Docket: IMM-1081-14
Citation:
2015 FC 397
Ottawa, Ontario, March 30, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Fothergill
BETWEEN:
|
THANABALASINGAM
ET AL.
|
Applicant
|
and
|
MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
Uthayapalan Thanabalasingam, Sivapalan
Thanabalasingam and Tharmapalan Thanabalasingam (collectively the Applicants)
have brought an application for judicial review of a decision of the
Immigration and Refugee Board, Refugee Protection Division (the Board or RPD)
dated February 4, 2014. The Board concluded that the Applicants are neither
Convention refugees nor persons in need of protection pursuant to ss 96 or
97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 (the
IRPA). The determinative issues were the Applicants’ credibility and whether
they had a well-founded sur place claim.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, the application for
judicial review is allowed and the matter is remitted to the Board for
re-determination by a different member of the RPD.
II.
Background
[3]
The Applicants are Tamil brothers from the island of Pungudutivu in the Jaffna Province in northern Sri Lanka. They claim to fear
persecution by Sri Lankan State security agents and paramilitary groups due to
their perceived political affiliation with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ealam
(LTTE or Tamil Tigers).
[4]
Two of the Applicants, Sivapalan and
Tharmapalan, arrived in Canada aboard the ship MV Sun Sea in August 2010. The MV Sun Sea, which carried approximately 494 Sri
Lankan ethnic Tamils, was widely reported to be owned and operated by the Tamil
Tigers, and its arrival in Canada received significant domestic and
international media attention. Uthayapalan travelled to Canada in 2010 circuitously by land and by airplane via the United States and several South American
countries. He sought asylum in the U.S. but left the country before any final
determination of his claim was made. On July 25, 2010 he initiated a refugee
claim in Canada. The Applicants were all placed in immigration detention in Fraser, British Columbia, pending an inquiry into their identities, motives for travelling
to Canada, security checks and a broader investigation of the MV Sun Sea.
[5]
The Applicants made a number of assertions
before the Board with respect to their past persecution in Sri Lanka. The Board found these assertions not to be credible and this conclusion is not challenged
by the Applicants in this proceeding.
III.
The Board’s Decision
[6]
In addition to finding the Applicants not to be
credible with respect to their allegations of past persecution in Sri Lanka (Decision at para 157), the Board also rejected their sur place claim. A sur
place refugee is defined in the United Nations Handbook on Procedures
and Criteria for Determining Refugee Status (the UNHCR Handbook) as a
person “who was not a refugee when he left his country,
but who becomes a refugee at a later date.” The UNHCR Handbook
describes two situations in which a sur place claim may arise: (1) a
change in circumstances in the country of origin during the person’s absence,
or (2) as a result of a person’s own actions such as associating with refugees
already recognized or expressing political views in the new country of
residence.
[7]
In its sur place analysis (paras 180-190
of the Decision), the Board found that there was no credible, persuasive
evidence that the Government of Sri Lanka suspects individuals of having links
to the LTTE solely by virtue of their having been smuggled to Canada aboard the
MV Sun Sea. The Board acknowledged that the arrival of the MV Sun Sea
in Canada attracted significant publicity, and that the Sri Lankan authorities
may learn that two of the Applicants travelled aboard it. The Board nevertheless
concluded that the three Applicants have little or no profile with the Sri
Lankan authorities, and they would not now be of interest to the authorities
simply because of their connection to the MV Sun Sea.
IV.
Issue
[8]
The central issue in this application for
judicial review is whether the Board’s assessment of the Applicants’ sur
place claim was reasonable.
V.
Analysis
[9]
The Board’s assessment of a sur place
claim is reviewable against a standard of reasonableness: B381 v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 608 at para 27; (M (P) v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 77 at para 5; Ganeshan v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 841 at para 9.
[10]
Since early 2010, this Court has considered a
large number of applications for judicial review brought by persons arriving in
Canada aboard the MV Sun Sea and its sister ship the MV Ocean Lady.
These claims have generally required a sur place analysis. Claimants
allege that, regardless of their actual affiliation with the LTTE, their
profile changed once they boarded the MV Sun Sea or MV Ocean Lady.
[11]
There has been considerable variation in the
determination of these sur place claims by both the Board and this
Court. Presumably this is because each decision is based on (sometimes subtly)
different facts and evolving reports of country conditions in Sri Lanka. As Justice Locke noted in Canada (MCI) v A037, 2014 FC 754 at para 5, “there are many decisions on both sides of this issue, and it
is generally recognized that such decisions turn on the evidence that has been
placed before the Court and the findings of the RPD in each case.”
[12]
It is possible for the Board to either accept or
reject a sur place claim by a passenger aboard the MV Sun Sea or
MV Ocean Lady, and for the Board’s decision to be upheld by this Court
as reasonable. However, it is an error for the Board to engage in a selective
analysis of the documentary evidence and to ignore contradictory evidence
without providing a reasonable explanation: Manoharan v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1996] FCJ No 356 (TD) at para 6).
The error is compounded where the evidence is especially relevant: Cepeda-Gutierrez
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] FCJ No 1425 (CA)
at paras 14-17.
[13]
In this case, the Board acknowledged that the
Sri Lankan authorities would likely discover that two of the Applicants had
travelled aboard the MV Sun Sea. There was evidence before the
Board that failed asylum-seekers undergo several hours of questioning and
security interviews by the State Intelligence Service upon their return (for
example, National Documentation Package document #1.13, “UNHCR Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International
Protection Needs of Asylum-Seekers from Sri Lanka”, December 21, 2012 (the
Guidelines)). The Board referred to the Guidelines, but neglected to mention
references therein to reports that failed asylum-seekers, particularly those
who are Tamil, have been detained, ill-treated or tortured after being forcibly
returned to Sri Lanka (the Guidelines at page 8; Certified Tribunal Record at
page 267).
