Docket: IMM-3390-15
Citation:
2016 FC 900
Ottawa, Ontario, August 5, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Elliott
BETWEEN:
|
GEDION MESFIN
BERSIE
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is an application for judicial review
pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA] of a decision of the Refugee Appeal Division of the
Immigration and Refugee Board [RAD] dated June 30, 2015, [Decision] confirming
the decision of the Refugee Protection Division [RPD] of March 11, 2015. The
Decision denied the Applicant’s claim for Convention refugee status on the
basis that he was not credible and he failed to provide a reasonable
explanation for his lack supportive documentation.
[2]
For the reasons that follow I have determined
the application must be dismissed.
I.
Background Facts
[3]
The Applicant was a citizen of Ethiopia. He applied
for refugee protection on the basis that he feared persecution if he returned
to Ethiopia because of perceived political opinions arising from his
affiliation with Abel Wabela [Wabela], who was a member of the Zone 9 Bloggers
- a group that wrote and published articles critical of the Ethiopian
government. The Applicant claimed to have reviewed, edited and discussed
various blogs with Wabela with whom he had become friendly when they both
worked for Ethiopian Airlines.
[4]
The Applicant also claimed that he had been
arrested, detained, interrogated, tortured and eventually released over a
six-day period in May, 2014. He was released on condition that he report to the
police station daily and appear as a witness against Wabela when required.
[5]
The determinative issue before the RPD was
credibility. The Applicant raised three issues in his appeal to the RAD. He
alleged the RPD: (1) made serious errors assessing credibility; (2) ignored a
psychological report; (3) made unsustainable implausibility findings.
[6]
The RAD heard this matter before Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v. Huruglica, 2016 FCA 93 [Huruglica FCA]
was released. In conducting the appeal the RAD followed this Court’s guidance
in Huruglica v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) 2014 FC 799. They
said that they would give deference to credibility findings of the RPD but would
conduct their own review and come to an independent assessment of whether the Applicant
is a Convention Refugee or person in need of protection. This approach accords
with the direction in Huruglica FCA.
II.
The RAD Decision
[7]
The RAD reviewed the record before the RPD and
listened to the audio recording of the hearing. The Applicant’s relationship
with Wabela was an essential element of the Applicant’s claim. In that respect,
the RAD noted Rule 11 of the Refugee Protection Division Rules, SOR/2002-228
requires a claimant to provide “acceptable documents”
to establish, in addition to identity, other elements of the claim or, an explanation
of why they were not provided and what steps were taken to obtain them.
[8]
The RAD found on the balance of probabilities that
the Applicant was not credible. He provided no persuasive evidence of any
association with either Wabela or the Zone 9 Blog. After listening to the audio
recording the RAD remarked upon the extensive questioning of the Applicant by
the RPD about the content of his discussions with Wabela. The RAD found his
answers were vague and nonspecific, even when he was prompted by the RPD to
provide more information. The RAD concluded the Applicant struggled to provide
anything other than superficial detail. They noted the supporting documents
submitted by the Applicant about the history and the issues addressed in the
Zone 9 Blog were all publicly available. They found his testimony did not show
he was knowledgeable of even the basic information in those documents.
[9]
The Applicant, in support of his claim of editing
and proofreading Wabela’s blogs and contributing a blog of his own under an
alias, only produced his diploma in journalism. The RAD concluded his testimony
was not commensurate with either his education or the issues Wabela and he
would have discussed. The Applicant said he had destroyed any documents or
emails with Wabela once Wabela was arrested. The RAD felt he could have
utilized his network of family contacts to attest to his ability to perform the
work he said he did for Wabela. The RAD found these problems detracted from the
Applicant’s credibility.
[10]
The RAD reviewed the Applicant’s testimony that
authorities were searching for him and found there was no persuasive evidence
to confirm it. They did not believe the Applicant’s claim that he was arrested,
detained and interrogated because of his friendship with Wabela as the
authorities released him without charge or other documentation. They reviewed
his testimony alleging he was what they called a central figure in the case against
Wabela and found it was not plausible that the Applicant could leave Ethiopia
using his own passport. They noted there was documentary evidence confirming
the government closely monitors individuals of whom it is suspicious.
[11]
Regarding the Applicant’s allegation that the
RPD ignored a psychological report the RAD found the report was in the record.
They reviewed and considered it. They noted the report was based on one 60
minute interview and no clinical testing. They found the conclusions drawn in
the report were, in the absence of any clinical assessment, speculative and in
some instances were a form of advocacy rather than clinical opinion. The RAD
also found the Applicant had failed to provide evidence that he could not obtain
psychological treatment in Ethiopia. The RAD gave the report little weight and
found it did not explain the failings in the Applicant’s testimony before the
RPD.
