Docket: IMM-7691-13
Citation:
2014 FC 899
Ottawa, Ontario, September 18, 2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
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AB, CD, EF
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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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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application under s. 72(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [Act] for judicial review of the
decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee
Board [RPD or the Board], which refused the Applicants’ application to be
deemed Convention refugees or persons in need of protection under s. 96 and 97
of the Act [Decision].
BACKGROUND
[2]
The Applicants are a husband [AB], wife [CD] and
their child. They say they came to Canada after suffering abuses at the hands
of the authorities in their home country, and out of fear that they would
suffer further harm.
[3]
AB claims he was detained and tortured by
government authorities. Upon his release, he was forced to sign an undertaking
promising not to participate in protests or political activity, or else he
would be brought before the court.
[4]
CD claims she was also detained and suffered
abuses at the hands of the government authorities. She was also forced to sign
an undertaking.
[5]
When AB went to pick up CD after her detention,
he shouted at the officers. They physically assaulted him, and then accused him
of assaulting officers of the government. Both Applicants were released, but
were informed that they would be summoned to court to answer charges.
[6]
The Applicants say they feared extreme sanction given
the earlier incident. AB was particularly afraid he would be imprisoned and
tortured again. The Applicants left within days, travelling through a number of
other countries with the aid of a smuggler before reaching Canada.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
[7]
The RPD found that the Applicants were neither
refugees nor persons in need of protection within the meaning of s. 97, because
it found them not credible.
[8]
The Board began by declaring CD a vulnerable
person pursuant to Chairperson Guideline 8: Procedures with Respect to
Vulnerable Persons Appearing Before the IRB, and noting that Chairperson
Guideline 4: Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender-Related Persecution was
employed during the hearing and in rendering the Decision.
[9]
The RPD noted that there were several medical
reports stating that the Applicants are suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder [PTSD], and accepted that this was the case. However, the Board found
that this condition could result from a variety of sources, and was not
necessarily due to the events alleged by the Applicants. The RPD member found
that she could not base her credibility findings on the conclusions of the
medical professionals as to the etiology of the PTSD since the Applicants
provided this information to those practitioners. The Board observed that the
PTSD could have resulted from the trying experiences during the Applicants’
journey to Canada, including the trauma of having to flee their country,
feeling betrayed and abandoned by their smuggler, running out of money and food
with their infant child, “starving” during the trip, separating from CD’s
family members (several of whom fled around the same time), and being received
harshly in the home where they first stayed upon arriving in Canada.
[10]
The Board then observed, with respect to the
Applicants’ credibility (Decision, at paras 23-25):
The literature on trauma provided in this case
does not support the proposition that traumatized individuals tell untruths or
cannot recall events that are unrelated to the trauma. It is for this reason
among others that adjudicators can determine whether a claimant has provided
credible, reliable, and trustworthy evidence. And when I tested the claimants’
credibility in this case, being mindful of the trauma they have endured, I
found that they did not provide credible and reliable evidence. There were
material omissions and contradictions that were not adequately explained and a
corroborating document I found not to be a genuine.
Because I chose not to examine the alleged
traumatic events themselves as to safeguard the claimants from further trauma,
I had to also include in my credibility assessment non-material aspects of
their claims as part of the credibility assessment. There were multiple
non-material omissions and contradictions contained in the claimants’ evidence
that demonstrated collectively that they have been untruthful with Canadian
immigration officials and with the IRB.
All told, I find on a balance of probabilities
that the claimants have not provided reliable and trustworthy evidence in this
case.
[footnotes omitted]
[11]
The Board characterized two inconsistencies or contradictions
in the Applicants’ evidence to be material to their claim. The first was the
Applicants’ failure to disclose in their Personal Information Forms [PIF] that
several members of CD’s family fled the country around the same time as the
Applicants, and made successful refugee claims elsewhere. The Board found this
information was material to the Applicants’ claim because the fact that these
family members had allegedly suffered persecution in their home country would
have impacted the Applicants’ own situation there. The Board found that the
Applicants (Decision, at para 26):
[…] attempted to hide this information from the
Tribunal and only disclosed limited information about these family members
after the Minister disclosed information [regarding the family members].
The Board found that CD’s father and sister
had been living elsewhere for two and a half months when the Applicants filed
their PIFs, and that the Applicants had not amended their PIFs until confronted
with the Minister’s evidence at the hearing.
[12]
The Board rejected as not being credible CD’s explanation
that despite communicating regularly during and after the journey with her
mother, who was still in their home country at the time, she was not told that
her other family members had fled and sought asylum elsewhere. Moreover, the
Board found that the adult Applicants contradicted each other on this point as AB
stated that they had no contact with CD’s family during the journey. AB also
gave inconsistent answers regarding when he first learned CD’s family members
had left their home country, stating variously that he learned only recently,
over a year ago, fourteen or fifteen months ago, and twelve to thirteen months
ago. The Board found that CD was untruthful when interviewed by an immigration
officer after filing her PIF: she said her father and sister were still living
in their home country, but asked the officer not to contact her father or
mother, when in fact she would have known by then that her family was not there.
The Board found that (Decision, at para 41):
[CD] did not want her mother or her father to
be contacted by the officer because this would expose to the officer that she
had just lied to the officer. These phone calls would have exposed the
associate claimant in her intentional material omissions that were in her PIF.
[13]
The Board found that when specifically requested
to provide certain documents regarding the family members’ asylum claims, the
Applicants failed to comply (Decision at paras 31-33):
And even when I explicitly told the claimants
and their counsel on the first day of our hearing, that I want them to get from
their family…all of the family’s refugee applications and decisions, the
claimants did not obtain the documents. It must be noted that the associate
claimant’s mother has now joined the associate claimant’s father and sister...
The claimants had no explanation for why the
family…could not send them any of their asylum information in the almost one
month time period that I had provided to them. They did manage to file other
documents but not the documents that I had specifically requested.
The associate claimant’s father, sister, and
brother-in-law were each given a copy of the interview they each had had with a[n]…
immigration officer. This copy contained all of their allegations of why they
were requesting protection. The copy they were provided contained their very
own signatures affirming their congruence with the material garnered in the
interview. And still the associate claimant’s did not send this information to
the IRB or the claimants did not choose to put it in evidence.
