Date:
20090123
Docket: A-167-08
Citation: 2009 FCA 21
CORAM: DÉCARY J.A.
LÉTOURNEAU J.A.
BLAIS J.A.
BETWEEN:
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
CANADA
Appellant
and
FATEH KAMEL
Respondent
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT
DÉCARY J.A.
[1]
This
appeal essentially deals with the constitutional validity of section 10.1 of
the Canadian Passport Order (Order), which authorizes
the Minister of Foreign Affairs (the Minister) to refuse to issue a passport
“if the Minister is of the opinion that such action is necessary for the
national security of Canada or another country” (SI/81-86 as amended by
SI/2004-113).
[2]
The
circumstances that form the backdrop to this dispute are relatively simple and
clearly uncontroversial. I will relate only those that are the most relevant.
[3]
The
respondent, Mr. Kamel, was born in Algeria in 1960. He immigrated to Canada in 1988 and
became a Canadian citizen on January 27, 1993.
[4]
On
January 29, 1993, Mr. Kamel was issued a Canadian passport. In October
1995, Mr. Kamel informed the Canadian authorities that his passport had
been stolen. A new passport was issued, valid until November 10, 2001. In July
1997, he found the stolen passport and filed a new passport application. A new
passport was then issued, valid until July 2002.
[5]
In
May 1999, Mr. Kamel was arrested in Jordan and then extradited to France. On April 6, 2001,
after a trial lasting several days, the Tribunal de
Grande instance de Paris convicted him of membership in a criminal organization for the
purpose of preparing a terrorist act and complicity in the forgery of three
passports he had brought from Canada. The act of terrorism in question was the attack in Roubaix, France, in 1998.
Mr. Kamel had legal representation. The Tribunal described Mr. Kamel as the [translation] “… principal organizer of
international networks determined to prepare attacks and procure weapons and
passports for terrorists acting throughout the world”. Some twenty accused were
tried at the same time as Mr. Kamel. He received the harshest sentence:
imprisonment for eight years and permanent exclusion from France.
[6]
Mr.
Kamel was imprisoned in France. He was released after serving half of his sentence. He returned
to Montréal, his place of residence in Canada, on January 29,
2005, with a [translation]
“temporary passport valid for one trip only” issued as an exceptional case to
allow him to return to Canada (A.B., Vol. 7, p. 1441).
[7]
On
June 13, 2005, Mr. Kamel applied to the Canadian authorities for a new
passport. He was planning a business trip to Thailand. According to the
evidence on record, “there is intense passport trafficking activity in Thailand.” (Rudner
Affidavit, Reasons for Judgment, para. 40).
[8]
Eventually,
after numerous exchanges that are not relevant for the purposes of this appeal,
Passport Office Canada recommended that the Minister refuse Mr. Kamel’s passport
application. On December 1, 2005, the Minister refused to issue the passport.
[9]
Mr.
Kamel then applied to the Federal Court for judicial review of the Minister’s
decision. He argued, first of all, that the rules of procedural fairness had
been violated. He also submitted that sections 4 and 10.1 of the Order infringed
his rights as guaranteed by sections 6, 7 and 15 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms (the Charter).
[10]
Mr.
Justice Simon Noël allowed Mr. Kamel’s application in part (2008 FC 338). He determined
that (1) the Federal Court has jurisdiction to review the legality of a Minister’s
decision in the exercise of a royal prerogative; (2) the requirements of
procedural fairness were breached in this case; (3) section 10.1 of the Order
infringes the mobility rights guaranteed by subsection 6(1) of the Charter; and
(4) the Attorney General of Canada cannot seek to justify this infringement
under section 1 of the Charter since section 10.1 of the Order, owing to its
vagueness, is not a “law” within the meaning of section 1. As a result of that determination,
Justice Noël did not address the issue of whether section 10.1 of the Order
infringes the rights guaranteed by sections 7 and 15 of the Charter. Since it
was unnecessary, the judge also did not conduct the justification analysis
under section 1 of the Charter. However, he refused to compel the Minister to
issue a passport to Mr. Kamel. He set aside the Minister’s decision and
remitted the file to the Minister for a re‑determination that meets the
requirements of procedural fairness. He declared section 10.1 of the Order
invalid and gave the Attorney General of Canada a period of six months to draft
wording that would comply with the Charter.
[11]
The
Attorney General of Canada is appealing. The suspension of the declaration of
invalidity was extended until this Court disposes of the appeal. The Attorney
General is limiting the appeal to the following points: the violation of
section 6 of the Charter and the justification under section 1 of the Charter.
Accordingly, I will not comment on the other aspects of this case, and nothing
in my reasons shall be interpreted as having an impact on the decision that the
Minister will eventually make after reconsidering Mr. Kamel’s passport
application. In addition, since the respondent did not refer in his memorandum
to the allegations regarding section 15 of the Charter, I will not deal with
them any further. As regards section 7, the respondent merely indicated in a
footnote that he was relying on his memorandum from the Federal Court. This is
inappropriate and unacceptable. I will not deal with section 7 either.
[12]
From
the outset, I point out that the real issue is section 10.1 of the Order and
that even if the respondent also takes issue with section 4, specifically
subsections 4(3) and (4), this incidental attack has no basis whatsoever and
does not merit our attention.
[13]
I
also note that, although this case involves an Order and not a statutory
provision, I will be using the word “Parliament” to facilitate reading the
reasons.
