Docket: IMM-2409-11
Citation: 2012 FC 11
Ottawa, Ontario, January 4, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
|
ERNESTO BATALLA RODRIGUEZ
|
|
|
Applicant
|
and
|
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
|
|
Respondent
|
|
|
|
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (Act) for judicial review of the
decision of the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) of the Immigration and
Refugee Board, dated 15 March 2011 (Decision), which refused the Applicant’s
claim for protection under sections 96 and 97 of the Act.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The
Applicant is a citizen of Mexico. He fled to Canada on 4 November
2008 and claimed refugee protection on 3 September 2009.
[3]
When
he lived in Mexico, the
Applicant co-owned a restaurant with his business partner, Michelle Martinez (Martinez). In June 2006,
the Applicant was approached by two members of the La Familia Cartel Texcoco (La
Familia), an emerging drug cartel and crime syndicate. The two cartel members, who
the Applicant knew as El Roberlee and El Richard, demanded that he pay La
Familia 4,000 pesos (approximately $300) as a “tax” every month. The Applicant agreed
and began paying La Familia.
[4]
Some
time later, two men – who the Applicant knew as El Rabano and Tarzan – approached
him at his restaurant. These men identified themselves as La Familia members
and demanded that he increase his payment to $500 per month. The Applicant
refused to pay this increase, as it would represent more than ten percent of
his take-home earnings. El Rabano and Tarzan also demanded that the Applicant permit
La Familia to sell drugs in his restaurant, which he refused to allow. When
these demands were made, Martinez was away from the restaurant, in the USA. Two weeks
later, four men came to the Applicant’s restaurant; one of these men was called
“El Commandant” by the other three. This man had formerly been in charge of an
anti-kidnapping section of the police in Texcoco. El Commandant told the
Applicant that if he did not pay the money demanded, he would be killed. The
four men also beat the Applicant.
[5]
On
28 May 2007, after he refused to pay the increased amount and allow La Familia
to sell drugs in his restaurant, the Applicant was beaten by the side of the
road outside Texcoco. The Applicant recognized one of the people beating him as
El Rabano, and he believes that La Familia was responsible for this attack. During
the beating, someone stabbed the Applicant in the stomach. Because of the
injuries he suffered, the Applicant had to spend approximately seven months in
hospital recuperating. He was unable to run the restaurant during this time so Martinez took on the
management responsibilities. She agreed to pay the increased amount La Familia
had demanded.
[6]
After
the Applicant was discharged from the hospital, he and Martinez decided that
it was not worth it for them to continue operating the restaurant, so they
decided to sell it. It took some time to find a willing buyer but, in March
2008, they sold the restaurant. The Applicant moved to the neighbouring state
of Guerrero. While he was in Guerrero, the Applicant received a telephone call
from El Commandant whose voice he recognized from their previous encounter. El
Commandant told him that it was a mistake to sell the restaurant without
informing the cartel and that the Applicant still owed the cartel money. After
receiving this phone call, the Applicant fled to Canada on 4
November 2008 and claimed refugee status on 3 September 2009.
[7]
The
RPD heard the Applicant’s claim on 15 March 2011. At the hearing, the
Applicant, his counsel, the RPD panel member, and an interpreter were present.
In oral reasons delivered at the end of the hearing, the RPD rejected the
Applicant’s claim for protection.
DECISION
UNDER REVIEW
[8]
After
the hearing, the RPD concluded that the Applicant was not a convention refugee
under section 96 of the Act or a person in need of protection under section 97
of the Act. The RPD found that the Applicant had not established a nexus to a Convention
ground, so his claim under section 96 of the Act failed. The RPD also found
that the Applicant did not face a personalized risk of torture or cruel and
unusual treatment or punishment on return to Mexico, so he was
not a person in need of protection under section 97 of the Act.
[9]
The
RPD found that the Applicant’s identity was established through a certified
copy of his passport and went on to consider the substance of his claim.
Allegations
[10]
The
RPD noted that the Applicant claimed to have owned a restaurant in Mexico and that he
had been extorted by La Familia and threatened with death if he did not give
them what they wanted. It briefly reviewed the circumstances of the restaurant’s
sale, the phone call from El Commandant, and the Applicant’s flight to Canada.
[11]
The
RPD found that the Applicant was a credible and trustworthy witness and believed
his story.
Convention Refugee
[12]
The
RPD found the Applicant’s claim under section 96 of the Act failed because he
had not established a nexus to a convention ground. Though the RPD accepted his
story that he had been extorted by La Familia, the Applicant’s fear of
extortion was not linked to race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or
membership in a particular social group. The RPD noted that the Applicant had
made submissions that he was a member of a particular social group – business
owners – and that he had an imputed political opinion because he had a
different political opinion from La Familia. The RPD also noted the Applicant’s
submissions that El Commandant was formerly a police commander and that La
Familia had the ability to put pressure on politicians.
[13]
The
RPD pointed out that this Court has held that victims of crime, corruption, or
vendettas generally fail to establish a link between their fear of persecution
and a Convention ground. The RPD pointed to Leon v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1995] FCJ No 1253; Calero
v Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [1994] FCJ No 1159; Vargas v Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1994] FCJ No 802; and
Marincas v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1994] FCJ
No 1254. The Applicant was a victim of crime without a nexus to a Convention
ground so that his claim for protection under section 96 failed.
Generalized Risk
[14]
After
it concluded that the Applicant was not a Convention refugee within the meaning
of section 96, the RPD separately analyzed his claim under section 97 of the
Act and concluded that, because the risk the Applicant faced on return to Mexico was
generally faced by the population there, he was not personally at risk. Without
a personalized risk, his claim his claim under section 97 failed.
[15]
The
RPD said that simply being at risk to life is not enough to make a claimant a
person in need of protection under section 97 of the Act. The Act specifically
excludes people from the definition of “person in need of protection” who face
risks that are generally faced by other people in the country (see subparagraph
97(1)(b)(ii) of the Act). Even though the Applicant faced a personalized
risk to life, or a risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment, this risk
was also one that was faced generally by others in Mexico. This
brought the Applicant within the exception under subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii)
of the Act.
[16]
In
analysing the Applicant’s claim under section 97, the RPD reviewed his
allegations of extortion. It also noted that the documentary evidence before it
indicated that La Familia was a well-organized and brutal criminal organization
which had been characterized as an emerging drug cartel. The RPD said that
generalized risk has to do with the nature of the harm a claimant faces and
that the exception under subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) includes risks
associated with crime, violence, extortion, corruption, abuse of authority,
human rights violations, general insecurity, terrorism, suicide bombing,
political extremism and activities of armed groups. It also noted that two Responses
to Information Requests – included in the documentary package before it –
indicated that crime was widespread in Mexico. The
Applicant was a victim of crime, but the crimes he was a victim of – extortion
and assault – were widespread in Mexico.
[17]
Hence,
the RPD found that the Applicant’s fear was a generalized one. It pointed out
that this Court has interpreted generalized risk to mean “prevalent” or
“widespread” without requiring that a risk be faced by all citizens in a
country to amount to a generalized risk. The RPD considered Vickram v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2007 FC 457, and said that this Court had
upheld the RPD’s determination that a claimant who faces a risk of criminal
activity is at no greater risk than the general population. The RPD also said
that this Court held that the perception of wealth does not constitute a
particularized risk.
