Docket: IMM-6096-11
Citation: 2012 FC 429
Ottawa, Ontario, April 13,
2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mandamin
BETWEEN:
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VASEEKARAN MANICKAVASAGAR
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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
[1]
Mr.
Vaseekaran Manickavasagar applies for judicial review of a pre-removal risk
assessment officer’s determination that Mr. Manickavasagar would not be subject
to risk of danger of torture or risk to life or risk of cruel and unusual
treatment if he is returned to Sri Lanka.
[2]
Mr.
Manickavasagar is a Tamil from Sri Lanka who has previously been
deported from Canada due to
serious criminality. He returned to Canada without official
permission and his presence was discovered when he was arrested by police
during a bar check. He applied for a pre-removal risk assessment (PRRA). The
PRRA Officer determined Mr. Manickavasagar would not be subject to risk if he
returned to Sri
Lanka.
[3]
He
now applies for judicial review contending that the PRRA Officer breached
procedural fairness by failing to grant him an interview and by referring to
post application documentation without giving him an opportunity to respond. He
also submits the Officer’s decision is unreasonable given the evidence before
the Officer.
[4]
For
reasons that follow, I am dismissing this application.
Background
[5]
The
Applicant, Vaseekaran Manickavasagar, is a 35 year old Tamil male who first
came to Canada at the age
of 16 after being sponsored by his father who was a successful refugee
claimant. The Applicant’s immediate Sri Lankan family are now Canadian
citizens. The Applicant also has a Canadian spouse and two children.
[6]
The
Applicant lost his permanent resident status and was deported from Canada in 2005 on
the grounds of serious criminality. His deportation order required the
Applicant to obtain written permission before returning to Canada. The
Applicant returned without permission to Canada in September
2010. He came to the attention of immigration officials in June 2011 after he
was arrested by police.
[7]
On
June 24, 2011, the Applicant was again determined to be inadmissible to Canada,
this time under s. 44(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA)
for failing to obtain proper authorization to return to Canada. The
Applicant made a claim for refugee protection but was found to be ineligible to
make a claim for refugee protection because of s. 101(1)(f) of the IRPA
due to the findings of serious criminality.
[8]
On
July 4, 2011, a second Deportation Order was issued against the Applicant. He
was given an opportunity to apply for a PRRA, his third PRRA application
overall. This latest PRRA application was refused on August 20, 2011. The
Applicant then filed this application for judicial review of the negative PRRA
decision.
Decision Under Review
[9]
The
Officer summarized the facts that led to the Applicant’s PRRA application and
then reviewed the standard to be met by the Applicant. The Officer noted that
objective factual material must show a probability of danger to the Applicant
if returned to his country of origin. The standard to be met by the Applicant
alleging a risk to life or cruel and unusual treatment or punishment is the
balance of probabilities.
[10]
The
Officer then went on to review the risk as submitted by the Applicant. The
Officer quoted the following from the Applicant’s submissions:
“Mr. Manickvasgar is not applying for
PRRA just because he is an ethnic Tamil but he request protection in Canada
[sic] because his life has been personally threatened in that country as a
result of his being falsely accused as a member of the VVT gang in Scarborough,
Ontario sometime in the 1980’s…. As a result of those false accusations and the
information given to the Sri Lankan authorities when he was deported he was
targeted by that government as a member of an organization that was an
affiliate of the Tamil Tigers. It is for this reason that he was persecuted and
his life threatened in Sri
Lanka.”
[11]
The
Officer noted that the pre-removal risk assessment is forward looking. The
Officer stated that he must look to the most current, publicly available
evidence regarding country and human rights conditions in order to make a
determination. The Officer reviewed all of the documents submitted by the
Applicant, as well as other publicly available documents.
[12]
In
referring to the Applicant’s PRRA narrative, the Officer noted the Applicant
was deported from Canada because he had a criminal record. The Applicant
alleged that when he arrived in Sri Lanka, he was interviewed for
five hours and asked about being a member of the VVT gang affiliated with the
LTTE. The Applicant states he denied the allegation and was eventually
released.
[13]
The
Officer quoted further from the Applicant’s PRRA narrative setting out the
details of the Applicant’s instances of arrest and detention once he returned
to Sri Lanka, and of how the Applicant sought to leave Sri Lanka and how he
eventually made it back to Canada.
