Docket: IMM-3102-16
Citation: 2017 FC 144
Ottawa,
Ontario, February 8, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Brown
BETWEEN:
|
EJIMOFOR
NWAFIDELIE
CHINONSO SUSIE
NWAFIDELIE
CHIOMA ELSIE
NWAFIDELIE
CHINONSO FAVOUR
NWAFIDELIE
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT
AND REASONS
I.
Nature of the Matter
[1]
This is an
application for judicial review by Ejimofor Nwafidelie [the Principal Applicant],
his spouse [the Female Applicant] and his two children, pursuant to s. 72(1) of
the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the IRPA],
of a decision made by a Representative of the Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration [Minister’s Representative], dated June 30, 2016, denying the
Applicant’s application for permanent residency [PR] status on humanitarian and
compassionate [H&C] grounds, pursuant to subsection 25(1) of the IRPA
[the Decision]. The two adults have a Canadian-born daughter. Leave was granted
November 4, 2016.
[2]
At the hearing I was also asked on consent to
amend the style of cause to correct the spelling of the name of the fourth
Applicant to Chinonso Favour Nwafidelie, which motion is granted.
II.
Facts
[3]
The Principal Applicant is a 36-year-old citizen
of Nigeria. He is married to the Female Applicant and has three children with
her. The youngest of these children, his one-year-old daughter, is a Canadian
citizen. His two other children are ages 5 and 3; one is currently enrolled in
kindergarten and the other is waiting to be accepted into a school. Both adult
Applicants' parents and several of their siblings live in Nigeria; they have one
relative living in Canada. At the time of the H&C Decision, they had been
living in Canada for over a year and a half.
[4]
The Applicants arrived in Canada on November 30,
2014. They made their claim for refugee status that same day. On March 25,
2015, the Refugee Protection Division [RPD] of the Immigration and Refugee
Board [IRB] determined that the Applicants were neither Convention refugees nor
persons in need of protection under sections 96 and 97 of the IRPA. The
Refugee Appeal Division [RAD] dismissed the Applicants’ appeal on June 25, 2015.
This Court dismissed their application for leave to apply for judicial review
of the RAD decision on October 5, 2015.
[5]
The RPD’s finding was based on “serious credibility concerns as it relates to the actions
taken by the claimants and issues surrounding their allegations”.
Specifically, the RPD concluded that: “while the
claimants may have been victims of crime in Nigeria, the panel does not, on a
balance of probabilities, believe that the claimants were personally targeted
or victimized as they are alleging”.
[6]
The basis of the Applicants’ claim is that they
were the victims of several armed robberies and an attempted kidnapping while
in Nigeria. The Principal Applicant alleged that he was specifically targeted
by “bandits” because he was a successful
businessman. He alleged that he had been physically injured and robbed on
several occasions. He also alleged that, after immediately trying to find
another place to which his family could move, he received a call (from an
unknown number) during which he was told, “No matter
where you go, we have our eyes on you and your family.” The Applicants
called the police in regards to one of these incidents, specifically, when the “bandits” attempted to gain entry to the Applicants’
home in Nigeria, but allege that the police did nothing further to assist them
after responding to the call aside from writing a report of the incident. The
Applicants applied for and were granted a visa to the United States in August
2014 but were unable to leave Nigeria due the Female Applicant’s miscarriage at
that time.
[7]
The Applicants’ allegation of risk before the
RPD was based on the same facts now put forward on H&C. The Applicants
submitted their H&C application on January 18, 2016, on the grounds of ties
to Canada, best interest of the children [BIOC], degree of establishment and
risk if returned. Both adult Applicants filed psychotherapist reports written
by Dr. Patricia Keith, Ph.D. The clinical interviews of both adult Applicants were
conducted on the same day. In her January 26, 2016 report, Dr. Keith diagnosed
the Female Applicant with “Major Anxiety Disorder
(300.4 in the DSM), which could be the cause of her depressed mood and severe
mental health illness of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (300.3 in the
DSM-IV-TR)” and noted that she is taking Cipralex-10 mg for her Obsessive
Compulsive Disorder [OCD]. The psychotherapist opined that such treatment is not
readily available in Nigeria. In the Principal Applicant’s report, dated
February 3, 2016, the psychotherapist likewise diagnosed him with Major Anxiety
Disorder.
