Docket: IMM-5472-15
Citation:
2016 FC 1161
[ENGLISH
TRANSLATION]
Toronto, Ontario, October 19, 2016
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Bell
BETWEEN:
|
GHOTRA, BALKAR
SINGH
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Nature of the matter
[1]
Balkar Singh Ghotra (Mr. Ghotra) is making
an application for judicial review under subsection 72(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c. 27 (the Act) with regard to
the decision by the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) on November 13,
2015, indicating that Mr. Ghotra is neither a Convention refugee nor a
person in need of protection under sections 96 and 97 of the Act.
[2]
For the following reasons, I am dismissing
Mr. Ghotra’s application.
II.
Background
[3]
Mr. Ghotra is originally from India and
lived in Greece for five years before returning to India in 2003 to live there
with his family. He claims to have been involved with the Akali Dal Amritsar
(Mann) political party, a Sikh nationalist party. Mr. Ghotra claims to
have had run-ins with the Indian police in 2008, after his friend, Vikramjit
Singh, a member of the same political party, allegedly went into hiding.
Mr. Ghotra states that he was arrested and detained on July 29, 2008,
for helping to plan a demonstration in protest of Independence Day. He was
detained for two days (until July 31, 2008), and was allegedly questioned
and tortured. Mr. Ghotra claims to have been released because influential
individuals bribed the authorities. He also claims to have been treated by a
doctor for injuries suffered while he was detained, and maintains that his
brother was arrested and released at the same time as him.
[4]
According to Mr. Ghotra, the Indian police
then allegedly harassed him regularly, and arrested him again on March 24,
2009. Mr. Ghotra maintains that he was detained and tortured until
March 28, 2009, and that was allegedly released again because of bribes.
He claims that following his release, the police required that he check in with
them on a monthly basis, beginning on May 1, 2009; otherwise, he would be
killed. Because of this threat, Mr. Ghotra claims to have travelled to New
Delhi and hired an agent to help him leave India. In May 2010, he
allegedly travelled to Greece and tried to obtain a Canadian visa, but was
unsuccessful. In July 2010, Mr. Ghotra’s agent brought him back to
New Delhi. Mr. Ghotra maintains that during this time, the Indian police
continued to search for him, thinking that he had joined the militants.
[5]
Mr. Ghotra arrived in Canada on
November 9, 2011, using a fake passport, and filed for refugee protection
at the airport. He claims that the Indian police continue to harass his family.
He also claims that they detained and tortured his father, and that his father
died after being tortured. Mr. Ghotra maintains that his children and his
mother left the family home and now move around from place to place.
Mr. Ghotra fears that if he were to return to India, he would be
persecuted by Indian authorities because of his political opinions.
III.
Impugned decision
[6]
The RPD accepted Mr. Ghotra’s identity, but
determined that he is neither a Convention refugee nor a person in need of
protection under sections 96 and 97 of the Act. The RPD held that
Mr Ghotra was not credible and that he had failed to discharge his burden
of proof. It identified several contradictions and inconsistencies in
Mr. Ghotra’s testimony, deeming them sufficiently significant to make his
testimony devoid of any credibility.
[7]
First, the RPD noted inconsistencies with regard
to Mr. Ghotra’s participation in the activities of the Akali Dal Amritsar
political party. After being questioned by the RPD member, Mr. Ghotra
testified that he supported this political party by transporting people and
materials to meetings and events, using his three-wheeled taxi. When questioned
again, he added that he also helped to distribute meals, but nothing else.
Nevertheless, on his Personal Information Form (PIF), Mr. Ghotra indicates
that he organized anti-police demonstrations and rallies, including a
demonstration against Independence Day. When confronted about this discrepancy
at the RPD hearing, Mr. Ghotra changed his testimony and stated that he
had organized demonstrations. When asked what he did to organize these
demonstrations, Mr. Ghotra testified that he had attended them. The RPD
determined that Mr. Ghotra was trying to alter his testimony to correct
the discrepancy noted, and that he was not able to provide consistent details
regarding his involvement with the Akali Dal Amritsar political party.
