Docket: IMM-4307-15
Citation:
2016 FC 510
Ottawa, Ontario, May 6, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Kane
BETWEEN:
|
BABAR MIRZA
|
Applicant
|
and
|
MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The applicant, Babar Mirza, seeks judicial
review of the decision dated September 4, 2015, of a Senior Immigration Officer
[the Officer] which confirmed that he is inadmissible to Canada pursuant to
paragraph 34(1)(f) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001,
c 27 [the Act] and found that there were insufficient humanitarian and compassionate
[H&C] grounds to forward his application to the Case Management Branch for
further consideration of an exemption from inadmissibility.
[2]
On judicial review, the applicant argues that
the decision is not reasonable and in addition, that there is a breach of
procedural fairness due to institutional bias in the decision making structure.
[3]
For the reasons that follow, I find that the
decision is not reasonable. There is no need to address the argument that the
decision making process reflects an institutional bias.
I.
Background
[4]
The applicant is a citizen of Pakistan. He
arrived in Canada on October 27, 1996 and was accepted as a Convention refugee
on January 28, 1999. His application for permanent residence was approved in
principle on September 22, 1999. He was interviewed by the Canadian Security
Intelligence Service on October 11, 2000. The applicant appears to have not
been made aware of the progress of his permanent residence application between
2000 and 2010.
[5]
On April 14, 2010, the applicant received a
letter from Citizenship and Immigration Canada [CIC] indicating that he may be
inadmissible to Canada pursuant to paragraph 34(1)(f) of the Act due to his
membership in the Muttahida Qaumi Movement [MQM]. On April 28, 2010, he was
interviewed by CIC. He then made submissions that it would be unreasonable to
find him inadmissible pursuant to paragraph 34(1)(f) and asked CIC to consider
H&C grounds to grant him permanent resident status.
[6]
On March 23, 2011, a CIC officer found that the
applicant is inadmissible to Canada pursuant to paragraph 34(1)(f). The
application for leave and for judicial review of that decision was denied.
[7]
On June 18, 2011, the applicant requested
Ministerial Relief. This application remains outstanding.
[8]
The applicant applied again for permanent
resident status on H&C grounds, pursuant to section 25 of the Act, shortly
before the Faster Removal of Foreign Criminals Act, SC 2013, c 16 came
into force in an effort to preserve his eligibility for the H&C exemption,
but did not make extensive submissions. The application was refused on October
25, 2013, as was his request for reconsideration.
[9]
The applicant’s original application for
permanent residence made in 1999 based on his Convention refugee status was, at
some later point, transferred to the Backlog Reduction Office in Vancouver. The
applicant was notified on March 28, 2014 and made further submissions on June
16, 2014 and March 10, 2015. His request was not barred by the Faster
Removal of Foreign Criminals Act because he had first requested an
exemption on H&C grounds in 2010.
[10]
The decision made with respect to this
application for an exemption on H&C grounds is the subject of judicial
review.
[11]
In the applicant’s various applications, he
provided information about his involvement with the MQM, Muttahida Qaumi
Movement-Altaf [MQM-A] and All Pakistan Muttahida Students Organization [APMSO]
between 1990 and 1996. He did not deny being a member, but noted that he joined
at the age of 14 and had limited involvement. He also noted that he was not
aware of the violence of the organization, although he had been a victim of
violence while working during the 1993 election.
[12]
There is no evidence that the applicant had any
involvement with the MQM/MQM-A after arriving in Canada in 1996 or any criminal
history in Canada or elsewhere. The applicant has been employed throughout his
time in Canada and currently works as a heavy equipment operator. He has been
married to his wife for over ten years. They have two children and the
applicant has custody of his son from a previous relationship. The applicant
also has extended family in Calgary.
II.
