Dockets: IMM-1312-15
IMM-2073-15
Citation: 2016 FC 242
Vancouver, British Columbia, March 22,
2016
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Bell
IMM-1312-15
|
BETWEEN:
|
FARAG FADEL
HEGI and
|
RAZAN FARAG
FADEL HEGI and
|
RAWAN FARAG
FADEL HEGI
|
by their
Litigation Guardian
FARAG FADEL
HEGI
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
IMM-2073-15
|
BETWEEN:
|
JOMANA TAWFIQ
HELAL KHALIL and
|
OMAR FARAG HEGI
by his
Litigation Guardian
JOMANA TAWFIQ
HELAL KHALIL
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT
AND REASONS
BELL J.
I.
Background:
[1]
These two applications for judicial review were
heard jointly on December 8, 2015. The reviews are from two decisions by
different members of the Refugee Protection Division [RPD] of the Immigration and
Refugee Board. In a decision dated February 23, 2015, the RPD dismissed Mr.
Farag Fadel Hegi’s [Mr. Hegi’s] and his two minor daughters’ applications for
refugee status and status as persons in need of protection as contemplated by
ss 96 and 97 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c
27 [the Act]. In a subsequent and separate decision dated March 3, 2015, the
RPD dismissed similar claims brought by Mr. Hegi’s spouse, Jomana Tawfiq Helal
Khalil [Ms. Khalil] and their infant son. It is from those two decisions that
the respective Applicants seek judicial review.
[2]
I will begin by briefly setting out the rather
complex history of the family’s status in the United Arab Emirates [UAE].
A.
Mr. Hegi
[3]
Mr. Hegi indicated in his Port of Entry [POE]
documents that he was born in the UAE to stateless Palestinian parents who held
Egyptian travel documents. His family was able to remain in the UAE as long as
his father maintained a work visa. Mr. Hegi’s parents were eventually deported
to Gaza (their place of former habitual residence) after Mr. Hegi’s father was
unable to continue his employment. Mr. Hegi, however, was able to obtain a work
visa and remain in the UAE. His visa allowed him and his children under the age
of 18 to remain with him in the UAE as long as he was employed.
[4]
In 2002, Mr. Hegi’s full-time employment in the
UAE was terminated. Between 2002 and 2012 he accepted work at little or no pay
in order to maintain his status. Upon termination from his last job in 2012,
Mr. Hegi applied for, and twice received, one year humanitarian extensions of
his visa. Officials apparently informed him that he would be denied a third
extension without proof of employment. If his visa were to expire, he would be
without status and would face detention or deportation from the UAE. On May 19,
2014, Mr. Hegi traveled from the UAE to the United States. His daughters and
his spouse, Ms. Khalil, later joined him in the United States. While the
daughters remained with their father, Ms. Khalil returned to the UAE to be with
their son until he could obtain travel documents. On October 9, 2014, Mr. Hegi
traveled to Canada with his daughters where he made claims for protection for
himself and them.
B.
Ms. Khalil
[5]
According to Mr. Hegi’s POE documents (adopted
by reference in Ms. Khalil’s documentation), Ms. Khalil’s status can be traced
to her grandfather, who also traveled to the UAE for employment. Her
grandfather worked for a member of the government of one of the emirates prior
to the creation of the UAE. He (Ms. Khalil’s grandfather) was apparently
conferred citizenship in compensation for his services. Although the Respondent
disputes exactly which rights were conferred upon Ms. Khalil by her
“citizenship” in the UAE, there is no dispute that rights were passed down to
her through her grandfather and parents and that she is unable to pass them on
to her spouse and children.
[6]
As a result of her status, Mr. Khalil possessed
what she refers to as a ‘national identity card’ and a passport which allowed
her to live and work in the UAE. She maintained these documents until the birth
of her son. At that time, Ms. Khalil’s passport had expired, although the
national identity card remained valid. Ms. Khalil states that when she applied
for her son’s birth certificate, she was told by the UAE Ministry of Health
that she was required to attend at the passport office to request a birth
certificate for her son. At that office, officials requested she remit her
passport and national identity card, and apply for a passport from the Comoros.
She was told these steps were necessary in order to issue the birth
certificate. Fearing for her son’s status, Ms. Khalil agreed. At approximately
the same time, her parents and siblings were similarly required to accept
Comorian passports. This program, by which Comoros issued ‘passports’ to
stateless Palestinians living in the UAE, constituted part of a financial
agreement between the UAE and the Comoros, whereby the government of the UAE
paid the Comoros to provide travel documents to some of its residents. Ms.
Khalil claims that through the issuance of the Comorian ‘passport’ she was
stripped of whatever citizenship rights she had in the UAE.
[7]
As a result of that set out above, Ms. Khalil
has a passport which affords no right to reside in either the UAE or the
Comoros. She contends that since she is female, she cannot pass her Comorian
status to her husband or children.
[8]
Ms. Khalil and her son entered the United States
on a visitor’s visa on December 24, 2014, and entered Canada on January 1,
2015, where she claimed, on her own behalf and on behalf of her son, refugee
protection and status as a person in need of protection. At the time she
entered Canada, Ms. Khalil possessed a resident’s visa for the UAE valid until
June 29, 2017 or until such time as she has been out of the UAE for more than 6
consecutive months. This visa is based upon her employment in the UAE and her
Comorian passport. The visa also grants her children status in the UAE until
they turn 18 years of age. The children are presently 16, 13, and 5 years old.
At the hearing before the RPD on March 3, 2013, Ms. Khalil reported she had
been absent from the UAE for approximately 2 ½ months, that her employer had
given her only one month off work and that she feared loss of her employment. The
Applicants have now been in Canada for more than one year.
II.