[14]
The
Officer considered four documents provided by the Applicant including three
news articles and the U.S. Department of State 2009 Human Rights Report Sri
Lanka released March 11, 2010. The Officer also considered additional documents
and included a list of the documents consulted at the end of the decision.
[15]
The
Officer used the country documentation to identify a number of indicia or
factors that would increase the risk that an individual could encounter
difficulties with the authorities, including possible detention. The Officer
compared the Applicant’s situation to the list of factors and determined that,
on a balance of probabilities, the objective factual evidence did not lead the
Officer to conclude that the Applicant would face a probability of risk if
returned to Sri
Lanka.
[16]
The
Officer also considered the documentary evidence regarding torture in Sri Lanka. However, as
the Officer found that it was not probable that the Applicant would come to the
attention of the Sri Lankan authorities, the Officer concluded it was not
likely that the Applicant would be subject to a risk of torture.
[17]
The
Officer found country conditions in Sri Lanka were slowly improving
as a result of the end of the civil war in 2009. The Officer noted that Tamils
are not at risk of serious harm from Sri Lankan authorities in Colombo. (Colombo is where the
Applicant was born and is where he would be returned to.) The Officer also
noted that the incidents of abuse and mistreatment alleged by the Applicant at
the hands of the Sri Lankan authorities happened before the end of the
hostilities.
[18]
The
Officer decided the facts did not demonstrate that the Applicant had the
profile of someone who would attract the attention of the authorities in Sri Lanka if he
arrived at the airport unescorted and carrying identification. The Officer held
the documentary country condition evidence showed that most of the factors
present in persons who may face problems upon return to Sri Lanka are not
found in the Applicant.
Relevant Legislation
[19]
Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27:
112.
(1) A person in Canada, other than a person referred to in subsection 115(1),
may, in accordance with the regulations, apply to the Minister for protection
if they are subject to a removal order that is in force or are named in a
certificate described in subsection 77(1).
…
(3)
Refugee protection may not result from an application for protection if the
person
…
(b)
is determined to be inadmissible on grounds of serious criminality with
respect to a conviction in Canada punished by a term of imprisonment of at least
two years or with respect to a conviction outside Canada for an offence that,
if committed in Canada, would constitute an offence under an Act of
Parliament punishable by a maximum term of imprisonment of at least 10 years;
[…]
113.
Consideration of an application for protection shall be as follows:
…
(b)
a hearing may be held if the Minister, on the basis of prescribed factors, is
of the opinion that a hearing is required;
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112.
(1) La personne se trouvant au Canada et qui n’est pas visée au paragraphe 115(1) peut,
conformément aux règlements, demander la protection au ministre si elle est
visée par une mesure de renvoi ayant pris effet ou nommée au certificat visé
au paragraphe 77(1).
…
(3)
L’asile ne peut être conféré au demandeur dans les cas suivants :
…
b)
il est interdit de territoire pour grande criminalité pour déclaration de
culpabilité au Canada punie par un emprisonnement d’au moins deux ans ou pour
toute déclaration de culpabilité à l’extérieur du Canada pour une infraction
qui, commise au Canada, constituerait une infraction à une loi fédérale
punissable d’un emprisonnement maximal d’au moins dix ans;
[…]
113.
Il est disposé de la demande comme il suit :
…
b)
une audience peut être tenue si le ministre l’estime requis compte tenu des
facteurs réglementaires;
|
[20]
Immigration
and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 [Regulations]:
167.
For the purpose of determining whether a hearing is required under
paragraph 113(b) of the Act, the factors are the following:
(a)
whether there is evidence that raises a serious issue of the applicant's
credibility and is related to the factors set out in sections 96 and 97
of the Act;
(b)
whether the evidence is central to the decision with respect to the
application for protection; and
(c)
whether the evidence, if accepted, would justify allowing the application
for protection.
[Emphasis
added]
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167.
Pour l’application de l’alinéa 113b) de la Loi, les facteurs ci-après servent
à décider si la tenue d’une audience est requise :
a)
l’existence d’éléments de preuve relatifs aux éléments mentionnés aux
articles 96 et 97 de la Loi qui soulèvent une question importante en ce qui
concerne la crédibilité du demandeur;
b)
l’importance de ces éléments de preuve pour la prise de la décision relative
à la demande de protection;
c)
la question de savoir si ces éléments de preuve, à supposer qu’ils soient
admis, justifieraient que soit accordée la protection.
