Date: 20110811
Docket: IMM-7652-10
Citation: 2011 FC 990
Ottawa, Ontario,
August 11, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
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BASKARAN GURUSAMY
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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 pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (Act) for judicial
review of the decision of the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) of the
Immigration and Refugee Board, dated 15 November 2010 (Decision), which refused
the Applicant’s application to be deemed a Convention refugee or a person in
need of protection under sections 96 and 97 of the Act.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The Applicant is a
citizen of Sri Lanka. Prior to coming to Canada, he lived in Colombo with his spouse and their daughter. The
Applicant and his spouse married in May 2006. He is Tamil and his spouse is
Sinhalese. He claims in his Personal Information Form (PIF) that “many people”
disapproved of and harassed both him and his wife for marrying outside their
ethnic groups. He also testified at the hearing that, even prior to the events
described herein, he was targeted by the authorities for questioning, as were
many other Tamils.
[3]
In May 2007, the
police, having received information from an undisclosed source that he was
helping the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), arrested the Applicant and
questioned him. They pulled him by the shirt but did not harm him physically.
Two days later, they released him. As a result of this experience, the
Applicant started looking for work outside of Sri Lanka.
[4]
In August 2008, he
relocated to Papua New
Guinea as part of his
employment. His spouse and daughter joined him later that year. While there,
the family obtained visas to travel to the US for a
family wedding in 2009 which, ultimately, they did not attend.
[5]
In 2009 there was an
outbreak of cholera and malaria in Papua
New Guinea. The Applicant
and his wife, believing that things were safer in Sri Lanka because the war was
over, decided that the spouse and daughter should return to live in Sri Lanka,
and they did so in June 2009. On 19 September 2009, the Applicant visited them
for a month and a half. Upon his re-entry, the authorities questioned him
regarding his job, his earnings and his place of residence. Later, the
Applicant requested and was granted permission by his employer to extend his
visit.
[6]
On 7 October 2009,
the police again arrested the Applicant, based on an accusation that he was
working with the LTTE. Over the course of three days, the police questioned and
beat him. They released him after his spouse paid a bribe, but they also warned
him that the next time that he was arrested he would not be released.
[7]
The Applicant claims
that, on 2 November 2009, members of the paramilitary group, Karuna (the Karuna
group), came to his house, identified themselves as members of the Karuna group
and threatened to accuse him falsely of assisting the LTTE if he did not give
them two million rupees. The Applicant promised to pay. However, on 7 November
2009, after seeing to the safety of his spouse and daughter, he fled Sri Lanka,
traveling via the United
Kingdom and the US to Canada, where he made a refugee claim on 24 November 2009.
[8]
The
Applicant appeared before the RPD on 15 September 2010. He was represented by counsel
and an interpreter was present. His section 96 claim was based on his race,
nationality and perceived political opinion as a Tamil. The RPD rejected both
the section 96 claim and the section 97 claim. The determinative issues, as
stated, were lack of
credibility, absence of subjective fear and absence of serious harm amounting
to persecution. This is the Decision under review.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
The Section 96 Claim
[9]
With
respect to the police arrest of the Applicant in 2007, the RPD noted that “while being arrested is certainly not a
pleasant experience,” the Applicant was not treated in a way that constitutes
persecution. Persecution requires “‘serious harm’ that is repetitive and
persistent, in a systemic way and caused for a reason that is related to the
Convention.” The RPD noted that the police had a lawful right to detain and
question the Applicant, and the shirt pulling incident does not constitute
serious harm.
[10]
With
respect to the police arrest of the Applicant in 2009, the RPD reviewed
documentary evidence demonstrating that the country was experiencing “enforced
disappearances of persons suspected of LTTE links, arrest and detention … on
limited evidence and often for extended periods … and use of informal places of
detention.” The RPD observed that the Applicant’s detention lasted only for
three days, it was not in an informal place and his treatment did not
constitute “serious harm.” On this basis, the RPD concluded that the Applicant
was not persecuted.
[11]
With
respect to the Applicant’s claim that his spouse then had to pay a bribe to
secure his release, the RPD rejected this evidence in favour of the documentary
evidence. According to the 2007 Human Rights Watch Report, it was only in the
northern and eastern provinces of the country that the Karuna group and Sri
Lankan security forces worked “in tandem” to carry out extortions and
abductions; no such cooperation was evident in Colombo. The RPD found that the Applicant had
“embellished the gravity of the treatment he endured, and merely alluded to
other situations [of persecution] without presenting any evidence.”
