Docket: IMM‑3702‑13
Citation:
2014 FC 868
Ottawa, Ontario, September 15, 2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
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ZOBON VARNEY JOHNSON
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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]
Zobon Varney Johnson seeks judicial review of
the finding made by an immigration officer that he was inadmissible to Canada for having committed a war crime or a crime against humanity.
[2]
The parties agree that the immigration officer
was entitled to rely on findings of fact made by the Refugee Protection
Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board in support of its conclusion that
Mr. Johnson was a person described in Article 1F(a) of the Refugee
Convention. In deciding the question of admissibility, however, the
immigration officer was required to then go on to consider those findings of
fact in light of the appropriate legal test in order to determine whether
Mr. Johnson was in fact admissible to Canada. This was not done.
[3]
The officer’s failure to conduct a proper
admissibility analysis was problematic as the Federal Court of Appeal had
revisited the law with respect to complicity in war crimes and crimes against
humanity in Ezokola v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2011 FCA 224, [2011] 3 F.C.R. 417, between the time that the Refugee Protection
Division made its exclusion finding and the time that the immigration officer
rendered her inadmissibility decision. As a consequence, the application for
judicial review will be granted.
I.
Background
[4]
The Refugee Protection Division accepted that
Mr. Johnson was born in Liberia in 1977. Mr. Johnson’s father worked
for the Special Security Services of then‑President Doe. When Charles
Taylor and his National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) invaded Liberia in 1990, Mr. Johnson’s family attempted to flee the country. Before they could
do so, however, Mr. Johnson’s father was captured and beheaded.
[5]
Mr. Johnson, who was 13 at the time, was
then forcibly recruited into, and compelled to fight for the Small Boys Unit
(“SBU”) of the NPFL. He was
promoted to Commander of the SBU in 1992, remaining in that position until the
organization dissolved in 1995. After that, Mr. Johnson began working as a
guard at Charles Taylor’s residence. By 1997, Charles Taylor had become
President of Liberia, and Mr. Johnson joined the President’s Special
Security Services (“SSS”) where he continued to work until 2000.
[6]
In July of 2000, Mr. Johnson left Liberia for the United States on a soccer scholarship. Although the Board did not accept his
evidence on this point, Mr. Johnson says that in 2006, he was ordered to
testify before a grand jury with respect to criminal allegations against the
son of President Taylor. Because of his grand jury testimony, Mr. Johnson
says that he was subjected to threats from Liberian ex‑patriots and that
the FBI was unable to help him. As a result, Mr. Johnson came to Canada with his wife in 2008, whereupon they both claimed refugee protection.
Mr. Johnson’s wife has since been accepted as a Convention refugee, and
the couple now has a Canadian‑born child.
II.
The Refugee Protection Division’s Exclusion
Finding
[7]
The Board rendered its decision in
Mr. Johnson’s case on November 18, 2010. At that time, the test for complicity
in war crimes and crimes against humanity was the one established by the
Federal Court of Appeal in cases such as Ramirez v. Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [1992] 2 F.C. 306, [1992] 2 F.C.J. No. 109.
The Ramirez test for complicity required “personal
and knowing participation in persecutorial acts” in order for there to
be a finding of complicity: Ramirez, above at para. 23.
[8]
The Board accepted that Mr. Johnson had
been forcibly recruited to serve as a child soldier in the SBU of the NPFL when
he was 13 years old. It further found that both the NPFL and the SSS were
organizations that had limited brutal purposes. I do not understand there to be
any dispute about the fact that both groups engaged in war crimes and crimes
against humanity against the citizens of Liberia in a systematic and widespread
fashion. The question for the Board was whether Mr. Johnson himself
committed, or was complicit in any of those crimes.
[9]
In addressing this question, the Board
considered the nature of Mr. Johnson’s various roles within the
organizations in question, and the extent of his involvement in the war crimes
and crimes against humanity committed by the NPFL and the SSS. The Board found
as a fact that Mr. Johnson held “a significant
leadership role within the SBU” of the NPFL. It further found that he
remained in the organizations until he was 23 years old ‑ a period of 10
years ‑ and that he did not make every possible effort to leave either
organization.
