Date: 20071016
Docket: IMM-1426-07
Citation: 2007 FC 1055
Ottawa, Ontario, October 16, 2007
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Barnes
BETWEEN:
ASHLEY
FRANCISCO RODRIGUES
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 Ashley Francisco Rodrigues challenging
a pre-removal risk assessment (PRRA) made on March 11, 2007.
Background
[2]
Mr.
Rodrigues was born in Kuwait in 1983 but because his father is an
Indian citizen he, too, is an Indian national. Mr. Rodriguez has lived only
briefly in India where he
attended boarding school and for the most part, he was raised in Kuwait. The
Rodrigues family is Christian and Mr. Rodrigues’ only language is English.
Mr. Rodrigues and his family were landed in Canada as permanent
residents in June 1997.
[3]
On
January 18, 2002, Mr. Rodrigues was convicted of attempted break and enter with
intent and possession of stolen property. He was sentenced to a conditional sentence
of four months followed by probation. Because of this conviction, he was
ordered deported and a subsequent appeal to the Immigration Appeal Division
(IAD) for a stay was denied. Apparently that decision is the subject of a
separate application for judicial review.
[4]
In
2006, Mr. Rodrigues was convicted of aggravated assault and possession of a
dangerous weapon. For this crime, he was sentenced to a period of
incarceration of two years followed by probation. When this application was
argued before me, Mr. Rodrigues was still serving his jail sentence.
[5]
On
February 8, 2007, Mr. Rodrigues applied for a PRRA. His claim to protection
was outlined in a detailed written submission which included the following
summary of his risk concerns:
There is ample documentary evidence,
showing numerous violent attacks on Christians in India. The religious violence is not abating
and police investigations are inadequate. Christians are persecuted,
discriminated against and ostracized in India.
The risks to the Applicant is further
heightened as he is a complete outsider to India and this factor will draw attention to
him. He is Caucasian, Christian, speaks only English, has no family, friends
or connections in India, and is unfamiliar with customs and culture in India. He will not be able to function
there. He will be perceived as an outsider, and his Christian faith will make
him a target of persecution, harassment, ostracism and attacks. Religious intolerance
is widely practiced in India and violence against Christians
continues unabated.
Ashley Rodrigues lived in India only for a few years as a child – during
the Gulf war. He lived in a boarding school, where only English was spoken and
where he was not allowed to leave the school premises. The school was guarded
and isolated. During that brief time in India, the Applicant could not and did not
assimilate values, culture and language of India. The Applicant was born in Kuwait. He is 23 years old and
lived half of his life in Kuwait and the remaining years in Canada. His only tie to India is his Indian citizenship obtained due
to the citizenship of his father at his birth. The Applicant will not be able
to function in India, will stand out as an
outsider, will have no means of supporting himself and no prospects for the
future. He is terrified that he will be subject to attacks due to his
Christian faith and Western values. He fears that his safety will be
jeopardized and that his life will be at risk.
[6]
In
addition to his personal concerns, Mr. Rodrigues submitted considerable country
condition evidence which described the risk situation in India for members
of the Christian minority. That material referred to instances of violence
directed at Christians carried out mostly by Hindu extremists including
situations where the state response was inadequate.
The PRRA Decision
[7]
After
referencing a number of country condition reports describing the risk situation
in India for members
of the Christian faith, the PRRA Officer concluded that Mr. Rodrigues had failed
to rebut the presumption of state protection in India. The PRRA
decision also contains the following conclusion:
With respect to the particular
circumstances of the applicant, I have taken into consideration his particular
profile specifically as a Caucasian Christian. Nevertheless, based on the
above documentary evidence, I am not satisfied that there is sufficient
evidence before me to indicate that Caucasians would not benefit from the state
protection that is available to Christians of other ethnicities.
Indeed, I am aware that the applicant
does not have a home or family network in India, and that finding employment may be
difficult as he only speaks English. I am sympathetic to the above but note
that such considerations fall under an application under humanitarian and
compassionate grounds. Still, I do note that according to the World Factbook,
English enjoys associate status but is the most important language for
national, political, and commercial communication.
In addition, I have read counsel’s
reference to how the applicant would experience immense psychological stress
upon a removal to India. I note that I have
considered the above assertion, but I do not find sufficient details presented
related to the degree of psychological difficulty the applicant would face. In
this respect I note that there is little medical evidence in the form of a
letter from a licensed psychologist or other medical professional to indicate
such.
Accordingly, based on the totality of the
evidence before me, I do not find that the applicant would face more than a
mere possibility of persecution under section 96 of IRPA. I also do not find
it likely that the applicant would face a risk of torture, risk to life, or a
risk of cruel and unusual punishment as described in paragraphs 97(1)(a) and
(b) of IRPA in India.
Issues
[8]
(a)
Did the PRRA Officer fetter his discretion by relying upon or by
adopting a United Kingdom Home Office Report as the basis for his state
protection finding?
(b)
Did the PRRA Officer err by being unduly selective in his assessment of
the country condition evidence?
(c)
Did the PRRA Officer err in concluding that the evidence before him was
insufficient to engage section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms (Charter)?
