Docket: IMM-8146-13
Citation:
2015 FC 354
Ottawa, Ontario, March 20, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Locke
BETWEEN:
|
JIAJIE LI
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Nature of the Matter
[1]
This is an application for judicial review
pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001, c 27 (IRPA) of the November 25, 2015 decision (the decision) of
the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) of the Immigration and Refugee Board,
wherein the RPD determined that the applicant is not a Convention refugee and
is not a person in need of protection pursuant to section 96 and subsection
97(1) of the IRPA.
II.
Facts
[2]
The applicant is a citizen of the People’s
Republic of China (China). He asserts that he fears persecution at the hands of
the Chinese authorities, and more specifically at the hands of the Public
Security Bureau (PSB), for his perceived association with Falun Gong.
[3]
The applicant’s parents operated a bookstore in
their local area where they secretly sold Falun Gong books. On February 11,
2012, the applicant (who was 15 years old at the time) was helping his parents
at the bookstore, and sold a Falun Gong book entitled “Zhuan
Falun” to a costumer. The applicant later went to play with a friend,
and was subsequently informed by his brother that their parents had been
arrested by the PSB.
[4]
The applicant and his brother went into hiding,
as the PSB allegedly also accused them of being Falun Gong propagandists. The PSB
allegedly came to arrest the applicant and his brother and left summons for
them with their grandfather. Fearing that he would be arrested and jailed, the
applicant fled China with the assistance of a smuggler. He arrived in Canada on
August 1, 2012 and made a claim for refugee protection on August 27, 2012.
III.
Decision
[5]
The impugned decision turns on the applicant’s
lack of credibility. The RPD found that the applicant was not credible for the
following reasons:
- Given the documentary evidence and the fact that the PSB
allegedly visited the home of the applicant and the applicant’s relatives
repeatedly (at least 21 times), there would have been an arrest warrant
against the applicant in the circumstances. The applicant testified that
he didn’t know if an arrest warrant had been issued against him and that
his grandfather (who he speaks with every two weeks) had not told him of
an arrest warrant. Moreover, the PSB would have become more aggressive in
light of the applicant’s continued absence. The applicant likewise had no
information of any such increased aggression.
- The applicant did not submit any documentation confirming that
his parents were Falun Gong practitioners; and the photocopy of his
parents’ arrest warrants indicated that they were detained due to “cult propagandize,” rather than as Falun Gong
practitioners.
- The summons submitted by the applicant does not have the
physical dimensions indicated in the documentary evidence for such
documents.
- The applicant’s Resident Identity Card (RIC) was issued by PSB
on the same date as the summons. The PSB would not issue an identity
document that could facilitate the applicant’s flight from the authorities
at the same time as they were seeking to detain him.
- The RPD places little evidentiary weight on the arrest warrants
issued against the applicant’s parents, for the following reasons:
- Though the applicant stated during his hearing before the RPD
that his parents were arrested at the family bookstore, the arrest
warrants indicate that the PSB sent officers to the applicant’s home
instead.
- The applicant provided only copies of the arrest warrants, not
originals as were provided of the applicant’s summons. This impeded the
RPD’s ability to test their authenticity.
- There appears to be writing on the stamp that “seals” the document.
- The warrants were not signed.
- The documentary evidence reveals that almost any document can
be forged in China.
- The applicant’s admitted use of both a fraudulent passport and
a fraudulent Canadian visa to exit China demonstrates that he is able to
obtain fraudulent documents.
- When he left China using the fraudulent passport, the applicant
was not aware of basic information in the event that he was questioned. He
was unaware of the information contained in his passport as well as the
Canadian visa, and he received very little information from the smuggler. In
light of the fact that the PSB was allegedly seeking the applicant for
arrest, it “strains the limits of plausibility to
believe the [applicant] would not be discovered in this circumstance.” The
RPD continued saying “[t]his action undermines the
basis of the [applicant’s] alleged fear of apprehension by the
authorities.”
[6]
Alternatively, the RPD also found that even if
the applicant helped in distributing Falun Gong books from the family’s
bookstore, he would have contravened a law of general application. Therefore,
the RPD concluded that the Chinese government’s actions against the claimant
are the enforcement of an ordinary law of general application, which is merely
prosecution and not persecution.
IV.
Issue
[7]
This matter raises the following issue:
- Did the RPD err in assessing the applicant’s credibility of the
applicant?
[8]
Because of my findings on this issue, it is not
necessary to address the RPD’s alternative finding.
V.
Analysis
A.
Standard of review
[9]
The lack of credibility of the applicant is a
question to be reviewed on the standard of reasonableness (Ndokwu v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2013 FC 22 at para 20).