[footnotes omitted]
[14]
The Board also found that the Applicants
introduced a document that was not genuine. They entered a photocopy of a
summons for AB to appear, which was allegedly issued after the Applicants had
fled. However, this document was not sent to the Applicants’ last address but
to CD’s parents’ home. The Board found that AB had no real explanation for
this. At her hearing, one month later, CD testified that this was because the
Applicants had no post box at their home, and they would therefore have
provided her parents’ address to institutions needing to contact them. The
Board rejected this explanation as follows (Decision, at para 48):
I find all of the claimants’ explanation
spurious. First the principal claimant himself could not remember that for
years his phone bills, credit card statements, bank statements, and so forth
did go [sic] directly to his own home but to his in-law’s home. The claimants
did not produce any other documentation in the month they had between the
hearings to corroborate that this was their modus operandus. I could not
examine their passport pages to see if that corroborated their new allegation,
as their addresses were not translated on the passports.
[footnote omitted]
The Board also noted that the documentary
evidence indicated that warrants for arrest in their home country were to be
served on the accused at their last known address, and that “the same kind of logic would apply to summons” (Decision,
at para 49).
[15]
Moreover, the Board noted that the Applicants
had not mentioned this summons in their PIFs, and that this was a material
omission. AB testified that he did not speak with CD’s mother, but only his own
parents after his arrival in Canada, and CD testified that her mother did not
tell her about the summons because she was already so traumatized. The Board
rejected these explanations as being not credible. The Board found that the
summons was sufficiently serious that CD’s mother would have told AB’s parents
about it even if they were not close friends, and that AB’s parents would have
told him. Moreover, the Board found that CD’s mother would have told her about
the summons. CD’s mother was entrusted with obtaining documents and whatever
else was needed for the Applicants’ and the other family members’ refugee
claims, and under these circumstances she would not have acceded to her
daughter’s alleged insistence not to tell her anything of substance in their
communications.
[16]
The Board found that the summons was a
fraudulent document and that, without it, there were no corroborating documents
that could independently support the Applicants’ allegations given the Board’s
finding that they lacked credibility.
[17]
The Board found that besides the material
contradictions outlined above, there were a series of non-material
contradictions that cumulatively indicated that “these
claimants have no qualms about stating mistruths” (Decision, at para
57). CD told the immigration officer who interviewed her that she did not know
the smuggler’s real name, but testified at the hearing that she did. When asked
how they knew the man who housed them in Canada when they first arrived, CD
told the immigration officer that he was a friend, when in fact he was a
relative. The Board observed (Decision, at para 62):
This is just another instance of the associate
claimant trying to hide the truth. And in so doing, I cannot tell which are the
truths and untruths in this case.
[18]
The RPD noted that the Applicants advanced a sur
place claim on the basis that asylum seekers are interrogated if returned.
The Board found that the documentary evidence did not state that “all asylum seekers are interrogated on return but only those
who are political activists or who have tried to conduct propaganda abroad”
(Decision at para 70). It found that there was no credible evidence that the
Applicants had ever participated in any political activity, and that therefore
they would not be interrogated if they returned.
ISSUES
[19]
The Applicants have raised the following issues
in this application:
a. Did the RPD err by finding that the Applicants were not credible on
the basis of immaterial or peripheral matters, while failing to give clear
reasons for rejecting the core allegations of their claims?
b. Did the RPD member breach a duty of procedural fairness by
indicating that she did not need to hear information on the traumatic events,
and then concluding that the traumatic events had not occurred?
c. Did the RPD err by assessing the Applicants’ credibility without
regard to the medical and psychological reports concerning the Applicants’
diminished capacity to testify?
d. Did the RPD err by failing to consider whether the Applicants were
in need of protection even if they lacked credibility on specific matters?
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[20]
The Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir] held that a standard of review analysis
need not be conducted in every instance. Instead, where the standard of review
applicable to a particular question before the court is settled in a
satisfactory manner by past jurisprudence, the reviewing court may adopt that
standard of review. Only where this search proves fruitless, or where the
relevant precedents appear to be inconsistent with new developments in the
common law principles of judicial review, must the reviewing court undertake a
consideration of the four factors comprising the standard of review analysis: Agraira
v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36 at para
48.
[21]
Issues a., c. and d. above relate to the Board’s
assessment of the Applicants’ credibility and its conclusions based on the
evidence. These matters are reviewable on a standard of reasonableness: see Cruz
Herrera v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 979 at
para 14; He v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC
525 at paras 6-9; Lawal v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 558 at para 11; Aguebor v Canada (Minister of Employment and
Immigration) (1993), 160 NR 315, [1993] FCJ no 732 at para 4 (CA)(QL) [Aguebor].
Issue b. raises a question of procedural fairness which is reviewable on a
standard of correctness: see Mission Institution v Khela, 2014 SCC 24 at
para 79; C.U.P.E. v Ontario (Minister of Labour), 2003 SCC 29 at para
100; Canada (Attorney General) v Sketchley, 2005 FCA 404 at para
53.
[22]
When reviewing a decision on the standard of
reasonableness, the analysis will be concerned with “the
existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within the
decision-making process [and also with] whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.” See Dunsmuir, above, at para 47, and Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12
at para 59. Put another way, the Court should intervene only if the Decision
was unreasonable in the sense that it falls outside the “range
of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts
and law.”
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[23]
The following provisions of the Act are
applicable in these proceedings:
Convention refugee
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Définition de « réfugié »
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96. A Convention refugee is a person who,
by reason of a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race,
religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political
opinion,
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96. A qualité de réfugié au sens de la
Convention — le réfugié — la personne qui, craignant avec raison d’être
persécutée du fait de sa race, de sa religion, de sa nationalité, de son
appartenance à un groupe social ou de ses opinions politiques :
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(a) is outside each of their countries of
nationality and is unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling to avail
themself of the protection of each of those countries; or
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a) soit se trouve hors de tout pays dont
elle a la nationalité et ne peut ou, du fait de cette crainte, ne veut se réclamer
de la protection de chacun de ces pays;
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(b) not having a country of nationality, is
outside the country of their former habitual residence and is unable or, by
reason of that fear, unwilling to return to that country.
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b) soit, si elle n’a pas de nationalité et
se trouve hors du pays dans lequel elle avait sa résidence habituelle, ne
peut ni, du fait de cette crainte, ne veut y retourner.