[18]
Though
Vickram was not precisely the same as the case before it, the RPD found
that the risks of violence, injury, and crime are generalized risks faced by
everyone in Mexico. While some
individuals such as the Applicant may be targeted more frequently, this does
not remove them from the generalized risk category.
[19]
The
RPD noted that the Applicant had suggested that Pineda v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2007 FC 365 [Martinez Pineda] was
applicable to his case. However, the RPD took the position that Martinez
Pineda was not consistent with the predominant line of cases, including Acosta
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2009 FC 213, Perez v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2010 FC 345, and Guifarro
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 182. The fact
that victims of generalized violence have an identity that is known to
perpetrators of violence does not mean that those victims face a personalized
risk.
[20]
The
RPD also reviewed Guifarro, above, and said that it is settled law that claims
based on targeting because a claimant is a member of a group that is perceived
to be wealthy, where that group is large enough to make the risk widespread,
will not meet the requirements of subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii). Though a
group may be a small portion of the population of the country of reference,
what matters is that the risk is widespread or prevalent.
[21]
The
RPD found that the Applicant was personally subject to a risk of harm under
section 97 involving extortion and gang violence. However, on the evidence
before the RPD, the Applicant’s risk on return was a generalized one. The
Applicant was therefore not a person in need of protection under section 97 of
the Act.
STATUTORY
PROVISIONS
[22]
The
following provisions of the Act are applicable in this proceeding:
Convention refugee
96. A Convention refugee is a person who,
by reason of a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race,
religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political
opinion,
(a) is outside each of their countries of nationality and is
unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling to avail themself of the
protection of each of those countries;
…
Person in Need of Protection
97. (1)
A person in need of protection is a person in Canada
whose removal to their country or countries of nationality or, if they do not
have a country of nationality, their country of former habitual residence,
would subject them personally
(a) to a
danger, believed on substantial grounds to exist, of torture within the
meaning of Article 1 of the Convention Against Torture; or
(b) to a risk to their life or to a risk of cruel
and unusual treatment or punishment if
(i) the person is unable or, because of that risk,
unwilling to avail themself of the protection of that country,
(ii) the risk would be faced by the person in every part of that country
and is not faced generally by other individuals in or from that country,
…
|
Définition de «
réfugié »
96. A qualité de
réfugié au sens de la Convention — le réfugié — la personne qui, craignant
avec raison d’être persécutée du fait de sa race, de sa religion, de sa
nationalité, de son appartenance à un groupe social ou de ses opinions
politiques :
a) soit se
trouve hors de tout pays dont elle a la nationalité et ne peut ou, du fait de
cette crainte, ne veut se réclamer de la protection de chacun de ces pays;
[…]
…
Personne à protéger
97. (1) A
qualité de personne à protéger la personne qui se trouve au Canada et serait
personnellement, par son renvoi vers tout pays dont elle a la nationalité ou,
si elle n’a pas de nationalité, dans lequel elle avait sa résidence habituelle,
exposée :
a) soit au
risque, s’il y a des motifs sérieux de le croire, d’être soumise à la torture
au sens de l’article premier de la Convention contre la torture;
b) soit à une
menace à sa vie ou au risque de traitements ou peines cruels et inusités dans
le cas suivant :
(i) elle ne peut ou,
de ce fait, ne veut se réclamer de la protection de ce pays,
(ii) elle y est
exposée en tout lieu de ce pays alors que d’autres personnes originaires de
ce pays ou qui s’y trouvent ne le sont généralement pas,
…
|
ISSUES
[23]
The
Applicant raises the following issues:
a.
Whether
the RPD erred in its interpretation of subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) of the
Act; and
b.
Whether
the RPD failed to appreciate the particularized nature of the threat he faced
on return.
STANDARD OF
REVIEW
[24]
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.
[25]
In
Osorio v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2005 FC 1459,
Justice Judith Snider concluded at paragraph 26 that the standard of review on
a tribunal’s interpretation of subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) is
reasonableness. In Dunsmuir, above, the Supreme Court of Canada
held at paragraph 54 that a tribunal’s interpretation of its enabling statute
will generally be accorded deference. The Supreme Court of Canada upheld this
approach in Smith v Alliance Pipeline Ltd. 2011 SCC 7 at paragraph 26.
Most recently, in Alberta (Information and Privacy Commissioner) v Alberta
Teachers’ Association 2011 SCC61, the Supreme Court of Canada held at
paragraph 30 that the standard of review on a tribunal’s interpretation of its
home statute is reasonableness, unless the interpretation falls into the
enumerated categories for which the correctness standard applies:
constitutional questions, questions of central importance to the legal system
as a whole, questions on the jurisdictional lines between specialized
tribunals, and true questions of vires. The interpretation of 97(1)(b)(ii)
does not fall into any of these categories, so the standard of review on the
first issue is reasonableness.
[26]
In
V.L.N. v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 768,
Justice David Near found that the standard of review with respect to a finding
of generalized risk was reasonableness (see paragraphs 15 and 16). In Vasquez
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 477, Justice
André Scott found that a finding of generalized risk involves a question of
mixed fact and law and is to be evaluated on a standard of reasonableness. The
standard of review on the second issue is reasonableness (see also Innocent
v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2009 FC 1019).
[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
The Applicant
[28]
The
Applicant does not take issue with the RPD’s conclusion that he is not a
Convention refugee; he confines his arguments solely to the RPD’s conclusion
that he was not a person in need of protection under section 97 of the Act.
The RPD Erred
in its Interpretation of 97(1)(b)(ii)
Martinez
Pineda is Good Law
[29]
The
Applicant notes that the RPD rejected Martinez Pineda, above. He says
that the cases the RPD relied on to reject Martinez Pineda – Acosta,
Perez, and Guifarro, above, – are distinguishable or were
decided in error.
[30]
Martinez
Pineda
was about a claimant who was repeatedly threatened by a street gang in El Salvador after he
refused to become a member of that gang. The Applicant notes that Martinez
Pineda was recently applied by Justice Simon Noël in Zacarias v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 62. In addition to Zacarias,
the Court has followed and applied Martinez Pineda in Castaneda v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 200, Lamour v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 322, and M.A.C.P.
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 81. Though this
Court distinguished Martinez Pineda in those cases on its facts, the
Applicant says that the Court followed the reasoning.
The Cases Relied on by
the RPD are Distinguishable or Wrong
[31]
The
Applicant argues that Acosta, Perez, and Guifarro
are either distinguishable on their facts or were wrongly decided. He says that
Acosta – a case where the applicant was a bus-fare collector who was threatened
after missing an extortion payment – is distinguishable from Martinez Pineda
on its facts. Justice Johanne Gauthier had this to say in Acosta, at
paragraph 17:
Finally, here, the Board found the risk faced by Mr. Acosta was “a
result of where he happened to be, or not to be, on the day the Mara wanted
their money” (para. 18) whereas Mr. Pineda had been targeted not as a victim of
the Gang but rather for recruitment into the Gang.
