Docket: IMM-3145-15
Citation:
2016 FC 711
Ottawa, Ontario, June 27, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice O'Reilly
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BETWEEN:
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JACK
PANBOUKIAN,
CARINA
PANBOUKIAN,
TAMAR
KENDERJIAN &
CAREN
PANBOUKIAN BY HER LITIGATION GUARDIAN
JACK PANBOUKIAN
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Applicants
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
The applicants, a family of four Armenian
Christians from Lebanon, sought refugee protection in Canada on the basis of
their fear of Islamist terrorist groups, particularly ISIS. They originally
came to Canada in 2012 on visitors’ visas. The adult applicants subsequently
applied for work permits, unsuccessfully. They made their refugee claim in 2014
after they learned that the security situation in Lebanon had seriously
deteriorated.
[2]
A panel of the Immigration and Refugee Board
rejected the applicants’ claim on the basis that ISIS was not actually in
control of Lebanon and security forces had waged a successful campaign against it.
In addition, the Board found that the applicants could probably live safely in
Beirut (ie, they had an internal flight alternative (IFA)). Accordingly,
the Board concluded that the applicants did not have a well-founded, objective
fear of persecution in Lebanon. Its conclusion was upheld by the Refugee Appeal
Division (RAD).
[3]
The applicants submit that the RAD’s decision
was unreasonable because it failed to explain why the evidence before it,
including new evidence filed by the applicants on their appeal, did not support
a well-founded fear of persecution. In addition, they argue that the RAD
unreasonably found that their delay in seeking refugee protection showed an
absence of subjective fear of persecution. The applicants ask me to quash the
RAD’s decision and order another panel to reconsider their claim.
[4]
I agree with the applicants that the RAD’s
findings were unreasonable on the evidence. Therefore, I will allow this
application for judicial review.
[5]
The sole issue is whether the RAD’s decision was
unreasonable.
II.
The RAD’s Decision
[6]
In addition to confirming the Board’s
conclusions on objective fear and IFA, the RAD went on to find that the
applicants’ delay in claiming refugee status showed an absence of subjective
fear of persecution in Lebanon. The RAD noted that the refugee claims were
filed only after the adult applicants’ work permits were denied. It found that
this showed that the refugee claim was simply one of a number of routes the
applicants explored in trying to remain in Canada.
[7]
The RAD also noted that the applicants did not
fear persecution in 2012, and that the evidence did not show that ISIS was now
targeting Armenian Christians in any significant way in Lebanon.
[8]
The RAD allowed the applicants to file three new
documents. It rejected a fourth on the basis that it was reasonably available
before their claim was heard by the Board. Nevertheless, the RAD found that the
evidence before it failed to show that the applicants had a well-founded fear
of persecution from ISIS.
III.
Was the RAD’s decision unreasonable?
[9]
The Minister makes the preliminary argument that
the affidavit of the applicant Jack Panboukian contains argument and legal
opinion and that those portions of it should be struck. I agree, and have only
considered the admissible contents of the affidavit.
[10]
The Minister also maintains that the RAD’s
decision was reasonable on the evidence. The Minister concedes that ISIS has persecuted
Christians in some areas of Lebanon, but points out that the applicants had no
problems before they left in 2012. In addition, the evidence showed that
Lebanese security forces had achieved some success in addressing the threat
posed by ISIS. In particular, Beirut was fairly safe.
[11]
I disagree with the Minister’s submissions. In
my view, the evidence showed that the applicants’ fear reasonably arose from
the circumstances in Lebanon in 2014, even though they had not experienced serious
problems in 2012.
[12]
The recent evidence before the Board and the RAD
showed that:
- The threat from
ISIS was not confined to border areas.
- Threats had been
made against Christians.
- Both the Prime
Minister and the Foreign Minister of Lebanon conceded that their country
lacked the resources to combat ISIS.
[13]
In addition, the new evidence before the RAD
established that:
- The threat from
ISIS was spreading, and youths were preparing to conduct suicide attacks.
- Jihadist
fighters were readying themselves for an attack against Christian towns.
- ISIS had
imported car bombs into Beirut, indicating an increased risk in that city.
[14]
In my view, this evidence contradicted the RAD’s
findings in respect of the applicants’ subjective and objective fear, as well
as its conclusion that they had an IFA in Beirut. The RAD did not analyze that
evidence in its reasons. Accordingly, I find that its decision does not
represent a defensible outcome based on the facts and the law.
IV.
Conclusion and Disposition
[15]
The RAD failed to address important evidence
supporting the applicants’ claims and contradicting its findings that the
applicants did not have a subjective or objective fear of persecution in Lebanon.
Therefore, I find that its conclusion was unreasonable and must, therefore,
allow this application for judicial review. Neither party proposed a question
of general importance for me to certify, and none is stated.