Docket: IMM-7263-14
Citation:
2015 FC 1013
Ottawa, Ontario, August 26, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
|
ANAR CAMAL
ISMAYILOV
a.k.a. ANAR
ISMAYILOV,
PARVIN AHMADOVA
AND
HACER
ISMAYILOVA
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The applicants are a family who sought refugee
protection in Canada claiming to fear persecution in Azerbaijan because of
their religious faith. The family’s claim was rejected by the Refugee
Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board on credibility
grounds. The Board also found that, in the alternative, the applicants had an
internal flight alternative (IFA) in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan.
[2]
Notwithstanding the deference that is owed to
the Board’s credibility findings, I am satisfied that many of the findings in
this case were made without regard to the evidence. The errors in the Board’s
credibility findings also tainted its IFA analysis, which was, in any event,
unreasonable. Consequently, the application for judicial review will be
granted.
I.
Background
[3]
The applicants are devout Salafi Muslims who
lived in a predominantly Shia country. They claim persecution at the hands of
government agents who fear Salafi extremists and who view ordinary Salafis as
potential threats to the state.
[4]
Mr. Ismayilov says that in the years
leading up to his departure from Azerbaijan, he was detained by the police on
four occasions for “looking too Muslim”. During
these detentions, he was questioned, beaten and forcibly shaved, as well as
insulted, denied food and water, and the ability to pray.
[5]
While the Board accepted that the applicants
were citizens of Azerbaijan, and appears to have also accepted that they were
Salafi Muslims, it was not persuaded that the applicants faced more than a mere
possibility of persecution in Azerbaijan.
II.
The Lack of Supporting Documentation
[6]
One of the main reasons cited by the Board for
disbelieving Mr. Ismayilov’s claim that he had been arrested and tortured
by the Azerbaijani police on four occasions was his failure to produce any
documentary proof of his arrests. The Board was of the view that it was
reasonable to expect there to be documents substantiating such a central
component of Mr. Ismayilov’s story. According to the Board, Mr. Ismayilov
asked his father to try to obtain documents pertaining to the arrests, but that
he himself had not made any effort to do so since his arrival in Canada.
[7]
What the Board does not mention is Mr. Ismayilov’s
explanation that he had already personally attempted to obtain documents
corroborating his arrests from the police while he was still in Azerbaijan.
According to Mr. Ismayilov, the police refused to provide him with any
such documents.
[8]
As the Board made no mention of Mr. Ismayilov’s
evidence on this point, it is impossible to know whether it was overlooked or
disbelieved. Mr. Ismayilov’s testimony regarding his attempts to obtain
police documents was material evidence that directly contradicted a central
finding by the Board, and should thus have been discussed: Cepeda‑Gutierrez
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (1998), 157 F.T.R. 35,
at paras. 14-17, [1998] F.C.J. No. 1425 (F.C.T.D.).
[9]
If the evidence was overlooked, then the Board’s
finding that Mr. Ismayilov had not personally attempted to obtain
documentary proof of his arrests was made without regard to the evidence. If
the Board did not believe Mr. Ismayilov’s testimony, it did not explain
why it was rejected, and this aspect of the Board’s decision thus lacks the justification,
transparency and intelligibility required of a reasonable decision: Dunsmuir
v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para. 47, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 and Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v. Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at para. 59, [2009] 1
S.C.R. 339.
III.
The Medical Documents
[10]
The Board also takes issue with the medical
documents provided by Mr. Ismayilov documenting the injuries that he claims
to have suffered during his detentions, discounting the evidence because it did
not indicate the cause of Mr. Ismayilov’s injuries. However, the medical
reports do in fact state that the injuries that he had suffered had been caused
by beatings, although they do not indicate who was responsible for the
beatings. Given that it is unlikely that the treating physicians were
first-hand witnesses to his mistreatment by the police, I question whether this
was a valid reason for rejecting the evidence, as any reference in the medical
reports to the individuals responsible for the injuries would likely have been
based on hearsay reports by Mr. Ismayilov himself.
[11]
If, however, the Board was of the view that this
was a significant omission, this creates a further problem. That is, the
medical reports documenting Mr. Ismayilov’s father’s injuries specifically
state that the injuries were sustained as a result of beatings by the police,
and the Board does not explain why it discounted the medical evidence regarding
the father’s injuries.
IV.
Failure to Claim
[12]
Mr. Ismayilov initially came to Canada in
December of 2009 on a study permit, with his wife and young child remaining
behind in Azerbaijan. He decided to seek refugee protection and consulted a
lawyer for advice. Mr. Ismayilov did not, however, end up claiming refugee
protection during his initial stay in Canada. He explained to the Board that
this was because his lawyer advised him to wait until his wife and child
arrived in Canada so that they could make their claims as a family. According
to Mr. Ismayilov, the lawyer was concerned that the other members of his family
might be denied visas to come to Canada if he had a pending refugee claim.