[32]
Unlike
Acosta, Martinez Pineda is factually similar to the facts in this
case. The Applicant was not randomly targeted by La Familia; he was
specifically targeted for extortion because he owned a restaurant where La
Familia wanted to sell drugs. He says that letting La Familia sell drugs
through his restaurant would amount to complicity in its acts and participation
in its criminal enterprise. La Familia’s attempt to get him to allow them to
sell drugs in his restaurant is therefore equivalent to recruitment, which
makes Martinez Pineda applicable.
[33]
The
Applicant also argues that Guifarro and Perez, which the RPD
relied on to support its analysis of section 97, were wrongly decided because
they followed the approach laid out by Justice Snider in Osorio, above. On
subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii), Justice Snider said at paragraph 26 of her
decision:
[…] I
can see nothing in s. 97(1)(b)(ii) that requires the Board to interpret “generally”
as applying to all citizens. The word “generally” is commonly used to mean “prevalent”
or “widespread”. Parliament deliberately chose to include the word “generally”
in s. 97(1)(b)(ii), thereby leaving to the Board the issue of deciding whether
a particular group meets the definition. Provided that its conclusion is
reasonable, as it is here, I see no need to intervene.
[34]
The
Applicant says that this approach is wrong and merits reconsideration. He says the
cases which rely on this approach are wrongly decided. The RPD’s interpretation
of 97(1)(b)(ii) was unreasonable because it relied on these wrongly
decided cases. The Applicant says that “generalized risk” should be interpreted
to mean “a risk faced by all citizens in the country of reference.” The RPD’s
interpretation of “generalized risk” to include risks faced by groups smaller
than the entire population of the country of reference was in error. The
Applicant says that his interpretation of generalized risk is supported by a
textual and contextual analysis of section 97, the legislative history of
section 97, and the spirit of the Act.
[35]
The
Applicant points to the Post-Determination Refugee Claimants in Canada (PDRCC)
class established in the former Immigration Act, RSC 1985, c. I-2. To be
eligible to remain in Canada under that class, claimants had to
establish that removal would subject them to “an objectively identifiable risk,
which risk would apply in every part of that country and would not be faced generally
by other individuals in or from that country.” He notes that the Citizenship
and Immigration Canada (CIC) Guidelines on that class said that:
The
threat is not restricted to a risk personalized to an individual; it includes
risks faced by individuals that may be shared by others who are similarly
situated. […] Any risk that would apply to all residents or citizens of the
country of origin cannot result in a positive decision under this regulation.
[36]
Because
these guidelines indicate that a risk to all citizens in a country would
exclude a claimant from the PDRCC class, the Applicant argues that “generalized
risk” in subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) of the Act must mean a risk that is
faced by all citizens in the country of reference.
[37]
The
Applicant notes that Justice Donna McGillis considered those Guidelines in Sinnappu
v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1997] FCJ No 173. Justice McGillis
said in her decision that the guidelines interpret “generalized risk” under the
PDRCC class to mean a risk faced by all residents or citizens of that country.
[38]
The
Applicant refers to a paper produced by the Legal Services Branch of the
Immigration and Refugee Board entitled “Consolidated grounds in the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act” from which he quotes the following
passage:
If
the risk faced by a person stems from a general risk in that country, the
person is not protected under section 97(1)(b). Protection is limited to those
who face a specific risk not faced generally by others in the country. There
must be some particularization of the risk to the person claiming protection as
opposed to an indiscriminate or random risk faced by the claimant and others.
A
claim based on natural catastrophes such as drought, famine, earthquakes, etc.
will not satisfy the definition as the risk is generalized. However, claims
based on personal threats, vendettas, etc. may be able to satisfy the
definition (provided that all the elements of s. 97(1)(b) are met) as the risk
is not indiscriminate or random.
In
a civil war situation a claimant would be required to adduce some evidence that
the risk faced is not an indiscriminate risk faced generally in that country,
but linked to a particular characteristic or status. In a refugee claim, a
claimant fleeing a situation of civil war may be able to establish a claim
where the risk of persecution is not individualized but is group-based harm
that is distinguishable from the general dangers of civil war. There is a
requirement of some targeting although the targeted group can be large and
there can be several opposing targeted groups. Similarly, the PDRCC Guidelines
did not require individualized targeting, but would exclude victims of random violence
in a civil war situation if all residents were subject to that random violence.
This approach to risk arising from civil war is consistent with the IRB’s
Chairperson’s Civil War Guidelines and appears to be consistent with the
intent of 97(1)(b)(ii).
Therefore,
individuals who face a serious and credible risk may not be able to benefit
from protection under s. 97(1)(b) as long as the risk is faced generally by
citizens in that country irrespective of their personal characteristics or
status [references omitted].
[39]
The
Applicant says that this passage demonstrates that subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii)
only operates to exclude from protection claimants who face a risk that is
faced by all the citizens in the country of reference.
[40]
The
Applicant also says that Parliamentary committee debates around the Act support
his interpretation of generalized risk. He notes that Gerry Van Kesssel, the
Director General, Refugees at the time the Act was before the Standing
Committee on Citizenship and Immigration said that the “concept of personal
risk as opposed to general risk faced by the entire population is contained in
the convention refugee definition and in the convention against torture.” This,
the Applicant says, demonstrates that “generalized risk” is risk that is faced
by all people in the country of reference.
[41]
The
Applicant also says that, where an individual is personally targeted, this is
enough to take that person out of the exclusion from generalized risk. Though
the risk that person faces may be faced by a significant portion of the
population, personal targeting is enough to particularize the risk and make the
97(1)(b)(ii) exclusion from protection inoperative. The Applicant says
that this is consistent with the UNHCR’s interpretation of “generalized
violence.” This interpretation also accords with the spirit of the Act, which
the Applicant says is primarily about saving lives and offering protection.
Further, this accords with an interpretation of the Act which is consistent
with the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
[42]
To
interpret section 97 as not extending protection to persons in danger who have
been personally targeted simply because they form part of a larger segment of
the population affected by the same risks would conflict with the wording and
spirit of the Act. The Applicant says that this would lead to arbitrary results
based on a subjective prior determination of the existence of sufficiently
large at-risk group. An interpretation of “generalized risk” which falls short
of a risk faced by all citizens in the country would result in a protection gap
and would not be consistent with international law. This interpretation would
also mean that nobody fleeing persecution from organized crime could ever make
a successful claim under section 97.
[43]
Osorio, above, was
therefore wrongly decided and, because the RPD relied on cases that followed the
reasoning in Osorio, its interpretation of subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii)
was unreasonable. The Decision should therefore be returned for
reconsideration.
The RPD Failed to Appreciate the Nature of
the Threat the Applicant Faced
[44]
In
the alternative, the Applicant argues that the RPD failed to appreciate the
fact that he was specifically and personally targeted. He says that the RPD
focused on the fact that he faced extortion and ignored the fact that he was
also at risk because of his refusal to allow La Familia to sell drugs in his
restaurant. The Applicant says that La Familia’s demand to sell drugs in his
restaurant is tantamount to recruitment into the cartel and his refusal is the
same as refusing to join La Familia. This puts him into the same situation as the
claimant in Martinez Pineda, above, who refused to join the Maras Salvatruchas
gang over an extended period. The RPD should have made a finding that was
consistent with Martinez Pineda because the facts of that case are
similar.