Relevant provisions
Canadian
Passport Order
4. (1) Subject to this Order, any person who is
a Canadian citizen under the Act may be issued a passport.
(2) No passport shall be issued to a person who is not a Canadian citizen
under the Act.
(3) Nothing in this Order in any manner limits or affects Her Majesty in
right of Canada’s royal
prerogative over passports.
(4) The royal prerogative over passports can be exercised by the Governor in
Council or the Minister on behalf of Her Majesty in right of Canada.
.
. .
REFUSAL OF PASSPORTS AND REVOCATION
9.
Passport Canada may refuse to issue a
passport to an applicant who
(a)
fails to provide the Passport Office with a duly completed application for a
passport or with the information and material that is required or requested
(i)
in the application for a passport, or
(ii)
pursuant to section 8;
(b)
stands charged in Canada
with the commission of an indictable offence;
(c)
stands charged outside Canada with the commission of any offence that would,
if committed in Canada,
constitute an indictable offence;
(d)
is subject to a term of imprisonment in Canada or is forbidden to leave Canada or the territorial jurisdiction of a Canadian court by conditions
imposed with respect to
(i)
any temporary absence, work release, parole, statutory release or other
similar regime of absence or release from a penitentiary or prison or any
other place of confinement granted under the Corrections and Conditional
Release Act, the Prisons and Reformatories Act or any law made in
Canada that contains similar release provisions,
(ii)
any alternative measures, judicial interim release, release from custody,
conditional sentence order or probation order granted under the Criminal
Code or any law made in Canada that contains similar release provisions,
or
(iii)
any absence without escort from a penitentiary or prison granted under any
law made in Canada;
(d.1)
is subject to a term of imprisonment outside Canada or is forbidden to leave a foreign state or the territorial
jurisdiction of a foreign court by conditions imposed with respect to any custodial
release provisions that are comparable to those set out in subparagraphs (d)(i)
to (iii);
(e)
has been convicted of an offence under section 57 of the Criminal Code
or has been convicted in a foreign state of an offence that would, if
committed in Canada,
constitute an offence under section 57 of the Criminal Code;
(f)
is indebted to the Crown for expenses related to repatriation to Canada or
for other consular financial assistance provided abroad at his request by the
Government of Canada; or
(g)
has been issued a passport that has not expired and has not been revoked.
|
Décret sur
les passeports canadiens
4. (1) Sous
réserve du présent décret, un passeport peut être délivré à toute personne
qui est citoyen canadien en vertu de la Loi.
(2) Aucun passeport n’est
délivré à une personne qui n’est pas citoyen canadien en vertu de la Loi.
(3) Le présent décret n’a
pas pour effet de limiter, de quelque manière, la prérogative royale que
possède Sa Majesté du chef du Canada en matière de passeport.
(4) La prérogative royale en
matière de passeport peut être exercée par le gouverneur en conseil ou le
ministre au nom de Sa Majesté du chef du Canada.
[…]
REFUS DE DÉLIVRANCE ET
RÉVOCATION
9.
Passeport Canada peut refuser de délivrer un passeport au requérant qui :
a) ne lui présente pas une demande de passeport dûment remplie ou ne lui
fournit pas les renseignements et les documents exigés ou demandés
(i)
dans la demande de passeport, ou
(ii)
selon l’article 8;
b) est accusé au Canada d’un acte criminel;
c) est accusé dans un pays étranger d’avoir commis une infraction qui
constituerait un acte criminel si elle était commise au Canada;
d) est assujetti à une peine d’emprisonnement au Canada ou est frappé
d’une interdiction de quitter le Canada ou le ressort d’un tribunal canadien
selon les conditions imposées :
(i)
à l’égard d’une permission de sortir, d’un placement à l’extérieur, d’une
libération conditionnelle ou d’office, ou à l’égard de tout régime similaire
d’absences ou de permissions, d’un pénitencier, d’une prison ou de tout autre
lieu de détention, accordés sous le régime de la Loi sur le système
correctionnel et la mise en liberté sous condition, de la Loi sur les prisons et les maisons de correction ou de toute loi édictée au Canada prévoyant des mesures semblables de
mise en liberté,
(ii)
à l’égard de toutes mesures de rechange, d’une mise en liberté provisoire par
voie judiciaire, d’une mise en liberté ou à l’égard d’une ordonnance de
sursis ou de probation établie sous le régime du Code criminel ou de
toute loi édictée au Canada prévoyant des mesures semblables de mise en
liberté,
(iii)
dans le cadre d’une permission de sortir sans escorte d’une prison ou d’un
pénitencier accordée en vertu de toute loi édictée au Canada;
d.1) est assujetti à une peine d’emprisonnement à l’étranger ou est frappé
d’une interdiction de quitter un pays étranger ou le ressort d’un tribunal
étranger selon les conditions imposées dans le cadre de dispositions
privatives de liberté comparables à celles énumérées aux sous-alinéas d)(i)
à (iii);
e) a été déclaré coupable d’une infraction prévue à l’article 57 du Code
criminel ou, à l’étranger, d’une infraction qui constituerait une telle
infraction si elle avait été commise au Canada;
f) est redevable envers la Couronne par suite des dépenses engagées en
vue de son rapatriement au Canada ou d’une autre assistance financière
consulaire qu’il a demandée et que le gouvernement du Canada lui a fournie à
l’étranger; ou
g) détient un passeport qui n’est pas expiré et n’a pas
été révoqué.
|
|
|
10. (1) Passport Canada may revoke a passport on the same grounds on which
it may refuse to issue a passport.
