Docket: IMM-5470-15
Citation:
2016 FC 834
Ottawa, Ontario, July 20, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
|
MIGUEL POTES
MINA
|
YORLENYS ZUNIGA
MORELO
|
MIGUEL POTES
ZUNIGA
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application pursuant to s 72(1) of the
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [Act] for judicial
review of a decision of the Refugee Appeal Division of the Immigration and
Refugee Board of Canada [RAD] dated November 9, 2015 which denied the Applicants’
appeal of a negative refugee decision made by the Refugee Protection Division
[RPD], confirming that the Applicants are neither Convention refugees within
the meaning of s 96 of the Act or persons in need of protection under s 97
of the Act.
II.
BACKGROUND
A.
Facts
[2]
Miguel Potes Mina [Principal Applicant], his
spouse, Yorlenys Zuniga Morelo and their 10-year-old son, Miguel Potes Zuniga,
are all citizens of Colombia. Fearing harm in their home country at the hands
of the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia [FARC] guerillas and the Urabenos
criminal organization, they filed their refugee claims at the end of December
2014. The Urabenos are a violent criminal organization which evolved out of the
right-wing paramilitaries in Colombia.
[3]
The Principal Applicant played professional
soccer from approximately 2001 to 2012, travelling frequently to cities in
Colombia and throughout Latin America. He played for 8 teams throughout his career
including teams in Nicaragua, Argentina and El Salvador. He says that the games
were often televised and that he was approached in the street for autographs.
[4]
The Applicants allege that members of their
family have repeatedly been the targets of paramilitaries. In 2004, three male
cousins of the Principal Applicant disappeared. In July 2008, the Principal
Applicant’s brother, Milton Potes Mina, disappeared after refusing to pay an
extortion known as the vacuna. His family presumed him dead. In 2010,
three other male cousins of the family were killed. In November 2014, a son of
one of the Principal Applicant’s missing cousins was killed in Buenaventura.
[5]
In November 2013, the Principal Applicant was
approached by two men near his home. They told him he had to pay a one million
pesos vacuna and hit him on the head with a gun. He was told that if he
did not pay, he would end up like his brother. The Principal Applicant says he
recognized one of the men as Chimbi, the commander of the local Urabenos group
and the other as El Mariachi, another Urabenos member.
[6]
The Applicants did not comply with the demand
for payment and, in late December 2013, El Mariachi confronted the Principal
Applicant at his house and warned him that if he did not provide the money
within a week, he would be killed.
[7]
The Applicants approached the authorities but,
despite identifying both Chimbi and El Mariachi, they were not assisted.
In January 2014, fearing for his life, the Principal Applicant left Colombia
and went to the state of New Jersey in the United States. He returned to
Colombia a few months later, after there had been no further threats, and he went
to live at his uncle’s home.
[8]
On September 3, 2014, the Principal Applicant
received a “private” call on his cell phone. A male caller threatened that he
would be found no matter where he tried to hide. After receiving (but not
answering) several such “private” calls, the Principal Applicant changed his
number.
[9]
On October 10, 2014, the Principal Applicant was
confronted by two men on a motorcycle while he was out jogging. At first he
thought the Urabenos had found him, but he suspects that these men were likely members
of the FARC because they addressed each other as “comrade” –
language used by the guerillas. The Principal Applicant says the “gun wielding man” told him he had 8 days to pay two
million pesos as a vacuna. He promised to comply with their demands.
[10]
The Applicants moved to an aunt’s home in
Ciudadela. On October 15, 2014, the Principal Applicant left Colombia by
himself, as the family did not have the funds to travel together.
[11]
On December 2, 2014, the Principal Applicant’s
spouse, Yorlenys Zuniga Morelo and their son were intercepted by two men on
motorcycles. While patting her son on the head, the men warned that if she did
not pay the vacuna, she knew what would happen. She went to the police
with her sister-in-law to seek out assistance. She was referred to an agency who
gave her instructions on what precautions could be taken for her and her son’s
safety, but they were given no protection. On December 15, 2014, she and her
son left Colombia and joined the Principal Applicant in the United States.
[12]
The Applicants then came to Canada to seek
protection because two of the Principal Applicant’s cousins had been given
protection after facing similar threats in Colombia.
[13]
In February 2015, the Applicants filed their
refugee claims based on fear of harm in Colombia. On March 2, 2015, their
hearing was held before the RPD.
B.
RPD Decision
[14]
The Applicants’ claims were rejected by the RPD
in a decision dated March 25, 2015, which found that: (i) credibility was a
determinative issue; (ii) the alleged extortion demands and related threats
suffered by the Applicants were criminal in nature rather than owing to the
Applicants’ family, social group, perceive political opinion or race; and (iii)
the existence of Bogota as a reasonable Internal Flight Alternative [IFA] was
also a determinative issue.
[15]
On April 17, 2015, the Applicants filed a notice
of appeal before the RAD.
III.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
[16]
The RAD admitted two affidavits (one from the
Principal Applicant and one from his sister) and a country information document
relating to the threat posed by the Urabenos as new evidence. However, the
Applicants’ request for an oral hearing was denied.
