Date: 20070810
Docket: IMM-4300-06
Citation: 2007 FC 830
Ottawa, Ontario, August
10, 2007
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Barnes
BETWEEN:
JANE EGRE SONIA CAMACHO
ALEJANDRA JACINTA ELISE PHILLIP
(a.k.a. Alejandra J.E. Phillip)
Applicant(s)
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent(s)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review by Jane Egre Sonia Camacho and her minor
daughter, Alejandra Jacinta Elise Phillip, from a decision of the Refugee Protection
Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board (Board) given at Toronto on June
28, 2006.
Background
[2]
Ms.
Camacho is a citizen of Venezuela and of Trinidad and
Tobago (Trinidad). Her
daughter is a citizen of Trinidad. Their protection claim was based upon
allegations of spousal abuse in both Venezuela and Trinidad. Ms.
Camacho claimed to have been abused in Venezuela at the hands
of a boyfriend in the early 1990’s. This caused her to flee Venezuela to return to
her birthplace in Trinidad.
[3]
In
1997 in Trinidad, Ms. Camacho
formed a common-law relationship with the manager of the casino where she was
employed. This was also an abusive relationship from which Ms. Camacho
attempted to escape but, when Alejandra was born in 1999, she returned to her
spouse. Nevertheless the threats and physical abuse continued unabated and in
2004 the Applicants left for Canada ostensibly to visit Ms. Camacho’s mother.
Several months after arriving in Canada, Ms. Camacho initiated
her protection claim.
[4]
It
was acknowledged by Ms. Camacho that she did not seek out any form of police or
state protection in either Venezuela or in Trinidad before she
left those countries. Her explanations for not seeking protection in Venezuela were that
she could not speak Spanish and that she doubted that the police would help.
Her explanation for not seeking protection in Trinidad was that she did not
believe the police would take her complaint seriously.
The Board Decision
[5]
The
Board recognized that domestic abuse was a serious problem in Venezuela and in
Trinidad. It found, however, that both countries were functioning democracies
with independent judiciaries and with available protective institutions and
resources for victims of abuse.
[6]
The
Board concluded that Ms. Camacho had failed to rebut the presumption of state
protection principally because she had not made a “determined effort” to exhaust
the available “avenues of protection.” It also concluded that her failure in
that respect was “objectively unreasonable.”
Issues
[7]
(a) What
is the standard of review applicable to the issues raised on this application?
(b) Did
the Board commit any reviewable errors in its decision?
Analysis
[8]
The
Applicants contend that the Board erred by failing to take appropriate account
of evidence which identified deficiencies in the state protection services
available to the victims of spousal abuse in both Venezuela and Trinidad. They
say that the evidence before the Board was sufficient to displace the
presumption of state protection in both countries and that the failure to
recognize the probative significance of this evidence was a reviewable error.
These are matters of mixed fact and law which are reviewable on a standard of
reasonableness: see Hinzman v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship), 2007 FCA 171, [2007] F.C.J. No. 584 at para. 38.
[9]
This
is a case which turned on the Board’s assessment of the reasonableness of
Ms. Camacho’s failures to pursue any avenues of police or state protection
before leaving Venezuela and, later, Trinidad. The Board considered Ms.
Camacho’s explanations for those decisions and found them to be objectively
deficient. That determination was reasonable on the evidence before the
Board. A reasonable decision is, of course, one which is supported by a
tenable explanation and need not be, in the eye of Court, a compelling
explanation: see Law Society of New Brunswick v. Ryan, 2003 SCC 20,
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 247 at para. 55.
[10]
The
Applicants’ arguments in this proceeding essentially call for the Court to
reweigh the evidence bearing on the adequacy of state protection in Venezuela and in
Trinidad and to reassess Ms. Camacho’s conduct in light of that evidence. That
is not the function of the Court on judicial review. Indeed, it is difficult
to be critical at all of the Board’s decision in this case having regard to the
recent admonition of the Federal Court of Appeal in Hinzman, above, at
para. 57:
“Kadenko and Satiacum
together teach that in the case of a developed democracy, the claimant is faced
with the burden of proving that he exhausted all the possible protections
available to him and will be exempted from his obligation to seek state
protection only in the event of exceptional circumstances: Kadenko at
page 534, Satiacum at page 176. Reading all these authorities together,
a claimant coming from a democratic country will have a heavy burden when
attempting to show that he should not have been required to exhaust all of the
recourses available to him domestically before claiming refugee status. In
view of the fact that the United
States is a
democracy that has adopted a comprehensive scheme to ensure those who object to
military service are dealt with fairly, I conclude that the appellants have
adduced insufficient support to satisfy this high threshold. Therefore, I find
that it was objectively unreasonable for the appellants to have failed to take
significant steps to attempt to obtain protection in the United States before claiming refugee
status in Canada.”
I take it from the above statement that, in
the absence of a compelling explanation, a failure to pursue state protection
opportunities within the home state will usually be fatal to a refugee claim –
at least where the state is a functioning democracy with a willingness and the
apparatus necessary to provide a measure of protection to its citizens. Ms.
Camacho’s excuses for not seeking help in Venezuela and in Trinidad were hardly
compelling. Here, I would adopt the remarks by my colleague, Justice Michael
Phelan, in Kim v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship), 2005 FC
1126, [2005] F.C.J. No. 1381 where he stated that a refugee claimant does not
rebut the presumption of state protection in a functioning democracy by
asserting only a “subjective reluctance to engage the state.”
[11]
In
conclusion, this application for judicial review is dismissed. Neither party
proposed a certified question and no issue of general importance arises on this
record.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ADJUDGES that this application for judicial review is dismissed.
“ R. L. Barnes ”
FEDERAL COURT
NAME OF COUNSEL AND SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-4300-06
STYLE OF CAUSE: JANE
EGRE SONIA CAMACHO ET AL v. MCI
PLACE OF HEARING: TORONTO, ONTARIO
DATE OF HEARING: JULY 25, 2007
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT BY: BARNES, J.
DATED: August 10, 2007
APPEARANCES:
DEBRA SHELLY FOR
THE APPLICANT
MARIANNE ZORIC FOR
THE RESPONDENT
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
BARRISTER &
SOLICITOR
ROBERT GERTLER
& ASSOCIATES FOR THE APPLICANT
5341 DUNDAS
STREET WEST
TORONTO, ON M9B 1B1
P: 416-231-9188
EXT. 35
F: 416-231-9492
JOHN H. SIMS,
QC FOR THE RESPONDENT
TORONTO, ON
P: 416-954-8046
F: 416-954-8982