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Person in need of protection
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Personne à protéger
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97. (1) A person in need of protection is a
person in Canada whose removal to their country or countries of nationality
or, if they do not have a country of nationality, their country of former
habitual residence, would subject them personally
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97. (1) A qualité de personne à protéger la
personne qui se trouve au Canada et serait personnellement, par son renvoi
vers tout pays dont elle a la nationalité ou, si elle n’a pas de nationalité,
dans lequel elle avait sa résidence habituelle, exposée :
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(a) to a danger, believed on substantial
grounds to exist, of torture within the meaning of Article 1 of the
Convention Against Torture; or
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a) soit au risque, s’il y a des motifs
sérieux de le croire, d’être soumise à la torture au sens de l’article
premier de la Convention contre la torture;
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(b) to a risk to their life or to a risk of
cruel and unusual treatment or punishment if
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b) soit à une menace à sa vie ou au risque
de traitements ou peines cruels et inusités dans le cas suivant
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(i) the person is unable or, because of
that risk, unwilling to avail themself of the protection of that country,
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(i) elle ne peut ou, de ce fait, ne veut se
réclamer de la protection de ce pays,
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(ii) the risk would be faced by the person
in every part of that country and is not faced generally by other individuals
in or from that country,
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(ii) elle y est exposée en tout lieu de ce
pays alors que d’autres personnes originaires de ce pays ou qui s’y trouvent
ne le sont généralement pas,
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(iii) the risk is not inherent or
incidental to lawful sanctions, unless imposed in disregard of accepted
international standards, and
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(iii) la menace ou le risque ne résulte pas
de sanctions légitimes — sauf celles infligées au mépris des normes
internationales — et inhérents à celles-ci ou occasionnés par elles,
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(iv) the risk is not caused by the
inability of that country to provide adequate health or medical care.
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(iv) la menace ou le risque ne résulte pas
de l’incapacité du pays de fournir des soins médicaux ou de santé adéquats.
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ARGUMENT
Applicants
Basing credibility findings on peripheral matters while
failing to deal with the core allegations
[24]
The Applicants argue that the RPD based its
assessment of their credibility on immaterial or peripheral matters while
failing to address the core elements of their claim, which were both internally
consistent and consistent with the medical and country evidence before the RPD.
The RPD made a negative decision based on credibility, which was silent on the
core allegations, despite having admitted the Applicants’ PIFs as sworn
testimony, and deciding not to question them on the core allegations stated in
the PIFs.
[25]
The Applicants note that the Board based its
credibility findings on the omission from their PIFs of information about CD’s
family’s claims, and the failure to mention the summons or to explain why it
was delivered to CD’s family’s home. They say the decision to base the
credibility assessment on these elements of their testimony was unreasonable
for several reasons:
a. The family’s asylum claims and the summons are non-material or
peripheral elements in their claim;
b. The fact that CD’s father and sister claimed asylum in another
country and were recognized as Convention refugees should, if anything, enhance
and not detract from the Applicants’ credibility;
c. The Applicants cannot be faulted for failing to produce all the documents
relating to these claims since those documents were outside of their control;
d. The RPD erred by impugning AB’s credibility on the basis of
omissions from his wife’s PIF since the RPD knew that he had never seen his
wife’s PIF; and
e. The RPD failed to explain why it disregarded the remaining evidence,
including the core allegations, in clear and unmistakable terms.
[26]
The Applicants acknowledge that the Board is
entitled to make adverse findings of credibility based on inconsistencies, but
they argue that not all inconsistencies can support such findings, which should
not be based on a “‘microscopic’ examination of issues
irrelevant or peripheral to the…claim”: Lubana v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2003 FCT 116 at paras 10-11; Cooper v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 118 at paras 3-4 [Cooper].
[27]
A material fact, the Applicants say, is one that
goes to the foundation of the case (Pfizer Canada v Canada (Minister of Health), 2011 FCA 215 at paras 21-22), and neither of the primary issues
identified by the RPD goes to the foundation of the Applicants’ claim for
protection in Canada. It is both irrelevant and immaterial whether there were
relatives who went to other countries to seek asylum, what the Applicants knew
about those claims, and whether they were able to produce all of the documents
relating to the relatives’ claims that the RPD requested. Similarly, it is both
irrelevant and immaterial where the summons for AB was delivered and whether he
knew the reasons for this. If there never was a summons it would not matter to
the substance and genuineness of AB’s claim for protection as documents such as
summonses are not required to be produced to corroborate refugee claims. Thus,
the two matters on which the Decision rests are not material.
[28]
While non-material matters can legitimately go
to credibility, and the cumulative effect of a number of non-material matters
may be determinative, the Applicants argue that it is an error to skip any
analysis of the core allegations and proceed directly to a consideration of
non-material elements. To do so, they say, is to fail to substantively and
materially evaluate the basis of the claim. They cite Justice Rennie’s analysis
in Cooper, above, at para 3:
I find that the Board's decision falls outside
the scope or range of legally permissible outcomes given the facts and law and
is unreasonable. Notwithstanding the concerns about the applicant's
credibility, the decision fails to substantively analyze the claim. Instead of
focusing on the factual issues that are material to a claim for protection, the
Board focused its attention on matters that were immaterial and irrelevant to
the claim for protection. In consequence, the Board undertook no analysis of
the principle basis of the claim of risk.
[Applicants’ emphasis]
Similar to the Court’s finding in Tsyhanko
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 819 at para
16, the Applicants argue, the Board implicitly accepted, or did not question,
the central elements of their claim, but then denied the claim based on
inconsistencies on peripheral matters.
[29]
The Applicants note that, at the RPD’s request,
they filed documents confirming that CD’s relatives were granted asylum elsewhere.
In keeping with the Board’s reasoning that persecution of CD’s relatives would
impact on their own situation, the Applicants argue the fact that those
relatives received asylum elsewhere can be viewed as a matter that supports,
rather than undermines, their own claims in Canada. The RPD’s conclusion that
the omission of this information from the Applicants’ PIFs supports a finding
that the Applicants were not in need of protection is unreasonable. Common
sense would lead one to ask why a claimant would suppress information that
bolsters his/her claim, but the RPD never asked or considered this question.
[30]
Furthermore, the documents requested by the RPD
were not in the Applicants’ control. They asked CD’s relatives to forward
evidence of their applications for asylum and filed the documents they received
from the relatives. The RPD cannot fault them for failing to file documents
which are outside their control. If the Board felt it needed the entire asylum
file, it could have requested copies of documents from the authorities in that
country.
