Docket: IMM-862-15
Citation:
2016 FC 12
Ottawa, Ontario, January 7, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Fothergill
BETWEEN:
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Applicant
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and
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TIRUEDEL ZENEBE
DESALEGN
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration [the
Minister] has brought an application for judicial review of a decision of the
Refugee Appeal Division [RAD] of the Immigration and Refugee Board. The RAD set
aside the determination of the Refugee Protection Division [RPD] that Tiruedel
Zenebe Desalegn is not 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 as defined by s 97 of the IRPA. The RAD substituted its own
determination that Ms. Desalegn is a Convention refugee. The Minister brings
this application pursuant to ss 72(1) and 72(2) of the IRPA.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, I have concluded
that the RAD admitted new evidence in a manner that did not comply with s
110(4) of the IRPA, and improperly relied upon that evidence and other
documents found in the record to conclude that Ms. Desalegn has a well-founded
fear of persecution in Ethiopia. The application for judicial review is
therefore allowed.
II.
Background
[3]
Ms. Desalegn is a citizen of Ethiopia. Her claim
for refugee protection was based on the following allegations.
[4]
Ms. Desalegn is a popular musician in Ethiopia.
Her parents are also musicians and known political dissidents. Ms. Desalegn’s parents
were arrested and detained in 2005 due to their membership in the opposition
group Unity for Justice and Democracy [UDJ], which Ms. Desalegn joined briefly
in 2008. Following their release, Ms. Desalegn’s mother fled Ethiopia with Ms.
Desalegn’s uncle, a well-known member of the Ethiopian opposition party Ginbot
7. They were both granted asylum in the United States of America. Ms.
Desalegn’s father remained in Ethiopia.
[5]
In May 2010, the police arrested and detained
Ms. Desalegn and her former partner due to their support of the UDJ.
[6]
On April 5, 2013, the police arrested and
detained Ms. Desalegn after her song “One Day” aired on the radio in Ethiopia.
The government perceived her song to be critical of the current regime. Ms.
Desalegn was released after her brother paid a bribe.
[7]
On June 3, 2013, Ms. Desalegn obtained a
Temporary Resident Visa for Canada. Ms. Desalegn managed to leave Ethiopia with
the help of a senior official at the Addis Ababa airport. She arrived in
Toronto and immediately made a claim for refugee protection.
[8]
In a decision dated July 15, 2014, the RPD
determined that Ms. Desalegn was neither a Convention Refugee nor a person in
need of protection. The determinative issue was Ms. Desalegn’s credibility. The
RPD also found a lack of objective corroborative evidence to support her claim.
[9]
Ms. Desalegn appealed the RPD’s decision to the
RAD. She challenged the RPD’s decision on two grounds: (i) the RPD erred in its
assessment of her credibility because it undertook a microscopic analysis of
the evidence; and (ii) the RPD ignored or dismissed corroborative evidence that
supported her claim. Ms. Desalegn submitted several new pieces of evidence
pursuant to s 110(4) of the IRPA.
[10]
In a decision dated January 28, 2015, the RAD
admitted the new evidence and granted Ms. Desalegn’s appeal. The RAD found that
the RPD had wrongly rejected three documents that the RAD considered to be
highly probative. The RAD substituted its own determination that Ms. Desalegn
is at risk in Ethiopia due to her political opinion and her popularity as a
musician.
III.
Issues
[11]
This application for judicial review raises the
following issues:
A.
Was the RAD’s admission of the new evidence
reasonable?
B.
Was the RAD’s determination that Ms. Desalegn is
a Convention refugee reasonable?
IV.
Analysis
A.
Was the RAD’s admission of the new evidence
reasonable?
[12]
Questions regarding the admission of new
evidence before the RAD are reviewable by this Court against the standard of
reasonableness (Singh v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 1022 at paras 36-42 [Singh]; Khachatourian v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 182 at para 37).
[13]
In support of her appeal, Ms. Desalegn submitted
several new pieces of evidence pursuant to s 110(4) of the IRPA to address the
RPD’s credibility concerns and to demonstrate that she had actively
participated in opposition politics since leaving Ethiopia. The evidence
included: (i) an affidavit setting out her personal history and her efforts to
obtain additional evidence following the RPD’s decision; (ii) a letter from the
Ethiopian Association of Greater Toronto dated September 9, 2014, confirming
that Ms. Desalegn had performed several songs at fundraising events throughout
2013 and 2014; (iii) a letter from the Ethiopian Satellite Television Service
[ESAT] dated September 24, 2014, thanking Ms. Desalegn for singing her song
“One Day” at a fundraiser in Toronto in October 2013; (iv) photographs of Ms.