[45]
Although
the risk of extortion was generalized, the Applicant says that when he refused
to allow La Familia to sell drugs in his restaurant, this sufficiently
particularized the risk to him to ground a finding of risk under section 97.
The RPD erred, as it did in Martinez Pineda, by focussing on the
generalized threat to the population in Mexico while at the
same time failing to consider the Applicant’s particular situation. The
Decision is unreasonable on this basis.
[46]
The Applicant says that the RPD also failed to
appropriately link the country documentation which was before it to his
situation. He says that, if it had done so, the RPD would have concluded that
he faced a risk which was different from that faced by the general population
in Mexico.
The Respondent
The RPD’s
Decision Was Reasonable
[47]
The
Respondent says that the RPD assessed the Applicant’s personal risk in the
context of the evidence and reached a reasonable conclusion that he had not
made out a case under section 97. The RPD did not ignore the evidence which was
before it and did not err in its analysis of this Court’s jurisprudence. The
RPD’s conclusion that the Applicant faced a generalized risk of harm was open
to it on the facts and the law. Since the standard of review on a determination
under section 97 is reasonableness, this Court should not interfere in the
Decision.
The
RPD’s Interpretation of Paragraph 97(1)(b) was Reasonable
[48]
The
Respondent notes that section 97 only extends protection to claimants where the
risk they face is particularized and is not generally faced by other
individuals in the country of reference. When the RPD finds that there is a
generalized risk, it need not examine state protection.
[49]
The
analysis under paragraph 97(1)(b) must be grounded in the circumstances
of each case. Where a person is a victim of crime, Innocent, above,
teaches that this is insufficient on its own to extend protection under section
97 of the Act. This Court has rejected the Applicant’s argument that it is
wrong per se not to extend protection to individuals who have been
targeted by criminal organizations because they form part of a larger segment
of the population affected by the same risks.
[50]
The
Respondent also relies on Innocent, above, at paragraph 49 for the
proposition that simply because members of a group may be at higher risk of
targeting for crime and violence because they are wealthy does not mean those
people have a sufficiently personalized risk to make them persons in need of
protection. The targeting and extortion of business people is not enough to
establish a personalized risk (see De Parada v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2009 FC 845).
[51]
In
this case, the RPD assessed the Applicant’s personal circumstances, considered
this Court’s decision in Martinez Pineda, above, and decided that that case
did not apply. Martinez Pineda was not about the proper interpretation
of 97(1)(b). Justice de Montigny found on the specific facts in that
case that the RPD failed to appreciate the specific nature of the risk faced by
the claimant. Further, the cases the Applicant relies on to show that Martinez
Pineda is good law – Aguilar Zacharias, Castenada, Lamour,
and M.A.C.P., all above – stand only for the proposition that each
case must be assessed on its own facts. Those cases do not stand for the proposition
that Martinez Pineda applies to all cases.
[52]
The
Respondent says that it was not an error for the RPD to rely on the cases that
it did; it did not have to decide the Applicant’s case according to Martinez
Pineda. The RPD’s finding that La Familia was not seeking to recruit the
Applicant, but was only interested in his business and his money, was open to
it on the facts.
[53]
The
Respondent also argues that the Applicant’s attempt to overturn Osorio
in this case is baseless. Justice Paul Crampton noted in Guifarro,
above, that Prophète v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 331 [Prophète 1] was decided
in a similar way to Osorio. The same approach taken by Justice Danièle
Tremblay-Lamer in Prophète 1, which was similar to that taken by Justice
Snider in Osorio, has been upheld by the Federal Court of Appeal (see Prophète
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2009 FCA 31 [Prophète
2]).
[54]
In
Arias v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2010 FC
1029, Justice Marie-Josée Bédard considered Prophète 2, Osorio,
and Innocent. The Respondent says that, in that case, Justice Bédard
rejected the claimant’s assertion that the tribunal erred in determining that
the risk he faced was comparable to that facing the general population. The
evidence in that case showed that the claimant was part of a subgroup of young
men who were more at risk of gang recruitment than the general population. This
was insufficient to show that the claimant faced a personalized risk.
[55]
The
Respondent says that in Innocent, Justice Robert Mainville rejected the
same arguments the Applicant has raised in this case based on the PDRCC
Guidelines, the Consolidated Grounds in the Act, the legislative history of the
Act, and UNHCR’s interpretation of “generalized violence.” The Respondent
points to Justice Mainville’s consideration of Sinnappu, Innocent,
both above, where he wrote at paragraph 53 that
We note that the guidelines dealt with the wording of the former
Regulations and certainly do not bind the Court with respect to interpreting
subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) of the Act as it reads
now. That being said, it is important to note that, subsequent to 1994, there
were significant regulatory and statutory amendments concerning the PDRCC
class.
[56]
The
Respondent also refers to Prophète 2 where
the Federal Court of Appeal found that it was open to the judge hearing the
judicial review application to find that 97(1)(b)(ii) applied to a
specific number of individuals, or subclass of individuals, who are targeted
more frequently because they are wealthy. The Applicant has not addressed Prophète
2 and there is no reviewable error in the RPD’s interpretation of
subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) of the Act.
The RPD’s Assesment of the Applicant’s Risk
was Reasonable
[57]
The
Respondent says that the RPD’s findings of fact are not in question, even
though the Applicant says that the RPD failed to appreciate the fact that he
was personally targeted. The Applicant has not asserted that the RPD ignored or
misconstrued the documentary evidence about the conditions in Mexico.
[58]
Contrary
to the Applicant’s assertion, the RPD appreciated the fundamental dynamics of
this case. It did not ignore the Applicant’s refusal to allow La Familia to
sell drugs in his restaurant. It was open to the RPD to find that this was not
recruitment into the gang but was a form of extortion, and that extortion was a
risk generally faced by all people in Mexico. Unlike Martinez
Pineda, where the claimant was targeted for recruitment over a long period
of time, the Applicant in this case was not targeted for recruitment. The risk
the Applicant faced was solely connected to his business.
[59]
The
RPD’s Decision falls within the Dunsmuir range and so should not be
disturbed by this Court.
The
Respondent’s Further Memorandum
[60]
The Respondent says that the Applicant does not
dispute the RPD’s analysis of the conditions in Mexico or argue that the RPD inappropriately considered country conditions
in this case.
[61]
In his Memorandum of Argument, the Applicant
says that the cook at his restaurant was kidnapped and executed by La Familia
members who came to collect on the “taxes” the Applicant owned. This event was
not in the Applicant’s PIF narrative submitted prior to the hearing. This event
was only raised at the hearing, where the Applicant said that the cook was
kidnapped, murdered, and found three days later. The Applicant testified that
he was told this by the cook’s wife and he believed La Familia was responsible.
[62]
It was reasonable for the RPD to conclude that
the Applicant faced a generalized risk of crime, given that he faced the same
risk of extortion from La Familia as other business owners. The Respondent
notes that, when asked how being a businessman made him different from other
victims of crime, the Applicant said “No, in nothing except that simply I had a
restaurant and they stabbed me. That’s it. There is no difference except that
they threatened me.”
