Date: 20140623
Docket: IMM-3540-13
Citation:
2014 FC 600
Ottawa, Ontario, June 23, 2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Manson
|
BETWEEN:
|
RYMMA MAKARENKO
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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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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is an application for judicial review of
the decision of N. Case, a Senior Immigration Officer at Citizenship and
Immigration Canada [the Officer], pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the Act]. The Officer refused to
exempt the Applicant’s permanent residence visa application from the selection
criteria of the Act on humanitarian and compassionate [H&C] grounds
pursuant to section 25 of the Act.
I.
Issue
[2]
The issue in this application is whether the Officer’s
decision was unreasonable.
II.
Background
[3]
The Applicant is an unmarried citizen of the
Ukraine. She is an ethnic Russian and was born on March 23, 1933. She has one
son, Iouri Makarenko, and two grandchildren, who were aged 10 and 25 at the
time of the Officer’s decision. Her son and grandchildren live in Canada. The
Applicant came to Canada in May, 2006, to visit her son and has remained in
Canada since that time.
[4]
In her H&C application, she states that she
has been subject to abuse and persecution throughout her life in the Ukraine.
She claims to have lost all her savings after she invested them in a bank. In
support of this contention she submitted investment certificates.
[5]
She also alleges to have been attacked by Ukrainian
nationalists because she did not speak Ukrainian.
[6]
In Canada, the Applicant is supported by her son
and lives alone in a rented apartment which is paid for by him. She attends
church and English as a second language classes. She spends time with her
grandchildren and has developed several friendships in Canada as is evident
from letters of support.
[7]
The Applicant previously applied for refugee
protection. In a decision dated April 17, 2009, the Immigration and Refugee
Board rejected the Applicant’s claim, finding that she was not a convention
refugee or person in need of protection.
[8]
The Applicant also submitted two medical
assessments in support of her contention that returning to the Ukraine will
cause her psychological hardship. One, from Dr. Pilowsky, states that the
Applicant suffers from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and depression, and that
returning the Applicant to the Ukraine would be psychologically detrimental to
her. The other, by Dr. Yaroshevsky, indicates that the Applicant suffers from
diabetes, depression, insomnia and has difficulty functioning. Dr. Yaroshevsky
indicates that she has a patchy memory.
[9]
The Officer rendered a decision in the
Applicant’s case on February 28, 2013. The Officer considered the Applicant’s
claim based on personalized risk, establishment in Canada, and the best
interests of the child.
[10]
With respect to risk, the Officer placed
considerable weight on the negative determination of the Applicant’s prior
refugee claim, drawing particular attention to its finding that she had not
rebutted the presumption of state protection. The Officer acknowledged that the
risk considered in the context of an H&C application is based on the degree
of hardship facing the Applicant.
[11]
The Officer found that there was insufficient
evidence to corroborate the Applicant’s statements that she experienced abuse
and harassment as a result of her ethnicity and that her investments were lost.
The Officer also examined country condition information relating to the Ukraine
at the time of the hearing. The Officer outlined the various redress mechanisms
available, including the government’s security, legislative and human rights
frameworks. The Officer concluded that the Applicant would not face a
personalized risk which would amount to an unusual, undeserved, or
disproportionate hardship.
[12]
The Officer accepted the Applicant was somewhat
established in Canada, by virtue of her apartment, friends, and attendance at
church. However, the Officer noted that she had stayed in Canada without proper
immigration authorization and there should have been an expectation that she
would be removed to the Ukraine at some point. The Officer acknowledged that
separation from her friends would be difficult, but she would still be able to
contact them. Furthermore, the Officer felt she would be able to develop new
friendships in the Ukraine. Cumulatively, the Officer found that her
establishment in Canada was not such that returning to the Ukraine would
constitute unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship.
[13]
With regard to the impact of the Applicant’s
departure on her grandchildren, the Officer acknowledged that the Applicant has
close ties to her grandchildren and that physical separation would be
difficult. However, the Officer noted that her grandchildren live with their
parents, and could maintain contact with the Applicant while abroad.
[14]
The Officer considered the psychological
assessments, and accepted that the Applicant would face anxiety by being
removed from Canada. However, the Officer determined that it would not constitute
unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship.
