Docket: IMM-740-14
Citation:
2015 FC 445
Ottawa, Ontario, April 10,
2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
|
ABDUL KHALIL
ALEAF, RAIHANA ALEAF, AND TAYEBA ALEAF AND ABDUL SABOOR ALEAF (BY THEIR
LITIGATION GUARDIAN ABDUL KHALIL ALEAF)
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
Abdul Khalil Aleaf and his family applied for
permanent residence in Canada as privately-sponsored members of the Convention
Refugee Class or Country of Asylum Class. Their application was refused because
a visa officer at the Canadian High Commission in Pakistan found Mr. Aleaf
not to be credible, with the result that he had not established that he and his
family would be at risk in Afghanistan. The officer made no finding that Mr. Aleaf
was inadmissible to Canada on security grounds.
[2]
The applicants seek judicial review of the visa
officer’s decision, asserting that they were treated unfairly in the visa
process because Mr. Aleaf was not provided with copies of Canada Border
Services Agency and Canadian Security Intelligence Service memos from 2006, nor
was he given a copy of a “poison pen” letter
that had been sent to the Canadian High Commission in Islamabad in 2005.
[3]
The applicants also say that it was unreasonable
for the officer to find that Mr. Aleaf’s story was not credible, and that
the visa officer further erred by failing to consider the gender-based
persecution that Mr. Aleaf’s wife and daughter would face in Afghanistan.
Finally, the applicants contend that there are “special
circumstances” in this case (including the inordinate delay in the
processing of their visa application) that justify an order of costs in their
favour.
[4]
I have not been persuaded that the applicants
were treated unfairly in this matter. I am also satisfied that it was
reasonable for the visa officer to find that Mr. Aleaf’s explanation
regarding his whereabouts in the late 1990s was not credible. No gender-based
claim was advanced by or on behalf of Mr. Aleaf’s wife and daughter, and
consequently there was no obligation on the visa officer to address this issue.
Finally, while there was undoubtedly a lengthy and ultimately unexplained delay
in the processing of the applicants’ visa application, I am not persuaded that
this constitutes “special circumstances” justifying
an award of costs in their favour.
I.
Background
[5]
Mr. Aleaf’s family comes from a village in
Logar province in Afghanistan. Mr. Aleaf says that sometime around 1992,
the family became embroiled in a property dispute with cousins, who had laid
claim to the family’s property. The cousins allegedly had ties to the Taliban,
and threatened to kill the family if they did not give up their claim to the
property.
[6]
In 1995, the family was living in Kabul when Mr. Aleaf’s parents’ house was destroyed by a rocket attack. Mr. Aleaf
was not at home at the time, although other family members were in the house.
Most of the family escaped the blast, after which they returned to live in
their village. The family asked village elders to help them reacquire their land,
but their relatives resorted to violent threats and the family was unable to
recover their property.
[7]
Mr. Aleaf’s parents and five of his
siblings fled to Pakistan in 1997, and came to Canada in 2000 as
privately-sponsored refugees. Mr. Aleaf says that he stayed in Afghanistan until 1998, and then moved to Pakistan where he remains to this day. The visa officer
did not find Mr. Aleaf’s account of his whereabouts between 1995 and 1998
to be credible.
[8]
Although there was a suggestion that Mr. Aleaf
may have originally been part of his parents’ application for refugee
protection, he was not included in the decision granting permanent residence to
his family. Mr. Aleaf filed his own application for permanent residence in
2004. He was interviewed in 2005, following which a visa officer made a
positive selection decision. The Canadian High Commission in Pakistan then received adverse information regarding Mr. Aleaf, including CBSA and CSIS reports
indicating that Mr. Aleaf had admitted to lying about his whereabouts in
his application for permanent residence.
[9]
Mr. Aleaf had stated in his immigration
application that he had lived in Kabul until 1998. However, the reports
received by the High Commission stated that Mr. Aleaf had admitted in an
interview that he had in fact been living in a series of refugee camps in
Pakistan between 1996 and 1998, at least one of which was run by the
Hizb-i-Islami Gulbuddin (HIG) as a refuge for their militants, supporters and
families. The HIG is a highly volatile group that has been involved in attacks
on the government of Afghanistan.
[10]
Mr. Aleaf amended his permanent residence
application after getting married. He updated his immigration forms again in
2012 to include the couple’s two children – a son and a daughter. Mr. Aleaf
continued to assert in these updated forms that he was living in Kabul between 1995 and 1998.
