Date: 20110727
Docket: IMM-5208-10
Citation: 2011
FC 941
Ottawa, Ontario,
July 27, 2011
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
|
ZU RONG LI
|
|
|
Applicant
|
and
|
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND
IMMIGRATION
|
|
|
Respondent
|
|
|
|
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 23 July 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 the People’s Republic of China. With the assistance
of a smuggler, he travelled from China under a false passport and arrived in Canada on 15 April 2007. He was interviewed at the port of entry (POE) by immigration
authorities, who asked why he was seeking refugee protection. The Applicant
said that, in China, he had filed a complaint against officers of the Public
Security Bureau (PSB) who were continually extorting money from his family’s
fruit stand. In consequence, he was arrested, jailed for a day and then
released. When the PSB began looking for him once again, he fled to Canada. He stated that he had no other problems with the police. The Applicant never said
during this interview that he was being sought by the PSB for being a Christian
and attending an unregistered house church.
[3]
In
his Personal Information Form narrative (PIF) and in his testimony at the
hearing the Applicant admitted that he had fabricated the story of extortion
and that religious persecution was the real reason for his fleeing China. In fact, the Applicant had never been jailed for any reason. He explained that he
did not claim religious persecution when he first arrived in Canada because the smuggler had told him that, if he did, he would be returned to China.
[4]
In
his PIF, the Applicant alleged that he joined a 12-member unregistered
Christian house church in Fujian Province in May 2006. A pastor came to the
group’s meetings on three or four occasions and, on one of these occasions, he
was baptized. On 4 February 2007, during a group meeting, two lookouts spotted
the PSB approaching and gave a warning. The Applicant escaped and went to a
friend’s home to hide. While there, he learned that three other church members
had been arrested and that the PSB had evidence against him. His family was
advised to report the Applicant’s whereabouts to the authorities but, instead,
they contacted a smuggler to assist the Applicant in leaving the country. The
PSB searched for the Applicant at his family’s home on seven or eight
occasions, most recently at Christmastime in 2009. At no time did they leave a
summons or an arrest warrant. Soon after arriving in Canada, the Applicant
began to attend a Christian church in Toronto. He attends regular services as
well as Bible studies.
[5]
The
Applicant fears returning to China because he believes that the PSB is still
looking for him, that they would be able to find him anywhere in the country
and that he would not be able to practise his chosen form of Christianity
without being persecuted or at risk.
[6]
The
Applicant appeared before the RPD on 12 February 2010. The hearing was
conducted by videoconference. The Applicant was represented by counsel and an
interpreter was present. The RPD found that the Applicant’s version of events
was not credible and that, should he return to Fujian Province, he would not
face a serious possibility of persecution for practising his chosen form of
Christianity, nor would he face a risk to life or a risk of torture or cruel
and unusual treatment or punishment. This is the Decision under review.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
The RPD Did Not Find the
Applicant’s Evidence to Be Credible
[7]
The
RPD did not find satisfactory the Applicant’s explanation for failing to
mention to immigration authorities at the POE that he had been pursued by the PSB for participating in an underground Christian house church. First, the Applicant could not
explain why the smuggler would believe that Canadian immigration authorities would
frown upon illegal religious activity in China. Second, if the smuggler had
warned the Applicant against making a religiously-based claim, the Applicant
would be unlikely to describe Canada as a “democratic, peaceful, civilized
country” that “would guard every citizen’s rights not to be violated,” which is
what he wrote in his POE statement. Third, setting aside the fact that the
Applicant’s statement in his PIF that his aunt helped him locate a smuggler
conflicted with his testimony at the hearing that his parents had that
responsibility, the RPD also found it unlikely that the aunt and/or parents
would arrange to send the Applicant to Canada if they were told by the smuggler
that Canadian authorities would likely deport the Applicant if they found out
that he had engaged in illegal religious activity in China. The RPD therefore found that the Applicant’s explanation for initially concealing the true basis for
his coming to Canada was not credible. Moreover, the RPD found that the
Applicant’s lack of legal counsel at the time was irrelevant since “[a]
statement of alleged truth does not require the prior advice of counsel.”
The Country
Conditions Documentation Does Not Support the Applicant’s Claim
[8]
The
RPD acknowledged that, while it is not always necessary for an applicant to
provide corroborating evidence, particularly where the lack of such evidence is
reasonably explained, the Applicant nonetheless provided no statements,
letters, affidavits, Chinese church membership records, arrest warrant or jail
visit records to support his version of events. Coupled with the documentary
evidence, the vast majority of which reports no incidents of persecution of
members of small underground house churches in rural areas of Fujian Province, the Applicant’s evidence was found insufficient to establish a credible
factual basis for his claim. The RPD concluded that there was “no more than a
mere possibility” that the Applicant would face persecution on the basis of his
religion and that, on the balance of probabilities, he would not face section
97 risks or dangers.