[10]
The Board did not, however, make any finding that
Mr. Johnson himself ever directly participated in a war crime or a crime
against humanity, observing that it was difficult to say what he did or did not
do. Rather, the Board’s conclusion that Mr. Johnson was complicit in war
crimes and crimes against humanity was largely based on its finding that he
must have been aware of the atrocities committed by the organizations that he
worked for.
[11]
Having regard to all of the circumstances, the
Board concluded that Mr. Johnson had to accept personal responsibility for
his part in the crimes against humanity committed by Charles Taylor’s
supporters. As a result, the Board found Mr. Johnson to be excluded from
the protection of the Refugee Convention as a person described in Article
1F(a).
[12]
Mr. Johnson applied for judicial review of
the Board’s decision, however this Court denied leave in 2011.
III.
The Immigration Officer’s Inadmissibility
Finding
[13]
After the Board accepted Mr. Johnson’s
wife’s refugee claim, he applied for permanent residence in Canada as the accompanying family member of a protected person. It was in the context of his
application for permanent residence that the immigration officer had to
determine whether Mr. Johnson was admissible to Canada or whether he was
excluded under paragraph 35(1)(a) of Immigration and Refugee Protection
Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27, which provides that a permanent resident or foreign
national is inadmissible on grounds of violating human or international rights
or for committing an act outside Canada that constitutes an offence referred to
in sections 4‑7 of the Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act,
S.C. 2000, c. 24.
[14]
In her “Report to File”, the immigration officer
referenced certain uncontested facts set out in Mr. Johnson’s Personal
Information Form and identified the various findings made by the Board. The
officer then referred to section 15(b) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227, which provides that:
15. For the
purpose of determining whether a foreign national or permanent resident is
inadmissible under paragraph 35(1)(a) of the Act, if any of the following
decisions or the following determination has been rendered, the findings
of fact set out in that decision or determination shall be considered as
conclusive findings of fact:
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15. Les
décisions ci‑après ont, quant aux faits, force de chose jugée pour
le constat de l’interdiction de territoire d’un étranger ou d’un résident
permanent au titre de l’alinéa 35(1)a) de la Loi :
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[…]
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[…]
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(b) a
determination by the Board, based on findings that the foreign national or
permanent resident has committed a war crime or a crime against humanity,
that the foreign national or permanent resident is a person referred to in
section F of Article 1 of the Refugee Convention;
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b) toute
décision de la Commission, fondée sur les conclusions que l’intéressé a
commis un crime de guerre ou un crime contre l’humanité, qu’il est visé par
la section F de l’article premier de la Convention sur les réfugiés;
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[my emphasis]
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[Je souligne]
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[15]
After referencing this provision, the officer
then immediately moved on to consider the best interests of Mr. Johnson’s
young daughter (a matter that had not been raised by Mr. Johnson himself).
The officer recognized that some level of interdependency existed between the
child and her father, but was satisfied that she would likely adjust to her new
circumstances if Mr. Johnson left Canada. The officer noted that
Mr. Johnson’s wife is gainfully employed, and it had not been demonstrated
that adequate arrangements could not be made to meet the child’s financial
needs. As a result, the officer was not persuaded that the child’s best
interests would be unduly compromised by Mr. Johnson’s absence.
[16]
The officer’s reasons then conclude with the
finding that “the applicant is inadmissible pursuant to
Section 35(1)(a) of the Act on the grounds of violating human or international
rights for committing an act outside Canada that constitutes an offence
referred to in sections 4 to 7 of the Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes
Act”.
IV.
Issues
[17]
The determinative issue in this case is whether
the immigration officer erred by simply adopting the Board’s conclusion
regarding Mr. Johnson’s complicity in crimes against humanity, without
carrying out her own analysis of the admissibility question based upon the
Board’s findings of fact.
V.
Analysis
[18]
In order to decide whether the immigration
officer erred in this case, it is first necessary to consider the relationship
between an exclusion finding made by the Refugee Protection Division and an
inadmissibility finding under subsection 35(1) of IRPA. This in turn
requires an understanding of subsection 15(b) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Regulations.