[11]
It is unclear why the processing of the Aleaf family’s
application took so long, but we do know that the High Commission decided to
interview Mr. Aleaf again in 2013. The High Commission was reassessing his
case because of the length of time since the 2005 eligibility decision, and because
many Afghans who had been living in Pakistan were now returning home.
[12]
Before reviewing the visa officer’s record of
the May 6, 2013 interview with Mr. Aleaf, it is important to note that Mr. Aleaf
has not filed an affidavit in this proceeding. As a consequence, there is no
evidence before me that would call into question the accuracy of the visa officer’s
record of what was said during the interview. Mr. Aleaf did provide an
unsworn “statement” in which he takes issue with
the officer’s interpretation of the events discussed during the interview. He
does not, however, point to any inaccuracies in the officer’s notes.
II.
The 2013 Interview
[13]
Mr. Aleaf told the visa officer that he had
a brother named Abdul Samay, who was “not a normal
person”, in that he was paralysed, blind, deaf and “dumb”. This brother was allegedly in the family home
in Kabul at the time of the rocket attack in 1995 and could not be found after
the attack, which had totally destroyed the house.
[14]
Mr. Aleaf says that he and his family
returned to their village in Logar after the rocket attack, where they lived
for the next year, a claim that was not consistent with the address information
that Mr. Aleaf had provided in his immigration forms.
[15]
The visa officer questioned the family’s
decision to return to their village, given that this was the location where the
family’s alleged agents of persecution were located. The officer also suggested
to Mr. Aleaf that if his cousins were intent on harming the family, they
would have done so in the year that the family spent in Logar. Mr. Aleaf
did not provide a coherent response to this concern, leading the officer to
question the story of the land dispute.
[16]
Mr. Aleaf told the visa officer that after
spending a year in the village, he spent the next two years looking for his
missing brother in various locations all over Afghanistan. The officer had
difficulty with this claim, given that the family had not returned to Kabul to search for Abdul Samay’s body in the ruins of their house, the place that he
would more likely have been found. The officer could not understand why Mr. Aleaf
thought that a severely disabled individual would have been able to survive a
rocket attack, and then move to another part of Afghanistan.
[17]
Mr. Aleaf says that he did not accompany
his family when they moved to Pakistan in 1997, claiming to have stayed behind
in Afghanistan to continue searching for Abdul Samay. Given the indications
that Abdul Samay had died in the 1995 rocket attack, the officer did not find Mr. Aleaf’s
claim to have spent years searching for his brother in Afghanistan to be plausible.
[18]
After moving to Pakistan in 1998, Mr. Aleaf
says that he got a job at a plumber’s shop in Peshawar, where he worked for the
next 12 years. Mr. Aleaf could not, however, remember the name of the
shop, and had no documentation to support his claim of long-term employment. Mr. Aleaf
also stated that he lost his job in 2012 because the owner was “not good with Afghans”. As the visa officer noted, it
did not make sense that the owner would suddenly fire Mr. Aleaf after 12
years of employment because he was “not good with
Afghans”.
[19]
These concerns led the visa officer to make a
general finding that Mr. Aleaf was simply not credible. The officer was
not satisfied that Mr. Aleaf would be at risk in Afghanistan, and found that he could live safely in Kabul.
III.
Was Mr. Aleaf Treated Unfairly in the Visa
Process?
[20]
Mr. Aleaf’s first argument is that he was
treated unfairly in the visa process because he was not provided with copies of
the CBSA and CSIS memos from 2006, or with the “poison
pen” letter received by the Canadian High Commission in Islamabad in 2005.
[21]
Where an issue of procedural fairness arises, the
Court’s task is to determine whether the process followed by the decision-maker
satisfied the level of fairness required in all of the circumstances: see Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v. Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at para. 43,
[2009] 1 S.C.R. 339.
[22]
As I noted in my decision declining to appoint a
special advocate to represent Mr. Aleaf’s interests in section 87
proceedings brought in this matter, I accept that this matter is undoubtedly of
great importance to Mr. Aleaf and his family, given that they were seeking
permission enter to Canada as refugees. I have not, however, been persuaded
that the family was treated unfairly, in all of the circumstances.