The Sur Place Claim Is Not Well-Founded
[9]
The
RPD accepted that the Applicant was currently a practising Christian. However,
it found that, if he were return to China and choose to worship in an
unregistered house church in Fujian Province, as he has stated he would, he could
do so freely without any serious possibility of persecution “by way of arrest,
detention, constraint, theological interference, or material impediment.”
[10]
The
RPD recognized that the treatment of Protestant Christians varies throughout China and between rural and urban areas, with the latter being more restrictive. However, even
the Applicant’s documentary evidence indicated that Fujian is among the
provinces with the most liberal religious policies; some of its churches, Bible
schools and missions have been allowed to operate “for years.” The only
reference to possible religious persecution in Fujian was contained in two
letters from the president of the China Aid Association, neither of which
provided specific examples of persecutory events in Fujian. The RPD found that,
given that nearly all of the Applicant’s documents came from Christian sources
that track the persecution of Christians in China, and given that none of them
indicated more than a mere possibility that regular members of underground
Protestant churches in Fujian would be persecuted, the Applicant would not face
a serious possibility of persecution due to his religion nor would he face any
of the risks and dangers set out in section 97 of the Act if he were to return
to China. Therefore, his claims pursuant to sections 96 and 97 were dismissed.
ISSUES
[11]
The
Applicant raises the following issues:
i.
Whether
the RPD erred in its assessment of the Applicant’s credibility; and
ii. Whether the RPD
erred in its assessment of the sur place claim.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[12]
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.
|
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.
|
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[13]
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.
[14]
Credibility
assessment is within the RPD’s area of expertise. It is reviewable on a
standard of reasonableness. See Aguebor v Canada (Minister of Employment and
Immigration) (1993), 160 NR 315, 42 ACWS (3d) 886 (FCA); Aguirre v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 571 at paragraph 14; and Dunsmuir,
above, at paragraphs 51 and 53.
[15]
The
assessment of the evidence regarding the Applicant’s sur place claim
also is reviewable on a standard of reasonableness. See Aleziri v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 38 at paragraph 11.
[16]
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.”
ARGUMENTS
The Applicant
There Was No
Evidence to Rebut the Presumption of Truth
[17]
The
Applicant argues that the RPD acted unreasonably in finding that the
inconsistencies of his PIF and testimony when compared to his POE statement
were sufficient to rebut the presumption that an applicant’s claims are true. See
Permaul v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1983), 53 NR
323, [1983] FCJ No 1082 (QL) (FCA). The Applicant’s explanation that the
smuggler warned him not to tell immigration officials that he had been
practising Christianity illegally in China was plausible. The Applicant was so warned
immediately before disembarking from the airplane and did not have time to
consider the wisdom of this advice nor to confirm its accuracy, as he did not have
access to counsel during his POE interview. The Applicant’s lack of experience
and education, his understandable reluctance to trust any authority figure and
the fact that he was in detention at the time coalesced in such a way that the
smuggler’s warning seemed credible to the Applicant. The RPD took none of this into account. Instead, it applied North American logic to the Applicant’s
behaviour. See Mohacsi v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2003 FCT 429 at paragraph 22. The RPD also failed to bear in mind that dhe
Applicant’s explanation for withholding information from Canadian immigration
authorities came within a month of the POE interview.
[18]
With
the exception of the POE inconsistency, the RPD cited no other material
inconsistencies in the Applicant’s testimony.
The Sur Place Claim
[19]
The
RPD found the Applicant to be a practising Christian here in Canada but concluded that, if he were to return to Fujian Province and practise Christianity in an unregistered
house church, he could “do so freely without any serious possibility of
persecution by way of arrest, detention, constraint, theological interference,
or material impediment.”
[20]
The
Applicant challenges this finding on two grounds. First, the Patriotic Church in China offends his religious beliefs. Second, the country conditions
documentation is mixed with respect to whether persons similarly situated to
the Applicant can practise their religion in China. The RPD erred by engaging
in a “selective review” of the documentation when, according to the jurisprudence,
the Applicant should receive the benefit of the doubt. For example, the
Reverend Ko, in his letter, stated that he has been to mainland China where Christians are being persecuted. Also, the president of the China Aid Society
has said that the government is repressive toward Christians in Fujian Province. Moreover, the Federal Court, in Song v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2008 FC 1321 at paragraph 71, held that “there was ample
evidence before the Board that religion is not practised freely within
registered churches in China and that members of underground churches are
persecuted.” The Applicant submits that the RPD ignored persuasive evidence and
case law.