[31]
The Applicants argue that there was no reason
for AB to include information about CD’s relatives in his PIF, and no basis for
the Board to fault him for failing to include such information. The form asks
for information about immediate family members (parents, siblings, spouse and
children). It was neither required nor appropriate for AB to list information
about CD’s family. The only area where he might have alluded to his wife’s
family’s problems was in the narrative portion of the PIF, but he did not flee
because of his in-laws’ problems with authorities. He fled because of his
personal experiences. Impugning his credibility on the basis that he should
have included information about his in-laws is unreasonable. Furthermore, AB
would not at any point have been aware of the contents of his wife’s PIF, and
the RPD was aware of the fact that he has never seen it.
[32]
Finally, the Applicants argue that the Decision
is unreasonable due to the Board’s failure to explain in clear and
unmistakeable terms why it rejected the traumatic and core incidents on which
the claims were founded: Hilo v Canada (Minister of Employment and
Immigration) (1991), 130 NR 236, [1991] FCJ no 228 (CA)(QL); Martinez
Caicedo v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC
749. The reasons do not consider, much less analyze, the core elements of the
claim. One must assume that they were rejected on the basis that they were not
credible, but that is only an assumption.
Failure to inform the Applicants of intention to focus on
non-material matters rather than core allegations
[33]
The Applicants note that the RPD breached a duty
of fairness by allowing them to believe that it accepted the basic elements of
their claims and then rejecting those allegations based on a general finding of
non-credibility. As such, they were unable to know the case that was being
built against them, to dispute, correct or contradict anything prejudicial to
their position, or to present arguments and evidence addressing the concerns of
the Board contrary to this Court and the Court of Appeal’s direction regarding
the content of the duty of fairness in this context: Thamotharem v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 16 at paras 62-64
[Thamotharem (FC)]; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
v Thamotharem, 2007 FCA 198 at para 37. Sworn testimony is presumed to be
true in the absence of some reason to find otherwise (Maldonado v Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1980] 2 FC 302 (FCA) [Maldanado]),
and if the RPD has no questions on an element of the claim, there is no need
for the claimant to review what has been accepted in writing as the basis of
the claim. The Applicants quote Justice Blanchard’s analysis in Thamotharem
(FC), above, at para 50, quoting in turn Justice Pelletier’s analysis in Veres
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2001] 2 FC 124 (TD),
relating to a decision of the Convention Refugee Determination Division (CRDD),
the predecessor of the RPD:
Rather, Mr. Justice Pelletier stated that the
unfairness arises where the Board in its reasons reproaches claimants for
failing to provide some piece of evidence without putting the claimants on
notice that they are at risk on that issue. At paragraph 28 of his decision,
Mr. Justice Pelletier wrote:
It is clear that the
CRDD is the master of its procedures. It is entitled to take economy of time
into account in devising its procedures. It can equally direct which
evidence it wishes to hear from the mouth of the witness and which it waives
hearing. But when it says it does not need to hear from the witness, it
cannot subsequently complain that it has not heard from the witness.
[Applicants’ emphasis]
[34]
The Applicants say that they had no reason to
suspect that the RPD doubted the core incidents of their claims as the Board
accepted their PIFs as sworn testimony: Maldonado, above. Through
preliminary discussion with counsel and through the approach she took to
questioning the Applicants, the RPD member indicated that the core allegations
forming the basis of the claims were not in issue. Counsel for CD raised the
issue of areas of questioning the RPD would want to pursue, and the RPD member
identified the areas in which she was interested. She never expressed any
concern about the core incidents to counsel, nor did she question on those
elements herself. Instead, the Applicants were questioned about events that
were tangentially or peripherally related to the key events. This tangential
information did not reveal any inconsistencies with the core claims.
[35]
The Applicants say they were entitled, as a
matter of procedural fairness, to respond to the RPD’s concerns before their
case was decided. At the point at which the RPD member believed the Applicants
not to be credible on peripheral matters, she should have advised them of her
doubts about the core allegations. The failure to do so meant that the
Applicants did not appreciate the need to establish their credibility on those
events because, to their mind, the Board had no doubts. In other words, they
were denied the opportunity to know the case they had to meet, and therefore
the right to a fair hearing.
Assessing credibility without regard to the medical and
psychological evidence and the literature on trauma
[36]
The Applicants note that they filed a medical
report and a psychological report concerning CD, which indicate that she is
severely traumatized and has a full range of PTSD symptoms, including poor
concentration and memory, and that progress in Stage I PTSD treatment has been
slow. A medical report diagnosed AB as suffering from PTSD, in partial
remission, and as having symptoms of Severe Depression. The report cautioned
that AB’s poor mental health, combined with the sedative effect of medication,
would likely affect his memory and the proper sequencing of events.
[37]
The Applicants acknowledge that medical
practitioners cannot attest to the etiology of an illness developed in a
faraway land, but they argue that the RPD missed the purpose of these reports,
which was twofold: first, the medical and psychological conditions documented
are consistent with the Applicants’ account of trauma and abuse; and second,
they offer a possible explanation for inconsistencies and gaps in testimony.
[38]
The Applicants say that the Board’s suggestion
that CD’s PTSD could be due to the difficulties encountered on the journey to
Canada is both speculative and shows a failure to understand the severity of
the diagnoses, which went far beyond what might be occasioned by those
difficulties.
[39]
Moreover, the RPD made findings based on
inconsistencies in the Applicants’ testimony without acknowledging the caution
stated in each of the reports that the Applicants would likely have difficulty
testifying at the hearing, would have difficulties with memory, and were likely
to become confused about the sequence of events, times and dates. They point to
AB’s inability to explain why the judicial summons was delivered to the home of
his parents-in-law rather than his former address as an example of the type of
difficulty testifying that can be explained by the medical evidence. AB’s
bewilderment is clear in the testimony, they say, whereas it would be very
simple to concoct a coherent explanation if he were trying to hide the truth.
The RPD member failed to explain why the findings of the physician and
psychologist had no bearing on the case, and her failure to consider their
reports when assessing the Applicants’ credibility renders the Decision
unreasonable: Mico v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2011 FC 964 [Mico]; Sokhi v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2009 FC 140; Atay v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 201; Owusu-Ansah v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)(1989), 98 NR 312, [1989] FCJ no
442 (CA)(QL); Arslan v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2013 FC 252 at para 36.
Failure to consider the
need for protection even if the Applicants were lacking in credibility on some
matters
[40]
Finally, the Applicants note that a refugee
claimant may be in need of protection even if found to be lacking in
credibility, and the RPD has a duty to examine all of the evidence to determine
if protection is warranted: Kulasekaram v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 388. They argue that the RPD failed
to state in clear and unequivocal terms the reasons for rejecting all of their
evidence, if in fact such a rejection has taken place, and failed to consider whether
they are in need of protection even if some of their testimony has been found
to be lacking in credibility.
