Date: 20090824
Docket: IMM-585-08
Citation: 2009
FC 841
Ottawa, Ontario, August 24, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mandamin
BETWEEN:
HONG
LIAN LI
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an application
pursuant to section 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
S.C., 2001, c. 27 (“IRPA”) for leave to commence a proceeding pursuant
to section 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act, R.S., 1985, c.F-7. The
Applicant seeks judicial review of a decision from a panel of the Refugee
Protection Division (“the Board”) of the Immigration and Refugee Board of
Canada (“IRB”) refusing her claim for refugee status.
[2]
The
Applicant, Ms. Hong Lian Li, is a Chinese citizen who had permanent residence
status in Argentina. She sought refugee status
because she feared violence at the hands of her divorced spouse in Argentina and also because she feared
she was sought by the Chinese authorities because of alleged harbouring of
Falun Gong in a residence she owned in China.
[3]
The Board
decided that Ms. Li had not proved to its satisfaction that she had lost her
permanent status in Argentina. It decided Ms. Li, as a
permanent resident, was entitled to return to Argentina and could avail herself of state
protection against domestic violence there. The Board denied her claim for
refugee status because she was excludable under Article 1(E) of the Refugee
Convention and because of the availability of state protection in Argentina.
FACTS
[4]
Ms. Li is a 38 year old
Chinese citizen. She married in 1992 and gave birth to her first child, a
daughter, in 1993. In 1994 the Applicant and her husband decided they wanted a
son. They were prevented by China’s one child policy from having other
children, so they moved to Argentina. They left their daughter behind with her
paternal grandmother. They had a son in Argentina in 1995. In 1996 they applied to become permanent residents in Argentina, this application was finally granted in 2003.
[5]
The couple ran a
supermarket in Buenos Aires. Ms. Li accuses her husband of getting
drunk and beating her on several occasions. The Applicant says she did not
seek help from police. She did not report these assaults to the police in past
because she did not speak Spanish. In August 2004 the couple decided to end
their relationship. Since they were married in China,
they decided to divorce there. Two years later, the ex-husband wanted to sell
the supermarket. Ms. Li who had remained in China
after the divorce, went to Argentina because the sale required her consent.
[6]
The Applicant was given
$20,000 in cash from the proceeds of the sale by her husband. That night, Ms.
Li says, two Chinese men robbed her in her hotel room. They held a gun to her
head and forced her to hand over the $20,000 she received earlier that day. She
says the men told her that her husband demanded she leave Argentina and if she didn’t he would kill her. She reported
this to the police with the help of the manager at the hotel where she was
staying since he was Chinese and spoke Spanish. The Applicant says the police
treated her claim lightly, suggesting she try to settle her dispute with her
husband. She says she persisted and the police said they would look into the
matter. The Applicant believes nothing was done because she said she spoke
with a friend of her ex-husband and asked if police had questioned him and the
friend said they hadn’t. The Applicant says she did not follow up with her
report to the police because she did not have any faith in them.
[7]
Ms. Li was in a hurry
to return to China. She says her only travel option was to
return via Toronto. The Applicant applied for a transit visa
and it was granted. The Applicant left Buenos Aires for China, transiting in Toronto. While in Toronto, She says she called her mother in China who warned that security forces were looking for her.
The Applicant owns a rental property in China.
The authorities arrested practitioners of Falun Gong in the apartment. The
Applicant believed Chinese authorities would find her guilty by association. She
says she will face the same persecution as did members of the religious cult if
she returns to China. The Applicant submitted evidence
indicating her daughter was dismissed from school because of the Falun Gong
tenants.
[8]
The Applicant does not
want to return to Argentina because she says she will live in constant
fear her ex-husband will see through his threat to kill her and the police are
not reliable protection for her.
THE DECISION UNDER REVIEW
[9]
The Board decided that
the Applicant is excluded from refugee status by Article 1(E) of the Refugee
Convention. It then determined the Applicant has not adduced enough evidence
to prove that the state is unable or unwilling to protect her from domestic
violence if she were to return to Argentina.
[10]
The Board found the
Applicant was excluded from refugee status because Article 1(E) provides:
This
Convention shall not apply to a person who is recognized by the
competent
authorities of the country in which he has taken residence as
having
the rights and obligations which are attached to the possession of the
nationality
of that country.
[11]
The Board applied the
test in Shamlou v. Canada (M.C.I.), [1995] F.C.J. No. 1537 at para. 35
which poised four questions in relation to rights of residence in a country being
whether there was:
(a) the right to return to the country of residence;
(b) the right to work freely without restrictions;
(c) the right to study, and
(d) full access to social services in the country of residence.
[12]
The Board found in Ms. Li’s
testimony sufficient satisfaction of the above criteria. It found that she had
permanent resident status in Argentina at the time of her application for refugee status
with no date of expiry. The
Board found it unnecessary to analyze the Applicant’s prospects for returning
to China because of its finding that the Applicant
could return to Argentina.