[17]
The RAD considered the RPD’s finding that an IFA
exists in Bogota. After reviewing the evidence and the RPD’s reasons, the
matter to be determined was whether the agents of harm feared by the Applicants
have the means and the motivation to find them in Bogota. With regards to the
Principal Applicant’s status as a well-known soccer player, the RAD concurred
with the findings of the RPD that his profile would not, on a balance of
probabilities, make him more likely to be located in Bogota. The evidence did
not reveal that his profile extends beyond his hometown, that he has continued
to pursue his soccer career, or that the alleged agents of harm knew about his
professional profile.
[18]
As regards the identity of the agents of harm,
the RAD found that there was no credible evidence that the individuals
described by the Principal Applicant ever identified themselves. The affidavit
of the Principal Applicant’s sister which formed part of the new evidence
before the RAD did not provide sufficient evidence that the agents of harm
belong to either of the groups feared by the Applicants. The RAD agreed with
the RPD that the agents of harm are common criminals or unknown individuals.
[19]
Assessing whether the agents of harm have the ability,
willingness or motivation to look for the Applicants in another city, the RAD
found that, while the Applicants may have family in Bogota, there is no
credible evidence of them looking for the Applicants in any part of Colombia
other than their hometown of Buenaventura. The RAD determined that no
persuasive evidence was provided that the agents of harm have the ability to
find the Principal Applicant in the proposed IFA location.
[20]
The RAD also addressed whether it would be
unreasonable for the Applicants to seek refuge in Bogota. While country documents
note that societal discrimination against indigenous persons and Afro-Colombians
can at times restrict their ability to exercise their rights, the RAD
determined that there was no credible evidence that discriminatory behaviour
against Afro-Colombians amounts to persecution as defined by the Act. The RAD
concluded that the Applicants have not been targeted in a way that limits their
ability to live safely in the IFA.
[21]
The RAD concluded that there was nothing to
indicate that the Applicants face a serious possibility of persecution or, on a
balance of probabilities, a danger of torture or risk to life or cruel and
unusual treatment or punishment, and it would not be unreasonable for the
Applicants to live in Bogota.
IV.
ISSUES
[22]
The Applicants raise the following issues:
1) Was the finding on the identity of the agents of persecution
reasonable?
2) Was the conclusion on the availability of an IFA reasonable?
V.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[23]
The Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v New
Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir] held that a standard of review
analysis need not be conducted in every instance. Instead, where the standard
of review applicable to a particular question before the court is settled in a
satisfactory manner by past jurisprudence, the reviewing court may adopt that
standard of review. Only where this search proves fruitless, or where the
relevant precedents appear to be inconsistent with new developments in the
common law principles of judicial review, must the reviewing court undertake a
consideration of the four factors comprising the standard of review analysis: Agraira
v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36 at para
48.
[24]
Both issues to be determined in this matter
address whether the RAD committed reviewable errors. The standard of review to be
applied in the review of the RAD’s findings and assessment of the evidence is
that of reasonableness and both issues will be analysed using this standard of
review: Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Huruglica, 2016 FCA 93 at
para 35; Siddiqui v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 1028
at para 42.
[25]
When reviewing a decision on the standard of
reasonableness, the analysis will be concerned with “the
existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within the
decision-making process [and also with] whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.” See Dunsmuir, above, at para 47, and Khosa v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 SCC 12 at para 59.
Put another way, the Court should intervene only if the Decision was
unreasonable in the sense that it falls outside the “range
of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts
and law.”
VI.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[26] The following provisions of the Act are
applicable in this proceeding:
Convention
Refugee
|
Définition de
« réfugie »
|
96. A
Convention refugee is a person who, by reason of a well-founded fear of
persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership in a
particular social group or political opinion,
|
96. A qualité
de réfugié au sens de la Convention — le réfugié — la personne qui, craignant
avec raison d’être persécutée du fait de sa race, de sa religion, de sa
nationalité, de son appartenance à un groupe social ou de ses opinions
politiques:
|
(a) is outside each of their
countries of nationality and is unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling
to avail themself of the protection of each of those countries; or
|
(a) soit se trouve hors de tout pays
dont elle a la nationalité et ne peut ou, du fait de cette crainte, ne veut
se réclamer de la protection de chacun de ces pays;
|
(b) not having a country of
nationality, is outside the country of their former habitual residence and is
unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling to return to that country.
|
(b) soit, si elle n’a pas de
nationalité et se trouve hors du pays dans lequel elle avait sa résidence
habituelle, ne peut ni, du fait de cette crainte, ne veut y retourner.