[23]
Insofar as the two government memos are concerned,
Mr. Aleaf argues that there is no record of an interview in the Certified
Tribunal Record in which he admitted to lying about his whereabouts in his
application for permanent residence. The difficulty with this submission is
that Mr. Aleaf has not denied making the statement attributed to him.
[24]
As noted earlier, Mr. Aleaf did not file an
affidavit in support of his application for judicial review, and his unsworn
statement does not address this issue. Consequently, there is no evidence
before me that Mr. Aleaf did not make the statement that was attributed to
him. Nor is there evidence that Mr. Aleaf was unaware of the contents of
the memos, or that he was prejudiced in any way by their non-disclosure. He
has, moreover, not identified any evidence that he could have produced to
counter the information contained in the reports, had he been aware of their
existence.
[25]
There is also no indication in the visa
officer’s reasons that any weight was attributed to the information contained
in the memos. The officer’s decision was based on the inherent implausibility
of Mr. Aleaf’s story of his multi-year search for his missing brother in
various regions of Afghanistan during a period that he had claimed to have been
living in Kabul.
[26]
Insofar as the poison pen letter is concerned,
the jurisprudence of this Court has commented on the inherent unreliability of
such communications: D’Souza v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2008 FC 57 at para. 15, 321 F.T.R. 315. There is, however,
nothing in the visa officer’s decision to indicate that the officer was aware
of the contents of the 2005 letter, or that any consideration was given to the
letter by the officer. Indeed, the officer’s notes specifically state that “adverse information” that had been received in 2005
regarding Mr. Aleaf was “not on the file, or
outlined in CAIPS”. The decision in Patel v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 1389, 422 F.T.R. 61, relied
upon by the applicants is therefore distinguishable: see paras. 30-32.
[27]
The visa officer’s notes of the 2013 interview confirm
that the officer explicitly told Mr. Aleaf that she was concerned about Mr. Aleaf’s
whereabouts between 1995 and 1998, and gave Mr. Aleaf ample opportunity to
respond to those concerns. No breach of procedural fairness has thus been
established in this case.
IV.
The Reasonableness of the Officer’s Credibility
Findings
[28]
The applicants submit that the officer’s
credibility findings were unreasonable, as the officer failed to appreciate
that Mr. Aleaf had two disabled brothers, Abdul Samay and Tawab.
According to Mr. Aleaf’s unsworn statement and the affidavit of his
father, Tawab was killed in the rocket attack in 1995, but Abdul Samay survived
the attack and went missing.
[29]
The difficulty with this argument is that there
is no evidence before me to indicate that the officer was ever made aware of
this claim. Mr. Aleaf’s father was not in attendance at the interview with
the visa officer, and is thus not in a position to comment on what transpired
at the interview. While Mr. Aleaf asserts in his statement that the
officer did not seem to understand that he had two disabled brothers, nowhere
in his statement does he indicate that he informed the officer of this fact.
[30]
The story that Mr. Aleaf told to the visa
officer as to where he was in the years between 1995 and 1998 was confusing,
convoluted and improbable. The officer’s finding that Mr. Aleaf was not
credible is amply supported by the record and no basis has been shown for this
Court to intervene.
V.
The Basis of Claim
[31]
The applicants also say that the visa officer
erred by failing to attach sufficient weight to the fact that Canadian
immigration authorities had accepted Mr. Aleaf’s parents and siblings as
refugees in 2000, and that a positive selection decision had been made in
relation to Mr. Aleaf himself in 2005.
[32]
It is, however, apparent from the visa officer’s
reasons that she was well aware of the history of the family’s refugee claims,
including the fact that Canadian immigration authorities had accepted the story
of the land dispute in 2000. However, each refugee claim has to be determined
on its own merits.
[33]
We do not know what evidence was before the visa
officer deciding the family’s claim in 2000, nor do we know how the evidence
adduced in support of the applicants’ claims differed from that in Mr. Aleaf’s
parents and siblings’ claim. We do know that the visa officer in this case
found that the Aleaf family’s decision to return to their village in 1995 after
the destruction of their house in Kabul was inconsistent with them having a
well-founded fear of persecution at the hands of their relatives in Logar
province. That was a finding that was reasonably open to the officer on the
record before her.
[34]
Moreover, the applicants’ refugee claim was
assessed in 2013, when conditions in Afghanistan were quite different than they
were in 2000.