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Issues
[21]
The
Applicant raises the following issues:
1. Did
the Officer breach the duty of fairness in failing to afford the Applicant an
opportunity to respond to the Officer’s concerns about his credibility?
2. Did
the Officer breach the required duty of fairness and natural justice by failing
to disclose documentary evidence related to changing circumstances in Sri Lanka?
3. Did
the Officer err by ignoring the Applicant’s evidence of risk?
4. Did
the Officer err in excluding the Applicant from the profile of at-risk persons?
Standard of Review
[22]
The
Supreme Court of Canada held in Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9
that there are only two standards of review: correctness for questions of law
and reasonableness involving questions of mixed fact and law and of fact. Dunsmuir
at paras 50 and 53.The Supreme Court also held that where the standard of
review has been previously determined, a standard of review analysis need not
be repeated. Dunsmuir at para 62
[23]
This
Court has held that risk assessments conducted by PRRA officers should be
reviewed on the standard of reasonableness because of their role as specialized
administrative tribunals, and that significant deference is owed to their
decisions, in particular to their decisions regarding the weight to be given to
the evidence before them. Aragon v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship & Immigration), 2008 FC 1309, 77. The standard for
procedural fairness is correctness. Sketchley v Canada (Attorney
General),
2005 FCA 404.
Analysis
Did
the Officer breach the duty of fairness in failing to afford the Applicant an
opportunity to respond to the Officer’s concerns about his credibility?
[24]
Section
113(b) of the IRPA provides that a hearing is to be held in exceptional
circumstances. The factors for an immigration officer to consider are found in
section 167 of the Regulations are evidence:
1) that
raises a serious issue of the applicant’s credibility;
2) are
central to the decision; and
3) if
accepted, would justify allowing the application.
[25]
The
Applicant submits that the Officer disbelieved the Applicant’s account of past
mistreatment because the Applicant had not provided documentary evidence to
corroborate the mistreatment notwithstanding the Officer did not expressly say
he disbelieved the Applicant. The Applicant argues the Officer made a negative
credibility finding without explicitly stating that the Applicant was not
credible. The Applicant submits that the Officer failed to contact the
Applicant to provide him with an opportunity to clarify his fears in light of
this disbelief.
[26]
The
Applicant relies on this Court’s decision in Alimard v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship & Immigration), [2000] FCJ no 1223 at para 15 where
Justice Hansen stated:
In situations such as this, the
jurisprudence is clear that where a visa officer has an impression of
deficiency in the proof being offered, fairness requires that the visa officer
give the applicant some opportunity to disabuse the visa officer of that
impression (Muliadi v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[1986] 2 F.C. 205).
[27]
I
consider this case is distinguishable from Alimard. In that case, the
applicant applied for permanent residence under the entrepreneur category. As
part of his application, the applicant submitted several deeds to his
properties, a valuation for one of the properties and a bank statement showing
a balance equivalent to $5,000 Cdn. The visa officer, based on her experience
with the reliability of real estate valuations from Iran and her
unfamiliarity with the organization which had prepared the valuation, gave no
weight to the one valuation provided. The applicant was unaware of the visa
officer’s concerns with respect to the valuation. Justice Hansen held that
because the visa officer’s finding that the applicant lacked sufficient funds
was a key factor in her assessment of his ability to successfully establish a
business in Canada, the applicant should have been given the opportunity to
address her concerns, possibly by providing the visa officer with evidence as
to the bona fides of the valuation or a new valuation.
[28]
In
this case, the Applicant did not provide documentary evidence corroborating his
account of mistreatment by Sri Lankan officials. This is not a case as in Alimard
where the credibility of the Applicant’s supporting evidence was questioned -
there simply was no evidence other than the Applicant’s statements.
