Docket: IMM-2462-16
Citation:
2017 FC 55
Toronto, Ontario, January 17, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
BETWEEN:
|
JOSEPH BITA
OUYA
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The Applicant has applied for judicial review of
a Decision of the Refugee Appeal Division [RAD] dated May 18, 2016 upholding
the Refugee Protection Division [RPD]’s finding that the Applicant is not a
Convention refugee or a person in need of protection. This application is
brought pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the IRPA].
[2]
The Applicant is a 37 year old citizen of Kenya
who alleges that he is bisexual. His former partners are called Thomas and Ben.
He dated Thomas when he was either 19 or 21. He dated Ben from 2007 to 2015.
However, in December 2013 he married his wife Sheila in an arranged marriage.
On May 17, 2015, Sheila caught the Applicant in bed with Ben. Thereafter they
were not on speaking terms. Nevertheless, she wrote a detailed support letter
for the Applicant’s Canadian visa application. On July 25, 2015, Sheila found a
text message from Ben on the Applicant’s phone. She then told her father and
the Applicant’s brother that the Applicant had slept with a man. The Applicant
went into hiding and then fled Kenya .He arrived in Canada on August 4, 2015
and claimed refugee protection.
[3]
On November 18, 2015, the RPD denied the
Applicant’s claim due to credibility concerns.
[4]
On January 9, 2016, a warrant for the Applicant’s
arrest dated January 8, 2016 [the Warrant] was served on his wife in Kenya.
I.
The Documents
[5]
The RPD had before it the material which
included:
•
An affidavit from the Applicant’s wife Sheila
Ngele Kirangu [the Kirangu affidavit] describing his behaviour with Ben. It was
sworn on August 18, 2015, by advocate and Commissioner SW Ndegwa.
•
An affidavit from the Applicant’s friend
Geoffrey Nyamuro sworn on August 18, 2015 by advocate and Commissioner SW
Ndegwa [the Nyamuro Affidavit]
•
An affidavit from William Nyakundi sworn on
August 21, 2015, before Andambi Chabala, Commissioner for Oaths [the Nyakundi
Affidavit].
•
These will be referred to collectively as the
Affidavits.
•
A document on the letterhead of the National
Police Service, Nyayo Stadium Police Station, dated July 29, 2015 [the Police
Department Notice].
•
A document on the letterhead of the Office of
the President, Provincial Administration and Internal Security (the Security Notice)
dated July 28, 2015.
•
These will be referred to collectively as the
Notices.
[6]
Before the RAD the following additional
documents were accepted as new evidence:
•
The Warrant together with its envelope.
•
An affidavit from the Applicant’s wife sworn on
February 9, 2016 describing the service of the Warrant [the Wife’s Affidavit].
II.
The RAD Decision
[7]
The appeal to the RAD was limited to the RPD’s
treatment of the documents, and in particular, the Affidavits and the Notices
described above. The RAD was concerned that the Kirangu and Nyakundi Affidavits
have similar signatures, similar handwriting and similar wording. As well, no
supporting identification was attached to the Affidavits.
[8]
Regarding the Notices, the RAD concluded:
•
That they are letters.
•
That they should therefore have been addressed
to the Applicant and not “To Whom It May Concern”.
•
That the Security Notice includes a significant typo
- “CONCERN” is written “CONERN” in the heading.
•
That both Notices include grammatical and
typographical errors.
[9]
The RAD also spoke of the cumulative credibility
concerns raised by the RPD which were not appealed [the Additional Concerns]. They
included the fact that in his BOC and to his psychologist he said he had his
first sexual encounter with Thomas at age 19. At the hearing he said he was 21
and he then explained that he was dating Thomas at 19 but was not sexually
active. The RPD rejected this explanation.
[10]
The RPD also found that the Applicant’s
credibility was undermined by the fact that his BOC made no reference to his
evidence that he wanted to come to Canada to see the Pam Am Games. Yet his
wife’s letter of support mentioned the games. Lastly, the RPD did not
understand why his wife would write a supporting letter when they weren’t on
speaking terms due to her discovery of Ben. The RAD shared these views.
[11]
The RPD also repeatedly criticized the Applicant
for vague and evasive testimony and this was accepted by the RAD.
III.
The Issues
[12]
In spite of the Additional Concerns it is my
view that the determinative aspect of the RAD Decision was its conclusion that
the Affidavits and Notices were not genuine and were to be given no weight. It
was for this reason that the RAD disregarded the Warrant and the Wife’s
Affidavit. Both of those documents are fundamental to the Applicant’s claim
[13]
In this regard the RAD said:
In light of numerous uncontested credibility
findings…the finding that the Appellant has tendered non-genuine police
letters…the finding that his general credibility has been undermined and that
he has not tendered trustworthy or reliable document to support his allegations,
the RAD finds that the Appellant’s allegations that he is being pursued by the
police in Kenya because of his sexual orientation not credible. The RAD finds
that the warrant for arrest and accompanying affidavit from the Appellant’s
wife do not overcome the overwhelming cumulative adverse credibility findings
noted in these reasons.
[14]
Accordingly the issue is whether the RAD’s
conclusion that the Affidavits and the Notices were not genuine was reasonable.
IV.
Discussion and Conclusions
[15]
In my view the RAD’s treatment of the Affidavits
and Notices was unreasonable.
[16]
There is no negative inference which can
reasonably be drawn based on the fact that the Nyamuro and Kirangu Affidavits
have similar wording, handwriting and signatures. This is explained by the fact
that they were both sworn by the same lawyer on the same day. It is obvious
that they were both prepared by Mr. Ngwega. In these circumstances similarities
in wording are to be expected and the handwriting on the commission is the same
on both affidavits because the writer was the same person. Finally, contrary to
the RAD’s conclusion, the signatures are not similar – one is largely vertical
and the other is substantially horizontal.
[17]
The RAD’s conclusion about the Affidavits is
also unreasonable because there is no requirement to attach an identification
document to a sworn affidavit. The deponents all identify themselves and
provide their addresses under oath. In the absence of some evidence contradicting
these statements, that is sufficient to establish identity.
[18]
Turning to the Notices, the important point is
that the RPD misdescribed them as letters and the RAD followed suit. The
transcript shows that they were initially called “documents”
and that it was the RPD Member at page 46, of the transcript who first
described them as letters. This was a fundamental error which led to mistaken
concerns about the fact that they were not addressed to the Applicant. It is
obvious that the Notices are directed to the public who are being warned about
the Applicant and asked to report his whereabouts. That being the case, the
fact that they include typos and bad grammar says very little about whether
they are genuine. It is not reasonable to expect that Public Notices will
receive the same attention as private correspondence.
[19]
These conclusions lead to a finding that it was
also unreasonable of the RAD to disregard the Warrant and the Wife’s Affidavit.
V.
Certification
[20]
No question was posed for certification for
appeal.
VI.
Conclusion
[21]
The application will be allowed.