[19]
In particular, it must be determined whether the
immigration officer was only bound by the Board’s factual findings as to the
role played by Mr. Johnson in the various organizations in deciding the
question of his admissibility to Canada, or whether she was also bound by the
Board’s conclusion that Mr. Johnson was complicit in the crimes against
humanity committed by the organizations of which he was a member.
[20]
The jurisprudence of this Court is not unanimous
on this point. While accepting that the issue was not free from doubt, the
Court in Syed v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2006 FC 1163, 300 F.T.R. 132, suggested that both factual
findings and findings of complicity made by the Board are binding on
immigration officers making admissibility findings under section 35 of IRPA.
In contrast, Abdeli v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2006 FC 1047, [2006] F.C.J. No. 1322, held that immigration
officers are only bound by the Board’s factual determinations as to an
individual’s actions, and not by its conclusion as to the individual’s legal
culpability: see para. 19.
[21]
The parties in this case agree that the
interpretation of subsection 15(b) of the Regulations provided in Abdeli
is the correct one, and I concur.
[22]
When making an exclusion finding in a refugee
claim, the Board must first make factual findings as to the nature of the
refugee claimant’s involvement with the organizations in issue, including the
specific activities in which the individual had been involved. If the Board
finds as a fact that the claimant had been directly involved in a war
crime or a crime against humanity, the claimant will be excluded from the
protection of the Refugee Convention, and that factual determination will also
likely suffice to render the person inadmissible under subsection 35(1) of IRPA.
[23]
Where, however, the individual has not him‑
or herself been directly involved in the commission of a war crime or crime
against humanity, the Board must then consider whether the individual was
nevertheless complicit in the crimes committed by the organizations in
question. This is not purely a finding of fact. It is a finding of mixed fact
and law, requiring the application of the legal test for complicity to the
facts of the case as they have been found by the Board.
[24]
Subsection 15(b) of the Regulations
stipulates that the findings of fact made by the Board in an exclusion
proceeding are to be considered as conclusive findings of fact in an
admissibility determination under section 35 of IRPA. This makes sense,
as it limits the potential for re‑litigation of factual matters that have
already been assessed by an expert tribunal in the context of an oral hearing.
[25]
Nothing in subsection 15(b) of the Regulations
suggests that officers are bound by findings of mixed fact and law that
have been made by the Board. Rather the task of immigration officers making
admissibility determinations is to take the findings of fact that have been
made by the Board and consider them in light of the provisions of section 35 of
IRPA in order to determine whether or not the individual in question is
admissible to Canada.
[26]
No such analysis was carried out in this case.
The officer simply listed the factual findings made by the Board and concluded
that Mr. Johnson was inadmissible to Canada for violating human or
international rights by committing an act outside Canada that constituted an
offence referred to in sections 4 to 7 of the Crimes Against Humanity and
War Crimes Act. There is no consideration whatsoever of Mr. Johnson’s
complicity in the acts committed by the groups of which he was a member.
[27]
It is true that an insufficiency in the reasons
of an administrative decision‑maker is no longer a stand‑alone
basis for quashing a decision: Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’
Union v. Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62, [2011] 3
S.C.R. 708. Rather, the task for the Court is to consider the reasons provided
by the decision‑maker, together with the outcome of the case, in order to
determine whether the decision falls within a range of possible outcomes.
[28]
While the lack of a complicity analysis will
thus not always be fatal to an admissibility decision, it is problematic in
this case. The Board specifically noted that it was unable to make any finding
regarding Mr. Johnson’s personal participation in war crimes or crimes
against humanity. Rather, its conclusion that Mr. Johnson was complicit in
such crimes was based, in part, on his history with organizations involved in
war crimes and crimes against humanity and his failure to leave the
organizations once he became an adult. More importantly for our purposes, the Board’s
complicity finding was also based to a large extent on its finding that
Mr. Johnson must have been aware of the atrocities committed by the
organizations of which he was a member.
