Docket: IMM-3986-11
Citation: 2012 FC 158
Ottawa, Ontario, February 6, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
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JOAHANA AWAH AMBASSA
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This
is an application under subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c. 27 (Act) for judicial review of the decision
of a Senior Immigration Officer (Officer) at Citizenship and Immigration Canada
(CIC), dated 19 April 2011 (Decision). In the Decision, the Officer refused the
Applicant’s application for an exemption under subsection 25(1) of the Act on Humanitarian
and Compassionate grounds.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The
Applicant is a citizen of Cameroon and of no other
country. She has a brother and sister living in Cameroon and no
family in Canada. She came to
Canada on 15 September 2003, after she fled from Cameroon where she
fears persecution because she is a lesbian. She claimed protection on 24
September 2003, but the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) of the Immigration
and Refugee Board denied her claim on 4 September 2004.
[3]
As
an unsuccessful refugee claimant, the Applicant is subject to a deportation
order. She applied for an H&C Exemption on 20 January 2005 and filed
additional materials in support of this application on 15 April 2010. On 31
December 2010, she applied for a Pre-removal Risk Assessment (PRRA).
[4]
In
her 2004 claim for protection, the Applicant had claimed that she had suffered
domestic abuse at the hands of her husband. She had also claimed that she faced
persecution because she is HIV+ and is a lesbian. The RPD found that she was
not credible and that she had not established that she had suffered domestic
abuse. It also found that she was not a lesbian and that she had attended Gay
Pride events in Toronto solely to bolster her claim. After her claim
was denied, the Applicant asked this Court for leave and judicial review of
that decision. Leave was denied on 24 January 2005.
[5]
In
her application for an H&C exemption, the Applicant said that she had
become established in Canada. She also said that she had not had an
easy life in Cameroon, where she
had been in an abusive, polygamous marriage into which she had been unable to
bring a child. After her husband began starving her and beating her, the
Applicant said she got help from members of her community. One person who
helped her was a widow with whom the Applicant developed a relationship. When
the Applicant’s husband found out about their relationship, the Applicant says
her partner was beaten to death by a mob and her house was destroyed. The
Applicant was told that she would be next because she could not be allowed to
corrupt the girls in their village. These were substantially the same
allegations she had raised in her refugee claim.
[6]
The
Applicant also said in her submissions that she was positive for both HIV and
Hepatitis C and was under continuing medical care. She said that she would not
be able to access medical treatment for her condition in Cameroon, so it would
be a hardship for her to return. She drew attention to the fact that women in Cameroon suffer
discrimination, including sexual violence. She said that the same people who
sought to harm her before she fled in 2003 continued to hold animosity toward
her and would harm her if she returned.
[7]
In
support of her H&C application, the Applicant submitted an affidavit
(Ambassa Affidavit) from her brother (Ambassa), who still lives in Cameroon. She also
submitted a letter (Muki Letter) from her Cameroonian lawyer, Mr. T.F. Muki.
(Muki). Both of these documents spoke to the events that had happened to the
Applicant in Cameroon. She also
submitted two convocations from the General Delegation for National Security in
Cameroon. These
convocations were addressed to her and her brother and requested that they
report to Public Security in Limbe, Cameroon. The Muki
Letter said that her husband had lodged a complaint against the Applicant
because she had deserted their matrimonial home.
[8]
The
Officer considered the Applicant’s submissions and came to his decision. On 19
April 2011, he denied the Applicant’s request for an H&C exemption. He
notified her of his decision by letter, dated 19 April 2011.
DECISION
UNDER REVIEW
[9]
The
Officer began his analysis by reviewing the Applicant’s immigration history. He
noted that she had unsuccessfully claimed refugee status, had applied for leave
and judicial review, and had applied for an H&C exemption on 20 January
2005. The Officer also noted that the Applicant had made updated submissions in
April 2010 and had applied for a PRRA in December 2010
[10]
The
Officer reviewed the grounds the Applicant had raised to support her request
for an exemption. He noted that she said she had been in a polygamous marriage
and was mistreated by her husband because she could not have a child. He also
noted that she had been involved in a relationship with another woman and that
the Applicant was afraid she would be persecuted because of this relationship.
The Applicant had also said in her submissions that homosexuality is against
the law in Cameroon and she would face discrimination there because she has HIV
and Hepatitis C and that she would not be able to access medical treatment for
these conditions in Cameroon. The Officer reviewed the Applicant’s
employment in Canada and her
volunteer work and involvement in her community.
Determination
[11]
The
Officer found that the Applicant had not demonstrated sufficient humanitarian
and compassionate grounds to merit an exemption from the requirement to apply
for a visa from outside of Canada. The Applicant had not shown that she
would face unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship if her
application for an exemption were rejected.