Desalegn meeting with the chairman of Ginbot 7 following the fundraiser in Toronto;
(v) a statutory declaration from her mother, Ms. Belayneh, amending her initial
account of Ms. Desalegn’s arrest in Ethiopia; (vi) a report by Amnesty
International dated July 10, 2014, stating that Ethiopians in contact with
members of Ginbot 7 and the ESAT are at risk of imprisonment because the
Ethiopian government views these groups as terrorist organizations; and (vii) a
journal article titled “Refugee Status Determination and the Limits of Memory”
by Hilary Evans Cameron.
[14]
The RAD’s decision makes it difficult for this
Court to assess whether it correctly applied the test for determining whether
the proposed evidence was admissible. Subsection 110(4) of the IRPA provides as
follows:
110 (4) On appeal, the person who is the subject of the appeal may
present only evidence that arose after the rejection of their claim or that
was not reasonably available, or that the person could not reasonably have
been expected in the circumstances to have presented, at the time of the
rejection.
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110 (4) Dans le cadre de l’appel, la personne en
cause ne peut présenter que des éléments de preuve survenus depuis le rejet
de sa demande ou qui n’étaient alors pas normalement accessibles ou, s’ils
l’étaient, qu’elle n’aurait pas normalement présentés, dans les circonstances,
au moment du rejet.
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[15]
Ms. Desalegn says that the RAD’s admission of
the new evidence was consistent with the Court’s approach in Singh, in
which Justice Gagné held that the test for admitting new evidence in the
context of a pre-removal risk assessment [PRRA] found in Raza v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FCA 385 [Raza] differs from the
criteria for admitting new evidence in the context of an appeal before the RAD.
Justice Gagné reasoned that Parliament intended the RAD to conduct a full, fact-based
appeal, and “when the RPD confronts a claimant on the
weakness of his evidentiary record, the RAD should, in subsequent review of the
decision, have some leeway in order to allow the claimant to respond to the
deficiencies raised” (at para 55). This decision is currently before the
Federal Court of Appeal, and the question of whether the Raza criteria
apply to s 110(4) of the IRPA is therefore unsettled.
[16]
The RAD admitted all of the new evidence with
the following explanation: “I have taken into account s
110(4) requirements and the Raza factors – applied not strictly – and
find that all documents mentioned above, with the exception of the article by
Hilary Evans Cameron, meet the statutory requirements as well as the Raza
factors: as they are new, were not reasonably available and are material and
relevant.” The RAD then denied Ms. Desalegn’s request for an oral
hearing.
[17]
The flexible approach contemplated in Singh
concerns the RAD’s treatment of evidence only once it has met the statutory
requirements of s 110(4) of the IRPA (Fida v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2015 FC 784 at paras 6-8). As Justice Strickland noted in
Deri v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 1041,
the RAD has no discretion to refuse to apply the three explicit conditions for
the admissibility of new evidence prescribed by s 110(4). The RAD must
therefore determine: (i) whether the evidence arose after the rejection of the
claim; (ii) whether it was reasonably available; and (iii) whether the applicant
could reasonably have been expected, in the circumstances, to present the
evidence before the RPD.
[18]
In this case, the RAD provided little in the way
of reasons for admitting the new evidence. Instead, the RAD stated: “I accept the justification for each of the documents
provided by the Appellant in the memorandum and the Appellant’s record.”
Assuming that this amounts to an incorporation by reference of the arguments
presented by Ms. Desalegn, these are insufficient to meet the statutory
requirements of s 110(4).
[19]
According to the memorandum of argument that Ms.
Desalegn submitted to the RAD:
… [s]ome of the information contained with
the new letters and Ms. Belayneh’s affidavit may have originated prior to or
during the course of the RPD hearing. However, in the Appellant’s case, the
above evidence was not reasonably available before or during her RPD hearing
because it specifically responds to information and findings contained in the
RPD decision. …
The new personal evidence directly responds
to the RPD’s central credibility findings and as such is relevant in addressing
issues identified in the RPD decision. The Appellant provided substantial
personal supporting documentation to corroborate her claim before the RPD. She
could not have anticipated that the RPD would utterly ignore or unreasonably
dismiss all of her corroborative documentation. Accordingly, she was not aware
until receipt of the RPD decision that the ‘new’ evidence on appeal would be
required to address the RPD Member’s erroneous factual findings.