The Decision Under Review
[13]
The Officer noted the applicant’s admissions of
membership and involvement in the MQM/MQM-A. The applicant described in his
Personal Information Form [PIF] that he joined an MQM rally in January 1990 and
became a regular member of the MQM in September 1991. The applicant recounted
an incident when he escaped a shooting attempt in April 1992. He also described
that he was arrested, detained and beaten in June 1992. He stated that he was
attacked and threatened when working for the election in October 1993. He
attended an underground meeting and was arrested in April 1994, but was
released on the payment of a bribe. The Officer noted that the applicant
continued an apparently voluntary association with the MQM-A after he knew his
involvement was dangerous.
[14]
The Officer noted some variations in the
applicant’s account of his membership between his application and interview.
The applicant explained that the description of his membership in his PIF was
for the purpose of his refugee claim. The Officer noted that the applicant
stated he had become a member at the age of 14, had thought that the
organizations helped the poor and had not been too sure of the MQM’s purpose or
mandate, but was unaware of MQM violence.
[15]
The Officer reviewed the history of the MQM,
MQM-A and APMSO, noting that the Immigration and Refugee Board, Canada Border
Services Agency, CIC, and the Federal Court have all found that there are
reasonable grounds to believe that the MQM-A and the APMSO are or were
organizations that have engaged in terrorism.
[16]
The Officer concluded that the applicant’s
voluntary association with the MQM-A in “dangerous
circumstances” constituted membership in the organization and that there
are reasonable grounds to believe the applicant is described in paragraph
34(1)(f).
[17]
With respect to the applicant’s request for an
exemption from the finding of inadmissibility and the Officer’s task to
consider whether the H&C grounds justify consideration by the next level
decision maker, i.e., the Case Management Branch, the Officer noted the
applicant’s employment and family history, statement of remorse for being a
member of the MQM once he learned of its activities, and his lack of
involvement since coming to Canada in 1996.
[18]
With respect to the hardship alleged, the
Officer noted the submissions of the applicant that his lack of permanent
resident status left him in a state of limbo and that the resulting stress had
an effect on his family, but found that the risk of removal from Canada was
speculative because the applicant is a Convention refugee and not subject to
removal. As a result, the Officer did not consider submissions relating to the
effect of a potential separation of his family. The Officer accepted that this
causes the applicant “emotional pain” and that
he might have more certainty if he were a permanent resident. The Officer found
that this uncertainty has no impact on the applicant’s children. Similarly, the
Officer placed little weight on the best interests of the applicant’s children
because the applicant would remain with his children regardless of his status.
[19]
The Officer stated that he placed greater weight
on the applicant’s long, voluntary association or membership in the MQM-A and
found that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the applicant is a
person described in paragraph 34(1)(f), adding that “this
is a very serious ground of inadmissibility.” The Officer found that the
“mild” H&C grounds in the applicant’s favour
do not warrant consideration by the Case Management Branch.
III.
The Issues
[20]
The applicant argues that the decision is not
reasonable and is not procedurally fair.
[21]
With respect to whether the decision is
reasonable, the applicant raises three issues:
−
Did the Officer err in his consideration of the
test to determine whether H&C factors justify consideration of an exemption
from inadmissibility by the Case Management Branch, in other words, whether the
Officer should forward the application to the Case Management Branch?
−
Did the Officer err in his consideration of the
evidence of inadmissibility?
−
Did the Officer err in his consideration of the
impact of the applicant’s immigration status?
[22]
With respect to whether the decision is
procedurally fair, the applicant argues that the structure of the decision
making process to determine whether to grant an exemption from inadmissibility
on H&C grounds demonstrates institutional bias. The applicant submits that
if the test applied by the Officer to determine whether to forward the
application for further consideration of an exemption based on H&C grounds
is more onerous than the wording in the Operational Manual for Immigrant Applications
in Canada made on Humanitarian or Compassionate Grounds (IP 5) [the Manual]
suggests, which refers to the Officer’s belief that H&C factors “might justify an exemption”, the structure is flawed
because it denies consideration by a higher level decision maker and by the
Minister. The applicant submits that this would amount to a breach of
procedural fairness.