Analysis
of Risk
[12]
The
Officer said that the risks the Applicant alleged she faced were considered by
the RPD when it determined her refugee claim in 2004. He examined the Ambassa
Affidavit, pointing out that it said the Applicant had been give away as a
child bride, mistreated by her husband, and that her partner had been beaten to
death by a mob. That affidavit also said that Ambassa had seen strange people
around his house who, when confronted, confirmed that the Applicant’s husband
was looking for her. The Officer also noted that a letter from Muki to Ambassa
said the Ambassa Affidavit had been back-dated to 6 December 2010. The Officer
concluded that the Ambassa Affidavit had been prepared sometime after 6
December 2010, at least seven years after the events it attested to took place.
He also said that Ambassa was not a witness to the events he attested to in his
affidavit. For these reasons, the Officer attached little probative value to
the Ambassa Affidavit.
[13]
In
the Muki Letter, the Applicant’s Cameroonian lawyer said that he was aware of
the problems she had and that she looked battered, beaten, and scared, when he
met with her. The Officer noted that the Muki Letter, like the Ambassa
Affidavit, was prepared seven years after the events it spoke to. Further, the
letter was not based on objective evidence, because the Applicant and Ambassa
were Muki’s clients. The Officer said that the RPD found that the facts in the
letter were not credible, and the Applicant had not provided additional evidence
to corroborate her allegations.
[14]
As
noted above, the Applicant had provided convocations issued to her and Ambassa
by the General Delegation for National Security in Cameroon as evidence
she was wanted by the authorities. The convocations did not say why the
Applicant and Ambassa were required to report and were dated from 2009, six
years after she left Cameroon. The Officer said that
the Applicant had not explained why her lawyer could not get more recent documentation
showing she was still wanted. The convocations did not lead the Officer to
conclude the Applicant was wanted by the Cameroonian authorities.
[15]
The
Applicant also submitted an article from a Cameroonian newspaper, The
Weekender, about what had happened to her. The Officer said that this article
was unreliable because it was written by an author who could not be traced and
the article was based on the Applicant’s own statements. The article was also written
more than seven years after the Applicant left Cameroon.
[16]
The
Officer also reviewed a number of documents the Applicant submitted on the
situation of women, HIV+ people, and homosexuals in Cameroon. He noted
that the US Department of State’s 2009 Human Rights Report for Cameroon said that
homosexuality was illegal there and that homosexual people generally keep a low
profile. That report also said there was discrimination against people with HIV
in Cameroon, but there
were no reports of discrimination with respect to employment, housing, or
health care based on sexual orientation. The Officer also referred to a report
from Amnesty International which noted that the Cameroon government
had committed itself to improving the status of women. He found that, though
human rights were not always respected in Cameroon, homosexual
relationships were prohibited, and people with HIV may be discriminated against,
the evidence did not suggest that the Applicant would face unusual and
undeserved or disproportionate hardship if she had to return to Cameroon to apply for
permanent residence.
[17]
The
Applicant had also submitted medical evidence in support of her application,
which the Officer reviewed. He noted that a medical certificate she filed
indicated that she needed ongoing treatment but the certificate did not say
what treatment she required. Though the Applicant had asserted that she would
not receive medical treatment in Cameroon, her submissions did
not indicate what treatment she would be unable to receive. The Officer
referred to the 2008 World Health Organization Epidemiological Fact Sheet on
HIV and AIDS, which said that anti-retroviral treatments are available in Cameroon. He found
that the Applicant had not shown what kind of treatment she was receiving in Canada and had not
demonstrated that her health justified an exemption from the requirement to apply
for a visa from abroad.
[18]
The
Officer found that the risks the Applicant faced in Cameroon would not result
in unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship from having to apply for
a visa from outside Canada.
Ties to Canada
[19]
In
addition to the risks the Applicant faced in Cameroon, the Officer
also examined how she had established herself in Canada. He found, based
on her T4 – Employment Income Statements, that she had successfully integrated
herself into the Canadian labour market. He also found that she had donated to
St. Mary’s Parish and had volunteered for that parish and the Archbishop of
Toronto. She had also been involved with the Cameroonian Alliance. The Officer
found that, though her economic self-sufficiency, community involvement, and
development of a social network were positive factors, the Applicant had not
demonstrated how they would cause unusual and undeserved or disproportionate
hardship if she were returned to Cameroon. He also found that the
skills she had obtained from working in Canada would be useful to her in Cameroon and ease her
transition back into that country.
[20]
The
Officer also found that the Applicant had limited ties to Canada because she
did not have family here and had lived for more than 34 years in Cameroon, where she had
family. He was not satisfied that the Applicant’s establishment in Canada would
cause her to suffer unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship if she
were required to apply for a visa from outside Canada. The Officer
therefore denied the Applicant’s request for an H&C exemption.
STATUTORY
PROVISIONS
[21]
The
following provisions of the Act are applicable in this proceeding:
11. (1) A foreign national must, before
entering Canada, apply to an officer for a visa or for any other document
required by the regulations.
The visa or document may be issued if, following an
examination, the officer is satisfied that the foreign national is not
inadmissible and meets the requirements of this Act.
…
25. (1) The Minister must, on request of a
foreign national in Canada who is inadmissible
or who does not meet the requirements of this Act, and
may, on request of a foreign national outside Canada, examine the circumstances
concerning the foreign national and may grant the foreign
national permanent resident status or an exemption from any applicable
criteria or
obligations of this Act if the Minister is of the
opinion that it is justified by humanitarian and compassionate considerations
relating to the
foreign national, taking into account the best interests
of a child directly affected.
