Date: 20120604
Docket: IMM-5805-11
Citation: 2012 FC 679
Ottawa, Ontario, June 4,
2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
BETWEEN:
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JOSEPH BLEDY
HELENA SAMKOVA
ADAM FRANTISEK BLEDY
JENIFER BLEDA
JOSEP BLEDY (JR)
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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
[1]
The
applicants, Josef Bledy [the Principal Applicant], his common-law partner
Helna Samkova, and their children Adam Frantisek Bledy, Jenifer Bleda, and
Josef Bledy (Jr) [the Applicants] seek judicial review pursuant to subsection
72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the
Act] of a decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and
Refugee Board [ the Board] dated August 5, 2011, wherein it determined
that the Applicants are not Convention refugees or persons in need of
protection.
[2]
The
Applicants are Roma citizens of the Czech Republic who came to Canada on
December 17, 2009 and, two days later, filed their refugee claim. Their
claim was heard by the Board [the First Hearing] and rejected in a decision
dated May 20, 2010 [the First Decision]. The Applicants’ application for
judicial review of the First Decision was allowed by Mr. Justice Scott
on February 22, 2011 (see J.B. v MCI, 2011 FC 210, [2011] FCJ No. 358).
The Applicants’ claim was subsequently heard de novo by the Board on
June 17, 2011 and was again rejected in a decision of August 25, 2011
[the Second Decision]. The Second Decision is the subject of this application.
[3]
In
his Personal Information Form [PIF] the Principal Applicant describes five
incidents of physical and sexual abuse in the Czech Republic in which the
victims were allegedly targeted because of their Roma ethnicity [together, the Incidents]:
1.
In
August 2005, the Principal Applicant was walking with one of his cousins when
they were attacked by about 12 skinheads [the First Incident]. They contacted
the police, who responded but accused them of provoking the confrontation. The
police also laughed at them and did not complete a report.
2.
In
January 2006, the Principal Applicant attended a disco with two of his cousins.
They were again attacked, this time by a group of about 30 to 40 skinheads [the
Second Incident]. One of the cousins was stabbed in the back with a knife. The
police were called, but again filed no report.
3.
In
August 2007, the Principal Applicant’s mother-in-law was raped in the town of Prachatice [the Third
Incident]. She subsequently sought help from the police, who laughed at her and
suggested that she had imagined the rape. She feared that the perpetrator knew
where she lived because he had taken her house keys and citizenship card. The
family later inquired about a police investigation but no results were
forthcoming.
4.
On
December 25, 2007, the Applicants were visiting the Principal Applicant’s
parents’ house in the town of Vimperk when the house was
“torched”, but then saved by firefighters. The next day, skinheads torched the
basement of the house but the fire was again doused in time to save the rest of
the house. On December 28, the roof of the house was torched and the next
day the entire roof and part of the house burned [the Fourth Incident].
5.
On
November 22, 2008, the Principal Applicant attended a party at a pub with
members of his family, including his common law partner. A group of six
skinheads attacked them with baseball bats and then escaped before the police
arrived [the Fifth Incident]. The police pursued the skinheads and took
statements from the victims, but the Principal Applicant and his family heard
nothing further about the investigation.
THE
SECOND DECISION
[4]
The
Board stated that the determinative issue was state protection but began its
reasons for decision with a consideration of the veracity of some of the
Incidents.
[5]
With
respect to the Second Incident, the Board noted that, at the First Hearing the
Principal Applicant testified that he had gone to the hospital. However,
because this fact had not been mentioned in his PIF, the Board concluded in the
First Decision that the Principal Applicant had never been to the hospital and
that that fact was an embellishment of his claim. Although the Board did not
expressly state in the Second Decision that it had reached the same conclusion,
I think it reasonable to infer that the Board agreed that there had been an
embellishment. However, the Board did not conclude that the entire incident had
been a fabrication.
[6]
With
respect to the Third Incident, the Board observed that the Principal Applicant
had produced a letter about the rape which was written in English and signed by
his mother-in-law. He testified that his mother did not speak or read English,
but that a family member who is fluent in English read the letter back to her
and that she understood its contents. However, the Board found that since the
mother-in-law had been in Canada for at least two years, the Principal
Applicant had had ample opportunity to obtain a letter that was properly
translated and signed. The Board concluded on a balance of probabilities that
the letter was written to embellish the Principal Applicant’s claim.
[7]
The
Board also doubted that the rape had occurred because, although it was alleged
that the medical report dealing with the incident was in Canada and in the
possession of the mother-in-law’s lawyer, it was not produced.