Respondent
[41]
The Respondent argues that the claim process
unfolded appropriately, with the RPD member taking into account the Applicants’
vulnerabilities and their particular allegations of trauma, and that the Board
came to a reasonable conclusion based on the inconsistencies, contradictions
and implausibilities in the Applicants’ evidence.
Credibility findings
[42]
The Applicants’ arguments that the Board erred
by making negative credibility findings based on peripheral matters and
improper consideration of the medical evidence misapprehends the Board’s
reasons, the significance of the multiple credibility issues identified, and
the effect of the accommodation requests put forward by the Applicants
themselves. On the evidence presented, the Board could reasonably find that the
claims lacked credibility and should be rejected.
[43]
The Respondent says that there is a
well-established duty on all claimants to provide truthful information, and
that the integrity of the refugee system requires that this duty be taken
seriously: Cao v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 450 at para 28; Garcia Porfirio v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 794 at para 46. Where a refugee
claimant fails to mention important facts in their PIF, this may legitimately
be considered an omission that goes to a lack of credibility: Lopez Pineda
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 889 at paras
14-15; Sahi v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2001 FCT 527 at para 18 [Sahi].
[44]
In this case, the Respondent says that it was
reasonable for the Board to find that the family’s claims were relevant to the
Applicants’ claims in Canada given the relationship the Applicants had with CD’s
parents, the role they played in the Applicants’ travel to Canada, and the fact
that CD’s family left so soon after the Applicants’ departure. CD repeatedly
stated that her family was in their home country when they were not, and the
Board found her explanation that she was unaware of her family’s claim not to
be credible. AB stated twice that he knew the family was in another country at
least a year before the hearing. The Board appears to have been concerned about
why the Applicants would hide the fact of the family’s asylum claims from
Canadian immigration officials. They refused to provide any details to the
Board as to the nature of the family’s claims or the reasons they were granted
protection, despite a request for this information. The Respondent argues that
it was reasonable for the RPD to request evidence about the claims, and
reasonable to expect CD’s family to have access to such documents. In addition
to not amending their PIFs until the hearing, the Applicants provided false
evidence. This alone significantly undermined their credibility, and the Board
was entitled to draw a negative inference: Li v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 998 at para 17; Ren v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 973 at paras 15-18.
[45]
The summons submitted by the Applicants was
found not to be genuine, the Respondent notes, and when combined with other
testimony, provided a strong indication that the Applicants were not credible. AB’s
PIF referred to the fact that they were told they would receive a summons, and
it was the fear that AB would be incarcerated again that precipitated their
flight. Yet, the summons was not mentioned in the Applicants’ PIFs, and this
gave rise to serious concerns about its alleged service on CD’s family. The RPD
found the Applicants’ story to be inconsistent, implausible, and not in
accordance with the documentary evidence. Thus, it was reasonably open to the
RPD to find that the summons was not genuine.
[46]
As to the medical evidence, the Respondent says
that both the reasons and the transcripts show that the Board explicitly
considered the effect of the Applicants’ alleged trauma on their ability to
testify. As observed by the Board, the evidence did not show that traumatized
individuals tell untruths or would be unable to recall events unrelated to the
trauma. The fact that the Applicants were afforded procedural accommodation in
recognition of their vulnerability does not indicate that the Board accepted
the credibility of their claim. The RPD respectfully and carefully proceeded
with the hearing in light of CD’s Vulnerable Person designation and both
Applicants’ alleged traumas. CD’s counsel explicitly stated that she did not
wish to question her client as to the details of her alleged detention. The
Applicants were questioned on key aspects of their claim, including events
leading up to and emanating from their alleged detention, and key omissions and
untruths that undermined their credibility.
[47]
The Respondent argues that the Applicants did
not simply misstate a sequence of events; they concealed material
circumstances. There was no evidence that the Applicants suffered from symptoms
that would cause them to tell material untruths such as the location of CD’s
family and their claim for asylum. Moreover, they did not state that they
“forgot” that the family was not at home, but that they were not initially
told. Similarly, there is no evidence that would explain the production of a
false document.
[48]
The Board considered whether the medical reports
were determinative of the Applicants’ credibility and found that they were not.
The Board was entitled to find that any PTSD was not necessarily caused by the
events alleged. The medical findings were based on the Applicants’ own
statements to medical professionals, and since these allegations were
determined by the Board to be unfounded, it was not required to accept findings
that were based primarily on the Applicants’ self-reporting as to the cause of
their difficulties: Benipal v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1999] FCJ no 1491 at para 5 (TD)(QL); Sahi, above, at
para 19.
[49]
The Board also found a number of “immaterial”
contradictions, and was entitled to conclude that, cumulatively, these
contradictions and implausibilities contributed to the Applicants’ lack of
credibility: Lawal v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 558 at para 25.
[50]
In sum, the Respondent argues that the Board was
entitled to analyze the Applicants’ claims based on rationality, common sense
and its own understanding of human behaviour, to reject evidence if it was not
consistent with the case as a whole, and to find that the inconsistencies and
contradictions indicated a lack of credibility: Shahamati v Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1994] FCJ no 415 (CA)(QL); Aguebor,
above; Li v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2002 FCT 358 at para 9 [Li (2002)].
Applicants not at risk
[51]
While the Applicants submit that the Board
failed to address whether they were at risk notwithstanding the negative
credibility findings, the Respondent argues that they presented no alternative
basis for risk. The Board considered their sur place argument, and found
that there was no reliable evidence that they were politically involved. They
were therefore not at risk. The argument that their claim was not fully
analyzed is without merit, and it is well-established that documentary evidence
about general country conditions cannot form the basis for a refugee claim
without some credible evidence related to the claimant: Sheikh v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1990] 3 FC 238 at 244.
No breach of procedural fairness
[52]
The Respondent argues that the Board had no
obligation to put its concerns about the weakness of the Applicants’ testimony
to them for a response, including its concerns about implausibilities. As such,
no duty of fairness arises in these circumstances: Li (2002), above, at
para 10; Markauskas v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 902 at para 24. Nevertheless, such concerns were put
to the Applicants and their counsel at multiple points in the proceedings. The conduct
of the hearing and the Board’s requests for explanations and documentation
further illustrates that the RPD’s concerns were communicated. Moreover,
counsel for the Applicants made oral submissions on credibility, the Applicants
were questioned extensively on credibility, and they filed written submissions
after the hearings concluded. The fact that the Board was not satisfied with
their explanations does not make its findings unreasonable, nor have the
Applicants pointed to any explanation of merit that the Board failed to
address.