[8]
Second, Mr. Ghotra testified that the full
name of his friend, the one who allegedly went into hiding and who was
allegedly the cause of his troubles with the police, was Sadra Buta Singh.
However, his Personal Information Form indicates that this friend was named
Vikramjit Singh. When confronted about this contradiction, Mr. Ghotra
explained that he had been confused when he wrote his account, and that he may
have forgotten his friend’s name. Noting that Mr. Ghotra made changes to
his Personal Information Form (including his account) on two occasions, the RPD
rejected his explanation.
[9]
Third, the RPD drew a negative inference from
the fact that Mr. Ghotra went to Greece in May 2010 without filing
for refugee protection. Mr. Ghotra testified that it was not possible for
him to find a job or to live in this country due to the economic crisis raging
there, and that it was therefore impossible for him to file for refugee
protection in Greece. The RPD rejected this last explanation, as Mr. Ghotra
had admitted to having done no research into the possibility of claiming
refugee protection in Greece. In fact, he admitted to having taken the word of
people he referred to as "passersby."
According to the RPD, the fact that Mr. Ghotra made no attempt to file for
refugee protection in Greece undermined his credibility. The RPD also held that
the fact that he returned to India in July 2010, while claiming that he
feared for his life, was not consistent with the behaviour that one might
reasonably expect from an individual in such circumstances.
[10]
Fourth, the RPD noted discrepancies in his
testimony regarding his activities in India prior to his departure for Canada
in November 2011. Mr. Ghotra testified that he had lived in hiding in
New Delhi for 15 months before leaving for Canada. When asked whether he
had returned to his village during this 15-month period, Mr. Ghotra stated
that he had never returned there, whereas he had previously admitted to working
the land with his father before leaving for Canada. When confronted about this
discrepancy, Mr. Ghotra then changed his testimony, admitting to having
returned to his village at least once during this period. Faced with this new
discrepancy, Mr. Ghotra once again changed his testimony and stated that
he had never returned to his village during the period when he was living in
New Delhi. The RPD held that Mr. Ghotra was adjusting his answers to the
questions and was unable to provide satisfactory justification to explain the
contradictions.
[11]
In light of these discrepancies, which it deemed
significant, the RPD held that [translation]
"the applicant’s testimony is devoid of all
credibility." The RPD then focused on the documents submitted into
evidence. The RPD found that due to the credibility issues raised, it could not
grant them any probative value, as they were [translation]
"not sufficient to make a testimony credible that,
in essence, is not." The RPD noted that an affidavit and some
photos produced made reference to Buta Singh, Mr. Ghotra’s friend, even though
Mr. Ghotra had indicated on his personal information form that his friend’s
name was Vikramjit Singh. The RPD also briefly examined the medical
certificate, which stated, among other things: "Patient
was suffering from multiple internal and external injuries like swelling,
bruises, rash marks, pain and stress because of the police torture […]."
Despite this statement from the attending physician, the RPD held that the
medical certificate did not show that Mr. Ghotra’s injuries from 2008 and
2009 were due to police torture. The author of the document would not have had
the skills to draw a conclusion as to how the injuries were incurred. Lastly,
in its analysis of the probative value of the documents submitted into
evidence, the RPD noted that fraudulent documents are quite prevalent and easy
to procure in India.
IV.
Issues
[12]
Mr. Ghotra maintains that the RPD’s
conclusions regarding his lack of credibility are unreasonable. More
specifically, he argues that the RPD did not properly assess his testimony and
erred in its interpretation of the alleged facts. Mr. Ghotra also argues
that the discrepancies raised by the RPD are not sufficient to undermine his
credibility.
V.