[29]
The
lack of corroborating documentary evidence did not bring the Applicant’s
credibility into issue. Instead, the absence of corroborating documentary
evidence goes to the weight of the Applicant’s statements. In Ahmad v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship & Immigration), 2012 FC 89 at paras 37-39 Justice Scott
addressed this question and stated:
[37] The applicant argues that
the PRRA officer made credibility findings when assessing the evidence that was
presented before her. The applicant relies on Zokai to support this
argument. A close review of the disputed decision leads this Court to find that
the evidence adduced was assessed by the officer in a manner in which it was
open to her to do. In Al Mansuri, this Court held that “the officer did
not deny the PRRA application on the basis of Mr. Al Mansuri's credibility.
Rather, the officer found that the objective evidence with respect to country
conditions did not support a finding of a danger of torture, or a risk to life,
or a risk of cruel or unusual treatment or punishment. That finding is a matter
distinct from Mr. Al Mansuri's personal credibility” (see Al Mansuri at
para 43). The officer clearly made findings in regard to the probative value of
the objective evidence adduced and not with regard to its credibility.
[38] It has been clearly
established that, in the context of a PRRA application, an oral hearing is the
exception. Moreover, serious credibility issues must be central to the PRRA
application in order to trigger the holding of an oral hearing. In reading the
officer’s decision, it is clear that no such serious issue of credibility was
found to exist.
[39] The officer did not
breach her duty of procedural fairness. As in Yousef v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 864 (CanLII), 2006 FC 864, [2006] FCJ
No 1101 (QL) at para 36, “the PRRA officer’s decision was based on the
insufficiency of the evidence submitted by the applicant in support of his
contention that he faced new or heightened risks if he returned to his country
of nationality]”. Finally, and equally important, it is clear that the criteria
set out in section 167 of the IRPR were not met by the applicant.
[Emphasis added]
[30]
I
agree with Justice Scott’s analysis and would adopt his reasoning. In this
case, the credibility of the Applicant was not an issue for the Officer.
Rather, the Officer did not disbelieve the Applicant’s evidence but instead
treated it as having less weight in the absence of supporting documentary
evidence.
[31]
I
would conclude that the Officer was not required to provide the Applicant with
an oral interview because the factors in section 167 were not satisfied.
Did
the Officer breach the required duty of fairness and natural justice by failing
to disclose documentary evidence related to changing circumstances in Sri Lanka?
[32]
In
his assessment of the risk posed to the Applicant on arrival at the Sri Lankan
airport, the Officer referred to published reports in the United
Kingdom
which detailed the risk potentially faced by 40 failed Sri Lankan asylum
claimants. The Applicant submits the Officer relied on Sri Lankan news reports
published after his PRRA was submitted that indicated that the returnees were
all released from the Sri Lankan airport without incident.
[33]
The
Applicant takes issue with the independence of these sources. The Applicant
submits “the officer heavily relied upon and quoted from these articles in
order to establish that Mr. Manickavasagar would not be at risk upon return to
the Sri Lankan airport, despite the fact that they were published after the
PRRA application was submitted.” [Emphasis added] The Applicant goes on to
state that the Officer did not contact the Applicant at any time to disclose
his reliance on these current reports. The Applicant submits that in the
circumstances of this case, that failure to disclose the new evidence of
country conditions upon which the Officer intended to rely constitutes a breach
of the duty of fairness.
[34]
I
must conclude the Applicant’s argument is in error. The Applicant’s PRRA
application was dated July 18, 2011. According to the list of the sources cited
by the Officer, the three documents challenged by the Applicant were published
on June 19, 2011, June 18, 2011 and June 26, 2011. These three documents relied
upon by the Officer were published before the Applicant’s PRRA application was
completed. As the three documents were general country documents that were
publicly available when the Applicant was completing his PRRA application, I
conclude the Officer made no reviewable error by not providing these documents
to the Applicant.
[35]
I
find my conclusion is supported by the Federal Court of Appeal decision Mancia
v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship & Immigration), [1998] 3 FC 461, [1998] FCJ no 565 at
paras 26-27 where Décary held:
The documents are in the public domain.
They are general by their very nature and are neutral in the sense that they do
not refer expressly to an applicant and that they are not prepared or sought by
the Department for the purposes of the proceeding at issue. They are not part
of a “case” against the applicant. They are available and accessible, absent
evidence to the contrary, through the files, indexes and records found in
Documentation Centres. They are generally prepared by reliable sources. They
can be repetitive, in the sense that they will often merely repeat or confirm
or express in different words general country conditions evidenced in
previously available documents. The fact that a document becomes available
after the filing of an applicant’s submissions by no means signifies that it
contains new information or that such information is relevant information that
will affect the decision. It is only, in my view, where an immigration
officer relies on a significant post-submission document which evidences
changes in the general country conditions that may affect the decision, that
the document must be communicated to that applicant.