(2) In addition, Passport Canada may revoke the passport of a person who
(a)
being outside Canada, stands
charged in a foreign country or state with the commission of any offence that
would constitute an indictable offence if committed in Canada;
(b)
uses the passport to assist him in committing an indictable offence in Canada
or any offence in a foreign country or state that would constitute an
indictable offence if committed in Canada;
(c)
permits another person to use the passport;
(d)
has obtained the passport by means of false or misleading information; or
(e) has ceased to be a Canadian citizen.
|
10. (1) Passeport Canada peut révoquer un passeport
pour les mêmes motifs que le refus d’en délivrer un.
(2) Il peut en outre
révoquer le passeport de la personne qui :
a) étant en dehors du Canada, est accusée dans un pays ou un État
étranger d’avoir commis une infraction qui constituerait un acte criminel si
elle était commise au Canada;
b) utilise le passeport pour commettre un acte criminel au Canada, ou
pour commettre, dans un pays ou État étranger, une infraction qui
constituerait un acte criminel si elle était commise au Canada;
c) permet à une autre personne de se servir du passeport;
d) a obtenu le passeport au moyen de renseignements faux ou trompeurs;
e) n’est plus citoyen canadien.
|
10.1 Without limiting the generality of subsections
4(3) and (4) and for greater certainty, the Minister may refuse or revoke a
passport if the Minister is of the opinion that such action is necessary for
the national security of Canada or another country.
|
10.1 Sans que soit limitée la généralité des
paragraphes 4(3) et (4), il est entendu que le ministre peut refuser de
délivrer un passeport ou en révoquer un s’il est d’avis que cela est
nécessaire pour la sécurité nationale du Canada ou d’un autre pays.
|
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms
1. The Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to
such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in
a free and democratic society.
.
. .
|
Charte
canadienne des droits et libertés
1.
La
Charte canadienne des droits et libertés garantit
les droits et libertés qui y sont énoncés. Ils ne peuvent être restreints que
par une règle de droit, dans des limites qui soient raisonnables et dont la
justification puisse se démontrer dans le cadre d’une société libre et
démocratique.
[…]
|
6. (1) Every citizen of Canada has the right to
enter, remain in and leave Canada.
(2)
Every citizen of Canada and every person who has the status of a
permanent resident of Canada has the right
a) to move
to and take up residence in any province; and
b) to pursue
the gaining of a livelihood in any province. …
|
6. (1) Tout citoyen canadien a le droit de
demeurer au Canada, d’y entrer ou d’en sortir.
(2)
Tout citoyen canadien et toute personne ayant le statut de résident permanent
au Canada ont le droit :
a) de se
déplacer dans tout le pays et d’établir leur résidence dans toute province;
b) de gagner
leur vie dans toute province.[…]
|
I. Section 6 of the Charter
[14]
The
appellant submits that subsection 6(1) of the Charter, which gives every Canadian
citizen “the right to enter, remain in and leave Canada”, does not impose
a duty on the state to facilitate the international travel of Canadian
citizens. The appellant also maintains that the respondent has not demonstrated
that a passport is required to enter or leave Canada.
[15]
At
the hearing, we did not consider it useful to hear the respondent on this issue.
In fact, we agree substantially with Justice Noël’s remarks on this point. To determine
that the refusal to issue a passport to a Canadian citizen does not infringe
that citizen’s right to enter or leave Canada would be to
interpret the Charter in an unreal world. It is theoretically possible that a
Canadian citizen can enter or leave Canada without a passport. In reality, however, there
are very few countries that a Canadian citizen wishing to leave Canada may
enter without a passport and very few countries that allow a Canadian citizen
to return to Canada without a passport (A.B., Vol. 7, p. 1406, Thomas Affidavit). The
fact that there is almost nowhere a Canadian citizen can go without a passport
and that there is almost nowhere from which he or she can re‑enter Canada
without a passport are, on their face, restrictions on a Canadian citizen’s
right to enter or leave Canada, which is, of course, sufficient to engage
Charter protection. Subsection 6(1) establishes a concrete right that must be
assessed in the light of present-day political reality. What is the meaning of
a right that, in practice, cannot be exercised?
[16]
Moreover,
it is ironic, as Justice Noël observed, that the same state that seeks to
minimize the consequences of not holding a passport felt the need to issue Mr.
Kamel a temporary passport valid only for his return to Canada.
[17]
It
must be noted that subsection 6(1) does not grant the right to enter another
country or the right to leave another country. It is the authorities of that
other country who determine their own entry and exit conditions. Subsection
6(1) does not impose any obligation on the Canadian government to guarantee
entry to or exit from another country.
[18]
I
add, however, that my determination, which is favourable to the respondent, is
a double‑edged sword. For although the courts can, and even must, consider
present-day political realities in interpreting the nature of the protection
granted by subsection 6(1) of the Charter, they can, and even must, consider those
same realities, with the appropriate burden of proof, when the time comes to
determine whether the restriction is justified “in a free and democratic
society” (section 1 of the Charter).
II. Justification
under section 1 of the Charter
(a) Is there a “law”
(“règle de droit”)?
[19]
In
my opinion, Justice Noël erred in finding that section 10.1 of the Order was
not a “law” allowing the state to claim the benefit of section 1 of the
Charter, on the ground that the provision was vague and overbroad.
[20]
I
adopt the following principles from the teachings of the Supreme Court of
Canada regarding the constitutional invalidity of statutory or regulatory
provisions for vagueness:
(1)
the
threshold for finding a law vague is relatively high. State conduct is guided
by approximation.