[…]
(1.3) In examining the request of a foreign national in
Canada, the Minister may not consider the factors that are taken into account
in the determination of whether a person is a Convention refugee under
section 96 or a person in need of protection under subsection 97(1) but must
consider elements related to the hardships that affect the foreign national.
[…]
113. Consideration of an application for
protection
shall be as follows:
(a) an applicant whose claim to refugee protection
has been rejected may present only new evidence that arose after the
rejection or was not reasonably available, or that the applicant
could not reasonably
have been expected in the circumstances to have presented, at the time of the
rejection;
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11. (1)
L’étranger doit, préalablement à son entrée au Canada, demander à l’agent les
visa et autres documents requis par règlement. L’agent peut les délivrer sur
preuve, à la suite
d’un contrôle, que
l’étranger n’est pas interdit de territoire et se conforme à la présente loi.
…
25. (1) Le
ministre doit, sur demande d’un étranger se trouvant au Canada qui est
interdit de territoire ou qui ne se conforme pas à la présente
loi, et peut, sur
demande d’un étranger se trouvant hors du Canada, étudier le cas de cet
étranger; il peut
lui octroyer le statut de résident permanent ou lever tout ou partie des
critères
et obligations
applicables, s’il estime que des considérations d’ordre humanitaire relatives
à l’étranger le
justifient, compte tenu de l’intérêt supérieur de l’enfant directement
touché.
[…]
(1.3) Le ministre, dans l’étude de la demande d’un
étranger se trouvant au Canada, ne tient compte d’aucun des facteurs servant
à établir la qualité de réfugié — au sens de la Convention — aux termes de
l’article 96 ou de personne à protéger au titre du paragraphe 97(1); il tient
compte, toutefois, des difficultés auxquelles l’étranger fait face.
[…]
113. Il est
disposé de la demande comme il suit :
a) le
demandeur d’asile débouté ne peut présenter
que des éléments de preuve survenus depuis le rejet ou
qui n’étaient alors pas normalement accessibles ou, s’ils l’étaient, qu’il
n’était pas raisonnable, dans les circonstances, de s’attendre à ce qu’il les
ait présentés au moment du rejet;
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ISSUES
[22]
The
Applicant raises the following issues in this application for judicial review:
a.
Whether
the Officer applied the correct test for hardship;
b.
Whether
the Officer correctly applied subsection 113(a) of the Act;
c.
Whether
the Officer’s conclusion she would not experience unusual and undeserved or
disproportionate hardship was reasonable.
STANDARD OF
REVIEW
[23]
The
Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008
SCC 9, held that a standard of review analysis need not be conducted in every
instance. Instead, where the standard of review applicable to a particular
question before the court is well-settled by past jurisprudence, the reviewing
court may adopt that standard of review. Only where this search proves
fruitless must the reviewing court undertake a consideration of the four
factors comprising the standard of review analysis.
[24]
In Sahota
v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 739, Justice Michael Phelan held at
paragraph 7 that the application of the proper legal test is reviewable on the
standard of correctness. See also Garcia v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2010 FC 677 at paragraph 7 and Markis v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 428 at paragraph 19. The standard of
review with respect to the first issue is correctness. As the Supreme Court of
Canada held in Dunsmuir (above, at paragraph 50).
When applying the correctness standard, a
reviewing court will not show deference to the decision maker’s reasoning
process; it will rather undertake its own analysis of the question. The
analysis will bring the court to decide whether it agrees with the
determination of the decision maker; if not, the court will substitute its own
view and provide the correct answer. From the outset, the court must ask whether
the tribunal’s decision was correct.
[25]
Subsection
113(a) of the Act concerns the circumstances under which evidence may be
adduced in a PRRA application. In Lai v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2005 FCA 125, the Federal Court of Appeal
held at paragraph 43 that, so long as the decision-maker applies the correct
test, the standard of review with respect to the admissibility of evidence is
reasonableness. As noted above, the standard of review on the application of
the correct test is correctness. With respect to the second issue, the question
of whether the Officer should or should not have applied subsection 113(a) will
be reviewed according to the correctness standard. With respect to the
balancing of the factors in subsection 113(a), the standard of review will be
reasonableness (see Raza v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2007 FCA 385 at paragraphs 18 and 19).
[26]
In Baker
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] SCJ No
39, the Supreme Court of Canada held that when reviewing an H&C decision, “considerable
deference should be accorded to immigration Officers exercising the powers
conferred by the legislation, given the fact-specific nature of the inquiry, its role
within the statutory scheme as an exception, the fact that the decision-maker
is the Minister, and the considerable discretion evidenced by the statutory
language” (paragraph 62). Justice Phelan followed this approach in Thandal v
Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 489, at paragraph 7. The standard of
review on the third issue is reasonableness.
