Date: 20120614
Docket: IMM-4632-11
Citation: 2012 FC 743
Ottawa, Ontario, June
14, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam
Justice Snider
BETWEEN:
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SAI
SU, XI TANG ZHUANG, AND
XI
HUA ZHUANG
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Applicants
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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
I. Introduction
[1]
Ms. Sai Su (the Principal Applicant) and her two children
(the Minor Applicants) claim to be citizens of the People’s Republic of China (China) resident in Guangdong province. They came to Canada in 2006 and claimed refugee
protection based on the Principal Applicant’s fear of forced sterilization. In
a decision dated June 28, 2011, a panel of the Immigration and
Refugee Board, Refugee Protection Division (Board) rejected their claim on the basis that the Applicants had failed
to establish their identities.
[2]
The Applicants seek to overturn the decision on the basis
that it is unreasonable. In spite of the most capable submissions of counsel
for the Applicant, I have concluded that the decision should stand.
II. Analysis
[3]
Proof of identity is a pre-requisite for a person claiming
refugee protection as without it there can “be no sound basis for testing or
verifying the claims of persecution or, indeed for determining the Applicant’s
true nationality” (Jin v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2006 FC 126 at para 26, [2006] FCJ No 181 (QL); see also Liu v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 831 at para 18, [2007]
FCJ No 1101 (QL)). Section 106 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA] and s. 7 of the Refugee Protection Division
Rules, SOR/2002-228 [Rules] set out the importance of establishing a
claimant’s identity:
IRPA
106. The Refugee Protection
Division must take into account, with respect to the credibility of a
claimant, whether the claimant possesses acceptable documentation
establishing identity, and if not, whether they have provided a reasonable
explanation for the lack of documentation or have
taken
reasonable steps to obtain the documentation.
Rules
7. The claimant must provide
acceptable documents establishing identity and other elements of the claim. A
claimant who does not provide acceptable documents must explain why they were
not provided and what steps were taken to obtain them.
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106. La Section de la
protection des réfugiés prend en compte, s’agissant de crédibilité, le fait
que, n’étant pas muni de papiers d’identité acceptables, le demandeur ne peut
raisonnablement en justifier la raison et n’a pas pris les mesures voulues
pour s’en procurer.
7. Le demandeur d’asile transmet à la Section des documents
acceptables pour établir son identité et les autres éléments de sa demande.
S’il ne peut le faire, il en donne la raison et indique quelles mesures il a
prises pour s’en procurer.
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[4]
The onus is on the claimant to produce acceptable
documentation establishing his or her identity. This is a high burden, as it
should be.
[5]
A decision of the Board with respect to identity is
exclusively fact driven. As such, the Board’s decision is reviewable on a
standard of reasonableness. In Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para 47, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, the Supreme Court of Canada explained that reasonableness is a deferential standard which recognizes that
certain questions “may give rise to a number of possible, reasonable
conclusions”. The Court elaborated that “reasonableness is concerned mostly
with the existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within
the decision-making process”, as well as with “whether the decision falls
within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect
of the facts and law”.
[6]
During the course of the hearing, the Applicants produced
much information allegedly establishing their identities. In oral submissions
to this Court, counsel for the Applicants described the record as containing an
“avalanche” of evidence establishing their identities. I will consider this
“avalanche” and the Board’s findings with respect to the evidence.
[7]
The Board considered and dealt with three categories of
evidence (or lack thereof): (1) primary documents, such as passports, resident
identity cards (RICs), birth certificates and a household register (hukou);
(2) secondary documents, such as drivers’ licences and photographs; and (3) viva
voce evidence from two witnesses called by the Applicants. I will consider
each of these categories.
A. Primary
Documents
[8]
The Applicants arrived in Canada on the basis of a false
passport. Obviously, a false passport cannot establish identity.
[9]
A second problem for the Principal Applicant was that she
was unable to provide either the original or a copy of her RIC. As noted by the
Board, the RIC is “the most important document to establish a claimant’s
identity”. While the Principal Applicant attempted to explain why she did not
have her RIC, the point remains that she did not have this important document
that could have established her identity.
[10]
The Principal Applicant did provide another very important
document – a hukou. When that document was submitted for forensic
testing, the result was “Inconclusive”. Given that the burden was on the
Applicants to provide proof of their identities, an “inconclusive” conclusion
from forensic testing arguably did not meet that onus. Moreover, the officer
conducting the forensic analysis noted that the document was altered by the
addition of middle pages to refer to the older Minor Applicant. The Board –
reasonably, in my view – concluded “on a balance of probabilities, that the
household register is not an authentic identity document”.