The process of approximation sometimes results in
quite a narrow set of options, sometimes in a broader one (R. v. Nova Scotia
Pharmaceutical Society, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 606, 626, 638-639);
(2)
a
law is unconstitutionally vague if it does not provide an adequate basis for
legal debate and analysis, does not sufficiently delineate any area of risk or
is not intelligible. The law must offer a grasp to the judiciary. Certainty is
not required. (Canadian Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2004 SCC 4, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 76, para. 15; Harper v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2004 SCC 33, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 827, para. 90);
(3)
the
courts may use a number of sources to determine whether the words used may
guide a legal debate, always bearing in mind the intention of Parliament. The
courts must first consider the words used in their legal and social context.
They may also refer, inter alia, to authorities and expert opinions, whether
they were expressed before or after the provision in question was adopted (Canada
(Attorney General) v. JTI-Macdonald Corp., 2007 SCC 30, [2007] 2
S.C.R. 610, para. 80);
(4)
even
if, in a given case, the drafters could have adopted a more detailed definition,
the provision is not constitutionally vague for that reason.
(5)
some
fields, such as international relations and security, do not lend themselves to
precise codification insofar as the situations envisaged are variable and
unpredictable. In that sense, a certain level of generality and flexibility is necessary
to preserve the effectiveness of the law for the future (Ontario v. Canadian
Pacific Ltd., [1995] 2 S.C.R. 1031, para. 48; Nova Scotia
Pharmaceutical, above, pages 641-642; Suresh v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 SCC 1, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 3, para. 85);
(6)
more
specifically, with regards to the security of Canada or national security (in a
Canadian context, these terms seem to me to be interchangeable and I consider
the expression “national security of Canada” to be redundant; in a global
context, the expression “national security” appears to me to be the most widely
used), the term “national security of Canada” serves to guide a legal debate.
In Suresh, where the expression “danger to the security of Canada” was not defined
at paragraph 53(1)(b) of the Immigration Act, the Supreme Court
of Canada recognized, at paragraph 85, that the expression was difficult to
define and accepted that the determination of what constitutes such a danger is
highly fact-based and political in a general sense. The Court nevertheless
determined, at paragraphs 82 and 85 to 90, that the expression was sufficiently
intelligible to be subject to judicial interpretation, and therefore, to satisfy
the constitutional test for precision.
[21]
Section
10.1 must be read in the context of the nature of the royal prerogative at
issue and in the context of the Order itself, particularly the September 2004
additions of subsections 4(3) and (4) and section 10.1.
[22]
For
the purposes of the debate and assuming, without deciding, that the Canadian
Passport Order adopted in 1981 (SI/81-86), which made no reference to
national security, nonetheless preserved the royal prerogative over passports
in cases of national security, there can be no doubt that the amendments made
to the Order in 2004 (SI/2004-113), namely, the addition of subsections 4(3)
and (4) and section 10.1, confirm that this prerogative is maintained.
[23]
Subsection
4(3) confirms the existence of a royal prerogative over passports, which is
broader than the prerogative to which the Order applies.
[24]
Subsection
4(4) indicates that the royal prerogative over passports can be exercised by
the Governor in Council or the Minister of Foreign Affairs.
[25]
Section
10.1 states that the Minister has the power to refuse to issue a passport for
reasons of national or international security. This new section establishes
that in cases of national or international security, the Minister, rather than
Passport Canada, exercises that power. We know that under section 9 of the Order,
Passport Canada has the power to refuse to issue a passport on the grounds set
out in that section. This clearly shows the Governor in Council’s intention to
place the refusal to issue passports for reasons of national security in a
particular category.
[26]
It
is curious that the provisions clarifying the Order’s effect and expressly
identifying a previously unmentioned ground for refusing to issue a passport are
now alleged to be vague. Read in the context of sections 9 and 10, subsections
4(3), 4(4) and section 10.1 provide an important clarification, which was
perhaps unnecessary (which, I repeat, I am not deciding), but which is now
unavoidable.
[27]
If
I understand his argument, the appellant contends that the expression “if the
Minister is of the opinion that such action is necessary for the national
security of Canada or another country” at section 10.1, or one of its components, is
vague. I do not agree.
[28]
The
words “is of the opinion” (“s’il est d’avis”) are part of the usual language of
Canadian administrative law. They vest a decision-maker with discretion. It is not
disputed in the jurisprudence that the decision-maker must exercise this discretion
in a reasonable manner, taking relevant factors into account. There is no vagueness
within the constitutional meaning of the term.
[29]
The
words “is necessary” are also words found in many statutory and regulatory
provisions. They afford a basis for “a legal debate”. They even provide a
framework for, and therefore limit, the discretion conferred upon the
decision-maker. As Chief Justice Lamer noted in R. v. Morales, [1992] 3
S.C.R. 711, at page 737, the word “necessary” means that the decision-maker
cannot simply be satisfied that his or her decision would “merely be convenient
or advantageous”. These words impose an additional burden on the state.
[30]
The
words “for the national security of Canada or another country” must be
interpreted in light of the Supreme Court of Canada’s finding in Suresh concerning
the expression “danger to the security of Canada”. If the concept
of “security of Canada” was held to be sufficiently precise in Suresh, it
must be all the more so in this case, where (1) the adjective “necessary”
clarifies the provision in that it introduces the requirement of a causal connection
between national security and the refusal to issue a passport; and/or (2) the
provision at issue specifies that the threat to the security of another country
is envisaged, thus responding to the concerns expressed by the Supreme Court of
Canada at paragraphs 87 and 88 of its reasons in Suresh.