[27]
When
reviewing a decision on the standard of reasonableness, the analysis will be
concerned with “the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process [and also with] whether the
decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are
defensible in respect of the facts and law.” See Dunsmuir, above, at
paragraph 47, and Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at
paragraph 59. Put another way, the Court should intervene only if the Decision
was unreasonable in the sense that it falls outside the “range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.”
ARGUMENTS
Preliminary
Issue – The Applicant’s Affidavit
[28]
The
Respondent says that paragraphs 8 and 11 to 16 of the Applicant’s affidavit in
support of judicial review contain argument and conclusions that are not within
her knowledge. In paragraph 8, the Applicant says she does not put excessive
demand on provincial health resources because she is privately insured.
Paragraphs 11 to 16 contain arguments about the Officer’s treatment of the
evidence before him, The Respondent points to Rule 12(1) of the Federal
Courts Immigration and Refugee Protection Rules SOR/2002-232 which holds
that affidavits must be confined to evidence within the knowledge of the
deponent. He asks the Court to give little weight to these paragraphs.
[29]
The
Applicant has not addressed this issue in her written submissions.
The
Applicant
The Officer
Applied the Wrong Test for Hardship
[30]
The
Applicant says that hardship which will merit an exemption under subsection
25(1) of the Act is hardship which is not anticipated by the Act or the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Regulations SOR/2002-227. This hardship must also be
beyond applicants’ control. Though the particular hardships faced by applicants
may not be unusual and undeserved, they may be disproportionate and support an
exemption. In the Applicant’s case, the Officer failed to assess whether the
circumstances she faces in Cameroon amount to hardship,
though they may not have amounted to a risk of persecution or of cruel and
unusual treatment or punishment.
The Officer Incorrectly Applied Subsection
113(a) of the Act
[31]
When
the Officer rejected as evidence the convocations issued to the Applicant and
Ambassa by the General Delegation for National Security and the Muki Letter, he
incorrectly applied subsection 113(a) of the Act. The Officer did not consider
that the Muki Letter was written on Muki’s letterhead and was written by Muki
as a member of the Cameroon Bar. These factors should have been weighed in
support of admitting the Muki Letter as evidence. The Applicant notes that in Raza,
above, the Federal Court of Appeal said that, under subsection 113(a) of the
Act, a PRRA officer must consider five factors in evaluating evidence submitted
in a PRRA application: credibility, relevance, newness, materiality, and
express statutory conditions. The Applicant says that the Ambassa Affidavit, the
Muki Letter, and the convocations fall within the criteria under subsection
113(a), so the Officer erred when he gave these documents no weight.
[32]
Although
the Officer examined the Ambassa Affidavit and the Muki Letter, he unreasonably
rejected them because they were prepared by Ambassa and Muki, who had ties to
the Applicant. The Officer’s conclusion that these documents were not objective
and independent because of the Applicant’s ties to their authors was
speculative. She points to Isse v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1998] FCJ No 1020 where Justice William Mackay quoted from Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration) v Satiacum, [1989] FCJ No
505 (FCA) (WestLaw). In Satiacum, the Federal Court of Appeal
held at paragraphs 33 and 34 that
The common law has long recognized the
difference between reasonable inference and pure conjecture. Lord Macmillan put
the distinction this way in Jones v. Great Western Railway Co. (1930),
47 T.L.R. 39 at 45, 144 L.T. 194 at 202 (H.L.):
The dividing line between conjecture and
inference is often a very difficult one to draw. A conjecture may be plausible
but it is of no legal value, for its essence is that it is a mere guess. An
inference in the legal sense, on the other hand, is a deduction from the
evidence, and if it is a reasonable deduction it may have the validity of legal
proof. The attribution of an occurrence to a cause is, I take it, always a matter of
inference.
In R. v. Fuller (1971), 1 N.R. 112 at 114, Hall J.A.
held for the Manitoba Court of Appeal that “[t]he tribunal of fact cannot resort to speculative
and conjectural conclusions.” Subsequently a unanimous Supreme Court of Canada
expressed itself as in complete agreement with his reasons: [1975] 2 S.C.R. 121
at 123, 1 N.R. 110 at 112.
The Officer’s
Conclusion on Hardship Was Unreasonable
[33]
The
Applicant also says that the Officer failed to properly assess the hardship she
would face in Cameroon as an HIV+
woman. She says that, at paragraphs 3 – 9 of Mings-Edwards v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 90, Justice Anne
Mactavish set out the scope of the duty to evaluate the hardship faced by HIV+
women.
[34]
When
he considered her Canadian employment experience and said that it would assist
her in Cameroon, the Officer failed to consider the employment discrimination
against HIV+ people that is pervasive in that country. The Applicant says that
the Officer did not consider the discrimination and stigma HIV+ people face in Cameroon and how it
would create hardship for her if she were returned.
[35]
In
the Decision, the Officer acknowledged that some of the evidence before him
demonstrated that human rights are not always respected in Cameroon and that
homosexuality is criminalized there. The Officer concluded, however, that this
evidence did not show the Applicant would face hardship. The Applicant says
that the Officer did not consider the documentary evidence which shows that Cameroon has a poor
human rights record and that she would face judicial and extra-judicial
sanctions because she is a lesbian. The documents the Officer considered went
only to the general situation in Cameroon and did not relate to
the Applicant’s particular situation. This renders the Decision unreasonable.