The Respondent
The RPD’s Credibility Findings Were Not Unreasonable
[21]
The
Respondent, in enumerating the Applicant’s credibility problems which were identified
by the RPD, contends that the RPD justified its negative credibility findings
with reasonable and transparent reasons that were grounded in the evidence as a
whole. The burden was on the Applicant to adduce credible evidence that
established on a balance of probabilities a serious possibility that he would
be persecuted for his religious beliefs and practices if returned to his
country of origin. Where the applicant provides no corroborating evidence but
rather expects the tribunal to accept him at his word, the tribunal is entitled
to acknowledge the absence of documents that it could reasonably have expected
to be in evidence to corroborate a story.
[22]
Consistency
and plausibility are important indicators of credibility in an applicant’s
story. See Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) v Dan-Ash
(1988), 93 NR 33, 5 Imm LR (2d) 78 (FCA). The Applicant’s PIF and oral
testimony at the hearing represent a significant departure from the claim made
during the Applicant’s POE interview, at which time the Applicant was given
multiple opportunities to state the truth but expressly denied any basis for
his claim other than alleged extortion of money from the family fruit stand by
public officials. It was also open to the RPD to reject as implausible the
Applicant’s explanation for making this false claim, given the difficulty in
reconciling his alleged belief that Canadian authorities would disapprove of
his illegal religious activity in China and his statement that Canada was a country that would guard everyone’s rights. To overturn a decision based on a
negative credibility finding, the Applicant would have to demonstrate, on a
balance of probabilities, that the RPD committed a palpable and overriding
error that affected the assessment of the facts. See R v Gagnon, 2006 SCC 17 at paragraph 20. This he did not do.
The Assessment
of the Country Conditions Documentation Was Reasonable
[23]
The
RPD carefully considered the documentary evidence in the National
Documentation Package as well as the documentary evidence provided by the
Applicant. It found no reliable evidence that regular members of an underground
house church have ever been arrested in Fujian or had their chosen form of worship
impeded in any significant way. Even the Applicant’s documents, sourced from
Christian groups that track such persecution, provided no specific examples of
persecution.
[24]
The
RPD was not required to accept the Applicant’s testimony at face value. The
truth of such testimony can be rebutted where the documentary evidence fails to
mention “what one would normally expect it to mention.” See Adu v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (1995), 53 ACWS (3d) 158, [1995] FCJ
No 114 (QL) (FCA) at paragraph 1. The Applicant cites as authority Federal
Court jurisprudence wherein the RPD was found to have ignored persuasive
documentary evidence. That is not the case here. The RPD’s weighing of the
evidence, even if in a manner that does not favour the applicant, in and of
itself, provides no grounds for the Court’s intervention where the RPD acted reasonably.
ANALYSIS
[25]
This
case raises a multitude of a familiar issues related to the treatment of
Christians in China. Scores of cases have come before the Court that have very
similar narrative backgrounds and which use very similar arguments and evidence
to attack the RPD’s Decision.
[26]
In
its basic features, the Applicant relies upon what has become an almost generic
set of facts. He became a member of an underground Christian house church in Fujian Province. There were 12 members. A pastor came to the group’s meetings on three or
four occasions. On one occasion the Applicant was baptized. Everything went
well for a time until, one day, during a group meeting, the lookouts spotted
the PSB approaching and gave warning. The Applicant escaped and went into
hiding. He learned that other members had been arrested and that the PSB was
looking for him. They went to his family home on seven or eight occasions. They
left no summons but the Applicant decided that he had to leave China and, with the assistance of his family, he made contact with a smuggler and came to Canada.
[27]
There
is little by way of authenticating detail to distinguish the Applicant’s basic
narrative from many others that have come before the RPD, and then the Court
for judicial review. When such cases come before me for review, I am usually
referred by both sides to competing authorities that go either way on fact
situations and evidence that are not that dissimilar. Fine distinctions are
drawn and, in the end, a great deal seems to depend upon the way the RPD
handled the evidentiary package before it.