[14]
The Board was also provided with a report titled
“Amnesty International Concerns with respect to forced
returns to Sri Lanka for passengers of the Ocean Lady and MV Sun Sea”
(Certified Tribunal Record at page 635) (the AI Report). The AI Report concluded
that failed asylum claimants face a serious risk of detention, torture and
mistreatment if the Sri Lankan government suspects that they travelled on the
MV Sun Sea.
[15]
Nevertheless, the Board stated the following:
[182] I find, however, that no credible, persuasive
evidence has been proffered that the Government of Sri Lanka suspects
individuals as having links to the LTTE by virtue of having been smuggled to Canada aboard a ship allegedly owned and operated by the LTTE. Although Sri Lankan
authorities may come to know how the claimants, Sivapalan and Tharmapalan, came
to Canada, the panel has considered if, in fact, those two claimants face an
increased risk of persecution by having travelled aboard the M.V. Sun Sea,
or if their brother, Uthayapalan, faces an increased risk because they did so.
[16]
In Y.S. v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2014 FC 324 [Y.S.], a case that bears a marked
resemblance to this one, Justice Russell wrote:
[68] The RPD – with other claimants –
has found that those returning with connections to the MV Sun Sea or the MV
Ocean Lady are at a risk of torture for perceived LTTE connections, even when
no prior connection has existed, and this Court has endorsed such decisions.
See, for example, Justice Blanchard's analysis in Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v. A032, 2013 FC 322 at para 17 and Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. B377, 2013 FC 320.
[69] There was significant evidence in
this case that Sri Lankan authorities are fully cognizant of the connections
between the MV Sun Sea and LTTE membership. This doesn't mean they believe all
MV Sun Sea passengers have LTTE links, but all returnees are suspects and are
questioned on arrival and failed refugee claimants are questioned more closely.
It is inevitable that the authorities will ask the Applicant how he got to Canada, and this will immediately identify his association with the MV Sun Sea. This means
that he will be detained for some amount of time to ascertain whether, for
instance:
a. he is
an LTTE member;
b. he has
organized for the LTTE abroad; and
c. he
possesses LTTE intelligence.
Hence, upon his
return, the Applicant will be detained and interrogated about possible LTTE
connections. Amnesty International says that individuals in the position of the
Applicant face a real risk of torture or other ill-treatment if returned to Sri Lanka. The RPD’s finding that there is “insufficient evidence to show that the Sri
Lankan authorities will have the knowledge that the claimant was a passenger on
the Sun Sea” and that “there was insufficient evidence that the Sri Lankan
government would treat the claimant any different than any other returnee to
the country ...” in my view simply ignores the evidence and the reality of what
the Applicant faces.
[70] Notwithstanding the credibility issue
regarding the Applicant's problems with the authorities before he left Sri
Lanka, and his own evidence that he has no past association with the LTTE,
there is no doubt that he is a young Tamil male from the North (and not Colombo
as the RPD finds) who arrived in Canada on the MV Sun Sea. The Applicant will
be detained and interrogated upon his return because of his association with
the MV Sun Sea. Although the RPD concludes that Tamils, as well as others, “may
be victims of abuse of power from Sri Lankan police or CID,” the RPD shies away
from a consideration of what will happen to the Applicant when he is
interrogated in the face of evidence that Sri Lankan authorities are very
interested in links between the MV Sun Sea passengers and the LTTE, and
evidence from Amnesty International that individuals who are “suspected of
belonging to, or having links to the LTTE face a real risk of torture or other
ill-treatment if forcibly returned to Sri Lanka.” These risks exist not just
for those who do have links, but for those suspected of having links. The RPD
appears to assume that the Applicant might not even be identified as a
passenger on the MV Sun Sea (which he will) and that, even if he is, he won't
be treated “any different than any other returnee ... given his complete lack
of past association with the LTTE.” In my view, the evidence does not support
these findings. The Decision is unreasonable on this ground alone and requires
reconsideration.
[17]
Both Justice Russell in Y.S. and Justice
Strickland in B381 v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 608 [B381] emphasized the AI Report in assessing the sur
place claims of asylum-seekers who travelled on the MV Sun Sea. In B381, Justice Strickland found that the failure of the Board
to explain why it discounted the AI Report rendered its decision unreasonable
(at para 58). Similarly in this case, the Board’s failure to explain why it
discounted the AI Report and other contradictory evidence renders its decision
unreasonable.
[18]
Finally, I am unpersuaded by the Board’s reassurance
that:
… all three claimants could produce
documentation, including the Immigration and Refugee Board’s decisions in their
joined claims, to indicate that each and every one of them has been found not
to have any association with the LTTE. Thus, in my view, the fact that
Sivapalan and Tharmapalan have been subjected to rigorous scrutiny by Canadian
officials and been subsequently released, may very well place all three in a
better light should any or all of them be returned to Sri Lanka.
[19]
I agree with the Applicants that this is
unwarranted speculation. As Justice de Montigny wrote in Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v. B272, 2013 FC 870 (CanLII); [2013] FCJ No 957 (QL); 19 Imm LR (4th)
93 at para 70:
It goes without saying that the Sri Lankan
authorities, concerned as they are with the potential resurgence of the LTTE,
will want to reach their own conclusions as to who is and who is not an LTTE
member or sympathizer. They would not necessarily rely on a foreign
government’s determination in that respect, if only because they would be
applying different laws as well as different legal standards, rules of
procedure and evidentiary norms.
VI.
Conclusion
[20]
For the foregoing reasons, the application for
judicial review is allowed and the matter is remitted to the Board for
re-determination by a different member of the RPD.