Date: 20170622
Docket: IMM-4829-16
Citation:
2017 FC 615
Ottawa, Ontario, June 22, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice McVeigh
BETWEEN:
|
YUANYUAN ZHU
|
Applicant
|
and
|
CANADA
(MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION)
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
Yuanyuan Zhu applies for judicial review of a
Refugee Appeal Division decision [RAD] dated November 2, 2016, which denied her
claim for refugee protection. The RAD found that Ms. Zhu was not a genuine
practitioner of the Church of the Almighty God and that her story of fleeing to
Canada lacked credibility. For the reasons that follow, I find the RAD’s
decision to be reasonable and dismiss the application for judicial review.
I.
Background
[2]
Yuanyuan Zhu is a citizen of the People’s
Republic of China. Her story is that in December of 2014, she was introduced to
the Church of the Almighty God by a friend, Tao Tao. Tao Tao taught her how to
pray to God and, in March 2015, Ms. Zhu began to attend Tao Tao’s home church
services.
[3]
On September 27, 2015, the church was raided by
the Chinese Public Security Bureau [PSB]. Ms. Zhu fled and went into hiding at
a relative’s home. On December 8, 2015, Ms. Zhu’s parents informed her that the
PSB came to her home with a summons [PSB Summons]. As a result, Ms. Zhu hired a
smuggler and fled to Canada in January, 2016. In February, Tao Tao was
arrested.
[4]
On July 15, 2016, the Refugee Protection Division
[RPD] found that Ms. Zhu was neither a refugee nor a person in need of
protection. The RPD found the determinative issues were Ms. Zhu’s credibility as
a genuine practitioner of the Church of the Almighty God and the credibility of
her escape from China.
[5]
Ms. Zhu appealed the negative RPD decision to
the RAD, which conducted an appeal on the record with no new evidence presented
for consideration. Ms. Zhu’s refugee claim was rejected by the RAD on November
2, 2016. The RAD found that Ms. Zhu was not a genuine practitioner of the
Church of the Almighty God and that her story of fleeing to Canada lacked
credibility.
A.
The RPD Decision
[6]
The RPD found that Ms. Zhu had several
inconsistencies in her testimony and that she lacked even basic knowledge of
her faith. She had not read any materials published by her church, including
the main text, and did not know any of its hymns. Ms. Zhu also neglected to
include that her mother had a stroke and her subsequent recovery in the basis
of claim as the primary motivation for joining the church. The RPD made
negative credibility findings based on these inconsistencies and omissions.
[7]
Moreover, the RPD questioned Ms. Zhu’s ability
to leave China on her own passport when she was allegedly wanted by PSB
authorities. She testified that she gave her passport to officials at Shanghai
airport as confirmed by an exit stamp. As a result, the RPD found that Ms. Zhu was
not wanted by the PSB, on a balance of probabilities, as she would not have
been allowed to use her own passport to leave the country.
[8]
Finally, the RPD considered Ms. Zhu’s sur
place claim, as she attended the Church of Almighty God since arriving in Canada.
A letter was written in support of Ms. Zhu’s sur place claim but was not
notarized, nor was the author presented as a witness. The RPD concluded that
Ms. Zhu’s attendance at the Church in Canada would not have come to the
attention of Chinese authorities and her sur place claim must fail. Given
their findings, the RPD determined that Ms. Zhu was neither a convention
refugee nor a person in need of protection and rejected her claim.
B.
The RAD Decision
[9]
The RAD concluded that the RPD’s negative
credibility findings were made without error. Ms. Zhu had failed to demonstrate
that she is a genuine practitioner of the Almighty God faith. The RAD noted
that Ms. Zhu’s level of education, combined with the length of her alleged
practice, would enable her to answer the most basic of questions about her
faith, which she failed to do.