|
Person in need of protection
|
Personne à protéger
|
97. (1) A
person in need of protection is a person in Canada whose removal to their
country or countries of nationality or, if they do not have a country of
nationality, their country of former habitual residence, would subject them
personally
|
97. (1) A
qualité de personne à protéger la personne qui se trouve au Canada et serait
personnellement, par son renvoi vers tout pays dont elle a la nationalité ou,
si elle n’a pas de nationalité, dans lequel elle avait sa résidence
habituelle, exposée:
|
(a) to a danger, believed on
substantial grounds to exist, of torture within the meaning of Article 1 of
the Convention Against Torture; or
|
(a) soit au risque, s’il y a des
motifs sérieux de le croire, d’être soumise à la torture au sens de l’article
premier de la Convention contre la torture;
|
(b) to a risk to their life or to a
risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment if
|
(b) soit à une menace à sa vie ou au
risque de traitements ou peines cruels et inusités dans le cas suivant:
|
(i) the person is unable or, because
of that risk, unwilling to avail themself of the protection of that country,
|
(i) elle ne peut ou, de ce fait, ne
veut se réclamer de la protection de ce pays,
|
(ii) the risk would be faced by the
person in every part of that country and is not faced generally by other
individuals in or from that country,
|
(ii) elle y est exposée en tout lieu
de ce pays alors que d’autres personnes originaires de ce pays ou qui s’y
trouvent ne le sont généralement pas,
|
(iii) the risk is not inherent or
incidental to lawful sanctions, unless imposed in disregard of accepted
international standards, and
|
(iii) la menace ou le risque ne
résulte pas de sanctions légitimes — sauf celles infligées au mépris des
normes internationales — et inhérents à celles-ci ou occasionnés par elles,
|
(iv) the risk is not caused by the
inability of that country to provide adequate health or medical care.
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(iv) la menace ou le risque ne
résulte pas de l’incapacité du pays de fournir
|
Decision
|
Décision
|
111 (1) After considering the appeal,
the Refugee Appeal Division shall make one of the following decisions:
(a) confirm the determination of the
Refugee Protection Division;
(b) set aside the determination and
substitute a determination that, in its opinion, should have been made; or
(c) refer the matter to the Refugee
Protection Division for re-determination, giving the directions to the
Refugee Protection Division that it considers appropriate.
|
111 (1) La Section d’appel des
réfugiés confirme la décision attaquée, casse la décision et y substitue la
décision qui aurait dû être rendue ou renvoie, conformément à ses
instructions, l’affaire à la Section de la protection des réfugiés.
|
VII.
ARGUMENTS
A.
Applicants
[27]
The Applicants allege that the RAD upheld the
decision of the RPD without undertaking its own assessment of the documentary
evidence, some of which addressed the credibility concerns of both tribunals.
Furthermore, little weight was given to the pattern created by a series of
events involving the Principal Applicant’s family members being targeted, including
the disappearance of his brother after receiving threats.
[28]
The Principal Applicant testified that he
believed the agents of persecution were from the FARC based on his own personal
knowledge that FARC members referred to each other as comrades. Neither
tribunal explained why this testimony was dismissed or specified what was
considered in coming to the conclusion that the men who had threatened the Principal
Applicant in October 2014 were simply common criminals. The new evidence before
the RAD in the form of a sworn statement by the Principal Applicant’s sister
described a man on a motorcycle coming to her home in April 2015 and looking
for the Principal Applicant. In the Decision, the RAD incorrectly referred to
this sworn statement as a “letter” when it was
clearly sworn testimony which, given that it details the sister’s belief that
the Urabenos are looking for the Applicants, should have at least been
addressed by the RAD.
[29]
In finding that there was an IFA in Bogota, the
tribunals both concluded that the Principal Applicant did not have a wide
enough public profile to be identified outside of Buenaventura. However, the Principal
Applicant played professional soccer for 11 years, including at a high level in
Bogota. The Applicants submit that the fact that the Principal Applicant played
professional soccer for a lengthy period of time in the very place proposed as
an IFA was clearly a relevant fact that ought to have been addressed by the
RAD.
[30]
The Applicants argue that both tribunals also
ignored evidence that the Applicants were forced to return to Buenaventura from
Bogota in 2012 because they could not survive in the city after the Principal
Applicant lost his work as a professional soccer player. There was no evidence presented
that they have any remaining support in Bogota.
[31]
The Applicants say that an analysis under s 96
of the Act ought to have been undertaken. The Urabenos are successors to the
right-wing paramilitaries who have a long history of disproportionately
targeting Afro-Colombians. Little to no weight was given to the fact that there
was a pattern of the Applicants’ family members being targeted, all of whom
were also Afro-Colombian. In fact, the RAD did not engage with this issue
related to s 96 of the Act at all. However, the Applicants suggest that the
failure to assess whether the risk faced was linked to a Convention ground led
to the wrong legal test being applied to the question of IFA. The issue of IFA
is part and parcel of the assessment of a well-founded fear of persecution. The
RAD’s analysis fails to consider the cumulative profile of the Applicants, an
Afro-Colombian family that has been repeatedly targeted by paramilitaries.
B.
Respondent
[32]
The Respondent says that the Applicants’
submissions amount to a disagreement with the Decision and do not identify
reviewable errors. The RAD did not engage in a simple confirmation of the RPD’s
findings; rather, it specifically considered the evidence that was before the RPD,
conducted its own assessment, and put forth reasons that are detailed, rational
and transparent.