B.
Credibility issues
(1)
Lack of arrest warrant
[10]
The applicant argues that it was unreasonable
for the RPD to draw any inference from the failure of the PSB to issue an
arrest warrant for the applicant or to become more aggressive after at least 21
visits to his home. He points to documentation showing that policing in China
is inconsistent, and argues that it is sheer speculation and a reviewable error
to expect any particular behavior from the PSB.
[11]
However, even accepting that policing in China
is inconsistent, it was entirely reasonable for the RPD to expect that, in the
course of its many attempts to locate the applicant, the PSB would have done something
other than simply return another day expecting the same result. This
expectation was all the more reasonable in light of the arrest warrants that
had been issued for the applicant’s parents in the same matter.
[12]
I leave no room for the possibility that an
arrest warrant for the applicant was issued but that he never learned of it.
The applicant’s grandfather would have received such an arrest warrant and
would surely have mentioned it to the applicant in their bi-weekly telephone
conversations.
(2)
No safety plan when leaving China
[13]
The applicant argues that it was unreasonable
for the RPD to form an expectation that the applicant (who was only 15 years
old when he left China) would have arranged with his smuggler some sort of
contingency plan in the event of problems leaving China, despite customs
officials having been bribed. In support of this argument, the applicant cites
jurisprudence to the effect that findings of implausibility should be made only
in the clearest cases, especially when another culture is involved (Chen v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 749 at para 54).
[14]
Though I might not have drawn the same
conclusion from the facts, I am not prepared to find that the RPD’s conclusion
was unreasonable. The applicant asks where the RPD’s conclusions lead since the
applicant clearly did leave China for Canada. One possible answer that comes to
my mind is that the Chinese authorities may not actually have been
looking for the applicant, and he may actually have left China under
circumstances that did not require a fraudulent passport, a smuggler, or any
safety plan.
(3)
Parents’ arrest warrants
[15]
The applicant criticises a number of the reasons
cited by the RPD for placing little evidentiary weight on the parents’ arrest
warrants. Specifically, the applicant argues that the RPD erred in:
- drawing any kind of conclusion from the fact that the arrest
warrants refer to the parents as being cult propagandists rather than
Falun Gong practitioners (the applicant notes that Falun Gong
practitioners are often called cult propagandists by Chinese authorities);
- concluding that there was an inconsistency in the address on
the arrest warrants (the parents’ home) and the location where they were
arrested (the parents’ bookstore) (the applicant notes that the address on
the warrants indicates the parents’ place of residence, not where they
were arrested);
- being concerned about the absence of a signature on the arrest
warrants without any documentation suggesting that a signature should be
present and that such absence affects the documents’ authenticity;
- drawing any conclusions from the presence of writing on the
stamps on the arrests warrants.
[16]
In my view, I need not address these issues
because they are trumped by the RPD’s reasonable concerns arising from the fact
that only copies of the arrest warrants were provided, even though it appears
that originals were available. This impeded testing the documents’ security
features. The applicant does not argue that the expectation of the originals of
important documents is unreasonable.
[17]
The applicant asserts that he did not receive
the originals from his grandfather because his grandfather said they were not
needed. The applicant argues that he is young and was reliant on his
grandfather’s advice. I agree with the respondent’s answer to these
submissions: that the applicant was assisted by counsel and by a guardian, and
it was not unreasonable for the RPD to be concerned about the failure to
provide original documents.
(4)
Dimensions of the applicant’s summons
[18]
The applicant argues that there are three
different kinds of summons in China (public security summons, criminal summons,
and coercive summons), and the only information in the evidence concerning the
dimensions of summons in China concerns criminal summons. The applicant’s
summons is not a criminal summons but a coercive summons. The available
evidence indicates that details on the formats and appearances of coercive
summons are not available.
[19]
For its part, the respondent notes that the
RPD’s concerns about the dimensions of the summons were brought to the
applicant’s attention at the hearing and that no further evidence or
information on the subject was provided. The respondent argues that the
applicant was made aware of the RPD’s concern and failed to meet his burden to
prove his case in this respect.
[20]
In light of the RPD’s other reasonable concerns
about credibility, I am of the view that it was reasonable for the RPD to
expect more information before accepting the authenticity of the applicant’s
summons. I note here that another reason expressed by the RPD for doubting the
authenticity of the summons was that it was issued on the same day as the
applicant’s RIC. In my view, the RPD was reasonable to be doubtful that the
authorities would issue the summons and the RIC on the same day.
VI.
Conclusion
[21]
For the reasons discussed above, the application
for judicial review should be dismissed.