[13]
The Board referred to the
presumption that states can protect their citizens, and its accessory
conclusion that applicants for refugee status must provide some evidence to
prove a state is unwilling or unable to provide that protection.
[14]
The
Board took issue with the quality of the Ms. Li’s evidence she proffered on the
question of state protection available to the Applicant in Argentina. The Board found the Applicant didn’t fully pursue her
options for state protection from her divorced husband. In result, the Board
concluded the Applicant has not exhausted the options of state protection
available to her and had not rebutted the presumption of state protection.
ISSUES
- Did the Board err in its assessment
of evidence on whether the Applicant had a right to return to Argentina?
- Did the Board err by failing to have
regard for adverse documentary evidence on the availability of state
protection in Argentina for victims of domestic violence?
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[15]
The Supreme Court in Dunsmuir
v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 recognized two standards of review:
correctness and reasonableness.
[16]
In Sittampalam
v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 65, I found the proper standard of
review since Dunsmuir with respect to the treatment of evidence was
reasonableness.
[17]
In Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration) v. Khosa,
2009 SCC 12 at para. 59, Justice Binnie stated “…there might be more than one
reasonable outcome. However, as long as the process and the outcome fit
comfortably with the principles of justification, transparency and
intelligibility, it is not open to a reviewing court to substitute its own view
of a preferable outcome.”
ANALYSIS
Did the Board err in its assessment of evidence on
whether the Applicant had a right to return to Argentina?
[18]
Ms. Li
asserts that she had been absent from Argentina for over two years by the time
of the Board’s decision and that her permanent residence status in Argentina has expired. She relies on a
2008 KPMG Report for business executives which notes that “individuals who have
been resident in Argentina shall lose their residence
status when they acquire permanent residence in another country or remain in
another country for 12 months or more.”
[19]
In Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Choovak, [2002] F.C.J. No. 767
Justice Rouleau followed the reasoning of the Federal Court of Appeal in The
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration v. Mahdi, [1995] F.C. J. No 1623
that “the real question that the Board had to decide in this case was whether
the respondent was, when she applied for admission to Canada, a person who was
still recognized by the competent authorities of the United States as a
permanent resident of that country”.
[20]
The Board
found on the evidence that Ms. Li had acquired permanent resident status in
2003 with no date of expiry. The Board also found she was able to return to Argentina after her divorce
notwithstanding she had been away from Argentina and in China for almost two years. The Board also
noted that the Applicant had not made any effort to approach the Argentine
authorities to inquire whether she could re-enter Argentina after being in Canada.
[21]
I find it
was reasonably open for the Board, on the evidence before it, to reach the
conclusion that the Applicant had a right of return to Argentina and that Article 1E had application in
her case.
Did the Board err by
failing to have regard for adverse documentary evidence on the availability of
state protection in Argentina for victims of domestic violence?
[22]
In Ward
v. Canada (Attorney General), [1993] 2 S.C.R. 689, the Supreme Court of
Canada provides guidance in cases where state protection is an issue, “…the
claimant will not meet the definition of “Convention refugee” where it is
objectively unreasonable for the claimant not to have sought the protection of
his home authorities; otherwise, the claimant need not literally approach the
state”.
[23]
The
Applicant cites a report from the United States Department of State which
offers a recent (2007) assessment on the protection of women in Argentina against domestic
violence. It generally concludes in spite of government action, violence
against women is still a serious problem in Argentina. The Applicant alleges the Board read
evidence selectively, and drew conclusions solely from evidence of legislative
action in Argentina.
[24]
The
Federal Court of Appeal held in Mahanandan v. Canada (Minister of Employment
and Immigration),
[1994] F.C.J. No. 1228 at para. 7, that a board must consider the documentary
evidence supporting a refugee claimant’s fear.
[25]
The Board acknowledged “some” documents showing domestic violence reportedly
remains a problem in Argentina and “that laws and regulations are not as effective as they
should be…”. The Board stated “the preponderance of objective and reliable
documentary evidence before the panel…strongly suggest that while not completely
eliminating the problems of domestic abuse, the authorities are making serious
efforts to address this issue”.
[26]
Ms.
Li’s minimal effort to secure police protection for herself does not call for a
closer critical examination of the effectiveness of state protection available
to the Applicant. She necessarily relies on documentary evidence.
Accordingly, the Board is entitled to draw its conclusion from the totality of
the documentary evidence before it.
[27]
I find
that the Board did consider the adverse documentary evidence indicating
problems with provision of state protection from domestic violence for women.
The Board’s conclusion is reasonable having regard to the whole of the evidence
before it.
CONCLUSION
[28]
The
Applicant has not made out that the Board’s decision on exclusion or its
decision on state protection was unreasonable. The application for judicial
review does not succeed.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS that:
1. The application for
judicial review is dismissed.
2. No general question of
importance is certified.
“Leonard
S. Mandamin”