[63]
The Respondent says that the Applicant has asked
this Court to examine his case from a theoretical point of view, when the
appropriate approach is to examine the application of subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii)
on the specific facts. There was no error in the RPD’s analysis of the relevant
subparagraph; the Applicant had to bring himself within the exception under
subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii), and it was reasonable for the RPD to conclude
that he had not.
[64]
In Osorio, above, Justice Snider said
that common sense must govern the application of subparagraph (97(1)(b)(ii).
The RPD, in this case, found that “generally” is commonly used to mean “prevalent”
or “widespread.” It was reasonable for the RPD to rely on Osorio in
interpreting 97(1)(b)(ii) as it did and to conclude that the fact that
some people share the same risk as other similarly situated persons does not
give them a personalized risk.
[65]
The Respondent notes that Osorio has been
considered a number of times by this Court, including in Prophète 1,
above. The Federal Court of Appeal declined to answer the certified question in
Prophète 1, saying that answering that question could unduly narrow or
widen subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii), depending on the circumstances of the
case.
[66]
In Innocent, above, Justice Mainville
emphasized that 97(1)(b)(ii) is highly fact dependent and that, to the
extent the RPD’s analysis and conclusions are reasonable, this Court should not
interfere.
[67]
The Respondent says that Martinez Pineda,
above, and Osorio are not in conflict. In S.M. v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2011 FC 949, Justice Snider said at
paragraphs 17 to 19 that
One of the
key elements of a s. 97(1) analysis is the characterization of the risk faced
by a claimant. If the risk can be associated to a Convention ground, it should
be considered under s. 96. Where, as in this case, the Board concludes that
there is no nexus between the risk and a Convention ground, the Board must
consider whether the risk falls within s. 97(1) of the Act. For s. 97(1)
purposes, the Board must first evaluate the risk to determine whether it is the
type of risk that is generally faced by citizens in the country (Diaz v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 797 at para 40). It is at this first step that the Applicant failed to
make her case to the Board.
Someone who
is attacked and fears that attacks may occur in the future will no doubt see
the attack as personalized. However, if that initial attack was based on a
generalized risk, it would likely not be unreasonable for the Board to find
that any future risk of an attack was a risk faced generally by the population.
That was the situation considered by the Court in Prophète
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 331 (aff'd 2009 FCA 31). If however, the first
attack took place for a unique or individualized reason, it may be that the
risk is not generalized (see, for example, Pineda,
above).
On the
particular facts of this case, the Board’s conclusion was reasonably open to
it. First, the Board reasonably characterized the risk faced by the Applicant
as one of extortion. The Applicant's attempt to characterize it otherwise to my
mind is not persuasive because, whether the ultimate money will come from the
Applicant or her brother, the fact is that she is being targeted for the
purpose of extorting money. Second, the Board reasonably found that a risk of
extortion by criminal gangs is one faced generally by individuals in El Salvador who are
perceived to be wealthy. Finally, the Board correctly applied the
jurisprudence, including Prophète, that states that
even if wealthy people face an elevated risk, that does not constitute a
personalized risk under s. 97.
[68]
Further, the Respondent says that Innocent teaches
that care should be taken when relying on external evidence to interpret
statutes.
[69]
On the cover page of his memorandum, the
Applicant has included the following quotation from Lukman Mohamed v The
Secretary of Satate for the Home Department, a case decided by the UK
Asylum and Immigration Tribunal: “Indiscriminate violence does not by its
simple and logical definition, target individuals; it targets no one, but
affects anyone and potentially everyone.” This quotation was reproduced in the
UNHCR Statement on Subsidiary Protection Under the EC Qualification
Directive for People Threatened by Indiscriminate Violence, of January
2008. The Respondent says that nothing turns on this quotation. He also says
that the EC Qualification Directive, to which the Statement on Subsidiary
Protection is addressed, is concerned with protection for people who face
indiscriminate violence arising from armed conflict. The EC Qualification
Directive is not relevant to the interpretation of subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii),
which is the issue before this Court, nor is that document before the Court.
ANALYSIS
[70]
The
issues raised by the Applicant have received a great deal of consideration by
this Court. The Applicant seeks to distinguish himself from one line of cases
and invites the Court to disregard and overturn other cases as being wrong in
principle. In my view, however, what the whole picture shows is that the
principles embodied in subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) of the Act are clear
and understood; the problem is that they are often difficult to apply to the
many and varied fact situations that come before the Court when it has to
decide whether a particular applicant is subjected personally to a risk that is
not faced generally by other individuals in or from that country of origin.
[71]
The
Court agrees with the Respondent that the jurisprudence of the Court dealing
with the application of subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) is largely contextual
in origin and is highly dependent on the individual facts of each case.
[72]
In
order to bring himself within subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) the Applicant
had to establish that removal to Mexico would subject him personally to a risk
to his life or to a risk of cruel and unusual treatment that is not faced generally
by other individuals in or from that country.
[73]
Based
on the evidence before the RPD and the substantial case law of the Court
dealing with subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii), it is my view that the RPD did
not err in its application of the provision.
[74]
In
Osorio, above, Justice Snider found that common sense must determine the
meaning of subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) at paragraphs 24 to 26:
It seems to
me that common sense must determine the meaning of s. 97(1)(b)(ii). To put the
matter simply: if the Applicants are correct that parents in Colombia are a
group facing a risk not faced generally by other individuals in Colombia, then
it follows that every Colombian national who is a parent and who comes to
Canada is automatically a person in need or protection. This cannot be so.
The risk
described by the Applicants and the Board in this case is a risk faced by
millions of Colombians; indeed, all Colombians who have or will have children
are members of this population. It is difficult to define a broader or more general
group within a nation than the group consisting of “parents”.
Further, I
can see nothing in s. 97(1)(b)(ii) that requires the Board to interpret
“generally” as applying to all citizens. The word “generally” is commonly used
to mean “prevalent” or “widespread”. Parliament deliberately chose to include
the word “generally” in s. 97(1)(b)(ii), thereby leaving to the Board the issue
of deciding whether a particular group meets the definition. Provided that its
conclusion is reasonable, as it is here, I see no need to intervene.
[75]
Relying
on the decision in Osorio in this case, the RPD reasonably stated that
the word “generally” was commonly used to mean prevalent or widespread. The RPD
relied on the decision in Osorio when it stated that “if the risk to violence
or injury or crime is a generalized risk faced by all citizens of Mexico, the fact
that a specific number of individuals may be targeted more frequently does not
mean that they are not subject to a generalized risk of violence. The fact that
they share the same risk as other persons similarly situated does not make
their risk a personalized risk subject to protection under section 97.”
[76]
The
decision in Osorio has been considered in a number of decisions of the
Court in the assessment of the factual context of individual cases. It was
relied on by Justice Tremblay-Lamer in Prophète 1. Moreover,
the Federal Court of Appeal in Prophète 2 emphasized the importance of the factual context of individual
cases. In the Court’s reasons for dismissing the appeal, Justice Trudel stated
that the Court would not answer the certified question which, depending on the
circumstances of each case, would unduly narrow or widen the scope of
subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii). In addition, the examination of a claim under
subsection 97(1) necessitates an individualized inquiry, which has to be
conducted on the basis of the evidence adduced by an applicant. See Prophète
1, above, Prophète 2, above, Innocent, above, Gabriel v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2009 FC 1170, and Aburto v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 1049.
