Americas, and specifically about the dangers
inherent in their recruitment practices. The Board found that the applicant's
participation in the armed forces stemmed from the fact that he had been
targeted for recruitment, and found that the threats and attacks made against
him were mainly due to his refusal to join the gang. The Board’s view appears
to be that there is no relevant distinction between a refusal to join the gang
and participation in an anti-gang task force. This Court finds that this is not
a reasonable possible conclusion because the applicant’s participation in the
Antimaras operation has affected and significantly altered the risk he faces
from MS 13, so as to make it a personalized risk not faced by other young men
in the armed forces or in the population at large. The attempt on his life was
triggered by the fact that he had openly fought and participated in the
imprisonment of MS 13 gang members.
[46]
In
Barrios Pineda at (at paras 12 and 13), the applicant was a doctor, who
had treated a gang member, whom he denounced to the police. Thereafter, he
received death threats from the MS, which prompted him to flee El Salvador. Justice Snider
set aside the RPD’s decision, finding it to be unreasonable. She noted that:
[O]n a basic level, the Applicant is a victim of crime.
However, the facts of this case are unusual in that the Applicant claims to
have been personally and directly targeted by MS-18… In other words, this is
not a generalized fear of being targeted by MS-18 just because the Applicant is
a citizen or because of his profile as a doctor. The nature of the risk he now
faces is not the same as the risk he faced prior to treating the gang member —
before he treated the gang member, he was susceptible to extortion or violence,
whereas now he is specifically and individually targeted for his perceived
actions, unlike the general population.
In virtually all of the cases cited by the Respondent, the applicants
were not targeted personally per se. While the gangs may have known
their names, their personal information, and may have even threatened them or
assaulted them on a number of occasions, the nature of the threat was still
generalized. The gang could have gone after anyone with perceived wealth, or
any young person who may be recruited into their gang. These people were
essentially means to an end for the gang members. I doubt that it really
mattered whether person A or person B gave the gang the money for which they
were searching, even if both parties were personally threatened. Similarly, I
doubt that it really mattered whether person C or person D joined their cause,
provided that they continued to increase their membership. The situation before
me is fundamentally different. The Applicant presented a story to the Board of
being at risk because he was perceived to be a person who “ratted out” an
individual gang member.
[47]
Similarly,
in Zacarias, Justice Noël set aside a decision of the RPD, where the
claimant claimed to fear the MS because he had reported the extortion he was
facing to the police, along with another vendor, who was killed by the MS. The
claimant thereafter received death threats from the MS. Justice Noël held that
the applicant was not targeted in the same manner as any other vendor in the
market and his risk was different because he faced reprisal for his report to
the authorities. Likewise, in Munoz, Justice Lemieux held that manager of
a car dealership, who refused gang extortion and was subsequently threatened, was
entitled to protection with his family under section 97 of IRPA. To similar
effect, in Pineda (2007) at para 15, Justice de Montigny quashed
the RPD’s decision, holding that:
It cannot be accepted, by implication at least, that the
applicant had been threatened by a well-organized gang that was terrorizing the
entire country, according to the documentary evidence, and in the same breath
surmise that this same applicant would not be exposed to a personal risk if he
were to return to El Salvador. It could very well be that the [MS] recruit from
the general population; the fact remains that Mr. Pineda… had been specifically
targeted and was subjected to repeated threats and attacks. On that basis, he
was subjected to a greater risk than the risk faced by the population in general.
[48]
In
the present case, the RPD determined that the applicant faced a risk of death
from the MS but did not elaborate that this was due to his having been a
suspected police informant. It thus failed to carry out the first step in the
required analysis under section 97 of IRPA. This, in turn, led the Board to
conflate the risk faced by the applicant with that faced by all men of the
applicant’s age in El Salvador, whom it noted all face the risk of
recruitment, threats and physical assault by criminal gangs. The Board thus
erroneously concluded that the risk faced by the applicant was the same as the
risk faced generally by other individuals in El Salvador.
[49]
This
finding is both unreasonable and incorrect. In making this determination, I
recognize that the reasonableness standard is a deferential one and provides
that the
Court may intervene only if it is satisfied that the reasons of the tribunal
are not “justified, transparent or intelligible” and that the result
does not fall “within the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are
defensible in respect of facts and law” (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008
SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, at para 47). The RPD’s determination in the present
case is unreasonable because its ruling irrationally concludes that the applicant
was in the same situation as any other young man in El Salvador, when this patently was
not the case.
[50]
Like
the claimants in the many cases cited above, the applicant in this case faced a
heightened and different risk not faced by other young men in El Salvador
because the MS had threatened him in order to obtain retribution for his having
spoken to the police and provided Carlos’ mother’s address to them. Carlos was
shown to have joined the MS and he personally made a death threat to the
applicant. The applicant’s situation was thus fundamentally different from that
of others, who might be generally at risk of recruitment, threats or even
assault by the MS. The applicant, though, was found to directly and personally
face the risk of death. This is a far cry from the risk of extortion,
recruitment or assault and thus the applicant’s risk is much more significant
and more direct than that faced by other men in El Salvador. Accordingly,
the RPD’s decision is both unreasonable and incorrect.
V. CONCLUSION
[51]
In
light of the foregoing, the RPD’s decision will be set aside and the applicant’s
claim will be
remitted to the RPD for re-determination by a differently constituted panel of
the Board.
[52]
No
question for certification under section 74 of IRPA was presented and none
arises in this case as the errors committed by the Board are closely tied to
the facts of this case and the issue of which standard of review is applicable
is not determinative to the result I have reached.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S
JUDGMENT is that:
1.
This
application for judicial review of the RPD’s decision is granted;
2.
The
RPD’s decision is set aside;
3.
The
applicant’s refugee claim is remitted to the RPD for re-determination by a
differently constituted panel of the Board;
4.
No
question of general importance is certified; and
5.
There
is no order as to costs.
“Mary
J.L. Gleason”