[36]
The
Applicant also challenges the reasonableness of the Officer’s analysis of her
ties to Canada. She says
that the seven years she has lived in Canada are the only meaningful
life she has had. The Officer failed to consider fundamental differences
between the quality of life she will experience in Cameroon as compared
to the life she leads in Canada. She says that the Officer imposed too
high burden on her and did not satisfactorily analyse her claim. He
unreasonably preferred evidence that showed Cameroon does not
persecute homosexuals even though its laws criminalize homosexuality. The
Officer’s conclusion that the Applicant will be able to reintegrate, in spite
of discrimination in Cameroon against HIV+ people,
was unreasonable.
The
Respondent
[37]
The
Respondent says that the Applicant did not produce evidence which could support
a positive determination in her H&C application. She was found not credible
at the hearing into her refugee claim in 2004 and did not adduce evidence which
required a reassessment of the RPD’s findings. She also did not provide
evidence to justify an exemption on the basis of her medical condition. Her
application for judicial review should be dismissed.
The Purpose of an H&C Exemption
[38]
The
H&C discretion vested in the Minister is not designed as a back door into
Canada when all other legal avenues have been exhausted (see Mayburov v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2000] FCJ No 953 at paragraph
39). H&C applications are not designed to eliminate all hardship, but only
that hardship which is unusual and undeserved or disproportionate. Applicants
for this kind of exemption must meet a high threshold for relief under
subsection 25(1) of the Act. For these propositions, the Respondent relies on Ahmad
v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 646; Irimie v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), [2000] FCJ No 1906 (FCTD), and Owusu
v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2004 FCA 38.
Decision
Entitled To Deference
[39]
An
H&C determination involves a fact-specific weighing of the evidence before
the Officer. The Respondent points to Legault v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2002 FCA 125 at paragraph 11, where the Federal
Court of Appeal said that
In Suresh, the Supreme Court clearly indicates that Baker did not
depart from the traditional view that the weighing of relevant factors is the
responsibility of the Minister or his delegate. It is certain, with Baker, that
the interests of the children are one factor that an immigration officer must
examine with a great deal of attention. It is equally certain, with Suresh,
that it is up to the immigration officer to determine the appropriate weight to
be accorded to this factor in the circumstances of the case. It is not the role
of the courts to reexamine the weight given to the different factors by the
officers.
[40]
In
this case, the Officer weighed the evidence which was before him and came to a
conclusion which was not perverse or capricious. He did not ignore material facts.
The onus to establish grounds for an H&C exemption lay with the Applicant,
but she did not meet it. The Officer considered all the evidence. The Decision
should stand.
The Decision Was Reasonable
[41]
Though
the Applicant may disagree with the Officer’s conclusions, the Respondent says
that she has not demonstrated any sufficient ground to justify the Court’s
intervention. He relies on Mooker v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 518 and says that the Officer
properly considered this as an H&C application without applying the test
applicable on a PRRA.
[42]
The
Respondent also says that Pinter v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2005 FC 296 and Ramirez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration) 2006 FC 1404 show that it is a reviewable error not to
deal with risk factors when assessing an H&C application. However, this
does not mean that, where a risk is alleged, it follows necessarily that there
will be a finding that of unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship. In
this case, the Officer applied the appropriate threshold for assessing risk in
an H&C application: hardship. He examined both unusual and undeserved
hardship and disproportionate hardship. Though the Applicant disagrees with the
Officer’s conclusions, this is not enough to overturn the Decision.
[43]
In
the Decision, the Officer considered when the Ambassa Affidavit and Muki Letter
were written. He also looked at whether these documents came from objective
sources. These were appropriate considerations for the Officer to look at and
he weighed them appropriately. The Court should not intervene. The Officer was
not bound to assign the Muki Letter any weight just because it was written by a
member of the Cameroon Bar. The authorship of this letter entered the Officer’s
analysis and the weight he assigned was reasonable. Further, both the Muki
Letter and the Ambassa Affidavit were based on information from the Applicant,
which the RPD found was not credible. The Officer reasonably found that the new
evidence the Applicant presented in support of her H&C Application was
insufficient to reassess the RPD’s conclusions from her claim for protection. The
Officer also reasonably assigned appropriate weight to the convocations and the
Court should not re-weigh this evidence.
[44]
The
Respondent further says that the Officer reasonably assessed the Applicant’s
health condition. HIV+ status alone is not enough to grant an H&C
exemption. The Officer’s conclusion that her status would not result in unusual
and undeserved or disproportionate hardship was open to him on the evidence and
should not be interfered with. The Applicant has failed to meet the onus on her
to prove the hardship her condition would cause. The Decision should stand. Likewise,
the Officer’s conclusion on the Applicant’s ties to Canada was also
open to him on the evidence and was reasonable.
ANALYSIS
[45]
The
Applicant makes a series of assertions in this judicial review application,
some of which are simply not borne out by a reading of the full Decision. In my
view, for example, there is nothing to support the Applicant’s assertion that
the Officer applied the wrong test for hardship or incorrectly applied
subsection 113(a) of the Act.