[Emphasis added]
[36]
As
all three challenged articles were publicly available before the Applicant
submitted his PRRA application, I conclude the Officer made no reviewable error
by citing them in the decision.
Did the Officer err by
ignoring the Applicant’s evidence of risk?
[37]
The
main thrust of the Applicant’s submissions is that the Officer’s assessment of
the Applicant’s risk was unreasonable.
[38]
The
Applicant submits that he evidenced specific incidents of mistreatment at the
hands of Sri Lankan authorities in his PRRA submission. The Applicant argues
that while the Officer quoted from the Applicant’s submissions, the Officer
made no effort to discuss, analyze or assign weight to these specific
assertions. The Applicant submits the Officer instead selectively relied upon
general country condition reports and news articles to paint a picture of Sri Lanka as a country
returned to normalcy after 26 years of civil war.
[39]
The
Applicant argues the Officer simply concluded that there was no documentation
to support the Applicant’s assertions of harm and so did not accept them. The
Applicant submits the Officer could not just gloss over the Applicant’s
statements and ignore it in the analysis. This, the Applicant submits, was an
error. In particular, the Applicant emphasizes his evidence that the Sri Lankan
authorities interrogated him because of his association with the VVT, a now
defunct Sri Lankan criminal street gang, and its links with the LTTE.
[40]
I
will first address one point of contention. The Applicant believes the
Canadian authorities informed Sri Lanka about the Applicant’s
connections with the VVT. The Applicant points out the Officer would have known
of the allegation that the Applicant had an association with the VVT. There is
no evidence in the certified tribunal record to that effect. More importantly,
there is no evidence in the certified tribunal record to that effect that the
Canadian government gave such information about the Applicant to Sri Lanka. Finally,
the Applicant said he was questioned about the VVT. He does not say he was told
Canadian government officials gave Sri Lanka that information. He
now speculates that is the case.
[41]
The
Applicant is essentially arguing that the Officer’s reasons are not adequate as
they do not specifically state that the Officer assigns little or no weight to
the Applicant’s personal evidence.
[42]
The
Supreme Court of Canada recently held in Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’
Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62 at paras
14, 16, 18, 21-22 that the adequacy of reasons is not a separate basis for
judicial review nor a question of procedural fairness. Rather, reasons must be
read organically with the record before the decision maker as part of the
reasonableness review. In conducting the review, the guiding principle is
deference and a decision is not to be overturned simply because the reasons
provided are not as fulsome as the reviewing court may have desired.
[43]
Here,
the Officer was alive to the claims of harm and mistreatment the Applicant
suffered at the hand of the Sri Lankan authorities. The Officer quoted at
several instances the various incidents alleged by the Applicant. By stating
that the objective factual material does not show a probability of risk to the
Applicant if returned to Sri Lanka, the Officer implicitly
gave little weight to the Applicant’s claims of mistreatment.
[44]
I
conclude the Officer did not ignore the Applicant’s evidence of risk and thus
made no error.
Did the Officer err in
excluding the Applicant from the profile of at-risk persons?
[45]
The
Applicant submits that the Officer’s finding that the Applicant did not fit the
profile of a person at risk upon return to Sri Lanka is
perverse. The Applicant submits the Officer selectively canvassed country
condition documents and identified several indicia of risk upon return to Sri Lanka. I note that
the Applicant only listed 8 of the 13 factors listed by the Officer in the
reasons.
[46]
The
Applicant submits it is clear from the record available to the Officer that the
Applicant met most of the indicia of risk identified by the Officer.
[47]
In
my view, the Applicant is seeking this Court to reweigh the evidence against
the various indicia or risk identified by the Officer. The Court ought not to
do this as the Officer’s factual determination that “the Applicant does not
have a profile that would cause him to be of interest to the authorities; if he
is able to present himself with his own identification documents in hand,”
deserves deference.
