Date: 20140619
Docket:
IMM-2355-13
Citation: 2014 FC 586
Ottawa, Ontario, June 19, 2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Manson
|
BETWEEN:
|
RESIT KARACAN
|
HAMIDE KARACAN
|
REHAMURAT CAHIT KARACAN
|
HARIKA AYTEN KARACAN
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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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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is an application for judicial review of
the decision of Lucinda Bruin, a member of the Refugee Protection Division of
the Immigration and Refugee Protection Board [the Board], pursuant to
subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001,
c 27 [the Act]. The Board dismissed the Applicants’ claim for refugee
protection, concluding that they were not convention refugees or persons in
need of protection under sections 96 and 97 of the Act.
I.
Issue
[2]
The issue in this application is whether the
Board’s credibility findings are unreasonable.
II.
Background
[3]
The Applicants are a family of Turkish citizens
of Arabic descent and the Alevi religion. They consist of Resit Karacan [the
Principal Applicant or PA], his wife, Hamide Karacan [the Female Applicant],
their son, Rehamurat Cahit Karacan [Rehamurat] and their daughter, Harika Ayten
Karacan [Harika].
[4]
According to the Applicants’ Personal
Information Form narrative [PIF] narrative, they suffered persecution as a
result of their race and religion while living in Turkey. They detail several
incidences of persecution in their PIF narrative as follows:
•
The PA’s father was taken into custody at the
place of his business by the police on September 28, 2007. The next day, the
Applicants found him dead at a local hospital. A doctor informed the Applicants
that he had been taken to hospital after he died. The doctor would not be a
witness to the circumstances surrounding the PA’s father’s death for fear of
losing his job;
•
Two of the Female Applicant’s sisters left Turkey because they were persecuted;
•
The PA was taken into custody, beaten and
tortured by police six times, but could only recall the circumstances surrounding
two occasions. These were described as follows:
o In June, 2009, the PA was arrested with his friends while leaving
church. He was beaten and detained overnight, and was warned not to attend the
same church in the future; and
o On October 15, 2009, the PA was arrested while leaving church. He
was beaten and detained overnight.
•
The PA was verbally abused by fundamentalists
hundreds of time;
•
The PA was physically assaulted by
fundamentalists three times in 2008 and five times in 2009, typically when he was
leaving church;
•
The Female Applicant began attending church less
frequently due to fear and was verbally abused by fundamentalists and the
police; and
•
At school, Harika and Rehamurat were verbally
and physically abused by their teachers and physically abused by their
classmates.
[5]
Before the Board, the Applicants filed
additional evidence, including the PA’s and the Female Applicant’s
identification cards for an Alevi cultural association, a letter of support
from a friend of the PA’s, a prosecutor’s report and a hospital report. These
reports appear to have been written in 2008. In their testimony, the Applicants
also described an incident on May 1, 2007, where the PA was taken to the police
station.
[6]
The Applicants arrived in Canada on February 15, 2010, and applied for refugee protection two days later. They had a
hearing before the Board on October 24, 2012.
[7]
The determinative issue for the Board was
credibility. The Board found that the Applicants’ testimony was vague and
included numerous omissions and inconsistencies.
[8]
The Board noted that when the PA was asked about
the most recent police mistreatment he could recall, he stated that it occurred
on May 1, 2007. This contradicts the PIF narrative, which describes specific
incidents in June, 2009, and October 15, 2009. The PA made no mention of these
incidents in his testimony, despite repeated questions by the Board. When asked
about the 2009 incidents, the PA stated that he was unaware of them and
suggested that he may have been confused. The Female Applicant testified that
the PA might have been nervous or did not want to mention these incidences in
front of his children. The Board did not accept these explanations.
[9]
The Board also found that the Female Applicant’s
testimony was inconsistent with what was stated in the PIF narrative regarding the
2009 incidents. In the PIF narrative, it is stated that the PA was arrested and
beaten in both instances. However, the Female Applicant testified that he was
arrested on only one of these occasions.
[10]
With regard to the incident on May 1, 2007, the
PA was vague as to how the medical and police report corroborated his
testimony. His description of this incident was also vague. He initially could
not recall the year it occurred, and subsequently could not describe the events
which led to his arrest. Additionally, it is omitted from the PIF narrative.