[8]
The Principal Applicant works full-time as a
construction worker. Both Applicants are very involved in their church
community and have made several friends since their arrival in Canada. In
addition to the crime and violence in Nigeria, they allege that lack of medical
care and social stigma surrounding mental illness in Nigeria will have a negative
effect on them, should they be returned.
III.
Decision
[9]
On June 30, 2016, the Minister’s Representative
denied the Applicants’ application for PR status on H&C grounds. The Minister’s
Representative’s denial of the Applicants’ application is largely couched in
the language of insufficiency of objective or corroborating evidence. The Minister’s
Representative found that insufficient evidence had been provided to support
any of the Applicants’ submissions. The Minister’s Representative declined to
give significant weight to the Applicants’ establishment or time in Canada,
instead finding it to be a natural and expected result of their involvement in
Canada’s refugee determination process. The Minister’s Representative noted the
Applicants’ allegations of risk on H&C were the same as that presented at
the RPD hearing and concluded that they could safely relocate to the proposed Internal
Flight Alternatives [IFA], as determined by the RPD, should they be returned to
Nigeria. In response to the psychotherapist’s statement regarding the
availability of medication in Nigeria, the Minister’s Representative noted that
Dr. Keith is “not an expert on Nigerian country
conditions and has not indicated how she arrived at this conclusion”.
The Minister’s Representative also noted that four months had passed since the
assessments were conducted without any updated evidence regarding treatment having
been filed; further, insufficient corroborative evidence had been provided regarding
whether the Female Applicant required additional medication, whether the adult
Applicants had attended further sessions in Canada or whether the Applicants
would be able to access or receive treatment or counselling in Nigeria. The Minister’s
Representative cites from open source information gathered through independent
research regarding country conditions in Nigeria.
[10]
The Minister’s Representative found that the
best interests of the children would be met should they continue to “benefit from the personal care and support of their family”.
Despite acknowledging the crime and violence in Nigeria, the Minister’s
Representative found the Applicants could seek the assistance of “the police, the judicial system or a non-governmental
organization” should they encounter problems. The Minister’s Representative
also noted that “the applicants’ familial ties to
Nigeria are very strong” and that family reunification would take place
upon their return. Noting that different educational and social standards do
not justify an H&C exemption, the Minister’s Representative concluded there
was: “insufficient evidence that [the children] would
not have their basic needs met in Nigeria.”
[11]
It is from this Decision that the Applicants
seek judicial review.
IV.
Issues
[12]
This matter raises the following issues:
1.
Whether the Minister’s Representative unreasonably
imported the RPD`s risk analysis under s. 97 of the IRPA onto the
H&C analysis, instead of separately considering the Applicants’ allegations
of risk through the lens of hardship?
2.
Whether the Officer determination on H&C was
otherwise unreasonable in particular with respect to the best interests of the
children?
V.
Standard of Review
[13]
In Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9
at paras 57, 62 [Dunsmuir], the Supreme Court of Canada held that a
standard of review analysis is unnecessary where “the
jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory manner the degree of
deference to be accorded with regard to a particular category of question.”
A review of an officer’s H&C decision is conducted on the reasonableness
standard: Kanthasamy v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 61
at para 44 [Kanthasamy]. The decision of whether to grant or deny an
exception for humanitarian and compassionate reasons is “exceptional and highly discretionary; thus deserving of
considerable deference by the Court”: Qureshi v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 335 at para 30, Zinn J. The highly
discretionary nature of H&C assessments results in a “wider scope of possible reasonable outcomes”: Holder
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 337 at para 18,
Near J; Inneh v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009
FC 108 at para 13, Phelan J.
[14]
In Dunsmuir at para 47, the Supreme Court
of Canada explained what is required of a court reviewing on the reasonableness
standard of review:
A court conducting a review for
reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable,
referring both to the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In
judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with the existence of
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making
process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.
[15]
The Supreme Court of Canada also instructs that
judicial review is not a line-by-line treasure hunt for errors; the decision
should be approached as an organic whole: Communications, Energy and
Paperworkers Union of Canada, Local 30 v Irving Pulp & Paper, Ltd, 2013
SCC 34. Further, a reviewing court must determine whether the decision, viewed
as a whole in the context of the record, is reasonable: Construction Labour
Relations v Driver Iron Inc, 2012 SCC 65; see also Newfoundland and
Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011
SCC 62.
