Date: 20151016
Docket: IMM-8377-14
Citation:
2015 FC 1172
Ottawa, Ontario, October 16, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Fothergill
BETWEEN:
|
H.A.K.
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Confidentiality Order
[1]
The Applicant asserts that she will be at risk
in Ethiopia if the authorities become aware that she has made a claim for
refugee protection in Canada. She has therefore requested that she not be
identified in this judgment by name. The Respondent does not object. The style
of cause is amended accordingly, and she is referred to in these reasons as the
Applicant.
II.
Nature of the Matter
[2]
The Applicant has brought an application for
judicial review of a decision of the Refugee Appeal Division [RAD] of the
Immigration and Refugee Board dated December 11, 2014. The RAD dismissed the
Applicant’s appeal and confirmed the decision of the Refugee Protection
Division [RPD] that she is neither a Convention refugee under s 96 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the IRPA], nor a person in need
of protection under s 97.
[3]
For the reasons that follow, I have concluded
that the RAD wrongly applied the standard of reasonableness to its review of
many aspects of the RPD’s analysis, and offered no independent analysis of its
own. I am unable to say whether an independent assessment of the Applicant’s
claim would have changed the outcome of the appeal before the RAD. The
application for judicial review is therefore allowed.
III.
Background
[4]
The Applicant is 35 years old and a citizen of
Ethiopia. Before her arrival in Canada she was a flight attendant with Ethiopian
Airlines. Her claim for refugee protection was based on the following
contentions.
[5]
In February, 2014, during a stop-over in
Germany, the Applicant was seen by a co-worker in a coffee shop talking to
other Ethiopians in the Amharic language. Her co-worker ordered her to end the
conversation. She returned to Addis Ababa on February 17, 2014.
[6]
On February 18, 2014, two security agents came to
her home and took her to the Maekelawi political detention centre. She was held
for seven days and questioned about her involvement in opposition groups. She
was beaten and humiliated.
[7]
The Applicant returned to work. On March 5, 2014
she flew to China and had a brief stop-over before returning to Ethiopia the
following day.
[8]
On March 13, 2014, the Applicant flew to South
Africa. While on a stop-over in that country, the captain of the aircraft
attempted to sexually assault her. She managed to escape to a co-worker’s room.
She reported the incident to the airline’s management when she returned to
Ethiopia, but no action was taken. She believed that this was because the
captain was an influential member of the ruling party, the Tigrayan People’s
Liberation Front [TPLF].
[9]
The Applicant fled Ethiopia on March 16, 2014. She
travelled to Canada via Italy and arrived on March 18, 2014. She claimed
refugee protection on April 4, 2014.
[10]
The RPD dismissed the Applicant’s refugee claim.
Given her failure to seek refugee protection in China or South Africa, the RPD found
that she lacked a subjective fear of persecution.
[11]
The Applicant appealed the RPD’s decision to the
RAD on the ground that the RPD’s conclusion regarding her lack of subjective
fear was unreasonable. She also argued that the RPD had failed to properly consider
the risks that she faced under s 97(1)(a) of the IRPA. In support of her
appeal, the Applicant submitted two letters from Ethiopian Airlines that were
not before the RPD. The RAD refused to admit the new evidence and confirmed the
RPD’s decision that the Applicant is neither a Convention refugee nor a person
in need of protection.
IV.
Issues
[12]
This application for judicial review raises the
following issues:
A. Was the RAD’s refusal to admit the new evidence reasonable?
B. Did the RAD apply the correct standard of review to its
consideration of the RPD’s decision?
A.
Was the RAD’s refusal to admit the new evidence
reasonable?
[13]
The new evidence offered by the Applicant consisted
of (a) a letter of decision from Ethiopian Airlines dated July 15, 2014, and
(b) a letter from Ethiopian Airlines confirming that the Applicant missed two
flights between February 21, 2014 and February 25, 2014 (when she was allegedly
detained at the Maekelawi political detention centre). The RAD found that the
new evidence did not meet the requirements of s 110(4) of the IRPA because it related
to circumstances that arose prior to the RPD’s hearing and the Applicant did
not provide a satisfactory explanation for her failure to present it before the
RPD. The RAD also found that the letters, even if admitted, would carry little
weight: the facts they described were vague, there were numerous spelling
errors, and they were not provided directly by the airline but by a third party.