[28]
In
this kind of situation, and particularly when an applicant provides no
corroborative evidence, I think the Court must take into account the
difficulties faced by the RPD as it goes about its legitimate business of
deciding who is a genuine refugee and who is not. The presumption of truth, so
often relied upon when no corroborative evidence is produced, does not mean
that the RPD is not entitled to probe and question a claimant’s narrative
through whatever legitimate means are available to it.
[29]
In
the present case, while the Applicant’s basic narrative is close to the generic
sequence outlined above, there are two factors that produce some kind of
variation. The first one is that, when he arrived in Canada by plane the
Applicant never said at the Port of Entry that he was being sought by the PSB
in China for being a member of a Christian underground church. Even though he
was questioned closely about what he was afraid of, his initial story was that
he had filed a complaint against officers of the PSB who were extorting money
from his family’s fruit stand and that the PSB were looking for him for this
reason.
[30]
Also
of significance is that, after he later changed his story to one of religious
persecution, the Applicant provided no corroborative evidence whatsoever from
any friend or family member, or anyone else, that would support any aspect of
his personal narrative.
[31]
Therefore,
the RPD was faced with someone who changed his story to one of religious
persecution after he arrived in Canada and who produced no corroborative
evidence that would support that story.
[32]
The
Applicant has raised a wide range of what he regards as reviewable errors in
the Decision but, as a starting point, I do not think it is unreasonable that,
given these two basic problems, the RPD was suspicious of the Applicant and
felt it was necessary to test and assess his credibility in some way.
Assessment of
Credibility
[33]
The
Applicant has put forward various arguments as to why the RPD was unreasonable
in not finding his allegations of persecution for his religious practices to be
credible. In the end, however, it is my view that the Applicant simply
disagrees with the findings of the RPD and now puts forward various reasons as
to why the Court should also disagree with the RPD. It is not the job of the Court
to submit its opinion for that of the RPD on credibility issues. See Juarez
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 890 at
paragraph 14.
[34]
Some
of the arguments raised are addressed by the RPD in its Decision. For example,
the RPD made it clear why a lack of counsel at the Port of Entry interview
could not explain the false story which the Applicant alleges he told at that
interview. It is possible to disagree with this conclusion but I cannot say that
it falls outside the Dunsmuir range.
[35]
The
Applicant also says that the RPD “applied a North American perspective of what
was plausible in the circumstances rather than examine plausibility from the
standpoint of the Applicant and the snakehead.” The Applicant does not say how
his perspective regarding plausibility differs from that of the RPD. What he
appears to mean is that the RPD did not adopt his perspective because they did
not believe him, and he does not agree with their reasons. The RPD obviously
considered the Applicant’s perspective because it refers to his explanation. I
do not think that this is really a perspective issue. The RPD gave its reasons
and, once again, I cannot say that they fall outside the Dunsmuir range.
[36]
Without
going through them all in detail, I think it is fair to say that each point
raised by the Applicant regarding the credibility finding has some merit. In
fact, it is my view that it would not have been unreasonable for the RPD to
have accepted the Applicant’s explanation and to have made a positive
determination. However, what I cannot say is that, given the fundamental change
in the primary basis for the Applicant’s persecution narrative, and given both the
total lack of any corroborative evidence concerning the Applicant’s narrative
and the objective country documents, the RPD’s assessment of credibility falls
outside of the range of possible acceptable outcomes which are defensible in
respect of the facts and the law. It is possible to disagree with this Decision
on the credibility findings but, in my view, if the Court were now to intervene
it would, in effect, be assessing the evidence itself and substituting its own
opinion for that of the RPD, which the Court cannot do.
[37]
The
RPD’s credibility finding is based in part upon the RPD’s assessment of the
objective evidence and its conclusion that, although Christians may be
persecuted in other parts of China, that evidence does not support the
proposition that the Applicant would face persecution or section 97 risk in
Fujian if he were to practise his chosen form of Christianity. This finding
also overlaps with the RPD’s assessment of the same evidence when dealing with
the Applicant’s sur place claim.
Sur Place Claim
[38]
Applicant’s
counsel’s submissions to the RPD on the objective documentary evidence raises
controversial and frequently debated issues. The Applicant complains that the
RPD ignored his arguments and some of the issues raised and failed to deal with
them in the Decision. My review of the submissions and the Decision leads me to
the conclusion that perhaps the RPD did not address the submissions in the way
that the Applicant thinks they should have been addressed but that,
nevertheless, the essential ground is covered.
