Date:
20130425
Docket:
IMM-7973-12
Citation:
2013 FC 426
[UNREVISED ENGLISH
CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario,
April 25, 2013
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Gagné
BETWEEN:
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WILMAR BURGOS GONZALEZ
MONICA ROCIO
BALLESTEROS CLAROS
JERONIMO BURGOS BALLESTEROS
JUAN JACOBO BURGOS BALLESTEROS
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Applicants
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and
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MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I. Introduction
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a decision of the Refugee Protection
Division (RPD) of the Immigration and Refugee Board, dated July 11, 2012. The
RPD rejected the claim for refugee protection by Mr. Burgos Gonzalez (Mr.
Gonzalez), his wife and his two children (collectively referred to as the applicants),
because it found that the applicants were not persons in need of protection
pursuant to paragraphs 97(1)(a) and (b) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 (IRPA).
II. The facts
[2]
The
applicants are citizens of Colombia. Mr. Gonzalez is a well-known businessman.
Since 2002, he has been the co-owner of a business specializing in the sales
and distribution of construction materials, which is valued at a thousand
million Colombian pesos (a little over C$550,000.00).
[3]
Mr.
Gonzalez alleges that starting in February 2010, he received several anonymous
telephone calls threatening him and demanding payment of two hundred and fifty
million pesos (about C$130,000.00). The extortion demands continued throughout
March and April 2010. When Mr. Gonzalez tried to report the extortion to
the police, he was told that there had to be evidence to file a complaint.
Thus, he decided to record the subsequent telephone calls and submit the audio
tapes to the Office of the Attorney General of the
nation.
[4]
A
few days later, when he was leaving his house, Mr. Gonzalez sensed that he was
being followed by individuals on motorcycles. They apparently disappeared when
he was trying to contact the nearest police station.
[5]
Mr.
Gonzalez and his family received many more telephone threats of extortion
following this incident. The technical investigation
team of the extortion and terrorism office, however,
refused to accept Mr. Gonzalez' telephone recordings as it deemed them
superficial. Mr. Gonzalez also reported these incidents to the Fiscalia and
while this complaint was still under investigation, the applicants left Colombia on September 26, 2010, to go to the United States. They arrived in Canada on October 3, 2010, where they claimed refugee protection.
[6]
The
RPD found the testimony of Mr. Gonzalez and his wife to be credible and
trustworthy.
[7]
The
RPD noted that, according to his oral testimony, Mr. Gonzalez decided to leave
his country when he noticed that he was starting to be followed by individuals
on motorcycles because, according to him, the majority of murders are carried
out by people who threaten their victim by chasing them on motorcycle.
Moreover, in late April 2010, Mr. Gonzalez was warned by his persecutors that
they would be putting a bomb in his home to kill him.
[8]
The
RPD was not convinced that these events could be considered a personal risk to
the applicants. The RPD determined rather that, based on the evidence as a
whole, the applicants faced extortion that, according to the documentary
evidence, is frequent and generalized across the country, especially since the
people who contacted Mr. Gonzalez were not identified. The RPD acknowledged
that Mr. Gonzalez is a wealthy businessman and as a result he would attract
envy, but it found that his problems were because of generalized violence
occurring with extortion. According to the RPD, most wealthy people or those
who are perceived to be wealthy, are targets of extortion or kidnapped and the
Colombian government is unable to provide perfect protection to the entire
country despite its best efforts.
[9]
Last,
the RPD noted that the applicants did not exhaust their recourse to the
Colombian authorities by addressing higher echelons, and that according to the
report on their complaint, dated September 9, 2010, their complaint is still
active and the case is under investigation. The RPD also noted that given the
fear and danger felt and experienced by the applicants, it was reasonable to
expect that they would seek protection from the first country that is a
signatory to the Geneva Convention in which they found themselves, specifically
the United States.