VI.
Analysis
[16]
The Applicants contend that the Minister’s
Representative acted unreasonably by focussing on the availability of treatment
of the adult Applicants’ mental health issues in Nigeria and by failing to
reasonably consider how the best interests of the children would be affected by
the effect of this possible lack of treatment on the adult Applicants’
parenting.
[17]
On the first issue, the Applicants noted that
the Female Applicant was being treated with a specific drug for her OCD,
namely, Cipralex-10 mg. This specific drug was not included on the list of
various medications available for mental health conditions in Nigeria that had
been produced by the Minister’s Representative. The Applicants argued the
absence of this specific drug from this list of available medications indicated
that the Female Applicant would undergo hardship if returned to Nigeria. I am
unable to accept this argument because the Applicants have the onus to show
hardship; it therefore fell to them to produce evidence that the drug or its
equivalents were not available in Nigeria. The only such evidence was supplied
by a psychotherapist in respect of whom no evidence of expertise in this
connection was provided; in this respect, the psychotherapist was not qualified.
The finding of the Minister’s Representative to discount this opinion of the
psychotherapist was therefore open on this record.
[18]
It was also argued that the finding of the
Minister’s Representative was contrary to Kanthasamy and, in particular,
paragraphs 47 and 48, which state:
[47] Having accepted the
psychological diagnosis, it is unclear why the Officer would nonetheless have
required Jeyakannan Kanthasamy to adduce additional evidence about
whether he did or did not seek treatment, whether any was even available, or
what treatment was or was not available in Sri Lanka. Once she accepted that he
had post-traumatic stress disorder, adjustment disorder, and depression based
on his experiences in Sri Lanka, requiring further evidence of the availability
of treatment, either in Canada or in Sri Lanka, undermined the diagnosis and
had the problematic effect of making it a conditional rather than a significant
factor.
[48] Moreover, in her
exclusive focus on whether treatment was available in Sri Lanka, the Officer
ignored what the effect of removal from Canada would be on his mental
health. As the Guidelines indicate, health considerations in addition
to medical inadequacies in the country of origin, may be relevant: Inland
Processing, s. 5.11. As a result, the very fact that Jeyakannan
Kanthasamy’s mental health would likely worsen if he were to be removed to Sri
Lanka is a relevant consideration that must be identified and weighed
regardless of whether there is treatment available in Sri Lanka to help treat
his condition: Davis v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
(2011), 96 Imm. L.R. (3d) 267 (F.C.); Martinez v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) (2012), 14 Imm. L.R. (4th) 66 (F.C.). As
previously noted, Jeyakannan Kanthasamy was arrested, detained and beaten by
the Sri Lankan police which left psychological scars. Yet despite the clear and
uncontradicted evidence of such harm in the psychological report, in applying
the “unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship” standard to the
individual factor of the availability of medical care in Sri Lanka — and
finding that seeking such care would not meet that threshold — the Officer
discounted Jeyakannan Kanthasamy’s health problems in her analysis.
[19]
In this case and in my view, treatment options
in Nigeria were relevant to the issue of hardship arising from removal from
Canada. The Minister’s Representative accepted the diagnoses of Major Anxiety
Disorder; the treatment options were therefore relevant in the sense of asking
whether the adult Applicants would be better or worse off in terms of their
mental health conditions if returned to Nigeria. In this case, I am unable to
see how, on these facts, these diagnoses were undermined or made conditional,
particularly given the markedly different factual matrix from that in Kanthasamy,
where the country condition risk had changed. Unlike the fact situation in Kanthasamy,
the risk alleged by the Applicants before the Minister’s Representative was the
same risk they had unsuccessfully alleged before the RPD. This is not disputed.
The RPD, which had the benefit of hearing directly from the Applicants, faulted
these very allegations of risk because of serious credibility concerns and discounted
the Applicants’ claim by finding an IFA in Nigeria. In addition to considering
these factors, which were not present in Kanthasamy, the Minister’s
Representative did in fact review mental health services available and noted
the lack of evidence supporting the Applicants’ submission that they would be
unable to obtain assistance in Nigeria. In addition, the Minister’s
Representative found the allegation that they would be ostracized due to the
Female Applicant’s medical condition was unsupported by the evidence. In
summary, the Minister’s Representative considered more than just treatment
availability in determining that the Applicants failed to establish their
H&C claim.