[39]
In
fact, I believe that the RPD in this case took particular care to assess the
available evidence and arrive at its conclusions. Its basic position is that
the situation for Christians is bad in many parts of China, but there are
significant differences among provinces and between urban and rural
communities. As has been found before, the RPD concludes that Fujian is
relatively liberal and that there is no evidence that would support a finding
that the Applicant will face “a serious possibility of persecution for
practicing his chosen form of Christianity in Fujian province if he returns
there”:
23. I
considered the [Applicant’s] documentary evidence to see if it contained
evidence that conflicted with the evidence found in the National Documentary Package.
I found no reliable document that indicates that regular members of a house
church have ever been arrested or detained in Fujian or otherwise had their
chosen form of worship impeded in any significant way. I did not find any
documents which stated that Christian ministers had ever been arrested,
convicted or tortured in Fujian. The exception to this lack of reference to Fujian in the [Applicant’s] documents were two letters from the President of the Chinese Aid
Association which is based in Texas and Washington DC. In these letters, the
writer states that “religious repression continues to occur in every province
in China, including Guangdong and Fujian province.” He adds that “repression of
unauthorized religious activity is a nationwide campaign mandated by the
Chinese Communist Party”. However, the writer provides no specific examples
whatever of any particular persecutory events ever happening in those two
provinces. It is an assertion without further evidence. Moreover, his inference
(and those of some of the Christian sources referenced in Exhibit 6) that the
repression in practice is mandated nationwide, from the top down, is at odds
with the other specific documentary evidence referred to above that there is a
wide geographic range of actual religious oppression in China, with Fujian and
Guangdong being seen as tolerant.
24. This
lack of mention in the [Applicant’s] documents of repression in Fujian is significant. Nearly all of the [Applicant’s] documents come from Christian
sources which track the repression of Christians in China. These sources point
out incidents of Christians being arrested, incarcerated, sent to re-education
through labour camps and tortured by the Chinese authorities for practicing
unauthorized forms of Christianity. The [Applicant’s] documentary evidence
comes from such sources as Epoch Times, Pilgrims Covenant Church, Mennonite
Brethren Herald, BosNews Life Asia Service, Radio Free China, Voice of the
Martyrs in addition to WorldNetDaily, Human Rights without Frontiers and the US
State Department.
25. The
[Applicant’s] documentary evidence corroborates the documentary evidence found
in the National Documentary Package that, if one is merely a regular church
member of an underground Protestant House Church in Fujian, there is less than
a mere possibility that such a member would face a serious possibility of
persecution. If the [Applicant] had resided in other Chinese provinces, such as
Shangdong, Xinjiang, Sichnan Hubei, Yunnan, Henan, Heilongjiang, Shaanxi,
Beijing or Anhui, a different finding may have been reached. In those
provinces, the [Applicant] has found documentary evidence indicating that
ordinary Christians and their leaders have suffered for practicing Christianity
in the way they wish to practice it. Fujian is not mentioned. I find that, in
particular, given the advocacy orientation of many of the Christian documentary
sources of the [Applicant], that, if there were instances of the religious
persecution of unregistered Christian churches in Fujian, such sources would
likely have mentioned them.
26. I
note as well that the China Aid Association itself stated that, in 2007, “house
churches were persecuted across 18 provinces.” There are 22 provinces in China which indicates that, based on at least information available to that Association; one can
conclude that there were provinces in China without such persecution.
[40]
Once
again, I can find nothing deficient or unreasonable about the way in which the
RPD assessed and weighed the available country condition documents in this case
or its conclusions based on those documents.
[41]
The
Applicant places strong reliance upon what Reverend Ko says about the
persecution of Christians in China, but the RPD reasonably explains why such
evidence cannot be used to support the proposition that there is a serious
possibility that the Applicant will be persecuted if he is returned to Fujian. Conditions differ across China, and Fujian, along with Guangdong, is the most
liberal of China’s provinces.
[42]
The
Applicant draws the Court’s attention particularly to the report on the
destruction of house churches in Fujian that is mentioned at page 92 of the
CTR. This occurs in the 22 June 2007 Response to Information Request that
appears in the National Documentation Package:
According
to CAA, while the number of reported raids on house churches in China declined
in 2006, there was an increase in the number of house church demolitions and
forcible closures compared with the previous year (Jan. 2007, 19). In the province of Zhejiang, three house churches were apparently demolished during the year
(ibid.; see also AFP 23 Dec. 2006; ibid. 4 Aug. 2006; The Washington Post
1 Oct. 2006). There were also reports of house churches being destroyed in the
provinces of Jilin and Fujian (CAA Jan. 2007, 19). Forcible closures of house
churches were reported in Anhui province (ibid.; AsiaNews 12 Dec. 2006), as
well as in Guangdong province, Shandong province, Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Region and Shanghai (CAA Jan. 2007, 19).
