Docket: IMM-414-11
Citation: 2011 FC 1095
Ottawa, Ontario, September 26,
2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
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CATHY DEYMIA FRANCIS
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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 ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
Cathy
Deymia Francis came to Canada fleeing domestic violence in Saint Lucia. While not
questioning the veracity of Ms. Francis’ story of serious physical and sexual
abuse suffered at the hands of her former domestic partner, the Refugee
Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board nevertheless dismissed
her claim for refugee protection on the basis that adequate state protection
was available to her in Saint Lucia.
[2]
At
the conclusion of the hearing I advised the parties that I would be allowing this
application as I was satisfied that the reasons given by the Board for
rejecting Ms. Francis’ claim were inadequate. These are my reasons for coming
to that conclusion.
Background
[3]
Ms.
Francis was physically and sexually assaulted by her partner on a number of
occasions between July of 2008 and March of 2010. Several of these assaults
resulted in serious physical injuries to Ms. Francis.
[4]
According
to Ms. Francis, she went to the police station after a particularly bad beating
in order to make a report. She was told that the officer she was dealing with
had more pressing things to attend to, and that she should “go home and give
[her] man a good loving and all will be well”. She says that she left the
station in tears, not knowing what else to do.
[5]
A
second attempt to seek assistance from the police ultimately led to Ms. Francis
obtaining a restraining order from the Family Court. This order did not,
however, prevent Ms. Francis’ partner from coming to her home and holding her
prisoner for a week, during which time he assaulted her and burnt her hand with
hot oil. Ms. Francis was finally able to call her son when her partner was
sleeping, and the son then contacted the police.
[6]
By
the time an officer came to Ms. Francis’ home, her partner had left. According
to Ms. Francis, the police officer did nothing other than tell her to call the
officer if she saw her partner around. Ms. Francis made a number of follow-up
calls to the police in order to find out what was happening, but it does not
appear that any investigation of her allegations was ever carried out, nor was
her former partner ever arrested or charged with an offence.
Analysis
[7]
The
Board’s reasons consist of 12 paragraphs. The first six paragraphs provide
factual background information and identify state protection as the
determinative issue in the case. Paragraph seven is a three-page single-spaced
extract of an IRB Response to Information Request with respect to the
availability of state protection for women in Saint Lucia. The issue
of state protection is dealt with in paragraphs eight to ten of the Board’s
reasons, and the last two paragraphs of the decision deal with the disposition
of the case.
[8]
Paragraph
eight contains the Board’s finding that adequate state protection mechanisms
are available for battered women in Saint Lucia. The paragraph states,
in its entirety, that:
States are not required to provide
perfect protection and, while the sources within the documentary evidence above
are mixed, I find on a balance of probabilities based upon it that Saint Lucia has at least adequate state
protection mechanisms for women in place.
[9]
Ms.
Francis argues the Board did nothing more than a “cookie cutter” analysis. I
do not agree. The Board did no analysis whatsoever. All the Board did was cut
and paste a lengthy extract from country condition information into its
decision, and then state a conclusion.
[10]
The
information relied upon by the Board to support its finding of adequate state
protection for female victims of domestic violence in Saint Lucia was not
consistent. While portions of the document suggested that police take
complaints of domestic violence seriously, other portions of the same document
question the adequacy of that protection.
[11]
Moreover,
some portions of the Response to Information Request that were included in the
Board’s decision actually suggest that there is little willingness on the part
of the Saint Lucian police to investigate or prosecute individuals involved in
domestic violence and few resources available to support battered women and
their families.
[12]
While
recognizing that the evidence before it was indeed “mixed”, the Board provided
no explanation as to why it found that the portions of the Response to
Information Request that supported a finding of adequate state protection
should be given greater weight than those portions that led to the opposite
conclusion. Indeed, there is no analysis whatsoever of the adequacy of the
state protection available to battered women in Saint Lucia. As such,
the Board’s reasons are clearly inadequate.
[13]
The
Board does go on in paragraphs nine and ten of its decision to briefly examine
Ms. Francis’ own efforts to access state protection in Saint Lucia. After
reviewing the treatment she received at the hands of the police, the Board
concluded that “local failures to provide effective police [protection] do not
amount to a lack of state protection unless part of a broader pattern, and
that has not been established here” [emphasis added].
[14]
I
have already addressed the Board’s failure to analyze the “broader pattern” in
relation to the adequacy of state protection for victims of domestic violence
in Saint
Lucia.
To the extent that the Board based its finding regarding the inadequacy of Ms.
Francis’ own efforts to seek police protection on its finding regarding the
“broader pattern”, the reasons are similarly insufficient.
[15]
Whether
Ms. Francis should have been expected to attempt to do more than she did to
access state protection in Saint Lucia depended on whether
state protection could reasonably have been expected to be forthcoming.
[16]
There
is no requirement that a victim of domestic violence make repeated attempts to
access state protection if the country condition information shows that the
state in question is unwilling or unable to assist victims such as the
claimant. The complete failure of the Board to come to grips with this
fundamental question means that its reasons were insufficient and that the
application must be allowed.
[17]
Neither
party has suggested a question for certification, and none arises here.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES
that:
1. This
application for judicial review is allowed, and the matter is remitted to a
differently constituted panel for re-determination; and
2.
No
serious question of general importance is certified.
‘Anne Mactavish”