[77]
The
Prophète decisions from both this Court and the Federal Court of Appeal
have also been applied in a number of court cases. In Innocent, Justice
Mainville further emphasized that the assessment under subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii)
is based on the particular facts of each case. He stated that to the extent the
RPD’s analysis and conclusions on the facts are reasonable, the Court should
not intervene. See Innocent, above.
[78]
The
Respondent submits that, contrary to the Applicant’s assertion, the decision of
the Court in cases such as Martinez Pineda and Osorio are not at
odds with each other. This is illustrated by the decision in S.M., above,
and the words of Justice Snider at paragraphs 17 and 18 and reproduced in
paragraph 67 of these reasons.
[79]
The
Applicant raises two issues for consideration by the Court. First of all, he
says that the RPD failed to consider whether the demand by La Familia to use
his restaurant as a place to sell drugs exposed him to a personalized risk that
would not be faced generally by other individuals in or from Mexico.
[80]
What
the Applicant has in mind here is the kind of situation dealt with by Justice Sean
Harrington in Uribe v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2011 FC 1164, at paragraphs 6 to 11:
The member correctly noted that a generalized
risk need not be one experienced by every citizen. He found that Los Zetas was
a gang highly active in Mexico and, indeed, country documentation indicated that
it was the number one organization responsible for the majority of narcotic
related homicides, beheadings, kidnappings and extortions which take place in Mexico. However,
he went on to say:
[26] There
is no evidence that the claimants were targeted by Los Zetas because of any
personal characteristics. The evidence indicates that Los Zetas simply wanted
to obtain assets: in this case, a warehouse and the physical help of its
workers.
[27] I
find, on the evidence, that the risk faced by the claimants is one that is
faced generally by other individuals from Mexico.
The issue in this judicial review of that
decision is whether it was reasonable. I find that it was not reasonable in
that there was an inadequate analysis of the Ponce Uribes’ personal situation.
The distinction between a “personal risk” and a “generalized risk” under section 97 of IRPA can
certainly give rise to difficulties. I recently set out my own understanding of
some of the factors involved in Jimenez Palomo v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1163. The duty to assess an
applicant’s personal situation in the light of country conditions was well
explained by Mr. Justice Simon Noël in Aguilar Zacarias v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 62, [2011] FCJ No 144
(QL), where he said at paragraphs 10 and 17:
[10] The
Board concluded that while this subjective fear was indeed present, the
Applicant faced a risk of persecution that is faced by the population in
general. This generalized risk spawned from the breadth of gang activities in Guatemala. The
Applicant would thus be part of a specific category of people, mainly vendors,
which are targeted generally by street gangs. As such, the risk faced by the
Applicant was not deemed to be within the range of possibilities provided by
section 97 of the IRPA. Furthermore, there was no nexus to a Convention
grounds. Consequently, his claim for asylum was rejected.
[17] As
was the case in Martinez Pineda, the Board erred in its decision: it focused on
the generalized threat suffered by the population of Guatemala while
failing to consider the Applicant's particular situation. Because the
Applicant's credibility was not in question, the Board had the duty to fully
analyse and appreciate the personalized risk faced by the Applicant in order to
render a complete analysis of the Applicant’s claim for asylum under section 97
of the IRPA. It appears that the Applicant was not targeted in the same manner
as any other vendor in the market: reprisal was sought because he had
collaborated with authorities, refused to comply with the gang’s requests and
knew of the circumstance of Mr. Vicente’s death.
The facts of this case are not unlike those in Munoz
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC
238, [2010] FCJ No 268 (QL), where Mr. Justice Lemieux said at paragraph 32:
[32] I
agree with counsel for the applicants, the extortion and threats which Mr.
Munoz alleges were not random. Mr. Munoz was specifically and personally
targeted by Mr. Garcia because of his unique position - the head of sales at a
car dealership which is why Garcia and his friends came there. If returned, Mr.
Munoz does not fear being subject to random acts of violence by unknown
criminal gangs. He fears Mr. Garcia.
This is not simply a case in which the Ponce
Uribe brothers were targeted because they ran a business. They were targeted
because they ran a particular business which suited the specific needs of Los
Zetas; vehicles could be sent to the carwash and while there, items could be
transferred to or from the vehicles into the warehouse.
There is no evidence as to how many other
persons would be facing a similar risk. Certainly, there is no indication that
the sub-group could number in the thousands as noted by Mr. Justice Crampton in
Paz Guifarro v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC
182, [2011] FCJ No 222 (QL), at paragraph 33:
Given the
frequency with which claims such as those that were advanced in the case at bar
continue to be made under s. 97, I find it necessary to underscore that is now
settled law that claims based on past and likely future targeting of the
claimant will not meet the requirements of paragraph 97(1)(b)(ii) of the IRPA
where (i) such targeting in the claimant's home country occurred or is likely
to occur because of the claimant's membership in a sub-group of persons
returning from abroad or perceived to have wealth for other reasons, and (ii)
that sub-group is sufficiently large that the risk can reasonably be
characterized as being widespread or prevalent in that country. In my view, a
subgroup of such persons numbering in the thousands would be sufficiently large
as to render the risk they face widespread or prevalent in their home country,
and therefore “general” within the meaning of paragraph 97(1)(b)(ii), even
though that subgroup may only constitute a small percentage of the general
population in that country.
[81]
As
in Uribe, above, the Applicant argues that the RPD did not address the
issue of whether he was targeted because he ran a particular business (i.e., a
restaurant) and there was no evidence as to how many other persons would be
facing a similar risk. Like the Uribe brothers’ carwash, the Applicant’s
restaurant suited La Familia’s needs and they wanted to use it to sell drugs.
[82]
The
Applicant claims that he raised this issue with the RPD. In his PIF and at
various points in his testimony, he referred to La Familia’s demand to use his
restaurant to sell drugs (see pages 22, 521, 525, and 527 of the CTR), but he
says that the RPD remained fixated on the money demands and neglected to
consider the restaurant aspect of the threats. He also says that his counsel
made submissions on point. The CTR records counsel arguing as follows:
Under 97, in my submission, the risk
faced by the Claimant here is not a risk that is faced generally by other
individuals in Mexico. As I said earlier, this is
something that is very specific to the Claimant that has arisen out of his
particular circumstances. If the Panel finds the Claimant to be credible -- and
in my submission there is no reason to find otherwise.
Then the Panel also has to recognize that
he was threatened by a well-organized, brutal criminal drug cartel who didn’t
only just try to extort him, but also demanded that they allow them to engage
in their criminal enterprise in his restaurant, making him complicit in their
criminal enterprise.
The Claimant was specifically and
personally targeted. He was threatened; his life was threatened. He was
stabbed. The cook at his restaurant was killed. And one of the principal
players here is, as I said, the police chief or ex-police chief in Texcoco.
