Docket: IMM-5464-15
Citation:
2016 FC 972
Ottawa, Ontario, August 26, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
BETWEEN:
|
YONG WANG
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
Mr. Wang’s refugee claim was dismissed by the
Refugee Protection Division [RPD]. In accordance with subsection 107(2) of the
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 the RPD concluded
that there was no credible or trustworthy evidence upon which it could have
determined that he was a Convention refugee or person in need of protection,
and it therefore found that there is no credible basis for his claim. Consequently,
Mr. Wang has no right of appeal to the Refugee Appeal Division.
[2]
Mr. Wang, a Chinese citizen, sought protection
on the basis that he was being persecuted in China due to its family planning
policy.
[3]
He says that he is married and has two
children. After the birth of his second child, his wife was forced to wear an intrauterine
device [IUD] and have regular IUD check-ups. On August 29, 2013, he received a
call that his wife had been found to be pregnant during one such check-up and
that she was having an abortion.
[4]
His wife was to be sterilized, but she was found
to have arrhythmia and a gynaecological disease that made it impossible.
Accordingly, Mr. Wang would have to be sterilized. He went into hiding and
later made arrangements to leave China.
[5]
Through an agent, Mr. Wang applied for and
obtained a temporary resident visa [TRV]. He arrived in Canada on December 25,
2013, and made his claim for protection on March 27, 2014.
[6]
Mr. Wang challenges a number of the findings of
the RPD as being unreasonable, specifically:
1.
Its finding at paragraph 11, concerning whether
the second child exists;
2.
Its finding at paragraph 26, concerning
inconsistencies between his refugee claim form and the TRV form;
3.
Its finding at paragraph 32, regarding re-availment;
4.
Its finding at paragraph 27, regarding wide
spread fraud in documents from China; and
5.
Its no credible basis finding.
[7]
The issue concerning the existence of the second
child is this. The Basis of Claim does not state, as Mr. Wang did at the
hearing, that his wife gave birth to the second child while in hiding. The RPD
found that his explanation for the omission, being focused on the third child,
was not reasonable as the central element of the claim was the persecution due
to China’s family policy. It further noted that he submitted at the hearing
that he had no problems with the authorities until his wife became pregnant
with their third child, but the RPD found that he did have problems as he had
to hide to have the second child born and then had to pay a fine.
[8]
Based on these inconsistencies the RPD writes: “The Panel finds that this omission undermines the claimant’s
overall credibility and undermines whether the second child exists.”
[9]
I do not accept the submission of the Applicant
that it is a “gross stretch” to conclude on the
basis of the discrepancy that there is doubt whether the second child exists.
In addition to the inconsistent evidence, the RPD also notes that the father’s
name is not on the second child’s birth certificate. In any event, nothing
turned on whether or not Mr. Wang did have two children. The issue here was
obviously the damage to his credibility due to differences in his evidence
regarding this child.
[10]
The RPD noted that there were differences
between the Basis of Claim form and the TRV application relating to his
employment and education, residence, marriage details, and children’s names,
such that it concludes at paragraphs 25 and 26:
The Panel finds that these inconsistencies
undermine the claimant’s general credibility, undermine the employment and
educational history of the claimant, undermine the place of residence of the claimant,
undermine the claimant’s marriage, undermine the number of children he has in
China and undermine whether the claimant worked in Malaysia.
…
The Panel finds that it does not know what
his profession is, what his employment is, what his education history is, if he
is married, if he has children and if he has travelled to Malaysia.
[11]
The explanation offered for these
inconsistencies was that the TRV was filled out by the smuggler. I agree with
Mr. Wang that a refugee claimant may need to lie in order to obtain a visa to
get to Canada and make a refugee claim, but when he does so, he ought to
immediately correct the record and most certainly not later than when the
refugee claim is made. Here no such corrective measures were taken and I
cannot find that the view of the RPD on the innumerable inconsistencies was
unreasonable.
[12]
At paragraph 32 of the decision, the RPD writes
that “the re-availment of China is determinative of the
claim.” Mr. Wang submits that this is an unreasonable finding, because
earlier the RPD stated that it did not know if he in fact had worked in
Malaysia. This submission is devoid of merit. Here the RPD is stating no more
than this: Mr. Wang asserts that he left Malaysia for China before coming to
Canada. He himself says he re-availed himself to China. It is this re-availment
that shows he has no subjective fear in China. It is determinative of the
claim for protection. That finding was reasonable and one I would have made
myself based on Mr. Wang’s evidence.
[13]
The observation of the RPD, at paragraph 27,
regarding the proliferation of fraudulent documents in China is reasonable.
Further the rejection of the documents was not made on this basis alone.
Rather the RPD stated that it did so because of the proliferation of fraudulent
documents “as well as the other credibility concerns
raised in these reasons.” This finding is not objectionable.
[14]
Lastly, seldom have I seen a situation where
virtually every aspect of the story told by a claimant is accompanied by other evidence,
often from his own, mouth that tells a different or inconsistent story. The no
credible basis finding here was warranted and is unassailable.
[15]
No questions were proposed to be certified.