IV.
Standard of Review
[23]
The standard of review applicable to an
officer’s decision on an H&C application is reasonableness: Kisana v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FCA 189 at paras 18,
20, [2010] 1 FCR 360; Figueroa v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2014 FC 673 at para 24, [2014] FCJ No 702 (QL) [Figueroa].
[24]
The reasonableness standard focuses on “the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process” and considers “whether the decision falls within a range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law”
(Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para 47, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 [Dunsmuir]).
The Court will not re-weigh the evidence or re-make the decision.
[25]
An issue of procedural fairness, in this case,
the allegation of institutional bias, if established, is reviewed on the
correctness standard (Khosa v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2009 SCC 12 at para 43, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 339).
[26]
Whether the Officer applied the correct test to
determine whether to forward the application to the Case Management Branch
raises a possible error of law. There is a distinction between whether the
correct legal test was applied, which is reviewed on the standard of
correctness, and for which no deference is owed, and whether the decision maker
applied the correct test to the particular facts, which is a question of mixed
fact and law reviewed on the reasonableness standard, and for which deference
is owed (Dunsmuir at para 53).
V.
Is the Decision Reasonable?
Did the Officer err in his consideration of the test to
determine whether H&C factors justify consideration of a waiver of
inadmissibility by the Case Management Branch, in other words, whether the
Officer should forward the application to the Case Management Branch?
[27]
The applicant submits that the Manual governing
H&C exemptions from inadmissibility, which is applicable to delegated
decision makers, makes it clear that where the Officer does not have the
authority to grant the exemption, as in the present case, the Officer must
forward the application to a delegated decision maker (the Case Management
Branch) if the Officer “believes that the H&C
factors might justify an exemption.”
[28]
The applicant submits that the use of the term “might” signals a threshold lower than reasonable and
probable grounds or a reasonable likelihood and would include circumstances
where some H&C factors are present and a delegated decision maker could
possibly find an exemption. The applicant acknowledges that some balancing is
required in this assessment.
[29]
The applicant adds that, because the Officer
cannot approve the exemption, but can only refuse the application or refer it
to the Case Management Branch, which can then only refuse it or refer it to the
Minister, the threshold of “might” must be a low
threshold. Otherwise, no potentially successful applications would reach the
Minister for consideration.
[30]
The respondent submits that the Officer is
tasked with conducting a more comprehensive analysis of the H&C grounds,
which requires a balancing of the H&C factors with the finding of
inadmissibility. Although the Manual uses the term “might”,
the guidelines are not the law. The respondent adds that the Officer’s decision
is reviewable on the reasonableness standard; there are a range of reasonable
outcomes and deference is owed to the Officer.
The Officer did not err in applying the test; the Officer
should and did conduct a thorough H&C analysis
[31]
Generally, issues regarding the application of
the correct legal test are reviewed on the standard of correctness. The issue
that arises in this case is a hybrid issue that is more related to how the
determination was made. Moreover, the meaning of what “might
justify an exemption” is not determinative of this application for
judicial review.
[32]
The Manual guides the Officer to forward the
application for further consideration if the Officer believes the H&C
factors “might justify an exemption.” In my
view, this requires the Officer to conduct a thorough assessment of the
application and balance the various factors. The mere possibility that another
decision maker could take a different view of the H&C application is not
the test; the Officer conducting the assessment must form the belief that there
are sufficient H&C grounds that “might”, in
the sense of a reasonable possibility (or at least more than a mere
possibility) justify the exemption.
[33]
In the present case, the Officer did conduct an
assessment of the H&C grounds and weighed them against the applicant’s
inadmissibility. The Officer concluded that there were “mild”
H&C grounds in the applicant’s favour, but found that these grounds did not
warrant consideration by the Case Management Branch. However, as explained
below, the Officer formed his belief and made his findings without conducting a
full analysis of all the evidence and a nuanced consideration of the facts
underlying the finding of inadmissibility as required.