Standard of review
[13]
The standard of review applicable to the RPD’s
conclusions regarding credibility and weighing of evidence is the standard of
reasonableness (Aguebor v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration)
(C.A.F.)(1993), 160 N.R. 315, 42 ACWS (3d) 886; Nzohabonayo v. Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 71, [2012] FCJ no 685 (QL) at
paragraph 26.) The Court may intervene only if it perceives an error that
is eligible for judicial review, and it must show a high degree of judicial
deference with regard to the RPD’s credibility findings (Kumar v. Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 643, [2009] FCJ No 811 (QL) at
paragraph 3). The standard of reasonableness requires that the decision
subject to judicial review be justifiable, intelligible and transparent, and
that it fall "within the range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law"
(Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9,
[2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at paragraph 47 [Dunsmuir]).
VI.
Relevant provisions
[14]
The relevant provisions of the Act are
reproduced in Appendix A.
VII.
Analysis
[15]
Essentially, Mr. Ghotra disagrees with the
RPD’s assessment of his credibility and of the evidence. He argues that the RPD
erred in citing his participating in organizing an anti-Independence-Day
demonstration, given that he had written in his PIF that "we were preparing to protest against the Independence
Day," the term "we"
referring to the political party he supported, and not to his own
participation. Mr. Ghotra also maintains that certain discrepancies raised
by the RPD between his written statements (in his PIF) and his oral testimony
are not sufficient to undermine his credibility to the point of arriving at a
negative conclusion regarding his refugee protection claim. Lastly,
Mr. Ghotra is of the opinion that his failure to apply for refugee
protection in another country (Greece, in this case) is not a deciding factor
in determining whether to grant his refugee claim in Canada.
[16]
Criticism of the RPD’s interpretation of
testimony and of statements made by an applicant is not sufficient grounds to
justify the Court’s intervention. It is up to the RPD—and not this Court—to
determine the probative value of the statements made by an applicant and to
draw appropriate conclusions regarding credibility (Eker v. Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 1226 [2015] FCJ No 1341 (QL) at
paragraph 9). This Court must show judicial deference to such conclusions,
as long as they are reasonable based on the criteria set out in Dunsmuir.
[17]
According to Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’
Union v. Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62, [2011] 3
S.C.R. 708, the reasons in support of a decision must allow the reviewing court
to understand why the tribunal made its decision and permit it to determine
whether the conclusion is within the range of acceptable outcomes. In light of
the reasons given by the RPD, I am of the opinion that the credibility
determinations are justifiable, intelligible and transparent, and that they
fall "within the range of possible, acceptable
outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law" (Dunsmuir,
above, at paragraph 47).
[18]
I am also of the opinion that it was
reasonable for the RPD to draw a negative inference in response to
Mr. Ghotra’s failure to claim refugee protection in Greece when he was
there in 2010. In rendering its decision, the RPD took into consideration the
explanations given by Mr. Ghotra to justify his failure to apply for
refugee protection in Greece. The RPD nevertheless determined that his
explanations were insufficient, noting that it is reasonable to expect that someone
who fears for his life would become more adequately informed about the
possibility of claiming refugee protection in the first country he arrives in,
rather than returning to the country in which he fears persecution. Failure to
claim refugee protection at the earliest opportunity is an indicator of the
absence of subjective fear of persecution, even though an adverse credibility
finding with respect to an applicant cannot be made solely on this basis (Islam
v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 1246, [2015] FCJ No 1292
(QL) at paragraph 22; Gavryushenko v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 194 FTR 161, [2000] FCJ No 1209 (QL)). Nevertheless,
based on the RPD’s reasons, it seems that the failure to claim refugee
protection in Greece was just one of several factors. I am of the opinion
that these factors were analyzed as a whole by the RPD and that they led to a
reasonable conclusion in this case.
VIII.
Conclusion
[19]
The credibility findings outlined by the RPD in
its decision are reasonable in the circumstances and do not warrant this Court’s
intervention. The application for judicial review is therefore dismissed.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT’S
JUDGMENT is that the
application for judicial review is dismissed without costs. There is no question
to be certified.
"B. Richard Bell"