[8]
At
the First Hearing, the Principal Applicant submitted a number of letters from
family members and acquaintances which supported his evidence that his parents’
house had been set on fire. When asked if the fire had been reported in the
newspapers, the Principal Applicant stated that he had seen an article about
the fire on the Internet the day before the First Hearing. However, he did not
print it because he did not have a printer. In the Second Decision, the Board
rejected this explanation and concluded that the Principal Applicant’s parents’
house had not been set on fire and that the letters had been produced to
embellish his claim.
[9]
The
Board made no adverse credibility findings in the Second Decision about the
First and Fifth incidents.
[10]
The
Board then dealt with the adequacy of state protection and concluded that the
Principal Applicant did not rebut the presumption that the Czech Republic is capable
of protecting its citizens. The Board acknowledged that, in the past, the Czech Republic had
difficulty protecting its Roma citizens and that, even today, that protection
“is not perfect”. The Board noted that, although there is documentary evidence
showing that attacks on the Roma minority by skinheads are on the rise, there
is also evidence that the Czech Republic “does not condone and
for the most part does not acquiesce to this behaviour.”
ISSUES
[11]
1. Was the
Board’s finding that there was adequate state protection unreasonable
2. Were Board’s
credibility findings unreasonable?
1. State
Protection
[12]
Both parties acknowledged
that the Board
articulated the proper test for determining the availability of state
protection and that the test is “adequacy” rather than “effectiveness”,
following the Federal Court
of Appeal’s decision in Carillo
v. MCI, 2008
FCA 94. The Applicants argue, however, that the Board must consider not only
the legislative and procedural frameworks created by the state, but also the
adequacy of state protection at an “operational level”: Sow v. MCI, 2011
FC 646, at para 11.
[13]
While not cited by
either party, a recent decision of this Court in Koky v MCI, 2011 FC 1407, FCJ No 1715, decided on
facts similar to the present case, is instructive. Mr. Justice Russell said at para 63:
According
to the jurisprudence of this Court, it is not enough that a government is
willing to provide protection and is making efforts to do so. In order for
state protection to be present, the efforts made must adequately protect
citizens in practice.
[14]
Justice Russell went
on to consider the decision of Mr. Justice Scott on the Applicants’ judicial
review of the First Decision, J.B. v MCI, above, where he said at para 71:
I
find that the RPD committed a serious legal error in equating “serious efforts”
with “adequacy” and unreasonably failed to address the evidence before it on
the issue of whether, in practice, those efforts have resulted in adequate
protection for the Applicants.
[15]
The
Applicants submit that the Board has again equated serious efforts with
adequacy and specifically takes issue with the Board’s failure to address
evidence on the record which showed that, in practice, the police fail to
protect Roma citizens in the Czech Republic.
[16]
I
have carefully reviewed the record and the documents listed in the Applicants’
Memorandum of Fact and Law and find that, while many are of marginal relevance,
there is one which includes several references to specific instances in which
the police response to crimes against Roma people was inadequate or hostile.
However, it also describes incidents of adequate police response. In my view, a
determination of the adequacy of state protection should have involved a
consideration of this document. It is number 13.16 in the Board’s National
Documentation Package for the Czech Republic [the Package].
2. Credibility
[17]
I
have found no basis for concluding that the Board’s credibility findings are
unreasonable.
CERTIFICATION
[18]
No
question of general importance was posed for certification pursuant to section
74(d) of the Act.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S
JUDGMENT is that the application is
allowed and the matter is referred back for further consideration on the
existing record [the Record] in accordance with the following directions:
(i)
If
possible, the Board member who made the Second Decision is to conduct the
further consideration;
(ii)
The
Board is to further consider the adequacy of state protection having regard for
the following documents in the Package:
(a) Document
13.6 – A response to Information Request dated March 1, 2011;
(b) Document
13.16 – a European Roma rights centre report updated as of May 4,
2011.
(iii)
The
Board may consider any other documents in the Record which it considers
relevant to the question of the adequacy of state protection;
(iv)
No
further evidence and no further submissions are to be filed unless the Board,
in its discretion, permits such filings and permission is only to be given if
the proposed material deals with the practical availability of police
protection for Roma citizens of the Czech
Republic.
“Sandra
J. Simpson”
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-5805-11
STYLE OF CAUSE: JOSEPH
BLEDY ET AL v MCI
PLACE OF HEARING: Toronto, Ontario
DATE OF HEARING: March 22, 2012
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: SIMPSON
J.
DATED: June 4, 2012
APPEARANCES:
Daniel Radin
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FOR THE APPLICANT
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Alex Kam
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FOR THE RESPONDENT
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SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Daniel Radin
Toronto, Ontario
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FOR THE APPLICANT
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Myles J. Kirvan
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
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FOR THE DEFENDANT
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