[31]
I
conclude that section 10.1 of the Order satisfies the test of precision that is
required to constitute a “law” (“règle de droit”) within the meaning of section
1 of the Charter. Justice Noël erred in law by confusing the constitutional
validity of a provision with the validity of the decision made under that provision.
If the court believes that, in a given case, the link between the refusal to
issue a passport and the national security of Canada or another country was not
established or that the Minister’s decision does not meet the other
requirements of Canadian administrative law, the remedy is not to strike down
the enabling provision but to set aside the decision.
(b)
The justification itself
[32]
The
analysis to determine whether a restriction of a Charter right is justified
under section 1 requires that the following two questions be answered in the
affirmative:
(1) is the restriction
designed to achieve a sufficiently important objective?
(2) are the means
chosen proportional to the objective?
(R.
v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103, p.138-139)
(Trociuk
v. British Columbia (Attorney General), 2003 SCC 34,
[2003] 1 S.C.R.
835, at para. 33)
[33]
In
turn, the second part—proportionality—has what Chief Justice Dickson describes
in Oakes at page 139 as “three important components”:
-
the measure must be rationally connected to the objective: it must
be carefully designed to achieve this objective and be neither arbitrary nor
unfair;
-
the means chosen to reach the objective should impair as little as
possible the right or freedom in question; and
-
there must be a proportionality between the effects of the measure
and the objective sought.
[34]
The
analysis calls for “canvassing the nature of the social problem which [the
impugned provision] addresses” (Thomson Newspapers Co. v. Canada (Attorney
General), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 877, para. 87). Only a contextual
analysis will serve to establish the objective of the impugned provision,
measure the proportionality of the means used and determine the type of proof
which a court can demand of the legislator to justify its measures.
[35]
The
analysis must be conducted with flexibility. The standard of proof that the
Attorney General must meet is that of the balance of probabilities, which is
established by the application of common sense to what is known, even though
what is known may be deficient from a scientific point of view (RJR-MacDonald
Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 199, paras. 63 and 137).
[36]
Justice
Bastarache stated in Harper, above, at paragraphs 77 and 78, “[w]here
the court is faced with inconclusive or competing social science evidence
relating the harm to the legislature’s measures, the court may rely on a
reasoned apprehension of that harm”. He added: “This Court has, in the absence
of determinative scientific evidence, relied on logic, reason and some social
science evidence in the course of the justification analysis in several cases”.
In R. v. Bryan, 2007 SCC 12, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 527, at paragraph 29, he
accepted evidence consisting of approximations and extrapolations.
[37]
This
leads me to examine the context of the impugned measure.
[38]
The
measure in question is the discretion vested in the Minister of Foreign Affairs
to refuse to issue a passport to a Canadian citizen where the refusal is
necessary for the national security of Canada or another
country.
[39]
It
is clear from the explanatory note accompanying the publication of the
amendments to the Order in 2004 that these amendments are part of the
Government of Canada’s “strategic framework and action plan” tabled in the
House of Commons on April 27, 2004, entitled “Securing An Open Society:
Canada’s National Security Policy”:
The
national security policy is an integrated, comprehensive approach for ensuring
the safety of Canadians and for responding to emerging threats to national and
international security. Canada is facing an increasingly complex and
changing security environment, both domestically and internationally,
underscored by growing threats of terrorism and organized criminal activity.
One of the six major strategic areas requiring action to address those threats
is border security, including using facial recognition biometric technology to
enhance it. The passport program, which is part of Canada’s national
security framework, must be adjusted to meet this evolving threat environment.
[40]
The
Attorney General of Canada filed two affidavits in evidence.
[41]
One
affidavit, that of Jody Thomas, Acting Director General of the Security Bureau
at Passport Canada, relates the circumstances surrounding Mr. Kamel’s passport
application and sets out the practices followed at Passport Canada for issuing,
refusing and revoking passports (A.B., Vol. 7, pp. 1398 to 1411). The
exhibits to the affidavit run to some 700 pages (A.B., Vol. 7 to Vol. 10).
[42]
Ms.
Thomas describes the types of passports that are issued and provides an account
of recent legislative and regulatory developments in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand and
the United
States.
She explains the role played by Passport Canada in the fight
against terrorism. The misuse of Canadian passports is of particular concern to
the Canadian government, which is participating in the international effort to
better control the fraudulent use of passports. This effort is evidenced by the
adoption of numerous resolutions by INTERPOL, the G-8 summit, the European
Union and the International Civil Aviation Organization.
[43]
Passport
Canada is the government
agency responsible for ensuring the security, integrity and value of Canadian
passports. Its Security Bureau advises the Minister regarding the possible
refusal of a passport for national security reasons. Passport Canada’s Business Plan
for 2005-2008 states that, in the current environment, “ . . . security
requirements have become the primary drivers of our business, and the most
important aspect of our product.” (A.B., Vol. 9, p. 1690).
[44]
The
other affidavit was filed by Professor Martin Rudner, who taught at Carleton University, Ottawa, who was Director
of the Canadian Centre of Intelligence and Securities Studies. His 34‑page
affidavit (A.B., Vol. 1, pp. 92 to 125) is accompanied by 42 documents spanning
1200 pages (A.B., Vol. 1, p. 162, to Vol. 7, p, 1397). He concludes
as follows, at paragraphs 2 and 54 (A.B., Vol. 1, pp. 93 and 125):
2.