[48]
The
Officer listed factors that would increase the risk that an individual could
encounter difficulties with Sri Lankan authorities, including possible
detention:
·
Tamil
ethnicity
·
Previous
record as a suspected or actual LTTE member or supporter
·
Previous
criminal record and/or outstanding arrest warrant
·
Bail
jumping and/or escaping from custody
·
Having
signed a confession or similar document
·
Having
been asked by the security forces to become an informer
·
The
presence of scarring
·
Returned
from London or other
centre of LTTE activity or fund raising
·
Illegal
departure from Sri Lanka
·
Lack
of ID card or other documentation
·
Having
made an asylum claim abroad
·
Having
relatives in the LTTE
·
Involvement
with media or NGOs
[49]
The
Officer then applied the Applicant’s circumstances to the various factors.
Going through the list of factors, the Officer found the following:
·
The
Applicant is Tamil.
·
The
Applicant’s counsel had stated that the VVT gang was linked to the Tamil
Tigers. However, the Applicant stated that he denied membership in the VVT. The
Officer also found that the Applicant had not provided supporting evidence to
demonstrate that he was mistreated on that ground when he was last in Sri Lanka. In
addition, the war is over in Sri Lanka and the VVT gang is
reported as no longer being active. The Officer found on a balance of
probabilities, that the Sri Lankan government would not perceive the claimant
as having any association or links with the LTTE.
·
The
Officer noted that the Applicant had a criminal record in Canada. The Officer
also stated that the Applicant has not provided evidence that he is subject to
an outstanding arrest warrant.
·
The
Officer made no comment, nor was any evidence provided to suggest that the
Applicant jumped bail or escaped from custody, had been asked by the security
forces to become an informer, or that the Applicant evidenced scarring.
·
While
the Officer did not make a specific finding on this point, the Officer did note
that the vast majority of Tamils returning at the moment are facing a minimal
risk for undergoing a scrutiny at the airport and that only people with a clear
LTTE-profile or people suspected of money transfer would be detained for
further investigations.
·
The
Officer held that the Applicant listed his status in India, Peru and Mexico
as Visitor; this led the Officer to believe that the Applicant did not leave Sri Lanka illegally.
·
The
Officer consistently stated that the level of risk would be minimized if the
Applicant returned on his own identification such as a Sri Lankan passport or
valid ID card.
·
The
Officer cited a country document for Iran which included
information regarding the CBSA’s process for removing foreign nationals. The
Officer quoted the document stating that, “[a]t no point during the removal
process are Iranian authorities or other receiving authorities advised that an
individual has made a refugee claim in Canada.” The
Officer then found similarly that there was no evidence to show that the
removal process to which the Applicant was subjected was any different from
that described for removals to Iran or that it would be in the event the
Applicant was removed to Sri Lanka again.
·
Finally,
there was no comment on whether the Applicant had relatives in the LTTE or that
he was involved with the media or NGOs. In fact, the record shows that all of
the Applicant’s family are now Canadian citizens.
[50]
The
Officer was tasked with determining whether the Applicant’s circumstances fit
within these indicia. This involved factual determinations based on the record
and the evidence before the Officer. The Officer’s factual determinations are
to be afforded significant deference and reviewed on a standard of reasonableness.
[51]
In
my view, the Officer adequately considered the Applicant’s personal profile
against the indicia of risk. All of the Officer’s findings are based on
evidence. The Applicant may disagree with the appropriate weight or the final
determinations made by the Officer. However, this Court is charged with
determining whether the Officer’s decision was reasonable.
[52]
My
review of the decision and the evidence indicates that the Officer’s decision
was reasonable. I disagree with the Applicant that the Officer’s determination
was perverse. I conclude no reviewable error was made.
Conclusion
[53]
I
conclude the Officer did not breach the duty of procedural fairness owed to the
Applicant.
[54]
Further,
keeping in mind that the PRRA Officer’s decision deserves significant
deference, I find the Applicant has failed to demonstrate how the Officer’s
decision is unreasonable.
[55]
I
would dismiss the application for judicial review.
[56]
Neither
the Applicant nor Respondent proposed a general question of importance for
certification. I do not certify any question.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S
JUDGMENT is that:
1. The
application for judicial review is dismissed.
2. No
question of general importance is certified.
“Leonard
S. Mandamin”