Did the Officer err in his assessment of the evidence of
the applicant’s inadmissibility?
[34]
The applicant does not challenge the finding
that he is inadmissible to Canada. Rather, the applicant submits that the
Officer erred by focussing on the ground of inadmissibility, finding it to be
serious, instead of focussing on the facts which underlie that finding and the
seriousness of the applicant’s conduct. The applicant argues that, as
established in Figueroa at para 34, there must be a nuanced
consideration of the nature of the applicant’s membership in the organization
balanced against the H&C considerations.
[35]
The applicant submits that the Officer failed to
consider the applicant’s knowledge of the organization’s purpose or activities,
his age at the time he joined, or the nature of his activity as a member.
[36]
The respondent argues that the applicant’s
circumstances differ from those in Figueroa, including the nature of the
organization, the involvement of the applicant and the strength of the H&C
factors. Regardless, the Officer did consider the nuances, consistent with Figueroa;
he noted the nature of the applicant’s ongoing involvement, despite dangerous
encounters, and his varying accounts of his activity.
The Officer erred in his assessment of the evidence of
inadmissibility
[37]
The issue is whether the Officer considered the
finding that the applicant is inadmissible to Canada by reason of his
membership in the MQM/MQM-A to be determinative and whether the Officer should
have looked at the conduct of the applicant as a member of the organization.
[38]
Although the respondent argues that Figueroa
is distinguishable on its facts, this is true of most decisions that involve
the consideration of several factors and the exercise of discretion. It would
be rare to find identical circumstances. Although the facts differ in some
respects, and in Figueroa the Court was considering a decision of the
Case Management Branch, there are many commonalities between the applicant’s
circumstances and those in Figueroa.
[39]
In Figueroa, Justice Mosley noted that
the Manual requires an officer to consider any new information or evidence
provided by an applicant in relation to their admissibility (at para 30). He
elaborated at paras 31-32 and 34:
[31] This requires the Minister’s
Delegate to do two things: (1) consider a prior inadmissibility finding in
light of any submissions to determine whether that finding still stands; and
(2) consider the gravity of the inadmissibility in light of the submissions. In
this instance, the Delegate failed to consider the gravity of the
inadmissibility in light of Mr. Figueroa’s submissions. Rather, the
Delegate simply reviewed and confirmed Mr. Figueroa’s inadmissibility to Canada
pursuant to paragraph 34(1)(f), on the basis of his membership of the FMLN and
the commission of terrorist acts by components of the FMLN while he was a
member. This in itself rendered the decision unreasonable.
[32] The Delegate’s decision to dismiss
the H & C application because “Mr. Figueroa’s inadmissibility was of a
serious nature” is also unreasonable as it failed to take into account the
nature of the conflict and Mr. Figueroa’s personal role as a non-combatant
political advocate. The finding that Mr. Figueroa’s inadmissibility is of a
“serious nature” amounts to nothing more than a facile observation that it is
serious, in general, to be found inadmissible on security grounds. This is
simply not good enough.
[…]
[34] I agree with the applicant that
the Delegate erred in failing to take this into account in her analysis. What
was called for was not just a simple application of the formula which applies
to a factual determination of membership under s 34, which does not have a
temporal component- i.e., once a member of an organization that had engaged in
acts of terror, always a member. Rather, the analysis required a more
nuanced consideration of the nature of that membership and how it should be
balanced against the strong humanitarian and compassionate factors in
determining whether an exemption was warranted under s 25.
[Emphasis added]
[40]
In the present case, the Officer’s decision does
not reflect a nuanced consideration of the nature of the applicant’s membership
in the MQM/MQM-A. The Officer simply confirmed the finding of inadmissibility
based on the applicant’s acknowledgment of membership noting that this is a “very serious” ground of inadmissibility.