[33]
As regards the new evidence brought forward by
the Applicants, the RAD found that the Response to Information Request which
discussed the Urabenos did not need to be directly addressed because the RAD
found that the Applicants’ alleged agents of harm were not members of the FARC
or the Urabenos.
[34]
Furthermore, the RAD did not disregard the Principal
Applicant’s testimony or his belief that the agents of harm were members of the
Urabenos or the FARC. It determined that the Applicants’ evidence, including
the affidavit of the Principal Applicant’s sister, did not establish that those
who threatened them were members of one of the feared groups. Moreover, the
Respondent notes that the RPD found inconsistencies between the Principal
Applicant’s oral testimony and his interview with the Canada Border Services Agency,
where he alleged that the two extortionists had positively identified
themselves as members of the FARC.
[35]
The Respondent says that the RAD applied the correct
test and standard of proof when dealing with the proposed IFA, applying the
balance of probabilities standard rather than “serious possibility.” At the RPD
hearing, Applicants’ counsel said that the claim was primarily based upon s 97
of the Act, as a connection could not be drawn to a Convention ground. The
RAD’s focus on an IFA rather than a race nexus was efficient and reasonable, as
the existence of an IFA is determinative: Figueroa v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2016 FC 521 at paras 20, 36 [Figueroa].
[36]
Given that the Principal Applicant only
submitted a copy of a rescinded professional sports contract with a second division
soccer team in El Salvador dated December 13, 2011, and three undated
photographs, it was reasonable for the RAD to find that the Applicant had not
adequately established that his profile as a former soccer player would
motivate the agents of harm to locate and pursue him in Bogota. Contrary to the
Applicants’ claims, in reaching its conclusions, the RAD implicitly dealt with
the allegation that the Principal Applicant had played soccer on a professional
team in Bogota.
[37]
The Principal Applicant and counsel for the
Applicants both claimed that paramilitaries and guerillas use hitmen to kill
those who fail to comply with their orders. The fact that there was no attempt
on the Principal Applicant’s life in Buenaventura between the first threat in
2013 and when he left for the United States in January 2014 is further support
for the reasonableness of the RAD’s conclusion that the agents of harm were not
part of the Urabenos or the FARC.
[38]
The Respondent says that the Applicants failed
to establish the identity of the agents of harm, or that they would have an
interest in pursuing them outside of Buenaventura, or that any discrimination
against Afro-Colombians would prevent them from establishing themselves in
Bogota.
VIII.
ANALYSIS
[39]
The RAD found that “the
main issue is whether the agents of harm feared by the appellants have the
means and the motivation to find them in Bogota” (para 37). The RAD then
considered “whether it would be unreasonable for the
appellants to seek refuge [in Bogota]” (para 50). In the end, the RAD
concluded that “the principal appellant’s profile as a
professional player would not, on a balance of probabilities, make him more
susceptible to be located in Bogota” (para 39) and that “it is not objectively unreasonable for the appellants to
seek refuge in the proposed IFA location” (para 50). The Applicants
disagree with these findings and raise various issues for review.
A.
The Agents of Persecution
[40]
The RAD concluded that the Applicants had not
shown the agents of persecution were anything more than “common criminals, or unknown individuals” (para 41)
and that there was no persuasive evidence to suggest that “the agents of harm have the ability, willingness, or
interest to search for the appellants outside of Buenaventura” (para
48).
[41]
The Applicants disagree with this conclusion and
point to the Principal Applicant’s testimony that he recognised the individuals
who first threatened him as Urabenos who were well-known in the community, and
the subsequent threats that came from the FARC because the men involved
referred to each other as “comrades.” The
Applicants also point to the new evidence provided by the Principal Applicant’s
sister to the effect that a man on a motorcycle came looking for the Principal
Applicant at her home and inquired about him with neighbours. The Applicants
complain that the RAD refers to the sister’s sworn statement as a “letter,” and point out that her statement that she is
convinced that Urabenos are looking for the Applicants should at least have
been addressed by the RAD.
[42]
Nothing turns on the use of the term “letter”
because the sister’s evidence was not discounted for not being sworn. All of
the Applicants’ evidence on this point was held to be insufficient because it
was simply speculative:
[40] The other issue before the RPD
Member was, who are the agents of harm? The RPD Member finds that the people
feared by the appellants are local criminals who “possess neither the
motivation nor the means to locate the claimant in that city of more than six
million people, based on evidence relative to efforts to locate them in
Buenaventura.” The principal appellant testified that he was approached by
different groups asking for extortion money. However, there is no credible
evidence that the agents of harm identified themselves. The RPD Member
questioned the appellants on who they believe are the agents of harm.
Initially, the principal appellant testified he believed the first encounter involved
members of the Urabenos as he recognized them as men from his neighbourhood who
belonged to this group. The principal appellant states that he was confronted
by these men who belonged to the Urabenos twice, November 2013 and December
2013. The principal appellant then left Colombia in January 2014, and the
associate and minor appellants moved to the principal appellant’s uncle’s home.