[10]
The RAD further noted that the Chinese
government operates a national computer network known as the Golden Shield
Project. The Golden Shield incorporates extensive tracking and control mechanisms,
including facial recognition surveillance technology and access to information
about criminal fugitives by the authorities who are at exit and entry points in
international airports. Therefore, the RAD agreed that Ms. Zhu’s story of being
wanted by the PSB and evading all security at Shanghai international airport
lacked credibility. When she was asked for details about how her smuggler
helped her navigate the airport she alternately said that he would not tell her
how he was facilitating her exit but then stated that he bribed customs. The
RAD acknowledged that it is possible to bribe one official, but concluded that
Ms. Zhu had failed to convince the RPD or the RAD that her smuggler had
successfully navigated all of the checks required at an international airport.
The RAD observed that her evidence was vague and lacking in detail, which
ultimately undermined her credibility.
[11]
The RAD examined Ms. Zhu’s corroborating
documents, finding them of little help to her allegations. In reviewing the PSB
Summons and the Notice of Dismissal from her employer, the RAD noted a complete
lack of security features. The RPD had dismissed these documents based on Ms.
Zhu’s ability to exit China on her own passport and her lack of knowledge of
the Almighty God faith. The RAD conducted its own review of these documents
finding that the PSB Summons was inconsistent with Ms. Zhu’s allegations, because
if her allegations were true, the PSB would have instead been required to use a
coercive summons and arrest warrant. Combined with her other negative
credibility findings, the RAD concluded that Ms. Zhu is not wanted by the PSB.
[12]
Finally, the RAD assessed Ms. Zhu’s sur place
claim. It imported the findings of the RPD on this issue, finding them without
error. Furthermore, upon review of the audio recording, the RAD found
insufficient evidence that the Chinese authorities would be aware of Ms. Zhu’s
religious activities in Canada. It therefore dismissed Ms. Zhu’s appeal.
- Did the RAD make
unreasonable credibility findings?
- Was the finding regarding the sur place claim
unreasonable?
III.
Standard of Review
[13]
The standard of review with regards to the RAD
decision is reasonableness. Reasonableness requires that the decision exhibit
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision making
process and must be within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes, defensible
in fact and law (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9; Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12).
IV.
Analysis
[14]
Ms. Zhu argues that her exit from China was the
determinative issue before the RAD and that its conclusions were speculative,
misleading, and internally inconsistent. According to Ms. Zhu, the RAD failed
to appreciate that the purpose of hiring a smuggler was to accomplish what she
could not on her own; namely, to circumvent airport security. The RAD’s
conclusion is therefore incompatible with the RPD’s determination that there is
systematic corruption in China and airport officials can be bribed.
[15]
Ms. Zhu further states that the RAD conducted an
unreasonable and misleading review of Federal Court jurisprudence. It
erroneously concluded that the facts relied upon in Sun v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 387, and Ren v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 1402, were now outdated.
Regardless of the dates between cases, the same legal principles apply between
those cases and this one. Namely, that it is impermissibly speculative to
assume that a claimant could not exit China using their own passport with the
assistance of a smuggler.
[16]
Ms. Zhu submits that the RAD failed to consider the
recent decision in Yang v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2016 FC 543 [Yang], which included an updated National Documentation
Package. This omission indicates that the RAD chose not to consider case law
that would contradict its own conclusions. In Yang, above, the Court
found it unreasonable that the applicant’s refugee claim was rejected because
of a negative credibility determination, based on the fact that the applicant was
smuggled out of China on their own passport. According to Ms. Zhu, the RAD
ignored this undeniably relevant decision. Ms. Zhu asserts that, since the RAD
decision, a Federal Court decision has been rendered which further supports her
position (Yao v Canada, 2016 FC 927 [Yao]).
[17]
Ms. Zhu also argues that the RAD unreasonably
rejected the PSB Summons issued against her and that the RAD speculated that a
coercive summons or arrest warrant should have been issued without any evidentiary
basis. The RAD further failed to consider that, if a warrant had been issued,
Ms. Zhu might not be aware of its existence. According to Ms. Zhu, the
existence of an arrest warrant does not necessarily mean that she or her family
members would have been notified about it. The provisions of China’s Criminal
Procedure Law, cited by the RAD, do not support their conclusion that a
coercive summons or arrest warrant had to be issued against Ms. Zhu. In fact,
public security summons – such as that issued against Ms. Zhu – are
specifically contemplated by China’s Public Security Administrative
Punishments Law, making coercive summons a discretionary choice. Therefore,
Ms. Zhu submits that the RAD’s rejection of the PSB Summons was not supported
by the evidence.