And so in my submission it’s clear here
that the Claimant would be exposed to a personal risk and that this risk is
greater than that faced by the general population in Mexico.
And I wanted to point the Member to a
2007 Federal Court case. It was Martinez Pineda v Canada.
And in this case, the federal court [sic] allowed the judicial review
application based on 97.1(b).
The Claimant there was a Salvadorian
citizen. He had been threatened on many occasions by a street gang after he
refused to become a member of the gang. And there was evidence adduced that
street gangs recruited across the country and that it was widespread. And so
Mr. Pineda’s application was denied, or his claim was denied on the basis that
the risk that he faced was a generalized risk.
On appeal, the federal court noted this,
and I’m just going to quote from the decision. It’s paragraph 17 of the Decision
for your reference.
“The Applicant was not
claiming to be subject to a risk to his life or his safety based only on the
fact that he was a student, young, but from a wealthy family.
“If such were the case, the Application
would have to be dismissed for the same reasons that led the Court to confirm
the in [sic] RPD decisions in the two matters mentioned above. But this
is not the case.
“The Applicant alleged that he
had been personally targeted on more than one occasion and over quite a long
period of time. Unless we question the truthfulness of his story, which the RPD
did not do, we have no doubt that he will be personally in danger if he were to
return to El
Salvador.
“And the particular
circumstances of this matter to find the opposite amounts to a patently
unreasonable error.
In my submission, in this case, the
Claimant is not claiming to be subject to a risk to his life or safety based
only on the fact that he is a business owner or entrepreneur in a
gang-controlled area. He is saying that he was personally targeted by members
of La Familia on more than one occasion.
And even if there are other business
owners facing similar circumstances, in my submission, such persons would also
face a heightened risk that is greater than that of the general population.
In my submission, if the Board accepts
the truthfulness of the Claimant’s story and there’s no reason not to, then the
Board must find that he would be personally in danger if he were to return to Mexico.
In my submission, the Claimant’s claim
for protection in Canada should therefore be accepted.
And subject to any questions, those are my submissions.
[83]
Counsel
clearly asked the RPD to consider personalized risk from La Familia not only
because the Applicant was extorted, but also because La Familia “demanded that
they (sic) allow them to engage in their criminal enterprise in his
restaurant, making him complicit in their criminal enterprise.”
[84]
In
the Decision, the RPD was obviously aware of, and acknowledged that “After some
time, the extortion demands were increased to $500 per month, with a request
that they be able to sell drugs in the restaurant.”
[85]
It
is clear then, that when the RPD refers throughout the rest of the Decision to
“extortion demands” it means the money paid together with the demand to use the
restaurant to sell drugs. The sentence quoted above is immediately followed by
“The claimant refused to pay this increase.” The RPD concludes that the
Applicant was a victim of crime, including extortion demands, but that the
crime was not specific to the Applicant.
[86]
The
RPD then states its general view of the law:
While that case differs from the present
case, I am of the view that if the risk to violence or injury or crime is a
generalized risk faced by all citizens of Mexico, the fact that a specific
number of individuals may be targeted more frequently, does not mean that they
are not subject to a “generalized risk” of violence. The fact that they share
the same risk as other persons similarly situated does not make their risk a
“personalized risk” subject to protection under section 97.
Counsel submits Martinez Pineda,
however, that case is not consistent with the predominant line of cases, such
as Acosta, Perez, and Paz Guifarro. Acosta was facing
death at the hands of the Maras for inadvertently failing to
pay the extortion money taken from bus drivers and fare collectors. Paz
Guifarro faced retaliation for not complying with the extortion demands of the Maras and reporting them to the police. That,
however, did not turn their risk as one of many such victims of these gangs
into a personalized risk. In Acosta, the Court stated that victims of
generalized violence are often known to the perpetrators, by name, by position,
or for any number of different reasons. The fact that the victims of
generalized violence happen again today, as all people do, and that that
identity is or becomes known to the perpetrator, does not mean that they are
not a victim of generalized violence. Furthermore, regarding generalized risk
in Paz Guifarro:
The Court underscored that it is now settled
law that claims will not meet the requirements of section 97(1)(b)(ii)
of the IRPA where (i) targeting is because of the claimant’s membership in a
sub-group of persons returning from abroad or perceived to have wealth for
other reasons and (ii) that sub-group is sufficiently large that the risk can
reasonably be characterized as being widespread or prevalent in that country. A
sub-group numbering in the thousands would be sufficiently large as to render
the risk widespread or prevalent and therefore “general” even though that
sub-group may only constitute a small percentage of the general population in
that country.
In summary,
the fact that a person or
group of people may be victimized repeatedly or more frequently by criminals,
for example, because of their perceived wealth or because they live any [sic]
more dangerous area,
that the claimant continues to
be pursued after reporting to police or relocating,
that the claimant faces
retaliation for not complying with the demands of the criminals, does not
remove the risk from the exception, if it is one faced generally by others. The
consequential harm faced in the circumstances, does not mean that the risk is
not a generalized one.
In this case, it is accepted that you
were subjected personally to a risk to harm under section 97 of the Act; you
were targeted for extortion, and that you became a victim of the gang’s
violence, when you refused to heed to their extortion demands.
However, in accordance with the
documentary evidence, the risk you faced as a result of being a target of
extortion is faced generally by people in Mexico. The extortion would be faced in every
part of the country and is faced generally by all residents of Mexico. The evidence in this case
shows that the fear of extortion has been recognized as a generalized risk.
[87]
The
Applicant faults the RPD for this conclusion because he says it did not
consider that aspect of his case where La Familia requested the use of his
restaurant to sell drugs. In my view, however, the RPD does address this aspect
of the case because it treats the request to use the restaurant as part of the
“extortion demands” used by La Familia. In my view, then, it is not left out of
account when the RPD considers generalized risk. So the issue becomes whether,
given that the “extortion demands” include both money and a request to use the
restaurant to sell drugs, it was unreasonable for the RPD to conclude that the
risk faced by the Applicant “as a result of being a target of extortion is
faced generally by all residents of Mexico.”
[88]
As
Justice Harrington pointed out in Uribe, above, the distinction between
generalized and personalized risk under section 97 can certainly give rise to
difficulties, and each fact situation needs to be carefully examined. The Court
also has to bear in mind that this is a matter for the RPD to determine and not
the Court. Provided the RPD makes a reasonable determination within the Dunsmuir
range that is supportable on the evidence, the Court should not interfere even
if it would have reached a different conclusion. Considering the
evidence given by the Applicant himself on this point, I cannot say that the
conclusion falls outside of the Dunsmuir range. The RPD specifically
asked the Applicant to say what made him different:
INTERPRETER: I
apologize; it might be my mistake.
MEMBER: No.
Okay, so you were a businessman?
CLAIMANT: M’hm.
MEMBER: How
does that make you different?
CLAIMANT: No,
in nothing except that simply I had a restaurant and they stabbed me. That’s
it. There is no difference except that this happened to me. They stabbed me;
they threatened me. They fulfilled it, and that’s it. I have the opportunity to
leave.
MEMBER: Counsel,
do you want to ask questions, or would you like to take a break instead?