Analysis
[9]
The
first and third issues noted above involve questions of fairness and law
respectively for which the standard of review is correctness: see Benitez
v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 461, [2006] F.C.J. No. 631 at
para. 44. The second issue is purely evidentiary in nature for which the
standard of review is patent unreasonableness: see Mugesera v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2005 SCC 41, [2005] S.C.J. No. 39 at para.
38.
Fettering
[10]
Counsel
for Mr. Rodrigues criticized the PRRA Officer’s reliance upon a portion of a report
prepared by the United Kingdom Home Office which evaluated the general,
political and human rights situation in India. That report, titled “Home Office Operational
Guidance Note – India” (OGN Report), states that it should be read in
conjunction with the Home Office Country of Origin Report for India (COI Report).
[11]
Mr.
Rodrigues is not concerned with the OGN Report per se but rather with the PRRA
Officer’s adoption of the following passage from it:
Those experiencing religious intolerance
can reasonably seek protection from the Indian authorities and there is no
evidence to suggest that such protection is not provided. As evidenced by the
NHRC findings in respect to the extreme violence in February 2002 in Gujarat, there is monitoring,
investigation and redress for those who are victim to religious violence even
in the most extreme circumstances. As detailed, perpetrators of religious
violence even in the most extreme circumstances. As detailed, perpetrators of
religious against Christians, Muslims and Hindus have been prosecuted for their
actions.
[12]
It was
strenuously argued by Mr. Waldman that the above statement represents a legal
conclusion that state protection is available in India for members of religious minorities. By
relying upon such a conclusion, the PRRA Officer is said to have fettered his
judgment in the sense that this was the very issue which he was legally obliged
to answer based on the factual evidence before him.
[13]
There is
nothing in the PRRA decision to suggest that the Officer considered himself to
be bound to adopt the findings in the OGN Report and, indeed, that document
does not purport to be a mandatory direction to asylum officers in the United Kingdom. Instead, the Report advises
that asylum claims should be considered on an individual basis. The OGN Report
also draws upon information from numerous source documents including material
from Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the United States Department of
State, various news organizations and the United Kingdom Home Office. There is
nothing to indicate that OGN reports from the United Kingdom are inherently
unreliable and, in fact, their utilization as immigration reference documents
is not uncommon in Canada: see, for example, Figurado v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2005 FC 347, [2005] F.C.J. No. 458. at para 54.
[14]
I also do
not agree that the manner in which the OGN Report was used in this instance
constitutes a fettering of the PRRA Officer’s duty to determine if state
protection was available to Mr. Rodrigues. When viewed in context, the impugned
passage is nothing more than a distillation of other information considered and
accepted by the PRRA Officer. While acknowledging that “conditions relating to
religious intolerance are far from ideal in India”, the Officer independently concluded that
Mr. Rodrigues had failed to rebut the presumption of state protection.
[15]
The above
conclusion was not made in isolation. The PRRA Officer noted the secular,
democratic traditions and institutions in India as well as the generally prevailing
respect there for religious freedom. The PRRA Officer relied upon several
source documents including two United States Department of State Reports to
support the following findings:
·
India has a stable, longstanding
multi-party federal parliamentary democracy;
·
India has free and fair elections;
·
The Indian
Government is generally effective in controlling its security forces;
·
Christians,
as the second largest religious minority in India, can carry out their practices without
interference from the authorities including the establishment of religious
schools and the dissemination of religious information;
·
The
imposition of Hindu-based government policy is subject to judicial review; and
·
The
National Commission for Minorities and the National Human Rights Commission
operate to protect the rights of minorities and human rights generally.
[16]
It is
clear that the PRRA Officer accepted the United States Department of State
Religious Freedom Report for India (2006) as an authoritative
reference. In addition to the passages expressly relied upon, other passages from
that Report supported the thesis that state protection for religious minorities
was available in India. While the authors of that Report recognized that
religious intolerance and violence were serious problems in India, they found that the generally
prevailing condition was that of “peaceful co-existence”. The Report also observed
that attacks against Christians were more prevalent in certain parts of the
country (eg. Gujarat) and often were directed at those who were attempting to
convert Hindus to Christianity. The new national government was reported to
have tightened legislative control over communal violence including the
granting of increased investigative authority to the Human Rights Commission.
A more aggressive policy of prosecuting those responsible for religiously
motivated attacks had also been instituted. The Report went on to observe that,
during 2005, the communal situation in India, by and large, remained under control.
[17]
It is
clear that the PRRA Officer in this case relied upon a number of trustworthy
sources in reaching his conclusion that state protection was available to Mr.
Rodrigues in India. I am not persuaded that he
subordinated his judgment on state protection to the views expressed in the OGN
Report, nor do I agree that the passage challenged by Mr. Rodrigues represents
a conclusion on an issue of law. Rather, it seems to me to represent a factual
conclusion supported by a considerable amount of evidence that victims of
religious intolerance could generally seek effective protection and redress
from the Indian authorities. This was a reasonable conclusion to draw from the
available evidence.
The Evidence Issue
[18]
Mr.