[46]
The
purpose of the section 25 H&C discretion is to allow flexibility to approve
deserving cases not anticipated in the legislation. It cannot be “a back door
when the front door has, after all legal remedies have been exhausted, been
denied in accordance with Canadian law.” See Mayburov, above, at
paragraph 39; Rizvi v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2009 FC 463, at paragraph 17, and Gardner
v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 895, at paragraph 41. Further, it
has been consistently asserted in this Court that the H&C process is not
designed to eliminate any kind of hardship, but to provide the applicant
relief from “unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship.” This is a
high threshold for applicants to meet. See Ahmad, above, at paragraph
49; and Irimie, above, at paragraph 26, and Li v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2006 FC 1292, at paragraph 20.
[47]
This
Court should not intervene in this Decision if it falls within the range of
possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and
law. See Dunsmuir, above, at paragraph 47, 53, 55, and 62; Khosa,
above, at paragraph 89; Baker, above, at paragraph 62, and Ahmad,
above, at paragraphs 11-13. In my view, the Officer’s Decision in this case was
reasonable and was based upon a thorough weighing of the factual evidence
before him. It is deserving of a high degree of deference. The Officer’s
findings did not ignore material evidence, nor did the Officer make perverse or
capricious findings. See Ahmad, above.
[48]
As
the Respondent points out, an H&C decision is not a simple application of
legal principles but rather a fact-specific weighing of many factors. As long
as the Officer considers the relevant, appropriate factors from the H&C
perspective, the Court should not interfere with the weight the Officer gives to
those different factors, even if the Court would have weighed the factors
differently. As the Federal Court of Appeal held in Legault, above, at
paragraph 11
In Suresh, the Supreme Court clearly indicates that Baker did not
depart from the traditional view that the weighing of relevant factors is the
responsibility of the Minister or his delegate. It is certain, with Baker, that
the interests of the children are one factor that an immigration officer must
examine with a great deal of attention. It is equally certain, with Suresh,
that it is up to the immigration officer to determine the appropriate weight to
be accorded to this factor in the circumstances of the case. It is not the role
of the courts to reexamine the weight given to the different factors by the
officers.
[49]
It
is well-established that the onus on an application for H&C relief lies
with the Applicant. See Owusu v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2003 FCT 94, at paragraphs 11 and12; Li,
above, at paragraph 21; and Ariyaratnam v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2010 FC 608, at paragraph 37. In my view,
the Applicant was unable to meet the onus in this case.
[50]
The
Applicant says that the Officer erred in rejecting the new evidence from Ambassa
and Muki, and that the Officer erred in his interpretation of subsection 113(a)
of the Act when he refused to consider the police convocations obtained by the
Applicant’s lawyer confirming that she is wanted by the authorities in
Cameroon.
[51]
My
reading of the Decision reveals that the Officer fully considered this new
evidence and provided full reasons for rejecting it. The Officer was not
obliged to accept evidence put forward by the Applicant and had a duty to
assess its credibility and weight (see Raza, above). That is precisely
what occurred in this case. The Applicant simply disagrees with the outcome and
wants the Court to re-weigh the same evidence in her favour. That is not the
role of the Court (see Suresh v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2002 SCC 1, at paragraph 34, and Legault,
above, at paragraph 11).
[52]
The
more substantial point raised by the Applicant is that the Officer failed to
appreciate and consider the real hardship she would suffer in Cameroon as a
result of being an HIV+ woman. In this regard, the Applicant cites and relies
heavily on the words of Justice Mactavish in Mings-Edwards, above, at
paragraphs 3 to 9:
I
am of the view that this decision was unreasonable as the Officer failed to
properly evaluate the hardship that Ms. Mings-Edwards would face in Jamaica as
an HIV+ woman. Consequently, the application for judicial review will be
granted.
Analysis
Although
Ms. Mings-Edwards’s H&C submissions were relatively brief, she clearly
identified the stigma and discrimination that she would face in Jamaica as a result of her HIV+ status as a hardship factor. She
also stated that she would have no employment prospects or family support in Jamaica.
Ms.
Mings-Edwards provided the Officer with a substantial amount of country
condition information that addressed the treatment of HIV+ individuals in Jamaica. Amongst other things, this evidence indicated that
individuals living with HIV/AIDS in Jamaica face significant social stigma and
discrimination, and that there are no laws in place to protect HIV+ individuals
from discrimination. Amnesty International describes this as a “pressing unmet
obligation”.
The
documentary evidence also demonstrated that HIV+ individuals in Jamaica are often ostracized by their families. They may lose their
homes and their jobs, and can be treated like “a throwaway person”.
Because
AIDS is frequently dismissed as a disease of gay men and prostitutes, women
infected with HIV are particularly stigmatized in Jamaican society, as they are
regarded either as promiscuous or as sex trade workers. This can expose them to
violence, and can also negatively affect their ability to access health care
and other services.
