Date: 20101027
Docket: IMM-506-10
Citation: 2010 FC 1054
Ottawa, Ontario, October 27, 2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice O'Reilly
BETWEEN:
RATNARAJAH
SINNAMMAH
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I.
Overview
[1]
Ms. Sinnammah Ratnarajah has been living in Canada with her daughter and grandchildren
since 2002. She left her home in Sri Lanka in 1998, and then lived in India for four years before travelling
to Canada. She is 68 years old.
[2]
Ms. Ratnarajah sought refugee protection in Canada based on her fear of the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). A panel of the Immigration and Refugee Board
(IRB) denied her claim; this Court then denied her leave to seek judicial
review. Ms. Ratnarajah also applied for a pre-removal risk assessment (PRRA)
and made a request for a humanitarian and compassionate exemption (H&C)
from the usual requirement that applicants for permanent residence apply from
outside Canada.
[3]
An immigration officer dealt with both the PRRA
and the H&C, and dismissed both applications. Ms. Ratnarajah returned to Sri Lanka after making an unsuccessful
request for a stay of removal. As she has left Canada, her PRRA application is moot (Perez v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 663). Her
H&C is not.
[4]
The officer dismissed the H&C because Ms.
Ratnarajah had failed to show that she would suffer unusual, undeserved or
disproportionate hardship if she were required to apply for permanent residence
from Sri Lanka instead of within Canada. The main thrust of Ms. Ratnarajah’s application was that current
conditions in Sri Lanka are so
appalling - especially for people who, like her, are of Tamil ancestry from the
north of Sri Lanka - that she
would suffer serious hardship if forced to return there.
[5]
Ms. Ratnarajah submits that the officer failed
to consider important evidence in her favour, which caused the officer to
render an unreasonable conclusion. She asks me to overturn the officer’s
decision and order another officer to reconsider her application.
[6]
I agree that the officer overlooked important
evidence and rendered an unreasonable decision. I must, therefore, allow this
application for judicial review.
[7]
The sole issue is whether the officer’s decision
was unreasonable.
II.
The Officer’s Decision
[8]
As mentioned, the main focus of Ms. Ratnarajah’s
H&C application was her contention that she would suffer serious hardship
in Sri Lanka due to the
deplorable conditions there, especially for Tamils from the north. She also
maintained that an elderly woman who would be perceived to be relatively
well-off would be at greater risk of extortion, kidnapping, and other criminal
acts.
[9]
After reviewing the evidence supporting her
refugee claim and the IRB’s negative decision, the officer referred to
documentary evidence relating to human rights abuses and violence in Sri Lanka. The officer believed that the
evidence showed that the problems in Sri Lanka either affected the entire population or persons who were not
similarly situated to Ms. Ratnarajah.
[10]
The officer went on to identify a number of
areas where conditions had recently improved in Sri
Lanka:
• no recent
abductions, disappearances or murders in Jaffna;
• curfews had been
relaxed;
• more police officers were going to be hired, many from
the Tamil and Muslim minority populations;
• anyone with an identity card can now live in Jaffna;
• Tamils have been released from refugee camps and have
been given some financial assistance.
[11]
The officer concluded that Ms. Ratnarajah’s
H&C application was not supported by evidence showing that the hardship she
would suffer on return to Sri Lanka was unusual, undeserved or disproportionate.
III.
Was the Officer’s Decision Unreasonable?
[12]
Ms. Ratnarajah maintains that the officer
overlooked significant evidence. In particular, she cites an April 2009 report
from the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) that includes the
following statements:
• Violations of the rights of women and children, in
particular in the conflict zones and areas of heavy displacement, are a serious
problem.
• Wide scale arrests and detentions of Tamils have been
reported throughout the country.
• The Government has been heavily criticized for the high
number of Tamils who have been subjected to arrest and security detention,
particularly on the basis of information gathered in registration exercises and
questioning at cordons and road checkpoints in and around the capital.
• Abductions of civilians have also been reported in
Colombo and the Western Province. The recorded cases involve
predominantly Tamil abductees, particularly young Tamils.
• Serious human rights violations continue to be committed
by multiple actors in Sri Lanka [who] have all been implicated in the high
number of abductions, disappearances, killings, extortions and forced
recruitments in Sri Lanka.
[13]
The Minister argues that Ms. Ratnarajah’s
submissions amount, in effect, to an invitation to reweigh the evidence before
the officer. In addition, the Minister points out the officer was clearly aware
of the UNHCR report; it was referred to in the officer’s PRRA decision.
[14]
In my view, the UNHCR report points to
circumstances that may well amount to unusual, undeserved or disproportionate
hardship for Ms. Ratnarajah. Clearly, not all of the documentary evidence was,
as the officer concluded, relevant only to the population of Sri Lanka as a whole and to persons whose
circumstances were unlike Ms. Ratnarajah’s. The officer was obliged at least to
refer to evidence that contradicted that conclusion, and to explain why the
other evidence was more relevant or persuasive.
[15]
It is true, as the Minister notes, that the
officer was aware of the UNHCR report. However, the officer merely noted that
the report was not binding and did not refer to any of its contents. While the
report was not binding, it was important evidence for the officer to consider.
[16]
I conclude that the officer’s decision was
unreasonable because of the failure to consider significant evidence supporting
Ms. Ratnarajah’s H&C application.
IV. Conclusion and Disposition
[17]
The officer overlooked important evidence that
contradicted his main conclusion. I find that the officer’s decision was
unreasonable, as it did not fall within the range of possible, acceptable
outcomes, based on the facts and the law. I must, therefore, allow this
application for judicial review and order a reconsideration of Ms. Ratnarajah’s
H&C application by another officer. Neither party proposed a question of
general importance for me to certify, and none is stated.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is
that:
1.
The
application for judicial review is allowed and the matter is referred back to
another officer for reconsideration;
2.
No
question of general importance is stated.
“James
W. O’Reilly”