I have been asked to examine international terrorism as it relates
to the issue and misuse of passports. It is my opinion that passport misuse and
travel identity fraud enable international terrorist networks to operate
and threaten the security of nations and the safety of peoples. It is,
therefore, important and necessary to maintain in place robust systems for
protecting the passport entitlement and determination process, and for ensuring
the proper utilization of passports, in the interests of public safety,
national security, and international cooperation in combating terrorism.
54.
It
is my opinion that the misuse of passports is
a staple of international terrorism. Travel documents are as important for
terrorists as are weapons. Terrorist groups depend on travel to meet, organize,
train, plan, reconnoitre (sic) targets, and deploy for attacks. For their
travels, terrorist activists and operatives make use of improperly obtained,
altered or counterfeit passports and visas, and often tie in with people
smuggling networks, and immigration and identity fraud. A seemingly genuine
passport, however improperly acquired and fraudulently used, can provide near-impenetrable
cover for terrorist activists and operatives on cross-border missions.
[45]
At
paragraphs 36 to 43 of his reasons, Justice Noël summarized the contents of Mr.
Rudner’s affidavit as follows:
[36] Canada’s response to international terrorism is set out in the
policy statement issued by the government in April 2004, entitled “Securing an
Open Society: Canada’s National Security Policy” (the 2004 Canadian policy statement). The
policy is a strategic framework and action plan designed to ensure that the
government can respond to current and future threats. It focuses on addressing
three core security interests:
1. Protecting Canada and Canadians at home and abroad;
2. Ensuring Canada is not a base for threats to our allies; and
3. Contributing to international security. (We
will see Canada’s international commitments in this regard later.).
[37] As a
reflection of the Canadian government’s concern for border security, it will
“deploy facial recognition biometric technology on the Canadian passport, in accordance
with international standards” (again, we will see that Canada
has signed an international agreement in this regard). Having stated the
objective of protecting Canada and
Canadians at home and abroad, the policy statement says: “The Government also
has an obligation to offer assistance to Canadians working or travelling
abroad.”
[38] To provide for border security, the 2004
Canadian policy statement requires that Canadian passports use biometric facial
recognition technology (digitized photograph). The international community is
increasingly using this new technology to facilitate the flow of low-risk
travellers and interrupt the flow of high-risk travellers. It was announced in
May 2003 that under an agreement among participating ICAO countries, facial
recognition would be the international biometric standard for travel documents.
Since 2005, Canada has used this sophisticated technology for Canadian passports.
[39] The April 2004 Canadian policy statement
explains that four key types of terrorism affect Canada:
- religious extremism;
- violent secessionist movements;
- state-sponsored terrorism; and
- domestic extremism.
It also notes that terrorism is global and
calls for international collaboration to control or prevent it.
[40] Terrorist groups must be able to obtain
passports in order to carry on their activities. They devote time and money to
obtaining passports. They do this by stealing genuine passports and by
borrowing, renting or purchasing passports. They also make forged passports. Those
passports are as important to them as weapons are. They use them to travel
abroad under false names, or otherwise, so as not to be detected at borders.
Members of these groups must necessarily operate clandestinely. Passports
enable them to travel without disclosing their real identities, so that they
can organize, receive training, plan or identify objectives and put their plans
into action. According to Professor Rudner, there is intense passport
trafficking activity in Thailand.
[41] For Canada, it is essential that Canadian passports be
managed in such a way as not to give the international community the impression
that Canadian passports are easy for anyone to obtain and so that a passport is
not given to people with dubious reputations. This is in Canada’s interests.
Otherwise, the international community will not have the necessary confidence
in Canadian passports, and Canadian citizens will suffer the consequences when
they travel outside the country. Canadians might be subject to questioning or
preventive detention in other countries, or even to arrest until the
authorities of the country where they are recognize that their travel documents
are genuine. When dealing with passports, there are stringent standards
approaching perfection that must be adhered to, in order to meet international
requirements and thus ensure the unreserved confidence of the international
community.
[42] In April 2005, Prime Minister Paul Martin
signed “Canada’s International Policy Statement” (April 2005 international
policy statement), which explained Canada’s international goals in the world and reiterated the
government’s firm commitment to combating terrorism and protecting national and
international security.
[43] Canada has signed United Nations conventions providing for ways
of combating terrorism, and adheres to numerous Security Council resolutions on
this subject. Some of those resolutions (1624 (2005)) call on states to
cooperate to strengthen international borders, combat fraudulent travel
documents and enhance terrorist screening. The Security Council (Resolution
1617 (2005)) welcomed the efforts of the ICAO to prevent travel documents being
made available to terrorists, and has recognized its success in promoting
biometric facial recognition capacity. Canada has also signed conventions and agreements
among the countries of the Americas that are intended to strengthen border security and
improve communications among those countries. In short, the 2004 and 2005
Canadian policy statements meet Canada’s international commitments and reflect the measures that
have been taken to honour those commitments.
[46]
Mr. Kamel
filed a five-page affidavit (A.B., Vol. 11, p. 2115), together with documents
that run to some 600 pages (A.B., Vol. 11, p. 2120 to Vol. 12, p. 2706). This
affidavit and these documents deal primarily with the “administrative”
component of this case, which is no longer in dispute before us. These
documents are of little value to the constitutional component.