The principal appellant returned to Colombia in May 2014 and also lived at his
uncle’s home. In September 2014, the principal appellant began to receive
threats on his phone. However, there is no credible evidence before the RPD or
the RAD that anyone approached the appellants at the uncle’s home during their
time there. Rather, the principal appellant testified that he was approached by
two men in October 2014 but stated that these men belonged to the FARC.
Specifically, the principal appellant states “I suspected that they were likely
FARC – this was confirmed when one of the men addressed the other as his
comrade.”
[41] Furthermore, the ‘new evidence’
disclosed for the RAD appeal is a letter from the principal appellant’s sister
in which she described an unknown man coming to her residence and enquiring
about the principal appellant’s whereabouts. However, I find that this is not
sufficient information to establish that this man is from the same group of men
that confronted the principal appellant for money in the past. Rather, the
appellants were not able to adequately establish who the agents of harm are.
Thus, I find that through this ‘new evidence’ and the appellants’ own evidence,
there is no persuasive evidence that the agents of harm belong to either of the
groups feared by the appellants. I find the appellants are speculating on who the
agents of harm are and have not provided persuasive evidence that they belong
to any of these groups. Coming to that finding given the evidence, I agree with
the RPD Member that the agents of harm feared by the appellants are common
criminals, or unknown individuals. I find the appellants are speculating as to,
who the agents of harm are, and I do not give weight to such speculations.
[footnotes omitted]
[43]
It is possible to disagree with the RAD’s
conclusions about the weight to be given to this evidence, but disagreement
about weight is not a justification for reviewable error. Nor can the Court
second guess the RPD or the RAD on matters of weight. The Principal Applicant’s
sister may well be personally “convinced” that
the Applicants are in danger from the Urabenos, but the Applicants still have
to provide sufficient objective evidence to support their subjective fears and
beliefs. The RAD simply found that they had failed to do so on this issue.
There is nothing to suggest that this finding was unreasonable, or falls
outside the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible on the
facts and law.
[44]
At the hearing before me in Vancouver, the
Applicants argued strenuously that the RAD does not really deal with the
adverse credibility findings of the RPD – which were a significant aspect of
the RPD’s finding on the identity of the agents of harm – and does not deal
with the sister’s evidence which establishes that the same group are still
looking for the Principal Applicant.
[45]
In paragraph 30 of the Decision, the RAD sets
out its approach to assessing the evidence and its indication that it gave “a certain deference to the RPD’s findings regarding the
appellants’ credibility and any other issues where the RPD enjoys a particular
advantage.” The Applicants take no issue with this generic statement but
say that credibility was not really addressed when it came to the identity of
the agents of harm. However, paragraph 40 of the Decision specifically deals
with the credibility concerns that arise from the Principal Applicant’s own
testimony on the identity of the agents of harm. The RAD points out that the “principal appellant testified that he was approached by different
groups asking for extortion money. However, there is no credible evidence that
the agents of harm identified themselves.” In other words, the Applicants
had certain beliefs about who the agents of harm were (the Urabenos and the
FARC) but there was no credible evidence to establish this identity. It was not
unreasonable for the RAD to defer to the RPD’s findings in this regard. See Gebremichael
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 646 at para 14.
[46]
The sister’s sworn declaration does not say that
the man who came to the door on April 4, 2015, identified himself as
either an agent of the Urabenos or the FARC. She says the man said “He knows who is looking for him” and “tell Miguel that we are looking for him and tell him not to
hide and that he should show his face and surrender and COLABORATE WITH THE
CAUSE.” The Applicants say that this shows that the same group who
approached him in the past is still looking for him, and that even if they are
just common criminals, they are at least persistent. The RAD finds that “this is not sufficient information to establish that this
man is from the same group of men that confronted the principal appellant for
money in the past” (para 41). I don’t think this can be said to be an
unreasonable finding because saying that the Principal Applicant knows who is
looking for him does not establish that whoever they are has approached him
before, especially when the Applicants have been found not to be credible on
the identity issue.
[47]
And the more significant finding is that “the appellants are not able to adequately establish who the
agents of harm are.” Their actual identity is crucial because the
Urabenos and the FARC may well have the will and the means to find the
Applicants anywhere in Colombia. The onus was on the Applicants to establish
that the agents of harm were either the Urabenos or the FARC but they were
unable to do this with persuasive evidence. I don’t see that the RAD’s findings
on this crucial issue can be said to be unreasonable. In my view, the RAD
reasonably dealt with the identification issues and showed appropriate
deference to the RPD’s credibility findings in so far as they impacted this
issue.
B.
Profile as a Professional Soccer Player
[48]
The Applicants also say that the RAD
misapprehended the evidence that supports the Principal Applicant’s profile as
a professional soccer player who would be recognised in Bogota:
49. In finding that there was an IFA
in Bogota, the RPD and the RAD concluded that the adult male applicant did not
have a wide enough public profile in all of Colombia such that he would be
identified outside of Buenaventura. However, the conclusions fundamentally
ignore the evidence provided by the Applicant in his testimony, without
providing any justification why that portion of the testimony was unreliable.