The
Officer recognized that no laws protected those infected with HIV from
discrimination, and that human rights NGOs reported severe stigma and
discrimination against HIV+ individuals. The Officer nevertheless went on to
find that state protection, while not perfect, existed in Jamaica, and that it
would not be a hardship for Ms. Mings-Edwards to access that protection, if
required.
The
Officer also noted that Ms. Mings-Edwards’s doctor had indicated that she led a
healthy, active and self-supporting life with medication and regular medical
care, and that Ms. Mings-Edwards had not shown that she would not be able to
access appropriate health care in Jamaica.
[53]
The
Applicant argues further that, even if the Officer does acknowledge the
difficulties she will face in Cameroon, he minimalizes and
turns a blind eye to them, and fails to evaluate the real hardship that awaits
her, which hardship is supported by the Applicant’s evidence, as well as the
Officer’s own research.
[54]
The
Respondent says that, given the scant evidence provided about the Applicant’s
medical condition and her particular circumstances, the Officer’s treatment of
the issue was reasonable.
[55]
In
his letter of 4 May 2009, Applicant’s counsel asserted as follows:
She is currently under treatment at
Halton Health Services, Oakville, with Dr. Neil V. Ran, and is
taking antiretroviral therapy. She has been wholly complaint (sic) with
therapy. Ms. Ambassa has been paying for her medication through private
insurance plan and on her own.
Since fleeing the Cameroon, Ms. Ambassa has made a great
effort to assimilate into her new Canadian surroundings. She is bright, hard working
and ambitious woman with great potential. With appropriate treatment, her HIV
disease has been rendered a chronic but not life-threatening condition.
I am very concerned for her safety and
ongoing health if she is forced to return to her native Cameroon. Firstly, she faces almost
certain persecution, for both her social status and personal beliefs. Secondly,
it would be impossible for her to access appropriate and adequate HIV
treatment, which would almost certainly result in deterioration of her health,
and eventual, premature death.
[56]
It
is not clear here what counsel means by “she faces almost certain persecution,
for both her social status and personal beliefs.” If this is intended to refer
to her former marriage and her homosexual relationship, the Officer reasonably explains
why these have not been established following the RPD Decision.
[57]
The
submissions appear to be most concerned with the Applicant’s on-going health
issues and the availability of treatment for HIV in Cameroon. These
issues are addressed directly by the Officer in the Decision:
Although the documents filed by the applicant
and the objective evidence consulted indicate that human rights are not always
respected, that the penal code criminalizes sexual relations between
individuals of the same sex, and that people with HIV can be discriminated
against in Cameroon, these articles describe the overall general conditions in
that country and do not lead me to conclude that the applicant would face
unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship if she were to return to
Cameroon.
To corroborate that she would not have
access to adequate medical treatment if she returned to Cameroon, the applicant filed a
medical certificate signed by Dr. Ibrahim, which is dated May 16, 2007. The
certificate confirms that owing to her health problems, she needs ongoing
treatment. However, the certificate does not specify the type of treatment it
required. In a letter dated May 4, 2009, the applicant’s representative states
that it would be impossible for her to receive adequate medical treatment in Cameroon, but does not give any
further explanations in this matter. In April 2010, the applicant’s
representative sent new information concerning this application, such as her T4
for 2009 and a bank statement. However, he did not give any further details on
the applicant’s health or on the treatment she must receive.
With respect to the health care situation
in Cameroon, information on the website
of the Return and Reintegration in Countries of Origin (IRRICO) Web site of the
International Organization for Migration states the following:
Programmes combating the malaria and
AIDS/HIV pandemics have improved access to medicines for most of the
population. The strategy is based on the introduction of generic medicines in
order to stimulate competition in the pharmaceutical market….
Between 2009 and 2010, the government
intends to set up more health care centers to provide basic healthcare services
to the population at a closer ranger [sic]. Malaria is the disease that
kills most people in Cameroon. However, the prevalence of
AIDS raises new concerns. 12% of people aged 15-49 have HIV.
To find further information on the
treatment offered in Cameroon, I consulted the Epidemiological Fact Sheet on
HIV and AIDS, core data on epidemiology and response, Cameroon, published in 2008 by the World Health
Organization. This publication states that in 2007, antiretroviral therapy for
people with HIV was available at 109 points of service in Cameroon. This same report points out
that in 2007, 46,000 to 48,000 people received antiretroviral treatment in that
country.
In its Country of Origin Information Report
CAMEROON, published in 2008, the UK Border
& Immigration Agency states that:
A WHO representative reported that all the
national hospitals and some provincial ones provided specialised care in most
medical fields, including cancer, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, cardiovascular
disease, eye, ear, nose and throat diseases. Essential medicine is generally
available in most public health facilities and non-profit organizations run by
the church.
Though I am sensitive to the applicant’s
health, I note that she has not submitted any documents that describe the
treatment she is receiving here in Canada
and has not demonstrated why she would be unable to continue treatment in Cameroon. She has not specified what
type of medication she has to take or how often she must see a doctor. I
believe that she has not demonstrated that her health justifies the application
of an exceptional measure in requiring her to file an application for permanent
residence from outside Canada.