[12]
The
RPD also found that the Applicant lacked subjective fear. He and his family
never used their US visitors’ visas to
escape from Sri
Lanka. The
Applicant was “casual” about allowing his spouse and daughter to return to Sri
Lanka from Papua
New Guinea.
Although he had a good job outside his home country, he re-availed for a visit
in 2009 and then requested permission to extend that visit. The RPD found that
a “person who is truly in fear for his life would not have returned, especially
to a country with a long history of conflict involving Tamil people ….”
Moreover, when he did decide to leave Sri Lanka, he chose not to reactivate his visa to Papua
New Guinea but instead to seek asylum in Canada. En route to Canada, he passed through the United Kingdom and
the US but made a claim in
neither country. The RPD concluded that his fear could not have been “so
serious” if he had the option of “shopping for where he want[ed] to go.”
The Section 97 Claim
[13]
With respect to the
section 97 claim, the RPD stated that, “[d]ue to [his] lack of credibility, and
the lack of serious harm, and lack of subjective fear,” the Applicant is not a
person in need of protection in that his removal would not subject him
personally to a risk to life or to cruel or unusual treatment or punishment or
to a danger of torture.
[14]
With respect to the
Applicant’s 19 September 2009 return to Sri
Lanka and the police
questioning at that time, the RPD noted that, according to the documentary
evidence, airport officials are responsible, inter alia, for enforcing custom
laws and collecting tariffs, investigating and laying charges in criminal
matters, and investigating document malfeasance, human smuggling and
trafficking. In light of this, it is “natural, and within their mandate” to
question in detail persons returning from abroad.
ISSUES
[15]
The
Applicant formally raises the following issue:
Did the RPD err in fact,
err in law, breach procedural fairness or exceed its jurisdiction in
determining that the Applicant was not a Convention refugee?
[16]
Based
on the Applicant’s arguments, I have restated the issues as follows:
a.
Whether the RPD erred
by ignoring material evidence;
b.
Whether the RPD’s Decision,
overall, was reasonable; and
c.
Whether the RPD
deprived the Applicant of procedural fairness by failing to conduct a separate
analysis under section 97.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[17]
The
following provisions of the Act are applicable in these proceedings:
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; or
(b) not having a country of nationality, is outside the country
of their former habitual residence and is unable or, by reason of that fear,
unwilling to return to that country.
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.
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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;
b) soit, si elle n’a pas de nationalité et se trouve hors
du pays dans lequel elle avait sa résidence habituelle, ne peut ni, du fait
de cette crainte, ne veut y retourner.
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.
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STANDARD OF REVIEW
[18]
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 the 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.
[19]
The
first and second issues concern the RPD’s treatment of the evidence and its
expertise as a decision-maker in immigration matters. These issues are
reviewable on a standard of reasonableness. See Dunsmuir, above, at paragraphs 51 and 53; and Ched
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 1338 at paragraph 11.
[20]
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.”
[21]
The
third issue, procedural fairness, is reviewable on the correctness standard.
See Khosa, above, at paragraph 43. When applying the correctness standard, a reviewing court will not show
deference to the decision-maker’s reasoning process. Rather, it will undertake
its own analysis of the question.
ARGUMENTS
The Applicant
[22]
The Applicant claims
that the RPD’s “overarching error” is its failure to deal properly with the
claim based on the Karuna group. The RPD refers to it briefly in paragraph 23
of the Decision but never indicates why the Applicant’s claim that he fears the
Karuna group is rejected. This is a reviewable error. See Miguel v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2004 FC 94
at paragraph 18.
[23]
However,
the Applicant also asserts that the RPD’s section 97 analysis is deficient. According
to the US DOS Report for 2009, the Karuna group is responsible for human rights
violations. The Applicant adduced such evidence to support his section 97 risks,
and the RPD has a duty to evaluate it and provide an appropriate analysis. See Anthonimuthu
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2005 FC
141 at paragraphs 51-52. The
RPD commented that it would be lawful for airport authorities to question the
Applicant should he return to Sri Lanka but, in the Applicant’s view, the section 97 analysis must extend
beyond what would happen to the Applicant at the airport.
[24]
The
Applicant’s section 97 claim should have been assessed separately from his
section 96 claim. Even if the Applicant was found to lack subjective fear, his specific
circumstances must be assessed in light of the objective documentary evidence,
including the country’s human rights record. See Kandiah v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2005 FC
181 at paragraphs 16-18.
[25]
The
Applicant also claims that the RPD erred in finding that, although he was
beaten by the police during his 2009 detention, he did not suffer “serious
harm.” The Applicant argues that the RPD must consider his particular
circumstances and that, if it had done so, it would have appreciated that it was
clear from the record that he was arbitrarily arrested because he is a Tamil.