[29]
Between the time that the Board rendered its
decision and the time that the immigration officer was called upon to decide
the question of Mr. Johnson’s admissibility, the Federal Court of Appeal
came out with its decision in Ezokola, above. There, the Court observed
that it is an error for the Board to rely on an individual’s ‘personal and
knowing awareness’ of crimes committed by organizations to support a finding of
complicity, emphasizing that knowledge of crimes is not enough: at para. 77. As
the Court noted, “[w]hile personal knowledge of the
crimes is one of the elements required for ‘personal and knowing
participation’, only participation, so described, if established according to
the applicable burden of proof, may support a finding of complicity”:
see para. 75.
[30]
In the absence of any analysis having
been provided by the immigration officer, it is impossible to know if the
officer’s admissibility decision was based upon the same error that had been
identified by the Federal Court of Appeal in Ezokola. The decision thus
lacks the justification, transparency and intelligibility of the decision‑making
process that is required of a reasonable decision: Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC
9 at para. 47, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190.
VI.
Should the Case be Remitted for Re‑determination?
[31]
The Minister submits that even if I were to
decide that the immigration officer erred, I should nevertheless decline to
send this matter back for re‑determination as the outcome would
inevitably be the same given the Board’s factual findings with respect to
Mr. Johnson’s leadership role within the SBU, and his involvement with the
NPFL and the SSS.
[32]
Judicial review is a discretionary process, and
it is open to the Court to decline to provide a remedy “where
the demerits of the claim are such that it would in any case be hopeless”:
Mobil Oil Canada Ltd. et al. v. Canada‑Newfoundland Offshore Petroleum
Board, [1994] 1 S.C.R. 202 at para. 53, [1994] S.C.J. No. 14. See also Yassine
v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1994), 172 N.R. 308 at
para. 9, [1994] F.C.J. No. 949 (F.C.A.).
[33]
This is not such a case. The law with respect to
complicity has evolved significantly since the immigration officer decided that
Mr. Johnson was inadmissible to Canada, and any re‑determination of
the question of Mr. Johnson’s admissibility would thus have to be carried
out in accordance with the law as it now stands.
[34]
As a result of the Supreme Court of Canada’s
decision in Ezokola v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 SCC
40, [2013] 2 S.C.R. 678, the test for complicity is now considerably stricter
than it was under the Ramirez test, as it eliminates the possibility of “complicity by association”. It would be more consistent
with the scheme envisaged by Parliament to return this matter to the expert
decision‑maker entrusted with the responsibility for making admissibility
determinations to reconsider the question of Mr. Johnson’s admissibility
to Canada based upon the current test for complicity.
VII.
Should Directions be provided with respect to
the Best Interests of the Child?
[35]
Mr. Johnson also submits that it was unfair
for the officer to address the best interests of his daughter without first
putting him on notice of her intention to do so, and affording him the
opportunity to make submissions on this issue. He further asks that in the
event that the matter is sent back for re‑determination, the Court
provide directions that the officer be required to revisit the issue of the
best interests of his child. Mr. Johnson asserts that such directions are
necessary as section 25.1 of IRPA has recently been amended to preclude
the consideration of humanitarian and compassionate factors, including the best
interests of children, in inadmissibility cases under section 35 of the Act.
[36]
I am not prepared to issue such a direction. The
officer considered the best interests of Mr. Johnson’s daughter on her own
initiative. There was no obligation on her to do so in the absence of any such
request from Mr. Johnson, nor was there any obligation on the officer to
seek out information from Mr. Johnson regarding the best interests of his
child: Gutierrez v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2013 FC 623 at paras. 39‑40, 434 F.T.R. 69. Rather, the burden is on
those seeking H&C consideration to put forward the information that they
wish to have considered: Owusu v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2004 FCA 38 at para. 5, [2004] F.C.R. 635.
[37]
Having failed to ask for H&C consideration
in the first place, Mr. Johnson should not now be placed in a more
advantageous position than would otherwise have been the case.
VIII.
Conclusion
[38]
For these reasons, the application for judicial
review is allowed. The question of Mr. Johnson’s admissibility to Canada is remitted to a different immigration officer for re‑determination in
accordance with these reasons and the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada
in Ezokola. I agree with the parties that the case does not raise a
question for certification.