The Decisions
[9]
Both RPD members concluded the Applicants are
neither refugees nor persons in need of protection pursuant to ss 96 and 97 of
the Act. Identity is not disputed for any of the parties. Both RPD
members accepted that the Applicants were all born in the UAE and are all
stateless, in spite of their travel documents, since they do not have a right
to enter Egypt (or the Comoros in Ms. Khalil’s case). The RPD members found the
UAE to be the country of former habitual residence for all Applicants.
A.
Mr. Hegi
[10]
In Mr. Hegi’s case, the RPD drew a negative
inference from inconsistencies in his testimony regarding his alleged fear of
returning to the UAE. Mr. Hegi states that he fears deportation or jail for
himself and his daughters if he returns to the UAE. However, when asked by the RPD
if he would be afraid to go back to the UAE, Mr. Hegi answered in the negative.
Mr. Hegi was challenged by the RPD regarding a statement he made in his POE
that he does “not fear returning to any countries”.
He contends before this Court, there was a miscommunication because he added
that he does “not have any countries to return to”.
He contends his lack of fear was based upon the fact he could not be sent
anywhere. The RPD rejected that explanation and took the view that Mr. Hegi did
not fear being returned to the UAE.
[11]
Further, the RPD found that even if Mr. Hegi’s
credibility were not in issue, he and his daughters could not claim refugee or
person in need of protection status since the basis of their fear arises from
an ordinary law of general application. The RPD held that it is within the
purview of any state to legislate regarding the consequences of remaining
within its borders after the expiration of one’s visa. The RPD concluded such
state action does not constitute persecution. It further noted that Mr. Hegi’s
daughters would, based upon Ms. Khalil’s visa, continue to have status in the
UAE until they reach the age of 18.
[12]
The RPD also drew a negative inference regarding
Mr. Hegi’s alleged fear given that he landed in the United States and remained
there for nearly 5 months without having made an asylum claim.
B.
Ms. Khalil
[13]
As in the case regarding her husband, the RPD found
Ms. Khalil and her son are subject to a valid law of general application and do
not face persecution.
[14]
The RPD also concluded that Ms. Khalil’s loss of
status in the UAE is speculative. It noted she was able to maintain employment
prior to coming to Canada, did not provide evidence regarding the current
status of her employment, and did not demonstrate an absence of future
employment prospects in the UAE. On this basis, the RPD held that she failed to
demonstrate a loss of her resident visa, which, on its face, is valid until
2017. In addition the RPD noted that at the time of the hearing she had only
been absent for 2 ½ months of the 6 month consecutive absence limit set out in
the visa.
III.
Issues and standard of review
[15]
While several issues are raised by the
Applicants, including apparent misapplication of the word ‘persecution’ instead
of ‘prosecution’ and findings of credibility as it relates to Mr. Hegi, I am of
the view the application of the reasonableness standard of review as set out in
Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] SCR 190 [Dunsmuir] is
determinative of the issues.
IV.
Analysis
A.
Prosecution vs. Persecution
[16]
The Applicants contend the RPD applied a
‘prosecutorial’ test instead of a ‘persecutory’ test to the refugee and person
in need of protection claims. This is, with respect, an inaccurate
characterization. In the decision concerning Mr. Hegi, the RPD properly noted
there is nothing persecutory about the nature of the laws in question. It goes on
to find that:
[…] the claimants face, at worst,
prosecution pursuant to a law of general application should they return to the
UAE, not persecution for a Convention ground or a risk to life or of cruel and
unusual treatment or punishment or of torture should they return to the UAE.
This excerpt demonstrates the RPD was aware
that persecution and prosecution are different and that prosecution does not
necessarily amount to a claim founded on a Convention ground.
[17]
This Court has concluded on several occasions
that prosecution with respect to a law of general application, does not
necessarily amount to persecution. In Karsoua v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 58, [2007] FCJ No 95, Justice
Blanchard found that the denial of a right to return to the UAE does not
constitute persecution. Similarly, in Altawil v Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration, 114 FTR 241, [1996] FCJ No 986 [Altawil]
the Court found that a denial of the right to return does not amount to
persecution if applying a law of general application.
[18]
The Applicants contend the RPD erred in law or
reached an unreasonable decision because it misquoted Altawil as it
relates to this issue of ‘prosecution’ versus ‘persecution’. While the RPD
misquoted one phrase from Altawil, I am satisfied the error constituted
only a typographical error which had no bearing on the decision-making process.
The RPD demonstrated that it knew and applied the proper test. It committed no
error of law, nor are its findings unreasonable in relation to the absence of
persecution.
B.
The merits of the claims
[19]
The RPD concluded the Applicants’ inability to
return to the UAE is speculative given none of them have attempted to do so. I
find Justice Simpson’s observations in Altawil demonstrative of the
reasonableness of the RPD’s findings in this regard. She quotes from the UNHCR
Handbook which states:
It will be noted that not all stateless
persons are refugees. They must be outside the country of their former habitual
residence for the reasons indicated in the definition. Where these reasons do
not exist, the stateless person is not a refugee.
[20]
The applications for judicial review by Ms.
Khalil and the minor children is further complicated by the fact they all had a
right to return to the UAE at the time of the RPD hearing. Mr. Hegi and Ms.
Khalil simply do not meet the definition of Convention refugees or persons in
need of protection under ss 96 or 97 of the Act. The RPDs’ conclusions in this
regard, and, in Mr. Hegi’s case, on credibility, meet the test of
reasonableness set out in Dunsmuir. The decisions are justified,
transparent and intelligible, and fall “within a range
of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts
and law” (Dunsmuir, above at para 47).
[21]
The applications for judicial review are
dismissed without costs.
[22]
None of the parties submitted a question for
certification and none is certified.
"B. Richard Bell"