Applicants’ Reply Submissions
Applicants did not foreclose questioning on traumatic
incidents
[53]
The Applicants say that in arguing that their
counsel requested that there be no questioning on the details of what happened
during CD’s incarceration, the Respondent has mischaracterized counsel’s words.
Counsel expressly invited the RPD member to inform herself of areas of
questioning that were of interest to the RPD, and neither the Applicants nor
their counsel ever stated that the Applicants did not want to answer questions
about what happened to them. Indeed, the reason for asking AB to be absent
during CD’s testimony was to ensure that CD could describe what happened in the
police cells without her husband listening. If the RPD member doubted what had
occurred, she could and should have questioned CD to test her credibility on
this point. Instead, the RPD chose to skirt the issue, substituting peripheral
matters for the core elements of the claim, contrary to the Court’s direction
in Cooper, above, at paras 3 and 6. Since the RPD did not question the
basis of the claims, or request that counsel do so, that evidence stands as
presumed to be true: Maldonado, above at 305-06. The RPD’s failure to
deal with that evidence or explain why she accepted or rejected it constitutes
a reviewable error.
RPD’s decision not to question on traumatic events
[54]
While the RPD stated that it chose not to
examine the Applicants on the alleged traumatic events so as to safeguard them
from further trauma, the Applicants argue that there is no evidence that such
questioning by the RPD would constitute further trauma. It could in fact be a
liberating experience. The RPD’s decision to avoid questioning on traumatic
events to “safeguard” the Applicants has resulted in a devastating decision
that they are not in need of protection, and any pain or distress that might
have been caused by such questioning is trivial in comparison with the distress
caused by this negative decision. While the RPD was attentive to the
Applicants’ need for procedural accommodation, going so far as to excuse AB so CD
could testify freely, it is impossible to tell from the reasons whether the
member ultimately concluded that the allegations never took place.
Vulnerable designation and presumption of truthfulness
[55]
The Applicants say the Respondent has
mischaracterized their argument with respect to the presumption of
truthfulness. They do not argue that they believed the RPD had accepted their
claims simply because it recognized their vulnerability and accorded procedural
protection. Rather, when the RPD accepted the PIFs as sworn testimony, a
rebuttable presumption arose that the PIF allegations were true. If the RPD
found that they were not, it had a duty to explain why and to turn its mind to
the core allegations rather than focusing solely on ancillary details.
Applicants provided asylum documents
[56]
The Applicants say they did not refuse to
provide the RPD with details about the family’s claim as stated in the
Decision. They point to the Board’s direction to “please
obtain copies of their applications for refugee protection…and decisions,”
and say they understood that the RPD sought corroboration that CD’s family had
been accepted as refugees. In addition to filing documents confirming this,
they filed documents describing the asylum process in that country. In that
process, there is no equivalent to a PIF or a Basis of Claim form [BOC].
Rather, asylum-seekers are interviewed about their need for protection, and the
officer who conducts that introductory interview can render a positive
decision, apparently without a requirement for reasons. CD’s relatives were
accepted after the initial interviews and provided the decisions, which were
filed by the Applicants. They could not provide the written “applications”
requested by the Member since there is no equivalent to the PIF or BOC in that
system. They attempted to fulfill the RPD’s request by filing the decisions,
and in the absence of written applications, they filed a description of the
asylum process. Yet, somehow, their failure to provide a transcript of the
relatives’ interviews has been characterized as deliberate obstruction, which
is neither accurate nor fair. The RPD erred by drawing an adverse credibility
inference based on the Applicants’ failure to provide documents that were not
in their possession or control.
Materiality of asylum claims
[57]
The Applicants argue that the family’s asylum
claims were not material to the Applicants’ need for protection, and the fact
that they loomed large in the RPD’s mind does not make them material. The
Applicants sought protection because of their own experiences, not those of CD’s
relatives. The only reason for not revealing the successful claims was the
mistaken belief that those claims were not relevant.
[58]
Moreover, the Respondent’s submission that the
Applicants did not amend their PIFs “until confronted
with evidence from the Minister” suggests deviousness and is incorrect.
The Minister did not disclose the fact that CD’s family had made claims
for protection. Rather, the Minister filed an 11-page disclosure three business
days before the Applicants’ hearing, which fleetingly referred to the fact that
the Applicants’ relatives were in another country and not their home country. At
the outset of the hearing, the Applicants submitted a number of corrections to
their PIFs, including correcting the location of CD’s relatives, which was to
their mind no more significant to their need for protection than the other
biographical corrections that were made at the start of the hearing (such as AB’s
name and CD’s education and addresses). The Applicants note that they were
without counsel between the filing of their PIFs and the scheduling of the
hearing, and it is common for claimants not to update their PIFs until the
hearing is at hand – particularly where, as here, they cannot read or write
English.
Erroneous findings regarding the Canadian Border Services Agency
interview of August 2012
[59]
The Applicants dispute the accuracy of the
findings that CD gave contradictory evidence regarding whether she knew the
real name of the smuggler, and that she told an immigration officer that her
father was in their home country and that she did not want him to be contacted.
The Canadian Border Services Agency [CBSA] officer’s notes state that CD said
she did not know the smuggler’s real name while in transit but learned it when
she arrived in Canada. This is consistent with her hearing testimony. Furthermore,
she did not tell the CBSA officer that her father was in their home country or
ask that he not be contacted. She stated that while they were in transit she
would contact her mother in their home country, where in fact she remained after
the family departed. The officer’s notes say that when he asked for CD’s
father’s telephone number, CD’s then-counsel interjected, saying they did not
want to involve another person. Thus, the RPD further justified its negative
credibility findings by pointing to inconsistencies and contradictions that do
not exist.
Failure to give effect to medical evidence
[60]
The Applicants reiterate that they are not
suggesting that the medical reports should have been determinative, but that
they contain important information that should have been considered. In
particular, they argue, the RPD failed to consider the effect of PTSD on their
ability to testify: see Mico, above, at para 49. The doctors do not
offer themselves as witnesses to the actual events alleged, but this appears to
have been the only potential relevance perceived by the RPD: the Board found
that PTSD can be occasioned by many things, and therefore saw no relevance in
this evidence. However, as in Mico, above, this evidence was put forward
here in order to alert the Board to the Applicants’ medical condition and the
impact it might have on their testimony. This evidence should have been
considered for its ability to explain confusion and perceived credibility
concerns, and the RPD’s failure to do so renders the Decision unreasonable.