[35]
Unlike the situation that confronted the Court
in Goven v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 FCT
1161, [2002] F.C.J. No. 1556, the visa officer clearly explained why she did
not accept Mr. Aleaf’s claim to be at risk in Afghanistan. Mr. Aleaf
has thus established no basis for this Court’s intervention on this ground.
VI.
The Failure to Consider a Gender-Based Claim
[36]
The applicants’ final argument is that the visa
officer erred by failing to consider the gender-based persecution that Mr. Aleaf’s
wife and daughter would face in Afghanistan. The difficulty with this argument
is that no such claim was asserted by the family in their application for
permanent residence. The claims of Mr. Aleaf’s wife and children were
entirely dependant on his claim, which was based on the alleged land dispute.
[37]
It is true that in Canada (Attorney General)
v. Ward, at p. 745-746, [1993] S.C.J. No. 74, the Supreme Court confirmed
that the Board must consider all of the grounds for making a claim to
refugee status, even if the grounds are not raised during a hearing by a
claimant, and that it is not the duty of a claimant to identify the reasons for
their persecution: see also Viafara v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2006] F.C.J. No. 1914 at para. 6. This assessment must,
however, be made on the facts as asserted by the claimants.
[38]
The applicant in Ward had claimed to have
a well-founded fear of persecution in Ireland as a result of a particular
series of events. Although the claim was originally based on the applicant’s
membership in a particular social group, the Supreme Court concluded that the
events in issue actually gave rise to a claim based upon political opinion, and
should be considered no that basis.
[39]
In this case, the only events that were alleged
to give rise to a subjective fear of persecution in Afghanistan on the part of
the applicants, including Mr. Aleaf’s wife and daughter, were the events
relating to the land dispute. There was no suggestion that this dispute related
in any way to the gender of Mr. Aleaf’s wife and daughter, and the officer
thus did not err in failing to address a gender-based claim: Kamara v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 785 at para. 25, [2008]
F.C.J. No. 986; Besadh v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2009 FC 680 at para. 11, [2009] F.C.J. No. 847.
[40]
The fact that country condition information
indicates that violence against women is a serious problem in Afghanistan is not an adequate basis for a positive determination of a refugee claim: Atahi v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 753 at para. 17, 413 F.T.R.
122.
[41]
The applicants cite three other cases as support
for their contention that the visa officer had a duty to consider a
gender-based claim, even though no such claim had been advanced by the
applicants. These cases do not, however, support the applicants’ position. In
both Luswa v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC
289, [2004] F.C.J. No. 320 and Njodzenyuy v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2014 FC 709 at paras. 4 and 34, [2014] F.C.J. No. 736,
refugee decisions were set aside because of a failure to consider an
independent claim that had been expressly asserted by the spouse of the
principal applicant.
[42]
In Ismailzada v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 67, 425 F.T.R. 271, the Court noted
that overseas refugee claimants have no right to an interview, but that there
may be cases where it is necessary to interview a co-applicant, where, for
example, the credibility of the principal applicant is in issue. There is,
however, no suggestion that Mr. Aleaf’s wife had any first-hand knowledge
of the alleged land dispute. Nor is there any suggestion that she had any
first-hand knowledge of Mr. Aleaf’s whereabouts between 1995 and 1998, a
period that pre-dated their marriage by several years. She has not filed an
affidavit in this matter, and there is nothing before me to indicate that she
could have shed any light on the situation.
VII.
Costs
[43]
The applicants also submit that there are “special circumstances” in this case (including the
inordinate delay in the processing of their visa application) that would justify
an order of costs in their favour.
[44]
Costs are not ordinarily awarded in immigration
proceedings in this Court. Rule 22 of the Federal Courts Immigration
and Refugee Protection Rules, SOR/93-22 provides that “No costs shall be awarded to or payable by any party in
respect of an application for leave, an application for judicial review or an
appeal under these Rules unless the Court, for special reasons, so orders”.
[45]
The threshold for establishing the existence of “special reasons” is high, and each case will turn on
its own particular circumstances: Ibrahim v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2007 FC 1342 at para. 8, 68 Imm. L.R. (3d) 43. The
applicants have not persuaded me that “special reasons”
exist in this case that would justify an order of costs, and I decline to make
such an order.
VIII.
Conclusion
[46]
For these reasons, the application for judicial
review is dismissed. I agree with the parties that the case does not raise a
question for certification.