While the Board acknowledged that traumatic events can lead to memory loss, the
Board did not accept that the extent of the PA’s omissions were reasonably explainable.
[11]
The Board noted that the PA did not mention the
physical or verbal abuse perpetrated by fundamentalists, which is described in
the PIF Narrative. Likewise, the PA testified to specific occasions where his
children were verbally or physically abused at school, but these are not
described in the PIF narrative and no corroborative evidence was provided.
[12]
Despite acknowledging their Alevi cultural
association membership cards, the Board found that the PA and the Female
Applicant had difficulty describing Alevi religious practices described in
country condition information. Further, when asked if any of the Applicants had
changed their religious practices as a result of the persecution they suffered,
the PA said there had been no changes. This contradicts the PIF narrative,
which states that the Female Applicant attended church less frequently as a
result of the persecution she faced. The Board questioned the PA about this
inconsistency, and the PA stated that he could not remember.
[13]
Based on the above, the Board concluded that the
Applicants had not provided sufficient reliable and credible evidence to
establish that they faced a serious possibility of persecution in Turkey based on their religion. The Board also considered submissions by the Applicants
that the Female Applicant’s sister and her family had made a successful refugee
claim to Canada in June, 2010. However, the Board noted that the decision
pertaining to the Female Applicant’s sister is not binding and in any event,
elements of that claim were different than the claim of the Applicants.
[14]
The Board concluded by finding that there was no
residual evidence to support a claim for refugee protection. The Board
acknowledged that country condition information indicates that Alevis are
unable to state their religion on their national identity cards and that there
are reports of societal abuses and discrimination based on Alevi religious
affiliation, belief and practice. Despite this, additional country condition
information indicates that the government generally respects religious freedom
and Alevis freely practice their beliefs and build places of gathering.
Additionally, while Alevis have faced social and employment discrimination, the
situation has improved in recent years.
III.
Standard of Review
[15]
The standard of review for determinations of
credibility is reasonableness (Aguebor v Canada (Minister of Employment and
Immigration), [1993] FCJ No 732, at para 4; Dunsmuir v New Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9, at paras 47-48).
IV.
Analysis
[16]
The Applicants criticizes the Board’s findings regarding
their knowledge of Alevi religious practices, citing excerpts from the hearing
transcript which shows that the Female Applicant and the PA were able to answer
many questions about Alevi religious practices. The Applicants argue that the
Board’s credibility findings were unreasonable because they were, in reality, implausibility
findings that were supported by the evidence (Hassan v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 1136).
[17]
The Applicants also argue that the Board engaged
in a microscopic examination of the evidence. In support of this contention,
the Applicants excerpt portions of the hearing transcript where the PA is
questioned about the incident on May 1, 2007. The Applicants argue that the
transcript demonstrates that the PA was able to provide an appropriate level of
detail about that incident.
[18]
I do not agree with the Applicants’
characterization of the Board’s treatment of the evidence, other than with
respect to questioning of the Applicants’ religious beliefs and practices.
While counsel made strong arguments that the Board’s findings on this front are
fundamental to the Board’s overall findings on credibility, I am not persuaded
that this is true.
[19]
The Respondent argues that the Board is entitled
to significant deference on its credibility findings (Rahal v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 319, at paras 42-46; Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12; Aguebor; Sinan
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 87, at para 11;
Sahota v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 123,
at para 30).
[20]
As outlined above, the Board articulated numerous
omissions, inconsistencies and contradictions in the evidence presented by the
Applicants. These related to the central allegations of mistreatment by Muslim
extremists and the police. These findings were in the Board’s purview as a
finder of fact, and it is entitled to deference (Rahal, at paras 42-46; Khosa;
Sheikh v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1990] 3 FC
238 (FCA)). It is telling that only two of the Board’s findings were challenged
by the Applicants. While the Board may have overstated the vagueness of the
Applicants’ responses on religious practices of the Alevi, there were numerous other
credibility findings that ensure the Board’s overarching credibility finding
and the decision as a whole was reasonable.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that:
1.
The application is dismissed;
2.
There is no question for certification.
"Michael D. Manson"