[18]
Additionally, Ms. Zhu points out that the RAD
failed to conduct its own assessment of the Notice of Dismissal from her work
and the Notice of Arrest for her friend, Tao Tao. According to her, these
documents were critical, clearly relevant to the issue before the RAD, and
contradictory of the RAD’s findings. It was therefore unreasonable for the RAD
to omit this evidence.
[19]
Finally, Ms. Zhu argues that the RAD’s
assessment of her sur place claim was tainted by its other negative
credibility findings. Since it had already determined that she was not credible,
it unreasonably disregarded her claim without due consideration.
[20]
It is surprising that Ms. Zhu does not take
issue with the determinative issue for the RAD. Specifically, Ms. Zhu does not
challenge the RAD’s conclusion that she is not a genuine practitioner of the
Church of the Almighty God. Unchallenged credibility findings must be presumed
to be true (Liu v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 207 at
paras 28-30). This unchallenged finding was dispositive of the claim. If she is
not a member of the Church of the Almighty God, there is no reason for the
Chinese authorities to be seeking her, and she would not have to avoid
detection at the border.
[21]
As this finding was not disputed, I find that the
RAD’s conclusion is reasonable and the RAD’s credibility finding on this point
will withstand judicial review.
[22]
Ms. Zhu relies on jurisprudence to challenge the
RAD’s analysis of her claims of exiting China. However, case law does not
constitute evidence which is what was lacking. It is not for this Court to
substitute its own decision or to reweigh the evidence which was before the
RAD. Moreover, Ms. Zhu’s reliance on jurisprudence involving different factual
findings does not render the RAD’s analysis of her facts unreasonable. Her
reliance on Yao, above, does not support her position since it is based
on whether a person could obtain and use a fraudulent passport to leave China,
and not about leaving on a genuine passport
[23]
Further, not every error committed by a board constitutes
a reviewable error. An error must go to the heart of the decision (Castillo
Mendoza v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 648 at para 24).
The RAD reasonably observed that Ms. Zhu’s documentary evidence lacked security
features. It also reasonably concluded that the PSB would have resorted to a
coercive summons in a situation like Ms. Zhu described. Since there was no
evidence of a coercive summons, Ms. Zhu’s credibility was further undermined.
While the RAD did not discuss the alleged arrest of Tao Tao, who allegedly introduced
Ms. Zhu to the Church of the Almighty God, this cannot be enough to make the
RAD’s decision unreasonable. Given that the RAD found Ms. Zhu was not a member
of the Church of the Almighty God, it is reasonable that the RAD did not see
the need to discuss or make findings in relation to Tao Tao.
[24]
The same logic applies to Ms. Zhu’s microscopic
dissection of the difference between airport security and airline personal, and
her arguments that the RAD was wrong about there being two or four layers of
security. However, even if the RAD made an error regarding the airport security
features at Shanghai airport, it would not constitute a reviewable error and would
not taint the RAD’s credibility assessment, as the RAD held that because she
was not a member of the Church of the Almighty God the Chinese authorities were
not looking for her.
[25]
Further, it is perfectly acceptable for
credibility concerns relating to the original authenticity of a claim to impact
an applicant’s sur place claim (Jiang v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 1067 at paras 28-30). Since Ms. Zhu presented no
evidence that her risk profile would attract the attention of the Chinese
authorities, she failed to establish a sur place claim. Without any
reliable evidence that the Chinese authorities are aware of her activities her
claim must fail.
[26]
Based on all of the above, I find that the RAD’s
decision was reasonable and I dismiss the application.
[27]
No question was presented for certification and
none arose.
JUDGMENT in file IMM-4829-16
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that:
1. This
application is dismissed.
2. No
question is certified.
"Glennys L. McVeigh"