As Justice Yves de Montigny observed in Thavam Sinnasamy v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2008 FC 67
at paragraph 27, “police forces are never entitled to arrest people in a
discriminatory way even during a state of emergency.”
[26]
With
respect to the Applicant’s subjective fear of persecution, the RPD ignored
important evidence in its assessment of why he made no claim for asylum until
he arrived in Canada. First, he was in the UK in transit and for less
than one day. It is unreasonable for the RPD to fault him for not claiming
there. Second, the Applicant offered a reasonable explanation for why he made
no claim in the US: he had been told by friends who had previously been
employed at the Sri Lankan embassy that, if he did so, he would be deported
back to Sri
Lanka. The
Applicant argues that, if it is unreasonable to expect him to approach his own
government for protection when doing do is futile, then it follows that it is
unreasonable to expect him to approach a foreign government when he believes it
to be futile. The RPD offers no explanation for why it rejects the Applicant’s
genuine belief on this point.
[27]
Finally,
the Applicant contends that the RPD’s findings regarding re-availment are unreasonable,
given that his escape from Sri Lanka was precipitated by incidents that happened after he
returned to Sri Lanka from Papua New Guinea and not before then.
The Respondent
[28]
The
Respondent argues that the RPD acted reasonably in factoring into its analysis
of subjective fear the Applicant’s failure to claim refugee protection at the
earliest opportunity, his 2009 voluntary reavailment following his two-day
detention by Sri Lankan police in 2007 and his subsequent choice to extend that
2009 visit. These actions evidence a lack of genuine fear for his safety.
[29]
The
Respondent challenges the Applicant’s argument that the RPD failed to deal
thoroughly with his alleged fear of the Karuna group. The RPD acknowledged the
Applicant’s allegation that the group threatened him and attempted to extort
money from him, but it found that the allegation was inconsistent with
documentary evidence indicating that the Karuna group and the Sri Lankan police
act “in tandem” to carry out such crimes in the eastern and northern provinces
but not in the Applicant’s city of residence, Colombo. The RPD simply found the
allegation to be not credible.
[30]
With
respect to the Applicant’s claim that he is a person in need of protection, the
Respondent submits that there is no absolute obligation on the tribunal to
conduct a separate analysis where the section 96 analysis demonstrates that
there is no evidence to support the section 97 claim. See Mahadeva v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 415 at paragraph 15. Such was the case
here. The RPD found that there was insufficient credible evidence to show that
the Karuna group was cooperating with the police and that the Applicant
suffered “serious harm” at the hands of the police. In short, in the absence of
evidence of personalized risk, a section 97 analysis is unnecessary.
[31]
The
Applicant claims that the police arrested him because he is of Tamil ethnicity.
There is no evidence of this. The evidence suggests, rather, that the police
arrested him because they had received reports that he was assisting the LTTE,
and his arrest was consistent with the Emergency Regulations. Moreover, the
determination as to whether discrimination amounts to persecution is properly
left to the RPD. See Ahmad v Canada (Solicitor General) (1995), 93
FTR 227, [1995]
FCJ No 397 (QL) at paragraphs 3-8, 19-21.
The Applicant’s Reply
[32]
The
Applicant contends that the Decision, while it mentions his fear of the Karuna
group, fails to “come to grips” with it. Also, the RPD’s credibility findings
are not expressed in clear terms. Although the RPD does not find that the
Applicant is lying about being targeted by the Karuna group, it dismisses his
fear of them as evidence supporting his claim. Similarly, the RPD does not find
that the Applicant was not mistreated when he was detained in 2009; rather, it
concludes that the Applicant embellished and exaggerated the details of his
treatment. These examples demonstrate that the RPD failed to provide clear and unmistakable
reasons for rejecting the Applicant’s evidence. If the RPD preferred the documentary
evidence to the Applicant’s evidence, it was duty-bound to state its reasons
for so doing. See Ndoci v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 698 at
paragraph 26. As it did not, it committed a reviewable error.
The Respondent’s Further
Memorandum
[33]
The
RPD found that the Applicant’s evidence—particularly with respect to his claim
of extortion by the Karuna group—was “vague” and embellished and, in short,
insufficient to establish that he suffered “serious harm.” The Respondent
submits that the RPD was under no obligation to ask him to provide clarifying
details; the onus was on the Applicant to adduce all evidence material to his
claim. The RPD’s expectation that the Applicant would provide some
corroboration to support his testimony was reasonable. As Justice Michael
Phelan stated in Ortiz Juarez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 288 at
paragraph 7: “The requirement for corroboration is only a matter of common
sense.”