[20]
In the alternative, Ms. Desalegn suggested that
even if the evidence did not meet the Raza criteria, the RAD should
nevertheless accept it pursuant to Elezi v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2007 FC 240 at para 45. In that case, this Court held
that PRRA officers have the discretion to consider evidence that has probative
value, even if it is “technically inadmissible”.
[21]
In my view, the RAD was required to examine each
proposed piece of new evidence and decide whether the information could have
reasonably been adduced during the proceedings before the RPD. Evidence that
merely responds to the RPD’s concerns regarding credibility, or that corrects
information or mistakes in affidavits that were previously submitted, does not
meet the Raza criteria.
[22]
Ms. Desalegn notes that Justice Hughes said the
following in Abdullahi v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2015 FC 1164 at para 11 [Abdullahi]: “Nonetheless,
the Applicant, who justifiably was surprised that the evidence he presented to
the RPD was not sufficient, endeavoured to provide further evidence to the RAD.
I find that the further evidence falls under the category of evidence that
could not reasonably be expected as set out in section 110(4) of IRPA.”
[23]
Abdullahi must be
understood within its unique factual context. In that case, the RPD instructed
the claimant to provide an affidavit or letter from his roommate to establish
his identity. The claimant provided a letter. The RPD then faulted him for not
providing an affidavit. Justice Hughes found this to be unreasonable because
the claimant had been presented with both options. Abdullahi cannot be
taken as authority for the proposition that an appellant before the RAD may
present new evidence every time he or she is surprised by the RPD’s decision,
particularly in this case where the hearing before the RPD took place over a
number of days and there was a hiatus of several months before the RPD rendered
its decision.
[24]
I therefore conclude that the RAD’s reasons for
admitting the new evidence are neither transparent nor intelligible. Reasons
are adequate if they permit a reviewing court to understand why the tribunal
made its decision, and to determine whether the conclusions fall within the
range of acceptable outcomes in light of the evidence before the tribunal (Newfoundland
and Labrador Nurses Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board),
2011 SCC 62 at paras 16-18). The RAD relied extensively on the newly-admitted
evidence in support of its decision to grant Ms. Desalegn’s appeal. Its failure
to provide an adequate justification for admitting the new evidence is
sufficient to dispose of the application for judicial review. I will
nevertheless comment briefly on the second ground for judicial review advanced
on behalf of the Minister.
B.
Was the RAD’s determination that Ms. Desalegn is
a Convention refugee reasonable?
[25]
The RAD’s decision to substitute its own
determination for that of the RPD is subject to review by this Court against
the standard of reasonableness (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9; Singh
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 1208 at para
25).
[26]
The determinative issue before the RPD was Ms.
Desalegn’s credibility. The RPD rejected Ms. Desalegn’s claim because of
numerous inconsistencies and contradictions in her testimony, the information
she provided in her Basis of Claim form, and the information contained in the
forms she submitted to the Minister in support of her application for a
Temporary Resident Visa.
[27]
The RAD opted for a wholly different approach.
It did not examine the RPD’s credibility findings, nor did it address the
grounds that Ms. Desalegn advanced in support of her appeal. Instead, the RAD
referred to the new evidence it had admitted and some other information in the
record that it held had not been properly considered by the RPD. The RAD then
listed a number of factual findings that it described as “uncontended”, i.e.,
uncontentious or uncontroversial.
[28]
However, many of the findings were very much in
contention, and some had been explicitly rejected by the RPD. The RAD did not
address the RPD’s rejection of Ms. Desalegn’s claim to be a political dissident
because she knew very little about the political parties to which she allegedly
belonged. Nor did the RAD address the RPD’s finding that there was a lack of
objective evidence to corroborate her claim that she had been arrested.
Instead, the RAD simply found that Ms. Desalegn had been arrested and continued
to be “of interest to the authorities.” Again,
the RAD’s reasons are neither transparent nor intelligible.
[29]
The RAD owes deference to the RPD’s assessments
of credibility that are based on witnesses’ testimony (Ngandu v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 423 at para 31, citing R
v NS (N), 2012 SCC 72 at para 25). This is an area where the RPD enjoys a
particular advantage (Huruglica v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2014 FC 799 at paras 54-55; Yetna v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 858 at para 17). It was unreasonable
for the RAD to substitute its own determination of Ms. Desalegn’s credibility
without affording deference to the RPD’s credibility findings or explaining why
it considered those findings to be wrong.
V.
Conclusion
[30]
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.