[58]
The
main problem in the present case was that the Applicant did not submit
sufficient medical and other personal information to show what she would be
facing in Cameroon as regards
her medical needs. Given the evidence and the submissions that were before the
Officer, I cannot say his finding was unreasonable or that the Officer turned a
blind eye to the realities of the Applicant’s position. There just was not
sufficient evidence for the Officer to conclude that she faced unusual and
undeserved or disproportionate hardship. I agree that, perhaps, the Officer
could have come to a positive conclusion, but I cannot say that the negative
conclusion was unreasonable. The evidence and the submissions made by the
Officer in this case do not appear to me to establish what Justice Mactavish
felt the applicant in Mings-Edwards, above, had established. The
reasonableness of the present Decision can only be gauged against the actual evidence
that was before the Officer and counsel’s submissions regarding the basis of
the Applicant’s request for an H&C exemption. It was open to the Officer to
conclude, based on information available to him, that the Applicant had not
provided sufficient evidence either of her condition, the treatment required,
or the availability or lack of the required treatment in Cameroon to allow for
a positive result. She failed to meet her onus in this case.
[59]
Justice
Mactavish said at paragraph 14 of Mings-Edwards that
The more fundamental problem with the decision is that nowhere in
the analysis does the Officer ever really come to grips with, or evaluate the
hardship that Ms. Mings-Edwards would face in returning to a society where she
would be exposed to pervasive discrimination and societal stigma as a result of
her status as an HIV+ woman.
[60]
The
issue in Mings-Edwards was that the Officer did not appreciate the
situation that the applicant faced on return to Jamaica. He had
limited himself to two prongs of analysis: state protection and access to
medical care. What was important to the H&C application, and the officer in
that case failed to evaluate, were the more social aspects of the hardship the
applicant would face related to her HIV+ status. In particular, he did not
analyse the applicant’s separation from her family and reduced employment
prospects, both of which were connected to her HIV+ status. Here, I do not
think the Officer committed the same error; he looked at the Applicant’s
employment prospects, the availability of medical care, her family ties and
homosexuality, and the legal regime in Cameroon. In the
context of an unclear factual matrix, the Officer drew a reasonable conclusion
from the evidence before him.
[61]
It
seems to me that important to Justice Mactavish’s reasoning in Mings-Edwards
was the clear link between the applicant’s HIV+ status and specific,
identifiable hardships she would face in Jamaica. Ms. Mings-Edwards had adduced
evidence that:
-
She
was ostracized by her family because of her HIV status and thrown out of her
aunt’s home for the same reason;
-
HIV/Aids
was seen as a disease of gay men and prostitutes;
-
HIV+
women were seen as promiscuous or sex-workers, so they were exposed to
violence;
-
She
had been employed in Jamaica before contracting HIV,
but became effectively unemployable after she was infected.
Ms.
Mings-Edwards was able to paint a very clear picture of the hardship she would
suffer in Jamaica, which the H&C
officer did not fully examine.
[62]
In
this case, the situation before the Officer was much less clear. Though the
Applicant had adduced evidence of employment discrimination against HIV+ people
in Cameroon, she could
not provide the same clear link as Mings-Edwards could. The Applicant did not
show that anyone in Cameroon knows that she is HIV+, or that she will have
to disclose her status to a potential employer. She also could not show what
treatment she was under in Canada that would be unavailable to her in Cameroon.
[63]
Also,
in Mings-Edwards, it was clear that the applicant’s family had
ostracized her because of her status. In this case, there was no link between
the Applicant’s HIV+ status and the trouble she faced from her family; she had
faced difficulties because of her homosexual relationship, not her HIV status.
At the same time, the Applicant’s brother filed an affidavit, which could be
taken as evidence that he supports her and will be able to support her in Cameroon. Though he
may not have been aware of her HIV+ status, the brother’s affidavit indicates
that he was aware of the Applicant’s homosexual relationship, but was prepared
to help her anyway. The Applicant did not show that he would spurn her because
she was HIV+. Against the brother’s support, the Officer balanced the fact that
the Applicant has no family in Canada, and concluded that she would have more
support in Cameroon from her family than she does in Canada.
[64]
All
in all, I think the Officer in this case appreciated the situation that the
Applicant faced in Cameroon. He looked at all the evidence before him and,
though he concluded that there might be some hardship, this did not rise to the
level of unusual and undeserved or disproportionate hardship required for
H&C relief.
[65]
I
also agree with the Respondent that it was open to the Officer, in his
assessment of the Applicant’s establishment in Canada, to consider
the fact that she has no family here; ties to Canada – including
family – can indicate the degree of establishment. The fact that the Applicant
has made a life for herself here and argues that she will suffer unusual,
undeserved or disproportionate hardship if she has to leave Canada and return
to Cameroon was
adequately considered and found to be insufficient to warrant H&C relief.
This is a matter of assessment of evidence and weight; this Court should not
intervene.
[66]
Counsel
agree there is no question for certification in this case and the Court
concurs.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that
1.
The
application is dismissed.
2.
There
is no question for certification.
“James
Russell”