Docket: IMM-551-17
Citation:
2017 FC 855
Toronto, Ontario, September 25, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Campbell
BETWEEN:
|
BLESSING FEBOKE
|
PREYE FEBOKE
|
DAVID DOUBRA
FEBOKE
|
(A.K.A DAVID
FEBOKE)
|
PEREZIDE FEBOKE
|
CHRISTABEL EBIE
FEBOKE
|
(A.K.A
CHRISTABEL FEBOKE)
|
FAITH
TAMARAKURHO FEBOKE
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
IMMIGRATION, REFUGEES AND CITIZENSHIP CANADA
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The Applicants are a family composed of a mother
(Principal Claimant), father, and their four children, all citizens of Nigeria,
who claim refugee protection arising from the Principal Claimant’s experience
in Nigeria. The Refugee Protection Division (RPD) rejected the claim in its
decision of January 23, 2017 on a finding that the claim is “manifestly unfounded” (Decision, para. 40).
[2]
A precis of the substance of the claim provided
in the sworn evidence of the Principal Applicant is stated by the RPD as
follows:
ALLEGATIONS
The claimants' allegations are set out in
the narrative attached to the Principal Claimant's Basis of Claim
("BOC") form, amended on November 7, 2016 and December 19, 2016. The claimants
allege that they are citizens of Nigeria residing in the municipality of Warri
located in Delta state. The Principal Claimant alleges that she is a caterer by
occupation. The Principal Claimant alleges that in July 2016 she was serving
food at a party when she overheard a
conversation by some party attendants who
were planning to blow up oil pipelines. The claimants allege that these individuals
belonged to the Niger Delta Avengers, a militant group in their state. The
Principal Claimant alleges that upon overhearing their plans she decided to
speak out to the group members about the damage their actions would do to
Nigeria. The Principal Claimant felt the need to do this because the group was
primarily composed of youth, being 18 or 19 year old men. She alleges that at
the conclusion of the party she was warned to never speak of what she heard to
anyone and was given extra money.
The claimants allege that the proposed
attacks overheard by the Principal Claimant actually took place. They allege
that after the police arrested some of the perpetrators, some Avengers became
suspicious that the Principal Claimant reported their overheard conversation.
The claimants allege that they then approached the police for protection and
reported what they heard at the party and the recent threats against them. They
allege Nigerian police have been corrupted by the Avengers and may have
actually assisted the Avengers to locate the family's whereabouts in southern
Nigeria. The claimants allege that the Avengers are continuing to look for them
in order to exact revenge.
(Decision, paras. 3 and 4) [Footnotes
omitted]
[3]
A critical observation of the decision under
review is that, with respect to the quoted statement of the substance of the
claim, the RPD does not express a single word of analysis. The decision is devoted
to reaching strongly contested findings of general negative credibility on
evidentiary features ancillary to the substance of the claim: use of and
production of the Applicants’ Nigerian passports; BOC error; BOC amendment; BOC
deficiency; and perceived supporting witness affidavit irregularities. With
respect to this approach, the RPD makes the following statement:
Based on the above credibility findings I
find the claimants to be generally not credible. I find that the adverse
credibility findings which go to the core of their claim extend
throughout their evidence. The claimants seriously damaged their credibility by
submitting fraudulent documentation. I do not believe what the claimants say in
support of their claim generally.
(Decision, para. 26) [Emphasis added]
[4]
In response to this statement I make two
findings: the ancillary issues do not go to the “core
of the claim” which is the substance of the claim quoted above; and, to
properly discharge the obligation to consider the Principal Applicant’s sworn
testimony of the substance of the claim, the RPD was required to evaluate the Principal
Applicant’s evidence and to make findings of fact on that evidence. In my
opinion, the RPD’s failure to meet this requirement constitutes a reviewable
error in fact-finding.
[5]
As a result, I find the decision is
unreasonable.