[34]
Further,
the RPD’s reasons were adequate in that they informed the Applicant of the
basis for the Decision and enabled him to decide whether to seek leave for
judicial review. The adequacy of the reasons in no way prejudiced the Applicant
in either respect.
ANALYSIS
[35]
Because
of the way this Decision is written it is not easy to assess. Findings and
comments are made out of context and necessary connections are not clarified.
This leaves the Court to read the Decision as a whole to try and determine if a
reviewable error has occurred.
[36]
I
have considerable difficulty following the logic of some aspects of the Decision.
For example, the RPD says, in relation to the Applicant’s transit through the UK and the US before
making his claim in Canada, that “if he was really
and truly fearful, he would have wanted to seek protection at the first
opportunity.” Protection from what? I would assume protection from what the
Applicant fears in Sri
Lanka,
which means that being sent back there is something he would want to avoid. The
Applicant simply transited the UK
on 7 November 2009 and arrived in the US on the same day. He did not seek protection in
the US because he was advised that he would be detained and deported back to Sri Lanka. If this is true, or if
the Applicant truly believed this (and the RPD does not bother to consider his
explanation), then the US is not where he would
want to seek protection. No one in their right mind would seek protection in a
country that will not, or which they believe will not, protect them. To do so
would defeat the whole purpose of the Applicant’s leaving Sri Lanka. In fact, if the
Applicant believed he would be detained by the US and deported back to Sri Lanka, then his
failure to claim in the US supports his subjective
fear. The RPD considers none of this. The Applicant’s brief transit through the
UK and the US is simply held against
him in a formulaic and thoughtless way.
[37]
In
the end, my review of the Decision leads me to conclude that there are
reviewable errors on important points and that it should be returned for
reconsideration.
[38]
It
is not possible to tell from the Decision whether the RPD has truly addressed
the Applicant’s fears regarding the Karuna group. The documentary evidence
referred to in paragraph 15 is about collusion between the security forces and
the Karuna group. But there was other documentary evidence that was drawn to
the RPD’s attention by counsel that the Karuna group is kidnapping young Tamil
males in Colombo for purposes of extortion and that the Karuna faction are “now
a de-facto extension of Sri Lanka’s intelligence services….” This evidence
supports the Applicant’s narrative and is contrary to the RPD’s conclusions
based upon documents that were given preference because “the claimant
embellished the gravity of the treatment he endured, and merely alluded to
other situations without presenting any evidence.” It is not possible to
comprehend what the RPD means here when it refers to embellishment.
[39]
Counsel
for the Respondent has ably suggested that the RPD does deal with the Karuna
group because, in paragraph 15 of the Decision, it finds that the group does
collude with security forces. For reasons given, however, I find that, if the
RPD intended to address the Karuna group in this way, then it should have been
much clearer on point, it should have addressed the contradictory evidence that
was brought to its attention, and it should have explained what it meant by “embellishment”
which is relied upon to prefer the documents cited to the Applicant’s evidence.
See Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Wahab, 2006 FC
1554; and Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v Zhang, 2008 FC 686.
[40]
Also,
the finding of re-availment on September 19, 2001 fails to take into account
that the Applicant fled Sri
Lanka as a
result of two precipitating incidents that occurred after that date. Subsequent
persecution after re-availment does not preclude a person from making a claim
for refugee status without being faced with the re-availment argument. See Prapahavan
v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2001 FCT 272 at paragraph 17.
[41]
Because
the RPD failed to clearly address the Karuna issue as set above, it also
neglected to conduct a proper section 97 analysis. The RPD’s section 97
analysis, in effect, stops at the airport. It does not assess section 97 risks
from the perspective of whether the Applicant faces death or torture from the
Karuna faction after he leaves the airport. This means that there is no clear
finding that the Karuna group can be left out of account and a fundamental
aspect of the claim is not assessed. See Gebremaskel v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 341 at paragraph 8.
[42]
As
pointed out above, I find the RPD’s use of the Applicant’s brief transit
through the UK and the US unreasonable. There is
no acknowledgment or assessment of the reasons the Applicant gave for his
belief that if he tried to claim in the US he would simply be detained and
deported back to Sri
Lanka. The
source of this information means that the Applicant’s belief had a reasonable
basis. See Gurung v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 1097.
[43]
There
are other aspects of the Decision that are problematic but I think these major
points are sufficient to render it unreasonable.
[44]
Counsel
agree there is no question for certification and the Court concurs.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is
that
1.
The
application is allowed. The Decision is quashed and the matter is returned for
reconsideration by a differently constituted RPD.
2.
There
is no question for certification.
“James Russell”