[14]
The RAD referred to the test for the admission
of new evidence found in Raza v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2007 FCA 385 [Raza]. The law is not settled regarding
the application of Raza to an appeal before the RAD, given that the test
was developed in the context of a pre-removal risk assessment (see Singh v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 1022 paras 55-58 [Singh]
and Denbel v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC
629). This Court’s decision in Singh is currently before the Federal
Court of Appeal.
[15]
Regardless of whether a strict or a more
flexible application of the Raza test is preferred, I am satisfied that
the RAD’s rejection of the Applicant’s explanation for not adducing the
evidence before the RPD was reasonable. The only explanation she offered for
her delay in obtaining the letters was that she did not think that the airline
would provide her with the information. It was open to the RAD to reject this
explanation as unsatisfactory. In any event, the Applicant’s detention and the
attempted sexual assault by the airline captain were both accepted by the RPD.
The letters were therefore not probative of any fact in dispute.
B. Did the RAD apply the correct standard of
review to its consideration of the RPD’s decision?
[16]
The law regarding the standard of review to be
applied by this Court to the RAD’s determination of its own standard of review
is not settled. This Court’s decision in Huruglica v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 799 [Huruglica] is currently
before the Federal Court of Appeal.
[17]
Pending clarification by higher courts, it is my
view that the RAD commits an error when it reviews the RPD’s findings against
the standard of reasonableness and fails to conduct its own assessment of the
evidence. Some judges of this Court have held that the RAD does not commit a
reviewable error when it applies the standard of reasonableness to findings of
pure credibility. However, this Court will uphold the RAD’s application of the
reasonableness standard to the RPD’s findings of credibility only when it is
clear that the RAD has in fact conducted its own assessment of the evidence as
a whole (Shukurov v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2015 FC 949 at paras 14 to 16).
[18]
In this case, the RAD stated its intention to conduct
its own assessment of the evidence and to determine independently whether the Applicant
is a Convention refugee or a person in need of protection. However, it is not
apparent from a review of the RAD’s decision that this approach was followed in
practice. Rather, it appears that the RAD applied the standard of
reasonableness to its review of many aspects of the RPD’s analysis, and offered
no independent analysis of its own.
[19]
In its consideration of whether it was reasonable
for the Applicant not to seek refugee protection in China, the RAD deferred to
the expertise of the RPD:
[33] … The RPD is
an expert body and is expected to have knowledge of refugee systems of foreign
nations. The RAD finds that the Appellant’s argument in this regard does not
have merit.
[20]
However, the RAD’s own expertise is considered
to be at least equal to, and generally to exceed, that of the RPD (Huruglica
at para 49; Njeukam v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2014 FC 859 at para 14).
[21]
The RAD’s treatment of the RPD’s failure to properly
consider the Applicant’s risk pursuant to s 97 of the IRPA was even more
deferential. The RAD expressed regret that the RPD had not explicitly analysed
this aspect of the Applicant’s claim, but did not proceed to conduct its own
independent assessment:
[36] … While it is
unfortunate that the RPD fails to mention Section 97(1)(a) of the IRPA in its
reasons, the RAD finds that it is not fatal to its decision. The RPD clearly
found that the Appellant was not at risk in Ethiopia on either section 96 or 97
grounds. The RPD provided sound reasons, and its findings were grounded in the
evidence in the record.
[22]
I am unable to say whether an independent
assessment of the Applicant’s claim would have changed the outcome of the
appeal before the RAD. The application for judicial review must therefore be
allowed.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that the
application for judicial review is allowed and the matter is remitted to a
differently-constituted panel of the RAD for re-determination. No question is
certified for appeal.
"Simon Fothergill"