[43]
This
is the only specific reference to possible persecution in Fujian to which the
Applicant can point. In my view, this one specific reference to house churches
in Fujian cannot be said to render the RPD’s overall assessment of the evidence
unreasonable when the preponderance of the evidence before the RPD is taken
into account. See Yu v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 310 [Yu].
[44]
The
Applicant is right to bring to the Court’s attention the treatment of the same
piece of evidence by Justice Michel Shore in Liang v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 65 at paragraphs 2 and 15-18:
The
destruction of house churches in the Fujian province is evidence, in and of
itself, that the Chinese authorities do not allow Christians to practice their
faith freely. Freedom of religion encompasses the ability to espouse one's
faith publicly, in a manner, individually or collectively, chosen in as much as
not to interfere with the fundamental rights of others. By destroying house
churches, the Chinese government is infringing on that right in a persecutory
manner.
…
The
Board found that the evidence did not support that the Applicant has good
grounds for fearing persecution in an unregistered house church. In making this
finding, the Board reviews the documentary evidence on the Fujian and focuses
particularly on reports of arrests of unregistered Christians in the Fujian and finds that there are no reports of arrests of unregistered Christians in the Fujian. The Board also focused on the size of the Applicant's church, twenty - thirty
members, and found that a church of that size did not need to register.
While
there may not have been any reports of Christians being arrested in the Fujian, reports of persecution of house churches in the Fujian do exist: the destruction of
house churches in that province have been reported. The China Aid Association
considered a reliable, reputable source by the Board, itself, has had it
reported as such. (page 106 at paragraph 3 of the Tribunal (Board) Record.)
The
destruction of house churches in the Fujian is evidence, in and of itself, that
the Chinese authorities do not allow Christians to practice their faith freely.
Freedom of religion encompasses the ability to espouse one's faith publicly, in
a manner, individually or collectively, chosen in as much as not to interfere
with the fundamental rights of others. By destroying house churches, the
Chinese government is infringing on that right in a persecutory manner.
Given the evidence of the destruction of houses of worship in the Fujian province, the Applicant does have substantial grounds to fear persecution if she
chooses to freely exercise her right to freely practice her religion.
[45]
In
my view, there can be no arguing with Justice Shore’s conclusion that the
destruction of house churches, in and of itself, may well constitute evidence
that the Chinese authorities are interfering with fundamental religious rights
in Fujian in a persecutory manner.
[46]
However,
each case depends upon its facts and the way in which the RPD assesses the
evidence. In the present case, the reference to reports of house church
destruction in Fujian in 2007 has to be looked at in the context of all the
other evidence before the RPD concerning Fujian in order to decide whether the
RPD’s overall conclusions about what the Applicant would be likely to face in Fujian are reasonable. The RPD does not just look at arrests and detentions; it also looks
to see if Christians in Fujian have “otherwise had their chosen form of worship
impeded in any significant way.” Other cases in this Court have upheld RPD
decisions involving the alleged persecution of Christians in Fujian. See, for
example, Yu, above; Yang v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2010 FC 1274; Jiang v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2010 FC 222.
[47]
The
reliance upon general statements and findings made by the Court in cases such
as Song, above, and Lin v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 108 are equally misplaced in a situation where the evidence did not
suggest the Applicant faced a serious possibility of persecution in Fujian. Just because the Court may have found in one case that the situation for Christians
in Fujian may not have been adequately assessed and therefore returned the
matter for reconsideration does not mean that the RPD commits a reviewable
error in this case when it assesses the situation in Fujian against the Applicant.
[48]
The
RPD’s review of country conditions was not “selective” as alleged by the
Applicant. The Decision reveals a thorough and thoughtful review of the
available evidence and conclusions that have an objective evidentiary basis.
[49]
In
the end, I agree that is possible to take strong issue with the RPD’s findings
on the sur place claim and that a finding in favour of the Applicant
would not have been unreasonable, but the analysis is thorough and I cannot say
that the RPD’s conclusions fall outside of the Dunsmuir range in this
case. Were the Court to intervene, it would simply be assessing the evidence
itself and substituting its own opinion concerning the situation in Fujian for that of the RPD.
[50]
Counsel
agree there is no question for certification and the Court concurs.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that:
1.
The
application is dismissed.
2.
There
is no question for certification.
“James Russell”