[47]
It follows from this context that the changes to the passport program in 2004 must
be analyzed in the always fleeting, sometimes elusive light of national and
international security and in conjunction with other measures in this regard
taken by Canada, other countries and the
international community. The constant efforts to improve the passport program
are a link in a long chain that terrorist threats forced Canada and the rest of the world to forge during recent years.
[48]
It follows
that the courts that are called upon to evaluate the choices made by the Canadian
government, whether these choices take the form of statutes, regulations,
orders or programs, must show humility―since this is an area for the
initiated; deference―since this is an area that involves efforts
characterized by international solidarity; prudence―since this is an area
that is constantly shifting; and also vigilance―since this is an area in
which information is rare and secret and where there is a temptation to
overreact, even in good faith.
[49]
It
follows, therefore, that in an analysis under section one of the Charter, the
courts must be satisfied with documentary and oral evidence that is limited,
incomplete, imperfect and inconclusive, and must weigh it with flexibility,
good sense and pragmatism.
(i) sufficiently important objective
[50]
I conclude
from the evidence that section 10.1 of the Order has both a broad objective―to
contribute to the international fight against terrorism and to comply with Canada’s commitments in this area,
and a particular objective―to maintain the good reputation of the
Canadian passport.
[51]
These
objectives are, on their face, sufficiently important for a measure to be
adopted that restricts the right of a Canadian citizen to enter or leave the
country. Moreover, counsel for the respondent acknowledged at the hearing that
if we conclude that section 10.1 of the Order is sufficiently precise to constitute
a law, the intended objective was sufficiently important.
(ii) proportionality test
(a) rational connection
[52]
Since the
attacks of September 11, 2001, in the United States, terrorism and the means to counteract it have become a
major concern and a top priority for the international community. Many
countries, including Canada, have adopted policies,
programs, statutes and regulations to strengthen their national security as well
as international security.
[53]
Professor
Rudner’s affidavit paints a picture of the context of the fight against
terrorism, both nationally and internationally. His testimony demonstrates, in
particular, that the passport is an essential work tool for terrorist groups.
These groups will use valid, falsified, forged or stolen passports to travel
surreptitiously, which facilitates recruiting members, transmitting
information, obtaining funds and establishing cells, all with the ultimate aim
of perpetrating attacks.
[54]
It is,
therefore, very important for Canada to implement a system for
issuing passports that is secure and flawless. As Professor Rudner states,
Anything that
might jeopardize the integrity of Canada’s system for issuing
and assuring the proper use of passports could put these national security
interests at risk. Governmental authorities the world over have become wary of
the dangers of passport misuse and identify fraud as facilitators of
terrorism.” (A.B., Vol. 1, p. 98)
If terrorists
were found to be in possession of Canadian passports, this would be damaging to
Canada, to Canadian
interests, and to the integrity of the Canadian passport system. (A.B., Vol.
1, p. 101)
Justice Noël made the following finding of fact at paragraph
41 of his reasons, which I believe bears repeating:
[41]
For Canada, it is essential that Canadian passports be
managed in such a way as not to give the international community the impression
that Canadian passports are easy for anyone to obtain and so that a passport is
not given to people with dubious reputations. This is in Canada’s
interests. Otherwise, the international community will not have the necessary
confidence in Canadian passports, and Canadian citizens will suffer the
consequences when they travel outside the country. Canadians might be subject
to questioning or preventive detention in other countries, or even to arrest
until the authorities of the country where they are recognize that their travel
documents are genuine. When dealing with passports, there are stringent
standards approaching perfection that must be adhered to, in order to meet
international requirements and thus ensure the unreserved confidence of the
international community.
[55]
Canada has signed and ratified twelve of the thirteen United Nations conventions
on terrorism, which attest to the solidarity of the international community in
the fight against terrorism. The United Nations Security Council has passed a
number of resolutions, including Resolution 1624 in 2005, which, at article 2,
2. Calls upon
all States to cooperate, inter alia, to strengthen the security of their
international borders, including by combating fraudulent travel documents and,
to the extent attainable, by enhancing terrorist screening and passenger
security procedures with a view to preventing those guilty of the conduct in
paragraph l(a) from entering their territory.
[56]
This
evidence, combined with logic, reason and common sense readily establishes a
causal connection between the violation―refusing to issue a passport―and
the benefit sought―maintaining the good reputation of the Canadian
passport and Canada’s participation in the
international fight against terrorism.
(b) minimal impairment
[57]
Parliament
has a duty to “minimally impair” the right protected by the Charter. Madam Justice Deschamps
recently explained the step that the court must take in this regard as follows:
36 Although the
legislative means are rationally connected to the legislative objective, if it
can be shown that they do not minimally impair the right at issue, they will
still fail to satisfy the proportionality element of the Oakes test (supra,
at p. 139). In applying the minimal impairment requirement, a court is required
to afford the legislature a margin of appreciation (Irwin Toy Ltd. v. Quebec
(Attorney General), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 927, at p. 999). That a court
can propose means that are less impairing than the impugned legislation is not
sufficient to give rise to a finding that an impairment is not minimal (Reference
re ss. 193 and 195.1(1)(c) of the Criminal Code (Man.), supra, at
p. 1138). However, if legislation does not impair an individual’s rights
“as little as is reasonably possible” (R. v. Edwards Books and Art Ltd.,
[1986] 2 S.C.R. 713, at p. 772), if in other words, legislation falls beyond “a
range of reasonable alternatives” (RJR-MacDonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney
General), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 199, at para. 160), it will not satisfy the minimal
impairment requirement.