[15]
Finally, with respect to the Applicant’s medical
conditions, the Officer found there was insufficient corroborative evidence
that the Applicant would be unable to receive necessary treatment in the
Ukraine, and noted that the Applicant’s submitted medical assessments were more
than two years old.
[16]
Based on the above, the Officer found that there
would be no unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship for the Applicant
if she were made to apply for permanent residence from outside Canada.
III.
Standard of Review
[17]
The standard of review is reasonableness (Dunsmuir
v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, at paras 47-48, 51).
IV.
Analysis
A.
Was the Officer’s decision reasonable?
[18]
The Applicant argues that the Officer failed to
adequately consider the reports of Dr. Yaroshevsky and Dr. Pilowsky on the
basis that they were not the witnesses of the events leading to the Applicant’s
medical issues (Zapata v Canada (Solicitor General), [1994] FCJ No 1303).
When a psychological assessment has specific and important evidence to an
Applicant’s case, it should be considered (Javaid v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] FCJ No 1730).
[19]
The Applicant further argues that the Officer
erred in stating that she could apply for permanent resident status in Canada
from outside the country. She notes that the Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration put a moratorium on the sponsorship of parents in December, 2011,
and the Applicant does not fit under any other immigration categories. The
lifting of the moratorium on permanent residence sponsorship applications from
abroad was announced after the Officer’s decision was made. Regardless, given
the Applicant’s advanced age and the waiting lists for permanent residence
sponsorship, the Officer’s assertion would have been unreasonable.
[20]
The Applicant also suggests that the Officer
failed to consider the cumulative evidence of discrimination against the
Applicant. The Applicant notes documentary evidence, including the European
Union Commissioner for Human Rights and the United States Department of State
Report for 2011, which suggests that elderly people are underprivileged and
often live in poverty, that the Ukraine’s government is corrupt and that
societal discrimination against ethnic minorities persists.
[21]
Finally, the Applicant asserts that the Officer
determined her degree of establishment in Canada without due regard to the
evidence.
[22]
The Respondent argues that the Officer carefully
considered all the evidence and that the Applicant is asking the Court to
reweigh the evidence. As well, notwithstanding the Officer’s reference to the
Refugee Protection Division’s decision and elements of risk determined in that
decision, the Officer conducted a proper hardship analysis based on all the
evidence.
[23]
I believe that two issues were unreasonably
dealt with by the Officer. Firstly, while the Applicant made submissions
partially on the basis that she is an “…elderly single person” there is no
analysis by the Officer of the impact of removing her based on her age. The
Applicant is currently 81 years old, has no family in the Ukraine, and
according to her medical reports, suffers from memory problems, insomnia,
depression, and anxiety. Whether she suffers from these medical issues does not
appear to be in dispute.
[24]
The Officer’s failure to consider the
Applicant’s age made other conclusions unjustifiable. For example, the Officer
concluded that the Applicant would make new friends and establish new social
ties in the Ukraine, despite having apparently no family or existing social
network. While the Officer’s analysis may be reasonable if it concerned a
younger person, it is unreasonable when considered in the context of an
81-year-old woman with health issues.
[25]
The second aspect in which this decision is
unreasonable is demonstrated by the Officer’s conclusion that:
I find the applicant has not established that
her personal circumstances are such that the hardships associated with having
to apply for permanent residence in the normal manner are in isolation to the
hardships associated faced by others who are required to apply for permanent
residence from abroad.
[26]
The Applicant is correct that at the time of the
decision, she could not apply for sponsorship abroad owing to a moratorium
imposed by Citizenship and Immigration Canada. While the Respondent is correct
in stating that this moratorium has now been partially lifted, this was not
apparent at the time of the Officer’s decision. Since the Officer was
apparently assessing undue hardship on an assumption that the Applicant could
apply for permanent residence from abroad, it is unclear whether the Officer
would have come to the same conclusion had they been aware of the fact that the
Applicant could not, given her personal characteristics, have applied for
permanent residence from abroad. While alone this error would not render the
decision unreasonable, in combination with the Officer’s failure to consider
the Applicant’s age, and the reality of her condition and circumstances if
returned to the Ukraine, I believe the decision is unreasonable.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that
1.
The Applicant’s application is allowed and
referred back to a different Officer for reconsideration;
2.
There is no question for certification.
"Michael D. Manson"