Docket: IMM-8262-13
Citation:
2014 FC 852
Ottawa, Ontario, September 8, 2014
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Roy
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BETWEEN:
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KAROLY NAGY
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AGNES MARIA SINKA
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KAROLY NAGY
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BERCEL NAGY
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AJTONY NAGY
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Applicants
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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ORDER AND REASONS
[1]
UPON an
application for judicial review of a decision of the Refugee Protection
Division [RPD] made pursuant to section 72 of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA];
[2]
AND UPON review
of the application and the documentation in support of the application;
[3]
AND UPON
considering carefully the arguments put forward by counsel for the parties;
[4]
The Court must conclude that the application for
judicial review has to be dismissed. Here are the reasons for that conclusion.
[5]
The facts of this case are simple and
uncontradicted. The applicants are Hungarians of Roma ethnicity. Following a
period living in Ireland, they went back to Hungary in 2009. It appears that
employment opportunities in Ireland had dried up and the family chose to go
back to its country of nationality. It appears that the employment situation in
Hungary for the principal applicant (Karoly Nagy) was not completely
satisfactory as only part time employment was available. One of the principal
applicant’s sons had to abandon his law studies in Hungary because of a lack of
financial resources. The applicants allege that two incidents, one in February
2012 and one in March 2012, convinced them that they had to leave Hungary. Indeed, they left Hungary on April 12, 2012 to come to Canada and seek refugee
protection upon arrival.
[6]
These incidents are the following. In February
2012, the principal applicant’s wife and one son were insulted and attacked on
the street. According to a police report which would have been done on April 1,
2012, the main applicant’s wife and son were grocery shopping when they were
accosted by an unknown man. He grabbed her hand and started threatening her.
The attacker was shouting and he let go of her, after hitting her left arm on a
few occasions, when the son ran away to call for help.
[7]
The second incident would have taken place on
March 29, 2012 when the principal applicant was attacked, at night, in a Budapest park. The principal applicant faced a group of three or four people who were
unknown to him and the altercation resulted in injuries to him.
[8]
A medical report, the authenticity of which was
doubted by the RPD, reveals that what appears to be a thorough medical examination
confirmed bumps and bruises which, according to the medical opinion, would
require a recovery within eight days.
[9]
Less than two weeks later, the applicants
traveled to Canada and sought refugee status.
[10]
The decision under review is not a model of
clarity but, upon careful examination, it is fundamentally based on the
conclusion that the incidents reported by the applicants do not rise to the
level of persecution. It is true that the RPD discounted significantly the two
incidents reported by the applicants. The Court is less than satisfied that
such discounting was appropriate, given the basis on which it was made by the
RPD. The RPD discounted an ambulatory card which would have been filled out
following the February incident. It also challenged the authenticity of the
medical report that would have been produced following the March incident
involving the principal applicant. Finally, the police report dated April 1,
2012 is not recognized as being authentic.
[11]
In my view, the important conclusion reached by
the RPD is that the situation of the applicants did not rise to the level of
persecution. Even if the incidents of February and March 2012 are factored in,
I fail to see how the RPD conclusion can be said to be unreasonable.
Persecution requires that the harm be serious and systematic. That proof has
not been made on this record. In fact, the only incidents reported by these
applicants refer to attacks by unknown individuals in February and March 2012,
with a decision made within two weeks of the second incident to seek refugee
status in Canada.
[12]
The RPD also concluded that the applicants had
not discharged their burden to show through clear and convincing evidence, that
state protection would not be available for them in Hungary. There was
certainly no evidence directly relevant to their situation since the police
report would have been taken on April 1, 2012, barely 11 days before they left
for Canada. They therefore had to rely on general country documentation.
[13]
With the greatest of respect, the applicants did
not even seek to show that state protection would not be afforded to them. The
failure to bring about evidence with respect to these applicants is fatal (Radics
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 110). The evidential burden
has not been met (Hetyei v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC
1208).
[14]
As a result the application for judicial review
is dismissed. There is no question to be certified.