Docket: IMM-2434-14
Citation:
2015 FC 654
Ottawa, Ontario, May 21, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
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BETWEEN:
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HAIM RODRIK
VIVET RODRIK
NATALIE RODRIK
LADYA RODRIK
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Applicants
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
Haim Rodrik [the Principal Applicant], his
spouse Vivet Rodrik [the Female Applicant], and their daughters Natalie and
Ladya Rodrik, have applied for judicial review of a decision dated February 13,
2014 made by the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee
Board [the Board], wherein it determined that the Applicants are neither
Convention refugees nor persons in need of protection [the Decision].
[2]
The application is made pursuant to subsection
72(1) of the Immigration Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the IRPA].
I.
Background
[3]
The Principal Applicant is a 56 year-old citizen
of Israel. He was born in Istanbul but immigrated to Israel in 1972. He fears
persecution at the hands of Meir Benhabib [Meir] who is an international drug
trafficker.
[4]
The Female Applicant is a 40 year-old citizen of
Turkey who also holds an Israeli passport. She fears persecution at the hands
of Karem Borekcioglu [Karem].
[5]
The Principal Applicant met the Female Applicant
in 1998. They began their relationship the following year and she gave birth to
Ladya in Turkey in 2004. After she moved to Israel and converted to Judaism, they
were married in October 2010. Natalie was born in Israel.
[6]
The Principal Applicant’s difficulties began in
2007 when Meir was released from prison in Turkey and moved to Israel. The
Principal Applicant was asked to help him start a legitimate business; however,
before long, Meir returned to drug trading.
[7]
Meir then asked for the Principal Applicant’s
assistance with his illegal business. However, instead of assisting Meir, he reported
him to the United States Drug Enforcement Administration [the DEA] at the
American Embassy in Tel Aviv, and was given a 10-year US visa in exchange for
information about Meir. The Principal Applicant was given an informant number
and began communicating with a DEA agent.
[8]
After the Female Applicant moved to Israel in
2010, the Principal Applicant became increasingly afraid of Meir, so he moved
his family away from the city to a nearby suburb. However, Meir located them
and contacted the Principal Applicant again.
[9]
The Principal Applicant did not go to the
Israeli police for protection because, as a result of his own experience as a
civil guard, he knew that the police had problems with leaks and that there was
no witness protection program. Instead, he asked the DEA to provide protection
for him and his family. He was told to travel to Cyprus where the DEA would help
his wife and children obtain US visas.
[10]
The Applicants travelled to Cyprus in January
2011 but were unable to acquire the visas. After the incident involving Karem
described below, they fled to Canada in August 2011 and made refugee claims.
[11]
The Female Applicant’s problems began in 2008
when she was introduced to Karem in Istanbul. He began to pursue her. However,
she was uncomfortable with his persistent advances. He followed her and her
daughter around Istanbul, and also appeared uninvited at her home.
[12]
The Female Applicant alleges that, in March
2010, Karem attempted to rape her. She says that her screams alerted a
neighbour who called security and Karem fled. It was a result of this incident,
that she joined the Principal Applicant in Israel.
[13]
After the Applicants travelled to Cyprus, the
Female Applicant alleges that Karem tracked them down and conspired with her
neighbours in Cyprus to kidnap her daughters. He was unsuccessful and was later
deported from Cyprus. She fears that if she were to return to Turkey she would
be terrorized by Karem and that the state would not protect her. However, she
has no fear of Karem if she returns to Israel. With regard to Israel, she
shares her husband’s concerns about Meir.
II.
The Decision
[14]
The Board dismissed the Principal Applicant’s
claim against Israel because:
a)
It found no nexus to a Convention ground;
b)
It found him lacking in credibility;
c)
It found him not to be at risk under s 97 of the
IRPA;
d)
It found that Israel offered adequate state
protection.
[15]
On this application for judicial review, the Principal
Applicant only challenges the Board’s finding about state protection.
[16]
The Board dismissed the Female Applicant’s claim
against Turkey under sections 96 and 97 of the IRPA because her account lacked
credibility.
[17]
The Board dismissed the Female Applicant’s claim
against Israel because it was based on the Principal Applicant’s claim, which
it had already dismissed.
[18]
The Board also found that the Female Applicant
is entitled to return to Israel and become a citizen under the Law of Return.
[19]
On this application for judicial review, the Female
Applicant challenges:
a)
The negative credibility findings relating to
her fear of Karem;
b)
The conclusion that she is entitled to Israeli
citizenship under the Law of Return.
III.
The Issues
[20]
The determinative issues are:
i. were the Board’s reasons adequate when they described Israel’s Law
of Return as the basis for the Female Applicant’s and Ladya’s right to
citizenship?
ii. if the reasons were inadequate, does the record disclose other
evidence to support the Board’s conclusion that the Female Applicant and Ladya
have a right to Israeli citizenship?
IV.
Discussion
[21]
The Board noted that the Female Applicant
entered Canada on a State of Israel Passport (provisional) which notes on its
cover “Israeli Citizenship”. The Board also noted that this
document creates the rebuttable presumption that she is a citizen of Israel
[the Presumption of Citizenship].
[22]
In her initial Personal Information Form [PIF],
the Female Applicant described herself as an Israeli citizen. Later, in her
amended PIF, she changed her status in Israel to “Visitor”. However, since no
documents were provided to support this status, the Presumption of Citizenship was
not rebutted.
[23]
The Female Applicant testified at the Board’s
hearing that she has a right to return to Israel and remain there indefinitely.
[24]
The Board noted that there are four means of
acquiring Israeli citizenship: birth, residence, naturalization, and the Law of
Return. Without considering its provisions, the Board simply concluded that the
Law of Return confers citizenship on the Female Applicant and Ladya.
[25]
In my view, this reasoning was inadequate. The
Law of Return is expressed to apply to Jewish immigrants to Israel. The Female Applicant
is clearly not in that category because the documentary evidence shows her to
be a citizen, and she testified that she already has a right to return and stay
in the country indefinitely.
[26]
However, there was ample evidence on the record
to support the Board’s decision without reliance on the Law of Return. First,
the Presumption of Citizenship applied so that she is presently a citizen. Second,
as a Jewish spouse and child of an Israeli citizen with rights to return and
stay indefinitely, it is within the control of the Female Applicant and Ladya to
acquire citizenship in Israel. In this regard, see Williams v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FCA 126 at paragraph 22.
[27]
For these reasons, I have concluded that, based
on the record, the Board’s decision is reasonable.
[28]
I have also concluded that it is not
necessary to deal with the other issues. Since the Female Applicant and Ladya can
live safely in Israel, I need not consider the reasonableness of the Board’s
decision that she was not credible in her claim against Turkey. As well, since
the Principal Applicant was found to face no risks in Israel, the Board’s conclusions
about state protection were unnecessary and need not be considered.
V.
Certification
[29]
No question was posed for certification for
appeal under section 74(d) of the IRPA.