[11]
The final primary document was the alleged birth
certificate of the older Minor Applicant. This document was also sent for
forensic testing, with a result of “Inconclusive”. The analyst noted that “There
are a number of significant differences between Birth Certificates believed to
be genuine and [the birth certificate submitted]”. As observed by the Board,
this document was “questionable”. Once again, this document failed to establish
the Minor Applicant’s identity.
[12]
The Applicants argue that the forensic result of “inconclusive”
does not mean that the documents are fraudulent. I agree. However, this
argument fails to recognize that the burden was on the Applicants to establish
their identities. Forensic examination of a document that results in an
“inconclusive” finding (particularly when specific problems with the document
are identified) does not establish the authenticity of the document.
[13]
In sum, there was not a single reliable or genuine primary
document that conclusively or persuasively established the identity of the
Applicants.
B. Secondary
Documents
[14]
During the course of the hearing, the Applicants put
forward a number of other documents purporting to establish the Principal
Applicant’s identity; specifically, a driver’s licence, marriage certificate,
IUD booklet and a Notice of Assessment. None of these documents contained the
type of security features that would permit a meaningful forensic analysis.
[15]
The Board examined all of these documents, although none
were sent for forensic testing. However, the Board referred to country
documentation that confirmed that fraudulent documents were readily available
in Guangdong province. The Board was under no obligation to conduct forensic
testing of each and every document. As stated by Justice Harrington in Farooqi
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 1396 at para 10,
[2004] FCJ No 1696 (QL):
As far as I am concerned, once the identity documents which
were offered as being real were found to be fake, the matter came to an end.
There was no duty on the part of the Board to submit other documents for
analysis. A legitimate claimant might well have reason to carry fake
identification, but no reason to proffer that fake identification as real. Was
the next set of documents better fakes? The Board should not be treated as a
training school in which counterfeiters can practice their craft.
[16]
In this case, having concluded that the primary documents
were either missing or not genuine and that fake identity documents were easily
obtained in Guangdong province, it was not unreasonable for the Board to give
the secondary documents “little weight”.
[17]
The Board also considered the photograph of the Principal
Applicant in a class photograph. The Board concluded that, even if the unclear
photograph included the Principal Applicant, a class photograph did not
establish citizenship.
[18]
These secondary documents did not substantiate the identity
of the Principal Applicant.
C. Viva
Voce Evidence
[19]
Two persons testified in support of the Principal
Applicant’s identity. The first witness claimed to be a friend of the Principal
Applicant during secondary school. The Board was skeptical of this witness’s
testimony on the following basis:
The panel finds it is not plausible for the claimant to “bump”
into a witness who she had not seen in more than 16 years and did so a month or
so before her November 2009 hearing. Therefore, the panel gives this witness’
testimony little weight.
[20]
With respect to the second witness, who claimed to be a
cousin of the Principal Applicant, the Board observed that:
[T]he witness cannot establish or corroborate the
children’s birthplace and citizenship with any first-hand knowledge and she
provided no documentary evidence of her relationship to the claimant.
[21]
The Board’s conclusion that little weight should be
accorded to the testimony of these witnesses is not unreasonable.
III. Conclusion
[22]
Quite simply, the Applicants failed to establish their
identities, in spite of the “avalanche” of evidence. There were significant
problems with each and every document and witness proffered. The Board’s
decision, when read as a whole, falls within a range of possible, acceptable
outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.
[23]
Finally the Applicants argue that, if the Board’s decision
is upheld, they are entitled to a declaration that they cannot be removed to China and an order prohibiting the Government of Canada from removing the Applicants to China.
[24]
The Applicants’ request for declaratory relief is beyond
the scope of this judicial review. Although I agree that the Federal Court has
the jurisdiction to issue the remedies of a declaration or a writ of prohibition
under s. 18.1(3) of the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7, this is not
a case where such a declaration can be granted. This judicial review is of a
decision by the Board which is within the purview of the Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration. Removal orders (made under s. 48(1) of IRPA)
are put in place by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), and thus within
the statutory responsibility of the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness. A declaration or prohibition order based on the current judicial
review application would bind a separate series of decision makers and is,
accordingly, inappropriate.
[25]
In addition, at this point in time, the actions that may be
taken by CBSA in removing the Applicants are not known. We can only speculate
that the CBSA may ultimately attempt to send the Applicants to China.
[26]
The Applicants propose a question related to the ability of
this Court to grant a declaration in these circumstances. Given that the answer
to any such question is not determinative of this application and would be, in
any event, based on speculation as to where the Applicants will be removed, I
decline to certify any question.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1.
the application for judicial review is dismissed; and
2.
no question of general importance is certified.
“Judith A. Snider”