Rodrigues also complains that the PRRA Officer erred by ignoring and
misconstruing evidence and by being unreasonably selective in the evidence he
adopted to support his state protection conclusion.
[19]
There is
no question that the PRRA Officer had a considerable amount of evidence before
him that Christians were frequently victimized by Hindu extremists in India and that the Indian police were sometimes
not responsive. This evidence, however, was not ignored and, in fact, the PRRA
decision contains a fairly representative sampling of the country condition
reports which confirm the extent of the problem. It is, of course, unnecessary
for a PRRA officer to refer to every documentary reference that was placed before
him. In this case, I am satisfied, from the materials cited, that the Officer
clearly understood the scope of the risk faced by Christians in India.
[20]
Much of
the evidence relied upon by Mr. Rodrigues was anecdotal and in the broader
context it was found insufficient to overcome the generally favourable state
protection environment that the PRRA Officer had recognized. The evidence
confirming instances of violence directed at Christians had to be considered in
the overall context of a country with a population exceeding one billion people
and where over twenty million citizens are Christians. Other evidence before
the PRRA Officer established that the risk faced by Christians was
substantially less in certain parts of the country and, in some places,
Christians represented the majority of the population. Also, some of the
evidence relied upon by Mr. Rodrigues on the issue of risk was out of date and
had been supplanted by evidence of an improved post-election risk environment.
[21]
It is also
of some contextual relevance that Mr. Rodrigues tendered no evidence to the
PRRA Officer as to the extent, if at all, that he was a practicing Christian.
This was of some potential significance because many of the documented examples
of religious intolerance in India involved church leaders and
others who were active in the conversion of Hindus. If Mr. Rodrigues had
abandoned any adherence to Christianity, the degree of risk he faced, such as
it was, would have been substantially diminished. Indeed, against the backdrop
of the evidence of Mr. Rodrigues’ history of serious criminality and
incarceration, his assertion of risk based on a Christian identity seems rather
incongruous particularly in the absence of competing evidence attesting to his
adherence to the faith and its practices.
[22]
On this
issue, I agree completely with counsel for the Respondent that the exercise
urged upon the Court on behalf of Mr. Rodrigues involves a reweighing of the
evidence of risk and that is not the function of the Court on judicial review.
Even if it was within my mandate to embark upon a reassessment of this evidence,
I would not have come to a decision any different from that reached by the PRRA
Officer.
The Charter Issue
[23]
Mr.
Rodrigues contends that the PRRA Officer had a duty to consider his life,
security and liberty interests under section 7 of the Charter and failed to do
so. He says that his section 7 interests were engaged by the evidence he put
forward concerning his “exile” to India.
This evidence consisted of a statutory declaration where he asserted that he
had no social, linguistic, cultural or family ties to India and no prospects for advancement. This,
he said, would cause hardship and emotional devastation. Apart from these bare
assertions, no other evidence of hardship was put to the PRRA Officer.
[24]
Here, too,
I agree with counsel for the Respondent. The PRRA Officer did not err by
observing that the hardship considerations advanced by Mr. Rodrigues were more
appropriately addressed within the context of other immigration processes. The
PRRA jurisdiction does not engage the kinds of humanitarian issues that Mr.
Rodrigues now advances: see Kim v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2005 FC 437, 272 F.T.R. 62 at paragraph 70. To the
extent that a person’s section 7 interests may be affected by deportation, they
must be examined against the panoply of options for relief that are available
under the Immigration
Refugee and Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c.27, (IRPA) and cannot be assessed in isolation: see
Powell v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FCA 202,
339 N.R. 189 at
paragraph 13 and Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
v. Varga,
2006 FCA 394, 357 N.R. 333 at paragraph 13. Mr. Rodrigues has had the benefit of a
proceeding before the IAD. That was the appropriate forum for assessing the
hardship issues which he claims the PRRA Officer should have considered.
[25]
Even at
that, there seems to be no inherent legal obligation to extend any humanitarian
and compassionate consideration to a non-citizen who faces deportation for
serious criminality: see Medovarski v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2005 SCC 51, [2005] S.C.R. 539 at paragraph 47. The kinds of concerns raised
by Mr. Rodrigues simply do not rise to the level which would engage his life,
liberty or security interests. He does not face any risk of torture in India and his claimed risk of persecution on
religious grounds was reasonably rejected. He is not presently incarcerated on
immigration grounds. Assuming, without deciding, that the PRRA Officer has a
duty beyond the existing statutory mandate to address Charter issues or values, there
were simply no proven features associated with Mr. Rodrigues’ deportation to India which would engage any section 7 rights.
In simple terms, if the types of concerns expressed by Mr. Rodrigues were
a bar to deportation very few foreign nationals could ever be lawfully
compelled to leave.
[26]
In
conclusion, this application for judicial review is dismissed.
[27]
Because
counsel for Mr. Rodrigues expressed some interest in proposing a certified
question, I will allow him seven days to do so. If he does propose a question
for certification within that time, counsel for the Respondent shall have the
following three days to reply.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ADJUDGES that this application for judicial
review is dismissed.
“ R. L. Barnes ”