[13]
Mr. Ismayilov further explained that he
became concerned that his family was in danger, and that he returned to
Azerbaijan in May of 2010 because of his concerns for their safety. I will deal
with the issue of reavailment in the next section of these reasons, but suffice
it to say that in finding that Mr. Ismayilov’s failure to claim indicated
of a lack of subjective fear on his part, the Board made no reference to Mr. Ismayilov’s
explanation that he was acting in accordance with legal advice that he had
received.
[14]
Once again, this was evidence that was material
to one of the Board’s central findings and should thus have been discussed: Cepeda‑Gutierrez,
above. The failure of the Board to consider the explanation provided by Mr. Ismayilov
renders this finding unreasonable.
V.
Reavailment
[15]
As noted, the Board found that
Mr. Ismayilov’s return to Azerbaijan in May of 2010 showed a lack of
subjective fear of persecution his part.
[16]
However, Mr. Ismayilov had testified that
after his wife and child obtained visas to come to Canada, they were denied the
right to leave Azerbaijan. The police allegedly came to the family’s home in
January of 2010 looking for Mr. Ismayilov, and in April of that year, his
wife and child were detained by the police and Mr. Ismayilov’s home was
searched. Fearing for their safety, Mr. Ismayilov returned home in May of
2010.
[17]
Once again, the Board made no mention of the
explanation given by Mr. Ismayilov as to why he was willing to put his
life at risk by returning to Azerbaijan. It was open to the Board to reject Mr. Ismayilov’s
explanation, but its failure to even mention such a key piece of evidence, let
alone deal with it, is a clear error.
VI.
The Internal Flight Alternative
[18]
The Board also found that the applicants could
live safely in Baku – the capital of Azerbaijan. There are a number of
problems with this finding.
[19]
The first is that the Board’s IFA finding is
tainted by the numerous errors in the Board’s credibility assessment. By
rejecting the applicants’ story, the Board did not fully appreciate the
applicants’ profile, and thus could not determine whether these applicants
could live safely in Baku.
[20]
That is, the Board based its assessment that
Baku was a valid IFA for these applicants on its finding that Mr. Ismayilov
was not a high-profile individual, and that he was not a person of interest to
the Azerbaijani authorities. I have already identified some of the problems
with this determination, and would further note the Board’s failure to address
the evidence indicating that Mr. Ismayilov was one of a number of Salafi
Muslims who had filed a written complaint with the Government in which they
complained of the systematic mistreatment of the Salafi minority by Azerbaijani
authorities. On top of the errors regarding Mr. Ismayilov’s past arrests,
the Board’s failure to deal with this evidence renders its finding that Mr. Ismayilov
was not a high-profile individual who would be of interest to the Azerbaijani
authorities unreasonable.
[21]
In support of its finding that Baku was a valid
IFA for these applicants, the Board relied primarily on a statement in one
article where one Salafi individual indicated that Baku was the only place
where he felt free to practice his version of the Muslim faith. However,
finding that Baku would be a valid IFA for these applicants required a highly
selective reading of the article.
[22]
The individual referred to above is also quoted
in the same article describing how he was insulted by the police and by others
who viewed him as dangerous because of his bearded appearance. This individual
also stated that he had been taken to a police station and forcibly shaved on
three occasions in the previous two years. Thus the evidence that the Board
relied on to support its IFA finding demonstrates that Salafi Muslims are
arbitrarily detained and mistreated by the police in Baku because of their
religious affiliation.
[23]
The article also indicated that the only Salafi
mosque in Baku had been closed by the government following an explosion in
2008, and that the mosque remains closed. The Board dismissed Mr. Ismayilov’s
concern that he would be unable to worship at a Salafi mosque in Baku on the
basis that he would be able to pray at another mosque, presumably one
practicing a different form of Islam. I agree with the applicants that this
comment demonstrates a remarkable insensitivity to the sincerity of the
applicants’ religious beliefs, and the nature of a religion-based refugee claim
in general.
VII.
The Alternative Finding
[24]
The Board’s alternate finding at paragraph 41 of
its reasons is also very troubling. There the Board dismisses Mr. Ismayilov’s
claim, stating that even if the allegations contained in his Personal
Information Form were accepted as true, Mr. Ismayilov had simply been
subjected to “routine questioning” by the
police, and was not personally targeted by the Azerbaijani authorities.
[25]
The Board describes this “routine questioning” as involving the aggressive
detention and harassment of Salafi Muslims, as part of an overall policy by the
Azerbaijani police who were concerned about extremists within the country’s
Salafi population.
[26]
Mr. Ismayilov stated in his PIF that he was
arrested and detained because of his religious faith. During his various
detentions, he was questioned, insulted, beaten, denied food, water and the
ability to pray, and forcibly shaved. To find that his claim was not
well-founded because this was just “routine questioning”
of a member of the minority Salafi population of Azerbaijan is simply perverse.
VIII.
Conclusion
[27]
For these reasons, the application for judicial
review is granted. I agree with the parties that the case is fact-specific, and
does not raise a question for certification.