His lengthy, uncontested testimony about his professional career included the
following:
How many years did you play soccer
professionally? 11 years
Were the games televised? Yes, they
were always televised.
Did you play for the same team? No,
different teams in different cities and different countries.
When you say you played in different
cities - games would be in one city? Six months I would be in one city, a year
in another city.
[...]
In your whole career [...]? In my
whole career I participated on part of 8 different teams.
[...]
What cities have you played for? Bogota.
Ibague. Pasto.
50. The Applicant went on to describe
how he was recognizable from due to his profile as a professional soccer
player, would appear in media including television, radio and newspapers and
that fans would approach him in the street to have him sign shirts or provide
autographs.
51. However, the testimony that he
played professional soccer at a high level in Bogota was a crucial fact which
was ignored in finding that there was no “persuasive evidence his profile
extends beyond his hometown”. The fact that he played professional soccer for a
lengthy period of time in the very place propose as an IFA was clearly a
relevant fact which ought to have been addressed by the Board.
52. Even more problematically, in assessing
the Principal Applicant’s employability in Bogota, the RPD specifically refers
to the fact that “he may be employable as a soccer coach in view of his
professional career”. This implies not only that the Board believes the Applicant
had a professional career, but that he would be able to leverage his reputation
in Bogota to find employment. The RAD cites this analysis with approval.
53. The agents of harm who approached
him in November 2013 knew about him and his professional career.
54. Furthermore, in finding an IFA in
Bogota, the RPD and RAD ignored evidence that the applicants were forced to
return to Buenaventura from Bogota in 2012 because they could not survive in
the city after the adult male applicant lost his work as a professional player.
There was no evidence that they had family or friends in Bogota who would still
receive them and offer support.
[emphasis in original, references omitted]
[49]
Once again, however, the Applicants are simply
disagreeing with the weight given by the RAD to the evidence on this issue and
the conclusions drawn:
[38] The principal appellant focuses on
the fact that he was a professional soccer player and due to this profile, he
would be targeted anywhere he may choose to live in Colombia. The RPD Member
canvassed this issue at the RPD hearing. The RPD Member finds:
The claimant alleges that he is widely
known as a professional athlete in Colombia, making it impossible for him to
relocate safely. The Panel accepts evidence that he played at a professional
level, both inside and outside the country, including objective evidence that
in December 2011 the claimant severed a professional sports contract with a
Second Division El Salvador soccer team, Dragon Sports Club. The Panel does
not; however, accept the submission that the claimant has a high profile
throughout Colombia on the basis of his sports career, in view of the
identified widespread credibility problems in his evidence, in conjunction with
an absence of objective evidence that the Panel finds would reasonably be
available to support such an assertion, such as media references to him. What
the Panel has, besides the terminated contract, are two undated team photos and
an action photo taken on the pitch. The Panel accepts that the claimant may
have some notoriety as a local success story in his hometown of Buenaventura
but concludes there is insufficient objective and reliable evidence to support
a finding that the claimant is widely known and will be readily recognizable in
every part of the country as he alleges.
[39] Through my review of all the
evidence before the RPD and the RAD, I agree with the RPD Member that the
principal appellant’s profile as a professional player would not, on a balance
of probabilities, make him more susceptible to be located in Bogota. The RPD
Member accepted that the principal appellant is a professional soccer player. I
note at the hearing, the principal appellant testified that his games were
televised and he was well known as a soccer player. However, I find the
principal appellant has not provided persuasive evidence that his profile
extends beyond his hometown. Furthermore, refugee protection is
forward-looking, and I have taken into consideration that the last contract the
principal appellant had with a professional soccer team ended in 2011. There is
no persuasive evidence before the RPD or the RAD that establishes the level of
profile the appellant had as a profession soccer player in Colombia. Here, the
onus is on the appellants to provide corroborative evidence to establish the
level of profile held by the principal appellant and other than the contract,
there is no further evidence before the RPD or the RAD. There is no credible
evidence that he has continued to actively pursue his soccer career since 2011.
I also note that the principal appellant continued to live in Buenaventura
after the threats began, and even though he lived in other places, there is no
credible evidence before the RPD or the RAD that he was found due to his
professional status. The only encounter he had while living at his uncle’s home
was when he was approached on the street and even then, there is no credible
evidence that these agents of harm knew about his professional profile. I find
that the principal appellant has not adequately established that this profile
has, and will, motivate the agents of harm to pursue him and locate him in
Bogota. This can further be explained through the analysis below.
[footnotes omitted]
[50]
It is clear from the Decision that the RAD did
not ignore or misapprehend the evidence on profile. It simply concluded on the
facts that the Principal Applicant did not have the kind of profile outside of
his hometown of Buenaventura that would place him at risk if the family moved
to Bogota. Once again, it is possible to disagree with this finding but it
falls within the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible on
the facts and the law. There is no indication that the RPD or the RAD ignored
evidence on this issue.
[51]
The fact that the agents of harm who approached
the Principal Applicant in 2013 knew about him and his professional career does
not support a conclusion that the Principal Applicant is well-known throughout
Colombia or in Bogota.