[10]
Despite
these additional points raised by the RPD, it should be noted that the
rejection of the applicants’ refugee protection claim was primarily based on
the RPD’s findings regarding the generalized nature of their risk as wealthy
people who might be targeted by criminal gangs for extortion and scams. It is
also this finding that the applicants are challenging. They claim that the RPD
erred, first in their assessment of the claim based on section 97 of the IRPA
by failing to carry out a distinct analysis of the applicants’ situation and
then in their assessment of the risk, which the applicants consider
personalized, that the applicants would face if they returned to their country.
III. Standard
of review
[11]
The
review of a claim made under subsection 97(1) of the IRPA calls for an
individualized and essentially factual inquiry. The appropriate standard of
review is thus reasonableness. In other words, “failure [of the RPD] to
consider the claim as it is put forward by [the applicants] constitutes a
misapprehension of the facts and the evidence” (Turton v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2011 FC 1244 at paragraphs 27-28 (Turton)). Moreover, assessment of the
generalized or personalized nature of the alleged risks involves applying the
IRPA to a specific factual situation, and the RPD’s findings are reviewable
against a standard of reasonableness Perez v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2009 FC 1029 at paragraph 24 (Perez).
IV Analysis
[12]
The
case law has acknowledged that even if the risk has a generalized basis, it can
become personalized through the specific circumstances raised in each refugee
protection claim. If the applicant’s account is deemed credible, as is the case
here, the RPD cannot rely only on the generalized nature of the threats as it
sees them;
it has the duty to conduct an individualized and thorough analysis of the facts
presented, examining all the aspects of risk stemming from these facts, to
determine whether the risk has become personalized even if the applicant was
initially a random target
(Pineda v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC
365 (Pineda); Zacarias v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2011 FC 62 at paragraphs 15-17).
[13]
This
is the case when a refugee protection claimant is believed to be responsible
for the death of a gang member and risks retaliation (Turton, above, at
paragraph 100); when a claimant is specifically and individually
targeted and threatened by gang members who suspect him of providing
information to the police after treating a gang
member (Pineda v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2011 FC 403 at paragraphs 12-13); or when a criminal gang has been
hired to kill a claimant who refused to carry drugs across the border (Guerrero v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1210 at paragraphs 22-23 (Guerrero)).
[14]
The
RPD must answer the following question: whether in the context of the alleged
present or prospective risks, the applicants provided evidence of their
specific circumstances that would make their risk distinct from that of the
general population given the widespread presence of gangs in their country. If
the applicants do not succeed in showing that their risk, although generalized,
had become personal or personalized, it is open to the panel to dismiss their
application. Several decisions of this Court have emphasized that without such
an individualized analysis, the protection of subsection 97(1) would be
stripped of its content or meaning every time that, in a specific country,
there is a danger that could be described as generalized. I would refer
specifically to the comments of Justice Zinn of this Court in Guerrero, above, at
paragraphs 32-34,
where he writes the following:
The fact that
decisions of this Court and the Court of Appeal have long held that such an
individualized inquiry is required explains, in part, why I do not accept the
submission of the respondent regarding Baires Sanchez. The respondent
relied on this decision to support his submission that virtually any risk of
violence at the hands of a criminal gang in one of the Central or South
American countries where gang violence is prevalent is a risk generally faced
by citizens of the country and thus falls outside the protection offered by s.
97 of the Act. To accept that bold proposition would run counter not only to
the position expressed by our Court of Appeal, it would also run counter to
those cases where this Court has found a personal risk from such gangs that is
not also a general risk: See, for example Pineda v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 365; Zacarias v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 62; Barrios Pineda v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship & Immigration), 2011 FC 403; and Alvarez
Castaneda v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 724.
During the
course of oral submissions, I asked the respondent, given his interpretation of
Baires Sanchez, if he could provide an example of a situation where a
person targeted for death from a gang in one of these gang-infested countries
could obtain s. 97 protection. The example provided in response was the
situation where a gang had been hired to kill a claimant. In that circumstance,
it was submitted that the risk to the claimant was personal and was not one
faced generally by the population. I note that the scenario provided is exactly
that which this applicant faced. He faced death at the hand of a gang hired by
a criminal organization to kill him.