ANALYSIS
[61]
At paragraph 71 of the Decision, the Board found
that:
In this case there is no credible evidence that
the claimants have ever participated in any political activity against…For this
reason I find that they will not be interrogated if returned.
[62]
In deciding that there was “no credible evidence” to support the Applicants’
refugee claim, the Board chose not to question them on the central aspects of
their claim involving their treatment at the hands of government authorities
which, the Applicants say, precipitated their flight to Canada (Decision, at paras 23-24):
The literature on trauma provided in this case
does not support the proposition that traumatized individuals tell untruths or
cannot recall events that are unrelated to the trauma. It is for this reason
among others that adjudicators can determine whether a claimant has provided
credible, reliable, and trustworthy evidence. And when I tested the claimants’
credibility in this case, being mindful of the trauma they have endured, I
found that they did not provide credible and reliable evidence. There were
material omissions and contradictions that were not adequately explained and a
corroborating document I found not to be a genuine.
Because I chose not to examine the alleged
traumatic events themselves as to safeguard the claimants from further trauma,
I had to also include in my credibility assessment non-material aspects of
their claims as part of the credibility assessment. There were multiple
non-material omissions and contradictions contained in the claimants’ evidence
that demonstrated collectively that they have been untruthful with Canadian
immigration officials and with the IRB.
[footnotes omitted]
[63]
In my view, then, the Board found that the
Applicants were not credible witnesses based upon:
(a) Material omissions and contradictions about the fate of other family
members who had made claims and had been granted asylum elsewhere;
(b) A finding that a summons issued against AB that was put into
evidence was not a genuine document; and
(c) Several non-material contradictions by the female claimant as to
what she knew about the smuggler who got the Applicants to Canada, and contradictions between the Applicants as to their relationship with GH.
[64]
The significant matters here are the family
issues and the summons and, in my view, the question for the Court is whether
the Board’s negative findings on these matters were reasonable and whether
those findings were sufficient to support a general negative credibility
finding, bearing in mind that other core allegations concerning the Applicants’
treatment at the hands of government authorities were never tested by the
Board.
[65]
As regards the family issues and refugee claims
in another country, the Board clearly suspected that the Applicants were
suppressing information that would undermine their own claims here in Canada.
[66]
There certainly were material inconsistencies
about the whereabouts of other family members and when the Applicants had
learned that those members had fled. But there was really no evidence before
the Board that the family’s claims contradicted the Applicants’ narrative as to
what had happened to them that caused them to flee. We just do not know what
the claims would have told the Board about the Applicants that would be
material to their claims for protection in Canada. This is why the Board
specifically requested that the Applicant provides all of the applications and
decisions involving the claims, and when the documentation that was provided
did not yield the information that the Board needed, the Board found as follows
(Decision, at paras 31-33):
And even when I explicitly told the claimants
and their counsel on the first day of our hearing, that I want them to get from
their family…all of the family’s refugee applications and decisions, the
claimants did not obtain the documents. It must be noted that the associate
claimant’s mother has now joined the associate claimant’s father and sister...
The claimants had no explanation for why the
family…could not send them any of their asylum information in the almost one
month time period that I had provided to them. They did manage to file other
documents but not the documents that I had specifically requested.
The associate claimant’s father, sister, and
brother-in-law were each given a copy of the interview they each had had with a[n]…
immigration officer. This copy contained all of their allegations of why they
were requesting protection. The copy they were provided contained their very
own signatures affirming their congruence with the material garnered in the
interview. And still the associate claimant’s [sic] did not send this
information to the IRB or the claimants did not choose to put it in evidence.
[footnotes omitted]
[67]
The Applicants say they should not have been
faulted for any omissions in another country’s documents because those matters
were not within their control. However, quite apart from this issue, it is unclear
to me what significance the RPD thought its findings on the family’s situation
had for the Applicants’ claims. The failure to provide documentation from another
country to satisfy the Board’s explorations in this matter does not establish
that those claims had any relevance for the Applicants’ claims in Canada, or would have undermined their credibility. The Board simply had suspicions that
this might be the case, and these suspicions can have little weight when the
Board itself deliberately chose not to question the Applicants about their own
direct experiences at the hands of government authorities.
[68]
In my view, the failure of the Applicants to
establish the basis for successful refugee claims by close family members is
not a reasonable basis for a finding that the mistreatment by government
officials did not occur, particularly when there are problems with the Board’s
treatment of the summons issue.
[69]
This issue is addressed in the following way
(Decision, at paras 44-56):
The claimants put into evidence a photocopy of
a summons that was allegedly issued…for the principal claimant to appear...This
summons itself indicates that it was delivered...
I have several reasons for finding that this
document is not a genuine document. With this finding, there are no
corroborating documents that could independently support the claimant’s
allegations despite my finding as to their credibility.
According to the principal claimant, the
summons was sent not to his residence, the marital home he had with the
associate claimant, but to the home of the associate claimant’s parents. I
asked the principal claimant why the summons was not delivered to his own home.
The principal claimant had no real explanation for this. He said that perhaps
he wrote this down because his mother-in-law was with him when he went to pick
up the associate claimant from her detention. Or perhaps he used this address
because the claimants would often stay with the associate claimant’s family at
their home.
When the associate claimant later testified in
this case, almost a month after the principal claimant had testified, the
definitive answer to this perplexing issue was provided. The claimants’ home had
no post box at their own home. Mail used to be slipped under the door. The
claimants therefore would provide her parents’ address and even their phone
number to all people and institutions that would need to be in contact with
them.
I find all of the claimants’ explanation
spurious. First the principal claimant himself could not remember that for
years his phone bills, credit card statements, bank statements, and so forth did
[sic] go directly to his own home but to his in-law’s home. The claimants did
not produce any other documentation in the month they had between the hearings
to corroborate that this was their modus operandus. I could not examine
their passport pages to see if that corroborated their new allegation, as their
addresses were not translated on the passports.
Finally I take note of Responses to Information Requests (RIR)... This RIR indicates that warrants for arrest are to be served on
the accused at the accused’s last known address. I find that although the RIR
only talks about warrants, I find that the same kind of logic would apply to
summons. A summons would not be delivered to a person’s secure post box (the
associate claimant’s parents’ address), but to the last known address of the
wanted person. I find that the summons should have listed the principal
claimant’s address not his in-law’s home address. That should have been where
the principal claimant should have been living had he not fled...