[52]
The fact that the Principal Applicant “may be employable as a soccer coach in view of his
professional career” does not mean that he is “well-known” in Bogota.
Experience is not the same thing as notoriety or celebrity status.
[53]
The Applicants strenuously argued at the hearing
before me that even if they could not establish that the agents of harm were
either the Urabenos or the FARC, so that the threat was just local criminals,
the people of Buenaventura who would know the Principal Applicant as a local
sports hero would also know of his whereabouts in Bogota, and this would
inevitably become known to the agents of harm. This argument, however, suffers
from the same problems as other evidence put forward on this issue. It is
speculative and is dealt with by the RAD’s general conclusion that “No persuasive evidence was presented to the RPD or the RAD
that suggests that the agents of harm have the ability, willingness, or
interest to search for the appellants outside of Buenaventura” (para
48).
[54]
It is also clear that both the Principal
Applicant and his spouse testified that the spouse has two aunts and a brother
living in Bogota (see para 62, RPD decision). And neither of them raised the
lack of family support as a reason why the IFA was unreasonable.
C.
Section 96 Assessment – Wrong Legal Test
[55]
The Applicants say that the RAD did not assess
the situation they faced as Afro-Colombians who have been disproportionately
targeted in Colombia by the Urabenos:
55. The decision of the RAD begins by
briefly acknowledging that the Applicants were raising their status as
Afro-Colombians. The situation of Afro-Colombians was particularly relevant in
the context of targeting by the Urabenos, successors to the right-wing
paramilitaries who have a long history of disproportionately targeting
Afro-Colombians.
56. In this context there is little to no
weight given to the fact that there was a pattern of the male applicant’s
family being targeted. Several of his family members, including a brother had
been killed or disappeared after receiving similar threats, all of whom were
also AfroColombian.
57. This issue was placed front and centre
in both the submissions to the RAD and in the new evidence from the Applicant’s
sister:
He is at risk in any city in Colombia
because, in addition to the risk that he’ll be executed, he is bullied because
of his skin colour. In the majority of the cities in Colombia there exists an
obvious racism. Us Afro-Colombians are shot and murdered for being considered
different. We are fated to face such crimes as discrimination and death because
of our skin colour, which elicits hatred and disdain- because of our ethnic background.
58. The RAD does not engage with this
issue at all, deciding that the finding on IFA was decisive. However, the
failure to assess whether the risk faced was linked to a Convention ground led
to the wrong legal test being applied to the question of IFA.
59. As the Court of Appeal makes clear
in Thirunavukkarasu, the issue of IFA is not a separate test or
threshold, it is part and parcel of the assessment of a well-founded fear of
persecution. What this means in practice is that the legal test for IFA is
different under s.96 than under s.97. The issue to be addressed by the Board
under s.96 was well established by the Court of Appeal in Adjei v. Canada (Minister
of Employment and Immigration), [1989] 2 F.C. 680; (1989), 57 D.L.R. (4th) 153
(C.A.):
What is evidently indicated by
phrases such as “good grounds” or “reasonable chance” is, on the one hand, that
there need not be more than a 50% chance (i.e., a probability), and on the
other hand that there must be more than a minimal possibility. We believe this
can also be expressed as a “reasonable” or even a “serious possibility”, as
opposed to a mere possibility.
60. At paragraph 32, the RAD
specifically says that it does not need to address the issue of the s.96 claim
because the IFA finding applies to both s.96 and s.97. However, the RAD then
goes on to make a finding on the first prong of the IFA analysis·explicitly on
the onus of a balance of probabilities:
I find, on a balance of probabilities,
and on my own assessment of the evidence, that the appellants have not provided
persuasive evidence to support their allegations that the agents of harm have
the motivation to find the appellants in the proposed IFA location in Colombia.
61. This analysis fails to consider the cumulative
profile of the Applicants, a family headed by a professional soccer player,
from an extended Afro-Colombian family repeatedly and violently targeted by
paramilitaries who disproportionately target Afro-Colombians. The targeting of
the Applicants was not random, and when considered in context as part of a cumulative
profile was linked to a Convention ground. An analysis under s.96 ought to have
been undertaken.
[56]
There was no evidence before the RPD or the RAD
that the Principal Applicant was targeted for any other reason than his wealth,
which is insufficient for a nexus to a refugee ground under s 96 of the Act.
See, for example, Figueroa, above, at paras 20 and 36. The Principal
Applicant was not targeted because he comes from an extended Afro-Colombian
family. For this reason, both the RPD and the RAD focus on s 97 risk. However,
the Applicants’ status as Afro-Colombians was certainly a factor that had to be
assessed under the second prong of the IFA test when deciding whether it is
reasonable, in all of the circumstances, for the Applicants to relocate to
Bogota. In fact, the RAD devotes considerable time to this factor:
[51] In reference to the second prong
for IFA, the RPD Member asked the appellants whether there was any other reason
besides their fear of the agents of harm as to why they cannot live in Bogota.