[12]
Finally, the RAD found the Applicant’s knowledge
about the human rights group to which he claimed to belong, that wrote a letter
of support for him, was lacking. Based on the group’s letterhead that it was a
human rights advocacy organization and documentary evidence describing the
objectives of the group the RAD rejected the Applicant’s explanation that it
was not really a human rights group but a support group that advocated for the
Ethiopian political party in Canada. They found his testimony undermined the
credibility of his allegations that he was part of any activist organization in
Ethiopia.
[13]
The RAD concluded the Applicant did not satisfy
the burden of establishing a serious possibility that he would be persecuted or
subjected to a risk to his life or risk of cruel and unusual treatment or
punishment or danger of torture by any authority in Ethiopia. They found based
on the evidence that they reached the same conclusion as the RPD. They
dismissed the appeal and confirmed the RPD decision.
III.
Issue and Standard of Review
[14]
The issue is whether the RAD’s decision that the
Applicant is neither a Convention refugee nor a person in need of protection,
was reasonable.
[15]
The standard of review by this Court of a
decision of the RAD has recently been confirmed by the Court of Appeal to be
reasonableness. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v. Huruglica,
2016 FCA 93, at para. 35 [Huruglica FCA].
[16]
In Ghauri v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2016 FC 548 at paragraph 23 Mr. Justice Gleeson
summarized the findings in Huruglica FCA establishing the standard of
review the RAD is to apply to RPD decisions:
[23] The RAD must apply the correctness
standard of review with respect to reviewing findings of law, as well as
findings of fact and mixed fact and law of the RPD that raise no issue of
credibility of oral evidence and must take a case-by-case approach to the level
of deference it owes to the relative weight of testimony and their credibility
or lack thereof (Huruglica at paras 37, 69-71, 103).
[17]
In determining the standard of review to apply
to the RPD decision the RAD followed the trial decision of Huruglica v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 799. The RAD
performed its own independent assessment of the evidence including reviewing
the record before the RPD and listening to the audio recording of the hearing.
They independently assessed the testimony of the Applicant and made their own
credibility findings ultimately agreeing with the RPD findings. The effect of
the RAD conducting a fresh review of the evidence and formulation of their own
conclusions prior to confirming the RPD decision met the required standard of
review.
[18]
The Supreme Court in Dunsmuir v New
Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at paragraph 47, instructs that a decision is
reasonable if it falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes that are
defensible on the facts and law. As subsequently stated in Newfoundland and
Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board) 2011
SCC 62 at paragraph 16 “if the reasons 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,
the Dunsmuir criteria are met”.
IV.
Arguments of the Parties
[19]
The Applicant argues there was no valid reason
to question his credibility so the RPD was in error to require documentary
evidence to corroborate his allegations and therefore the RAD was in error in
coming to the same conclusion. He states he did provide a plausible explanation
for his lack of documentary evidence linking him to Wabela in that, in order to
protect himself, he destroyed all such documents as soon as Wabela was
arrested. The Applicant also relies on various decisions of this Court to say
the RAD cannot make a negative credibility finding solely on the basis of a
lack of corroborative evidence. The Applicant states the RAD did not provide
clear and sufficient reasons for rejecting the Applicants plausible explanation
nor for preferring the documentary evidence about the level of control in
Ethiopia to his testimony that he left with is own passport.
[20]
The Applicant also criticizes the RAD for
conducting what he says was a microscopic, selective and overzealous
examination that resulted in several erroneous findings of fact which then led
to unreasonable findings on credibility. Examples provided by the Applicant
included that the RAD misstated his testimony about what was discussed with
Wabela and the nature of the testimony he would give about Wabela if called as
a witness.
[21]
The Applicant says the way in which he left
Ethiopia was exaggerated by the RAD by saying that he was a central figure in a
high profile anti-terrorism case. Then the RAD ignored the Applicant’s
plausible explanations of his various efforts to hide his activities from
security when getting ready to leave Ethiopia. The Applicant also complains the
RAD used a North American analysis when questioning why he was released from
prison.
[22]
The Applicant claims his relationship with
Wabela was misstated when the RAD simply said he worked in the tool room, he
and Wabela were on different shifts and there were many employees. The
Applicant testified he and Wabela met outside of work hours when their shift
breaks co-incided and they would then discuss issues. The Applicant asserts
that when the RAD said the fact that the Applicant and Wabela worked “in the same company does not mean they were known to one
another” it was an understatement designed to support their credibility
finding.