Second, although this alleged summons was
issued…[before the Applicants completed their PIFS,]the claimants fail to state
that the summons was issued in their PIFs…This is a material omission.
The claimants should have been aware of the
summons had it actually been issued. According to the claimants’ testimony the
associate claimant’s mother was living at the location of where the summons was
issued. The mother was in telephone and Skype contact with the associate
claimant, while they were travelling and also since she arrived here in Canada...
The associate claimant’s mother was certainly
aware of the summons, as the claimants testified that the associate claimant’s
mother allegedly had entrusted the summons to another family member after she
moved...The relative who was allegedly entrusted with the summons eventually
scanned it and sent it to Canada in time for this refugee protection hearing.
I asked the claimants many questions to
understand how they could not have known about the issuance of the summons at
the time of the filing of their PIFs if one had been issued. The principal
claimant stated that after he arrived in Canada he did not speak to the
associate claimant’s mother; he only spoke to his own parents. Even if this
were true, I find that the principal claimant’s own parents would have told him
about the summons. The principal claimant testified that his parents and the
associate claimant’s parents are not close friends but are cordial with each
other. Both families lived in the same city...I find it incredulous…that the
associate claimant’s family would have not contacted the principal claimant’s
parents to tell them about the serious situation that their son faced…This is
not only critical information for the claimants’ refugee protection hearing but
also for the claimants very lives if they were to be returned...
I took a negative inference that this a genuine
summons. It is not credible that if this summons existed that the principal
claimant’s own parents would not have told him about its existence.
The associate claimant insists that her mother
did not tell her since she, the associate claimant, was so traumatized. She
told her mother not to tell her anything; her mother should just listen to her
crying. I find this explanation vacuous. The associate claimant’s mother was [at
home] while her husband, the associate claimant’s sister and husband, the
associate claimant, and the principal claimant were in [other countries] trying
to get out of detention and trying to be accepted in both of these countries as
Convention refugees. I find under these circumstances that it is simply not
credible that this mother and wife with such an incredible responsibility in
terms of obtaining documents and whatever else was needed for her family in
such dire circumstances would have succumbed to her daughter’s alleged
insistence that she not be told anything of substance in all their
communications.
There is a time for a lot of crying and calls
for comfort. And there are times that critically important information must be
relayed to one’s adult children if they are going to have a chance at
potentially saving their own lives. That this allegedly critically important
information was not relayed to the claimants until some time after the filing
of their PIFs…months after the summons was allegedly issued reinforces my
finding that the summons is a fraudulent document that was never issued by the
Government.
[footnotes omitted]
[70]
The Board finds the female Applicant’s evidence
that her mother did not tell her husband about the summons because she was so
traumatized “vacuous,” but once again fails to address the material medical
evidence about the female Applicant’s condition that explains why this
explanation might not be vacuous.
[71]
The conclusion that the female Applicant’s
mother would have told the AB’s mother about the summons is speculation.
[72]
In my view, the Board appears to have an
inaccurate view of what the medical evidence tells us about the Applicants’
ability to recall past events when facing the stress of testifying at a refugee
hearing. At paragraph 23 of the Decision, the Board asserts that the “literature on trauma provided in this case does not support
the proposition that traumatized individuals tell untruths or cannot recall
events that are unrelated to the trauma” [footnotes omitted]. The
evidence cited for this assertion is “Exhibit 5.1 at pp. 206-207” of the Certified
Tribunal Record [CTR] but, as Respondent’s counsel pointed out at the hearing,
this reference is not relevant to the medical issue. I can find nothing in the record
to support the Board’s conclusion, and much to suggest it is incorrect. For
example, evidence on PTSD and Traumatic Recall at 390 of the CTR provides as
follows:
PTSD traumatic memory recall has been
accompanied by memory loss for peripheral details, which are necessary for the
formation of an accurate detailed reconstruction of a traumatic event (Herlihy,
Scragg, & Turner, 2002).* According to one interesting prospective study
conducted by Yovel and researchers (2003), memory gaps that are persistent,
“?consistent, circumscribed, and stable” (p. 684) and limited to brief moments
on the most horrifying moments of the insult or assault are common among many
trauma victims. Accordingly brief and delineated memory gaps do not impair the
development of a relatively complete coherent, personally meaningful trauma
report. However trauma survivors, who go onto develop PTSD symptoms from 30
days onward, present memory losses that enlarge well beyond the most horrifying
traumatic perceptions. They found that PTSD associated memory loss to be
progressive and persistent. PTSD trauma narratives often lacked temporal
sequencing, were vague and diffuse in the amount of trauma detail provided, as
well as embedded with a good deal of survivor guilt. For instance on day 120,
one participant, who went on to develop later PTSD symptoms, had difficulty
recognizing and recalling peripheral traumatic details recalled earlier despite
rigorous cuing. Although certain loss of peripheral details of a traumatic
event’s more horrifying extent is normal, progressive and expanded loss of
memory details seem to be associated with PTSD symptom expression.
[73]
The Board completely accepts the medical
evidence on trauma (“I have no doubt that the claimants
are suffering from PTSD”: Decision, at para 18) and that the female Applicant
was a “vulnerable person.” In fact, the Board relied upon this evidence when it
decided not to question the Applicants upon their direct experiences with the government
authorities that triggered their flight to Canada. Yet, when considering CD’s
family’s asylum claims and the summons, the medical evidence is not given the
same weight, if it is given any weight at all. For example, at para 40 of the
Decision, the Board relies upon the fact that AB “reported
to [his doctor] that his own sense of his memory is that it is good”
[footnote omitted], but neglects to mention and weigh the doctor’s advice that AB
appears to minimize his difficulties.
[74]
My general conclusion is that the grounds and
reasons provided by the Board do not, on the evidence before it, reasonably support
a general negative credibility finding in a situation where the Applicants were
never questioned on the direct experiences that caused them to leave their home
country and to seek refugee protection in Canada.
[75]
The Applicants have proposed questions for
certification in the event of a negative finding, which I do not need to
address. The Respondent takes the position that the Decision is basically fact
driven and gives rise to no question of general importance. I agree.
[76]
The Respondent has also pointed out that the
Applicants have incorrectly identified the Respondent at various places in
their materials. The Applicants acknowledge their mistake and agree that the
Respondent is the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Canada and that their
materials should be amended to reflect this fact.