(Trociuk
v. British
Columbia (Attorney General), 2003 SCC 34, [2003] 1
S.C.R. 835, para. 36)
[58]
Furthermore,
there are areas in which “a certain measure of deference” is appropriate. The
area of national security and the fight against terrorism is most certainly one
of them. These statements by Chief Justice McLachlin in Canada (Attorney
General) v. JTI-Macdonald Corp., 2007 SCC 30, [2007] 2
S.C.R. 610, paragraphs 43-44, where the issue was prohibiting commercial
advertising, apply a fortiori to this case:
43 Again, a certain
measure of deference may be appropriate, where the problem Parliament is tackling
is a complex social problem. There may be many ways to approach a particular
problem, and no certainty as to which will be the most effective. It may, in
the calm of the courtroom, be possible to imagine a solution that impairs the
right at stake less than the solution Parliament has adopted. But one must also
ask whether the alternative would be reasonably effective when weighed against the
means chosen by Parliament. To complicate matters, a particular legislative
regime may have a number of goals, and impairing a right minimally in the
furtherance of one particular goal may inhibit achieving another goal. Crafting
legislative solutions to complex problems is necessarily a complex task. It is
a task that requires weighing and balancing. For this reason, this Court has
held that on complex social issues, the minimal impairment requirement is met
if Parliament has chosen one of several reasonable alternatives: R. v Edwards
Books and Art Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 713; Irwin Toy.
44 The minimal impairment analysis in this
case will also be coloured by the relationship between constitutional review
and statutory interpretation. Before engaging in constitutional review, the law
must be construed. This may have a critical effect at the stage of minimal
impairment, where overbreadth is alleged. The process of interpretation
may resolve ambiguity in favour of a more limited meaning. This may only be
done in cases of real ambiguity in the statute. In cases of ambiguity,
therefore, claims of overbreadth may be resolved by appropriate interpretation:
R. v. Sharpe, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 45, 2001 SCC 2, para. 32.
[59]
Once it is
established that the refusal to issue a passport on the ground of national or
international security rationally serves a sufficiently important objective, it
becomes difficult to imagine how the refusal to issue a passport could,
substantially, take place other than in the manner prescribed by the Order.
[60]
As I
already noted, the Minister’s refusal can only be exercised in accordance with
the rules of Canadian administrative law. This case is a good illustration of
this principle: Mr. Kamel’s application will have to be reconsidered since
the original review breached the rules of procedural fairness, according to
Justice Noël. The justification of section 10.1 of the Order must be assessed
on the basis of a ministerial decision that meets the requirements of the law
and the jurisprudence.
[61]
Moreover,
this refusal can only be exercised if it is a “necessary” measure. As I
indicated above, this requirement for a necessary connection makes it more
difficult for the state to adopt a measure that impairs a right protected under
the Charter.
[62]
Finally,
this refusal to issue a general passport does not necessarily result in
completely depriving a Canadian citizen of his or her right to leave the
country. There are other types of passports that can be issued, if necessary,
including the limited validity passport for urgent or compassionate reasons.
[63]
The
Attorney General referred to statutory provisions adopted in Australia, Great Britain, New Zealand and the United States to point out their similarity
with the Canadian Order. Counsel for the appellant, in turn, pointed out the
differences in the provisions and maintained that the Canadian provision does
not contain the same requirements as some of the others.
[64]
This
comparison is useful insofar as the analogy shows the same concern and the same
type of methods used. The fact that the method, or the way of expressing it,
adopted in one or more countries is a little different does not in any way
signify that the method adopted in Canada
is not reasonable. It is not the Court’s role to speculate on what, in its
opinion, would be the perfect solution as long as the one chosen is within the
range of reasonable solutions.
[65]
I find
that there is minimal impairment in this case.
(c) proportionality between
the effects of the measure and the law’s objective
[66]
To echo
the words of Chief Justice McLachlin in JTI-Macdonald, at paragraph 45,
this is an inquiry that “focuses on the practical impact of the law”:
45. . . . What
benefits will the measure yield in terms of the collective good sought to be
achieved? How important is the limitation on the right? When one is weighed
against the other, is the limitation justified?
[67]
Once the
Minister is of the opinion, in the lawful exercise of his or her discretion,
that it is necessary to refuse to issue a passport to a Canadian citizen on the
ground of national or international security, the denial of a passport does not
weigh heavily in the balance when compared to the resultant strengthening of security.
It is not for the Court to speculate on the harm that this person could cause
to the security of Canadians, Canada and the international
community. The evidence is clear: the Minister would fail in his or her duty to
protect Canadians and Canada and to comply with Canada’s international commitments
if the Minister issued the requested passport. There is no reason to wait for
the risk to materialize. The Court must be satisfied, here, with hypotheses and
realistic speculations and must rely on, to quote Justice Bastarache in Harper,
“a reasoned apprehension of … harm”. Common sense dictates that the
possible collective harm outweighs the real individual harm.
Disposition
[68]
For these
reasons, I conclude that section 10.1 of the Canadian Passport Order
infringes the right of a Canadian citizen, under section 6 of the Charter, to
enter or leave Canada, but that this infringement
is justified under section 1 of the Charter.
[69]
I would
allow the appeal with costs, and I would set aside that part of Justice Noël’s
decision that declares section 10.1 of the Order to be invalid.
“Robert
Décary”
“I
concur.
Gilles
Létourneau J.A.”
“I
agree.
Pierre Blais J.A.”