Date: 20111212
Docket: IMM-3537-11
Citation: 2011 FC 1447
Ottawa, Ontario,
December 12, 2011
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
BETWEEN:
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SHAIK
JALALUDEEN AHAMED
(A.K.A. AHAMED,
SHAIK JALALUDE)
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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]
For the reasons that follow, this application for judicial review
of a decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee
Board, determining that the applicant was neither a Convention refugee nor a
person in need of protection, is dismissed.
[2]
The applicant is a citizen of India who claimed protection due to
his fear of two political parties, the Dravide Munette Kalgan (DMK) and the
Anna Dravida Munetta Kalgan (ADMK). On May 16, 2009, the day after the results
of parliamentary elections in India were released, the applicant was riding his
motorcycle from his home to work. In Athirampaddi he passed by two groups of
people who were fighting. He attempted to find an alternate route but was
pulled off his motorbike and beaten. He awoke in a private hospital and was
questioned by the police because a member of the ADMK party had been killed
during the fight. The applicant told the police that there had been a fight
between two groups of people but that he did not know more because he was
unconscious.
[3]
A few days later, a member of the DMK party visited the applicant
and told him that he would be killed if he mentioned anything to the police. I
note that he had nothing to tell them. A few days after that, four members of
the ADMK attempted to bribe the applicant to give information regarding the
incident. Members of the ADMK also came to his house and threatened his wife
and made threats against him.
[4]
The applicant felt threatened by both parties and decided to
leave Athirampaddi. He went to Kerala on May 2009 and stayed there until
October 2009. The applicant hired an agent who took him to several places
before he landed in Canada. From the record, it appears that he traveled from India
to Singapore, Malaysia, and Madras before returning to India; then again from
India to Thailand, Hong Kong and China before returning again to India; leaving
India a third time and traveling to Madras, Brazil, and then arriving in Canada
on April 3, 2010, after obtaining a work visa. On April 28, 2010, he filed for
refugee protection.
[5]
The applicant addressed three issues at the
hearing. He submitted that the Member erred in failing to do a proper analysis
leading to his conclusion that there was no nexus to a Convention ground as set
out in s. 96; that he applied the wrong test in stating that the applicant had
to establish that he would be personally subjected to persecution in order to
establish a claim under ss. 96 or 97; and that he failed in his state
protection analysis by holding that the applicant ought to have sought
protection from the police in Athirampaddi when they were part of the
state and thus part of the agent of persecution.
[6]
In spite of applicant counsel’s able submission,
I am not persuaded that the Member made any of the errors alleged; further, the
finding of state protection, in my view, is unassailable and is fatal to this
application even if he had succeeded in convincing me of the merits of his other
issues.
[7]
Admittedly the Member did a cursory analysis of
the claim under s. 96; however, the applicant admitted that he had no political
affiliation, that he was an innocent bystander harmed during a fight between
two rival groups of political supporters, that he saw nothing of the killing
the police were investigating and that the alleged agents of persecution were
seeking him to testify against the other or to say nothing. He was a victim of
crime and a target of bribery and threats that had nothing to do with his
political opinion or perceived political opinion. There was only one
conclusion the Member could reasonably have reached regarding s. 96, and he
reached it – there was no nexus to a Convention ground.
[8]
Having found that there was no claim under s.
96, the Member considered the claim under s. 97. While the Member erred in
describing the test under s. 96 in paragraph 7 of the decision, that error was
not material as the claim was considered only under s. 97 and the statement of
the test under that section was accurate, as admitted by the applicant. As the
error had no connection to or impact on the final result, it is not a
reviewable error.
[9]
In any event, this application must fail as the
Member, correctly in my view, concluded that there was state protection
available for the applicant and an internal flight alternative (IFA).
[10]
The applicant stated that he had been approached
only once by members of the DMK and twice by members of the ADMK. Asked why he
had not sought police protection, he responded that the head of the police was
a member of the DMK and would therefore not listen to him.
[11]
First, this explanation only addresses why he
would not approach the police to complain of members of the DMK. Presumably
the chief of police, given his alleged political affiliation, would welcome any
report of threats or bribery from members of the ADMK.
[12]
Second, as the Member noted, the explanation
does not hold water even if the applicant were bringing to the police concerns
regarding DMK members. The applicant himself produced a news article that
described the clash between the two groups in which the applicant found himself
and the police actions following it. It says that the police had charged DMK
members and were continuing their investigation. As the Member noted “[t]he
claimant’s testimony regarding the head of the police force and his reticence
to act against DMK members because of his political affiliation is not
accurate, or credible.” I agree.
[13]
The applicant did not directly challenge the IFA
finding but argued that it was subsumed in the other alleged errors. If so,
and given my finding that there were no reviewable errors, the IFA finding is
also unassailable.
[14]
In any event, the evidence before the Board
revealed that the applicant had remained in India for some time and from time to time after the initial incident,
including staying in Delhi,
without any contact or threat from either alleged agent of persecution. The
Board’s finding that members of neither group were not likely to find him in
Delhi, a large city of over 16 million people some 2,000 kilometres from his
home town, was reasonable given the record before him.
[15]
For these reasons this application is dismissed.
No question was proposed for certification.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that this application is dismissed and no question is
certified.
"Russel W. Zinn"