[41]
All findings of inadmissibility are serious and
have serious consequences. Despite the seriousness of a finding of
inadmissibility, the Act provides for an exemption from the consequences of
such a finding. As the respondent notes, this relief is indeed exceptional and
perhaps rare. While careful consideration of an application for such
exceptional relief is necessary, it should not be impossible to obtain. The
Officer was required to consider the applicant’s involvement or activities as a
member of the organization to determine how serious these activities were and
then go on to balance this with the relevant H&C grounds.
[42]
Although the Officer recited the applicant’s
submissions, the Officer did not fully assess the facts underlying the
inadmissibility finding, including the nature or level of the applicant’s
involvement and his awareness of the organization’s purpose. For example, the
Officer noted that the applicant was 14 years old when he joined the
organization, but did not consider whether he would have been aware of the
activities of the organization or what membership entailed at the age of 14.
The Officer characterised the applicant’s involvement as “long”, but did not appear to take into account that
he joined in 1990 or 1991, at 14 years of age, and came to Canada in 1996 and
has not had any involvement since that time. The Officer acknowledged the
applicant’s descriptions of his involvement, although there were varying
accounts, but in the assessment of the nature of the applicant’s involvement, appears
to have overlooked that the applicant did not participate in any violent
confrontations and does not appear to have done more for the organization than
drive voters to one election.
Did the Officer err in his consideration of the impact of the
applicant’s immigration status?
[43]
The applicant submits that the Officer’s
assessment of the effect of a negative decision was unreasonable. Although the
Officer acknowledged that the applicant would feel more certain if he were a
permanent resident, the Officer characterized this as an emotional issue rather
than a legal issue. The Officer failed to acknowledge that the applicant’s lack
of status, among other things, requires him to obtain work permits and travel
documents, limits his participation in civil society, and has an impact on his
children and their best interests.
[44]
The applicant also argues that the Officer
failed to consider that, if country conditions in Pakistan change, he could
face removal, despite that he was found to be a refugee. A change in country
conditions would likely not have an impact if the applicant were a permanent
resident.
[45]
The applicant submits that the Officer
significantly downplayed the impact of the decision on the applicant’s children
by finding that there was no prospect of removal and, therefore, no likelihood
of being separated from his family.
[46]
The respondent submits that the Officer cannot
be faulted for referring to the emotional impact, given that the applicant’s
H&C submissions and affidavit focussed on his emotional state.
The Officer’s assessment of the impact of the decision was
not reasonable
[47]
The Officer appears to have misunderstood the
applicant’s submissions with respect to the impact of remaining without status
in Canada, as opposed to being granted status as a permanent resident, and the
consequent impact on the best interests of his children.
[48]
The applicant’s submissions clearly raised both
the emotional impact of his lack of status and the legal implications, and
specifically noted that he was required to renew work permits, had limitations
on his ability to travel and faced other impediments. The Officer misconstrued
the effect on the applicant of continually applying for work permits, health
care and refugee travel documents when needed; not having the certainty that
comes with permanent resident status; and, not being on the path to the
privilege of citizenship.
[49]
While it is true that the applicant does not currently
face removal from Canada and, if he did, there would be other opportunities to
challenge his removal, this does not alleviate or address the impact on him of
his lack of status at the present time.
[50]
In conclusion, the Officer’s findings that the H&C
factors do not justify consideration of an exemption from inadmissibility by
the next level decision maker, the Case Management Branch, are not reasonable
because the Officer ignored or misconstrued the relevant evidence and failed to
conduct the nuanced consideration of the nature of the applicant’s membership
in a terrorist group and how this should be balanced against the relevant
H&C factors.
VI.
Was There a Breach of Procedural Fairness?
[51]
The issue of whether there was institutional
bias resulting from the structure of the decision making process, amounting to
a breach of procedural fairness, does not need to be determined. As a result,
the question proposed for certification, related to the allegation of
institutional bias, does not need to be certified.