The principal appellant replied that there is a lot of discrimination due to
the colour of his skin as an Afro-Colombian. The appellants submit that “their
financial situation has also changed and there is no evidence that the
associate claimant [appellant] would be able to work as a teacher or at a
restaurant in Bogota. It is not a question of transferable skills but rather
whether or not as Afro-Colombians, they would get employment in Bogota.
[52] The RPD Member finds:
Unlike the majority of internally
displaced persons (IDP) who relocate to Bogota, the claimants have years of
prior experience living in Bogota and it is to be expected that they would
continue to have some personal and professional contacts in that location. They
also have family resources in that location – the associate claimant’s brother
and two aunts live there – which suggests they would have some support in
resettling there. The associate claimant previously worked in Bogota as a
cleaner and in restaurants. She testified to subsequently obtaining years of
experience running a restaurant kitchen in Cali, which, if true, the Panel
considers to be a highly transferable skill, and she also has a teaching
certificate. The claimant has a certificate as an IT Technician and alleges
some experience as an administrator for a restaurant, and may also be
employable as a soccer coach in view of his professional career.
[53] There are country documents which
note that “Societal discrimination against indigenous persons and
Afro-Colombians at times restricted the ability of these groups to exercise
their rights.” I also note that the appellants have lived in many cities within
Colombia in the past. The onus is on the appellants to adequately establish
that such discrimination would prevent them from establishing themselves in
another city such as Bogota. However, in reviewing the evidence, I note that
there is no credible evidence that this discriminatory behaviour has amounted
to persecution and not enabled them to live in any other part of Colombia in
the past. The principal appellant testified that his son was called a ‘black slave’
at school. However, again, this does not amount to persecution as defined by IRPA.
There is no evidence of any of the appellants being targeted for being Afro-Colombians
that limits their ability to live safely in the IFA location. The adult
appellants have work experience and education. It is clear from their past
history that being Afro-Colombian has not limited them from living in any of
these other cities in the past, which include Cali and Bogota.
[54] The RPD Member finds:
The Panel accepts the claimants’
evidence in regard to the problems of racial discrimination in Colombia, and
notes plentiful objective evidence in regard to disadvantages faced by
Afro-Colombians as well as indigenous people in that country.
The Panel also observes, however,
that the adult claimants, despite many years living in Bogota, the proposed
Internal Flight Alternative, where Afro-Colombians constitute a visible
minority, gave no specific instances of having been harmed or adversely
affected by racial discrimination. Under questioning from her counsel, the
associate claimant first testified that it would be difficult for her to get a
teaching job in Bogota. The Panel accepts that their racial identities may make
relocation more difficult, but finds that this fact does not make Bogota and
unreasonable Internal Flight Alternative, in view of all the circumstances
particular to the claimants.
[55] Therefore, I find the RPD Member’s
assessment as it relates to the second prong of the IFA test is accurate, and I
find the appellants have not provided persuasive evidence, either to the RPD
nor the RAD, that they could not live safely in the proposed IFA location is
unreasonable in their personal circumstances.
[footnotes omitted]
[57]
The legal test for a viable IFA is accurately
set out in the Decision. However, the Applicants are now, in effect, saying
that the RAD applied a wrong “balance of probabilities” test to the first prong
of the test in considering s 96 persecution where the standard is a “serious
possibility.”
[58]
As the Decision makes clear, however, the RAD
considered both s 96 persecution and s 97 risk when addressing the first
prong of the IFA test and applied the correct test to each:
[56] The appellants have not provided
evidence to meet the onus on them to meet the two prongs of the IFA test. I
have not found anything in my review of the evidence before the RPD or the RAD
that would indicate that they face a serious possibility of persecution or, on
the balance of probabilities, of a danger of torture or risk to life or cruel
and unusual treatment of punishment and it would be unreasonable for the
appellants to live in Bogota.
[59]
It would appear that the Applicants are
confusing the standard of proof applicable to facts and the standard for
assessing the risk of future persecution. In Hinzman v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 420, the Court had the following to
say on point:
[184] A distinction has to be drawn
between the legal test to be applied in assessing the risk of future
persecution, and the standard of proof to be applied with respect to the facts
underlying the claim itself. While the legal test for persecution only requires
a demonstration that there is more than a mere possibility that the individual
will face persecution in the future, the standard of proof applicable to the
facts underlying the claim is that of the balance of probabilities: Adjei,
at p. 682. See also Li v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2005] F.C.J. No. 1, 2005 FCA 1 at 9-14 and 29.
[60]
It was not legally incorrect for the RAD to use
a balance of probabilities test for facts underlying the claim itself. The
Decision is clear that the “serious possibility” test was applied to assessing
the future risk of persecution.
D.
Conclusions
[61]
The Applicants are naturally disappointed with
the Decision and their fears of returning to Colombia may well be entirely
genuine. However, subjective fear alone is not sufficient to support a claim
for protection under the Act. The RPD and the RAD carefully examined their
fears and considered whether they could be objectively supported on the facts.
The Applicants have not shown that either tribunal was wrong or unreasonable on
the facts.
[62]
Counsel agree that this application raises no
question for certification and the Court concurs.