[23]
The Respondent says the RAD conducted a “robust evaluation of the probative value of the evidence”,
“a meticulous assessment of the Applicant’s
credibility” and, “an exhaustive examination of
the facts”. They say the RAD looked at the totality of the evidence then
found the Applicant was vague and non-specific in his testimony and failed to
provide a reasonable explanation for the absence of documentation.
[24]
As to the finding that the Applicant’s evidence was
vague and non-specific, they point out that the RAD listened to the tape of the
RPD hearing and concluded that he “struggled to provide
anything but superficial detail”. He gave generic answers about matters
central to his claim and was generally confused about organizations with which
he claimed to be associated.
[25]
The Respondent relies on the decision of Madame
Justice Gauthier in Mercado v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2010 FC 289 in which she cites Mr. Justice Nadon in Hamid
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1995] FCJ No. 1293
(F.C.) to say that once a Board comes to the conclusion that an Applicant is
not credible, some form of corroboration or independent proof will be required
to offset the negative credibility conclusion. The Respondent alleges no such
proof was put forward by the Applicant. As the lack of credibility related to
the central element of the Applicant’s claim, such corroboration was a necessity.
[26]
The Respondent submits the Applicant failed to
meet the onus he bore to satisfy the decision maker with “clear, convincing and cogent evidence” on the balance
of probabilities that he was either a Convention refugee or a person in need of
protection. They say the RAD, as it was entitled to do, gave more weight to the
absence of supporting documentation central to the Applicant’s claim than to
the psychological report that, in their opinion, contained speculative
information.
V.
Analysis and Conclusion
[27]
The Court of Appeal in Siad v Canada
(Secretary of State), [1997] 1 FC 608 at paragraph 24 (FCA)
established the starting point for review of decisions based on credibility and
the requirements that must be met by the decision-maker when rejecting a
claimant on grounds of credibility:
The Tribunal is uniquely situated to assess
the credibility of a refugee claimant; credibility determinations, which lie
within "the heartland of the discretion of triers of fact", are
entitled to considerable deference upon judicial review and cannot be
overturned unless they are perverse, capricious or made without regard to the
evidence.
An important indicator of credibility is the
consistency with which a witness has told a particular story. (Dan-Ash v
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1988), 93 NR 33 (FCA)
When a tribunal rejects a claim on the
ground that the claimant is not credible, it must state that ground clearly (Ababio
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1988), FCJ No 250 (FCA))
and it must give reasons for the credibility finding. (Armson v Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1989] FCJ No 800 (FCA).
(spacing added to separate discrete
principles)
[28]
This case turns on whether the RAD made findings
that were without regard to the evidence. Despite the earnest and able
arguments of counsel for the Applicant in my view the RAD made reasonable
findings and came to a conclusion that was open to it on the evidence.
[29]
Lack of corroborative documentation, while a
factor, was not the only reason the RAD found the Applicant was not credible. The
RAD also found he did not make reasonable efforts to obtain corroborating
documents. His testimony was reviewed via the audio recording of the hearing and
the RAD found it did not support his claim. The psychological report was reviewed
and found insufficient. Jurisprudence dealing with credibility and sworn
testimony was reviewed and applied as was Rule 11. The record before the RPD
was reviewed and the RAD came to an independent assessment of all the evidence.
All in all there was ample reason for the RAD to come to the conclusions on
credibility that it did. It is not for the court to re-weigh this evidence.
[30]
The Applicant accuses the RAD of conducting a
microscopic analysis yet, in reply they point out minor issues such as the
discussion of the “different shifts” and whether
the Applicant knew Wabela. The transcript of the testimony on that point, put
in evidence in this application, is not in any way additional proof of the
degree of relationship between Wabela and the Applicant. In fact, the short
excerpt opens with the Applicant saying with reference to Wabela “[w]e do not have any special friendship outside of work.”
The omission to mention the Applicant’s brief evidence that he and Wabela met when
their shift breaks coincided does not mean it was not considered. Even if it
was overlooked it is not enough to overcome the balance of the testimony of the
Applicant or counter the overall negative credibility findings.
[31]
The reasons provided by the RAD enable the
Applicant to understand why the determination was made, even though he
disagrees with it. It is not my role to re-weigh the evidence. Given the
expertise of the RAD and the deference owed to that expertise I am unable to
say the decision was perverse, capricious or made without regard to the
evidence.
[32]
The application is therefore dismissed.
[33]
No serious question of general importance arises
for certification.