I do not
accept that protection under the Act is limited in the manner submitted by the
respondent. This is not to say that persons who face the same or even a
heightened risk as others face of random or indiscriminate violence from gangs
are eligible for protection. However, where a person is specifically and
personally targeted for death by a gang in circumstances where others are
generally not, then he or she is entitled to protection under s. 97 of the Act
if the other statutory requirements are met.
[15]
All
the parties relied on cases that could seem contradictory with respect to the
scope of subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) of the IRPA, specifically under what
circumstances could a person claiming a risk of being killed by a criminal gang
in one of the countries where gang violence is prevalent is a risk “not faced
generally by other individuals in or from that country.” It is clear that the
issue of being targeted depends largely on the specific facts of the case, thus
the RPD should be given some deference. Having read the case law raised by the
parties, I fully agree with the opinion of Justice Rennie in Vivero v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 138 at
paragraph 11, where he states that differences in the outcomes of
section 97 cases stem from the need for an individualized inquiry by the RPD in each case.
[16]
In
this case, it cannot be claimed that the RPD based its decision solely on the
finding that the risk faced by the claimants stemmed from criminal activity
that is widespread in Colombia (unlike in Lovato v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 143 at paragraph 14 and
Beltran (By his Litigation Guardian) v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 275 at paragraph 18). In this case, although in its brief reasons for decision, the RPD did
not specifically state its finding regarding the applicants’ lack of
personalized risk; it noted all of the facts alleged in support of their
application (including the numerous extortion demands and threats that Mr.
Gonzalez received and the fact that he was followed once by individuals on
motorcycles), and then considered whether other wealthy people in the country
would generally face this risk. Moreover, the RPD noted that Mr. Gonzalez did
not know the identity of the two individuals who had threatened him by
telephone or those who were following him. On the whole, unlike the decisions
mentioned at paragraph 13 above, nothing in the evidence indicates to me that
the RPD should have determined that the prospective risk that the applicants
would face, if they were to return to their country, would differ from the risk
facing all wealthy citizens. In other words, the simple fact that the risk
materialized in the past, in a relatively random manner, does not make it a
prospective personalized risk.
[17]
Essentially,
our case law indicates that the alleged risk may personalized either because of
its targeted or unusual nature (as opposed to a random and systematic risk) or
because of its extent. In Perez, above, at paragraph 34, the Court
mentioned that repetitive nature of the threats against the applicants was a
continuation of the extortion and the generalized risk of violence that all
citizens of the country face. Similarly in Pineda, above, at paragraphs
12-15, the Court determined that the continual threats and assaults against the
applicant over an extended period of time should have been considered by the
RPD before it determined that the applicant was not subjected to a risk greater
than the risk faced generally by the population at large (see also Ventura v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1107, at
paragraph 19). In Perez, above, at paragraph 34, Justice Kelen
distinguished Pineda by stating that unlike in that case, “[t]here is no
evidence that the maras personally targeted the applicants or that they
face a greater risk then other small business owners or persons perceived to be
relatively wealthy”.
[18]
In
this case, the RPD took into consideration the fact that there were multiple
extortion demands that sometimes included death threats. However, it was
reasonable to find that these facts were not enough to place the applicants
outside the generalized risk of violence and to demonstrate that, on the
balance of probabilities, Mr. Gonzalez had been targeted by a gang or likely
would be in the future. The applicants did not raise any fact other than those
that were noted by the RPD and have not satisfied me of how, or at what point,
their risk became personalized. Given the absence of such facts, I can only
find that the RPD’s finding does not fall “within the range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of facts and law” (Dunsmuir
v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 190 at paragraph 47).
V. Conclusion
[19]
Consequently,
I find that the RPD’s other findings, regarding State protection and the
applicants’ lack of subjective fear, were only subsidiary, and even if they
were erroneous, they would be insufficient overall to set aside the impugned
decision.
[20]
For
these reasons, this application for judicial review will be dismissed. The parties did not suggest questions
for certification and none arise in this case.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
a.
The
application for judicial review is dismissed; and
b.
No
question is certified.
“Jocelyne Gagné”
Certified
true translation
Monica
F. Chamberlain