[20]
Likewise, I am unable to conclude that there was
an exclusive focus on treatment in Nigeria such that the Minister’s
Representative might be said to have “ignored what the
effect of removal from Canada would be on their mental health”, again
unlike the situation in Kanthasamy. The two cases are distinguishable.
[21]
In terms of the allegation of excessive focus on
risk, again I am not persuaded. While I agree that a finding by the RPD or RAD that
an applicant has failed to establish the risks outlined in sections 96 and 97
of the IRPA does not equate to a finding that there is no hardship in removing
the same applicants to the country in question if denied H&C relief, the
Minister’s Representative made no such finding. Instead, the Court is asked to
infer from the reasons that the focus was on the section 96 and 97 risks and
not on H&C considerations writ large, as demanded by Kanthasamy. In
this connection, it is important to keep in mind that there will inevitably be
some hardship associated with being required to leave Canada; in this regard,
however, the courts have repeatedly stated that such hardship alone will not
generally be sufficient to warrant relief on H&C grounds under subsection
25(1). This is affirmed by in Kanthasamy itself, where the Supreme Court
of Canada also stated that H&C is not an alternative immigration scheme:
[23] There will
inevitably be some hardship associated with being required to leave Canada.
This alone will not generally be sufficient to warrant relief on humanitarian
and compassionate grounds under s. 25(1): see Rizvi v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 463, at para. 13 (CanLII); Irimie
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (2000), 10 Imm. L.R.
206 (F.C.T.D), at para. 12. Nor was s. 25(1) intended to be an alternative
immigration scheme: House of Commons, Standing Committee on Citizenship and
Immigration, Evidence, No. 19, 3rd Sess., 40th Parl., May 27, 2010, at
15:40 (Peter MacDougall); see also Evidence, No. 3, 1st Sess.,
37th Parl., March 13, 2001, at 9:55 to 10:00 (Joan Atkinson).
[22]
In my respectful opinion, the Applicants have
mischaracterized the reasons of the Minister’s Representative. Of course
hardship was considered, as was the RPD’s decision; but while consideration of
hardship is mandated by the Guidelines and indeed by Kanthasamy,
above at para 30, the RPD’s decision may not simply be ignored, particularly
where it speaks to the alleged hardship and has serious credibility concerns
with the Applicants’ allegations. An applicant whose claims of risk are
rejected on credibility concerns by either division of the IRB (or both, as
here, in respect of which decisions this Court previously refused leave) cannot
turn around and expect those same allegations to be accepted without more when they
are repeated to the Minister’s Representative on an H&C application.
[23]
The Applicant also takes issue with the Decision
of the Minister’s Representative in terms of the assessment of the BIOC. In my
respectful view, there is no merit to this argument. The Minister’s
Representative was, in my view, “alert, alive and
sensitive” to the BIOC. The Applicants’ allegations mischaracterize the
Minister’s Representative’s reasons. The Minister’s Representative considered
the young age of the children, where they were in school, their resilience and
adaptability to change, the fact they will be returning with their parents, the
support their parents will give, their best interests in remaining together
with the personal care and support of their family, the fact that they have
extended family in Nigeria consisting of their grandparents, uncles and aunts
and the evidence regarding the willingness and ability of the extended family
to assist the children. The Officer further considered the best interests of
the children as individuals and distinguished between the two younger children
who had not yet entered school or established friendships here in Canada and
the five year-old daughter, who had. In all and again with respect, the BIOC
assessment was reasonable.
[24]
Judicial review involves considering the
decision as an organic whole. It is not a treasure hunt for errors. In my
respectful opinion, the decision falls within the range of permissible outcomes
that are defensible on the facts and law in accordance with the Supreme Court’s
decision in Dunsmuir. Therefore, this application must be dismissed.
VII.
Certified Question
[25]
Neither party proposed a question for
certification and none arises.
VIII.
Conclusions
[26]
The name of the fourth Applicant is hereby
amended to read Chinonso Favour Nwafidelie. The application is dismissed and no
question is certified.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that:
1.
The spelling of the name of the fourth Applicant
is amended effective immediately to Chinonso Favour Nwafidelie.
2.
The application for judicial review is dismissed.
3.
No question is certified.
4.
There is no order as to costs.
“Henry S. Brown”