COUNSEL FOR CLAIMANT: I have
very few questions, so I think I could ask them now; thank you.
MEMBER: Okay.
So I don’t have questions for you right now. But your counsel is going to ask
you questions.
[89]
Having
just heard what the Applicant had to say on what made him different, his counsel
did not explore this matter further with him or try to elicit evidence that
would relate his difference to the request to use the restaurant for selling
drugs.
[90]
Given
this evidentiary basis, I cannot say that the RPD overlooked some point of
difference that the Applicant felt took him outside of the general risk from
extortion that is faced generally in Mexico.
[91]
In
submissions at the RPD hearing, counsel ask the RPD to consider the request to
use the restaurant, but my reading of the Decision is that this was taken into
account as part of the “extortion demands.” So I cannot say that this factor
was overlooked and I cannot say that, after taking all of the factors at play
into account, the RPD reached an unreasonable conclusion about generalized risk.
[92]
The
Applicant also seeks to have the Decision set aside on the basis that the RPD
misinterpreted and misapplied the relevant legislation and jurisprudence, and
that decisions such as Osorio are flawed and require reconsideration
because
by its very nature, a generalized risk is
one that applies to all citizens of country, and that where an individual has
been personally targeted, the risk to that person ceases to be a generalized
risk regardless of what risks may be faced generally by others in the same country.
[93]
The
Applicant says that his interpretation of the legislation is supported by a
textual and contextual analysis of section 97, including the records of the
drafting of this provision, and with the spirit of the Act as a whole. In my
view, however, the approach to section 97 of the Act, as found in cases such as
Osorio, above, is well-settled in the jurisprudence of this Court and is
quoted and described accurately in the RPD’s Decision.
Certification
[94]
In
Zazai v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2004 FCA 89,
Justice Pelletier held at paragraph 11 that a question for certification must
be a serious question of general importance which would be dispositive of an
appeal. To be dispositive of an appeal, a question must have been raised and dealt
with in the decision below. Further, where the judge on judicial review decides
that it does not need to be dealt with, the issue will not be an appropriate
question for certification. In Varela v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2009 FCA 145, Justice Pelletier affirmed Zazai
and held at paragraph 28 that a question for certification must arise from
the issues in the case and not from the reviewing judge’s reasons.
The
Question Proposed
[95]
The
Applicant proposes the following question for certification in IMM-2409-11:
Does the limitation of section
97(1)(b)(ii) of the IRPA apply to an individual who, unlike an
individual who fears the possibility of being targeted, has already been
personally targeted by a specific agent of persecution, and who fears that he
will be targeted by that agent of persecution?
Arguments on Certification
The Applicant
[96]
The
Applicant pins his proposed question on the role that a claimant’s personal
circumstances play in the analysis of section 97. He says that the RPD can
grant protection where a claimant’s personal circumstances merit it, even where
the RPD finds an internal flight alternative exists under 97(1)(b)(i) or
where state protection exists under 97(1)(b)(ii). The Applicant also
says that, as the jurisprudence now stands, the RPD cannot grant protection if
a claimant faces a generalized risk, even if the claimant’s personal
circumstances merit protection. Because the RPD is permitted to grant
protection based on personal circumstances under 97(1)(b)(i) and (ii),
this means that the generalized risk exception in 97(1)(b)(ii) is not
meant to apply to people who have been personally targeted.
[97]
The
Applicant’s position seems to be that once a claimant has been victimized,
there can be no more generalized risk. He says that, though the Court has
refused to certify similar questions in the past, this does not prevent
certification in this case. Previous cases refused certification on narrow
factual grounds, while the question he raises is of broad application.
[98]
The
Applicant argues that, while the Court in Prophète 2 declined to answer
a similar question in a factual vacuum, his question is different. He says that
his question deals with the narrow issue of whether there is a difference in
law between a person who fears becoming a victim of crime in a country where
crime is widespread and a person who has already been a victim of crime. The
Applicant also seeks to distinguish his question from that raised in Prophète
2 by saying that his question would not narrow the scope of 97(1)(b)(ii).
This was a concern of the Federal Court of Appeal in Prophète 2. The
Applicant notes that claimants must still establish that they have no internal
flight alternative and rebut the presumption of state protection to be granted
protection under subsection 97(1). Certifying the question he proposes would
not open the floodgates to claims under subsection 97(1).
The
Respondent
[99]
The
Respondent argues that the question the Applicant has proposed does not have
the required factual basis to be certified. He says that the question is
academic and hypothetical, such that the Federal Court of Appeal cannot
meaningfully answer the question. The Respondent notes that Justice Trudel said
in Prophète 2 at paragraph 7 that
The examination of a claim under subsection 97(1) of the Act
necessitates an individualized inquiry, which is to be conducted on the basis
of the evidence adduced by a claimant “in the context of a present
or prospective risk” for him …
This shows that all claims must be examined
on the basis of a prospective risk, regardless of past experience. The
distinction the Applicant draws between those who have been targeted in the
past and those who only fear potential targeting is in error because all claims
must be examined by looking at prospective targeting.
[100] The
Respondent also says that, where the Applicant’s question refers to the
possibility of future targeting, it introduces an uncertain element into the
burden of proof under section 97. The jurisprudence establishes that the risk
under section 97 must be proven on a balance of probabilities. Further, the
Respondent says that the proposed question asks the Court to analyse the
internal flight alternative available to the Applicant or to presuppose that
the Applicant was at risk from La Familia in every part of Mexico. This is not
proper because questions of fact relating to the determination of a refugee
claim are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the RPD under section 162 of the
Act.
[101] The
Respondent further challenges the conceptual basis for the Applicant’s
question. He notes that the entire analysis under subsection 97(1) looks at the
personal circumstances of the claimant and depends on the facts in each case.
To say that the RPD cannot consider a claimant’s personal circumstances when
analysing generalized risk is incorrect. The Respondent points to S.M.,
above, and says that the RPD must analyze the specific risk to the claimant in
every case.
[102] Finally, the
Respondent says that if, as the Applicant has said, the question deals only
with a narrow issue of law which has nothing to do with the facts, the
certified question cannot be answered by the Federal Court of Appeal in any
meaningful way. This means that the proposed question is not proper to certify.
[103] In my view,
the Federal Court of Appeal has already indicated that it will not answer the
kind of question which the Applicant seeks to raise in this case. The Federal
Court of Appeal declined to answer the following question in Prophète 2:
Where the population faces a generalized
risk of crime, does the limitation of section 97(1)(b)(ii) of the IRPA
apply to a subgroup of individuals who face a significantly heightened risk of
such crime?
[104] To answer the
proposed question in the present case, the Federal Court of Appeal would be
called on to decide whether, in all cases where an individual has been previously
targeted, the limitation of subparagraph 97(1)(b)(ii) should not apply.
Referring again to the words of Justice Trudel in Prophète 2, above, at
paragraph 8,
The examination of a claim under subsection 97(1) of the Act
necessitates an individualized inquiry, which is to be conducted on the basis
of the evidence adduced by a claimant “in the context of a present
or prospective risk” for him ….
[105] The proposed
question would ask the Federal Court of Appeal to decide a question as a matter
of law which it has already said is properly a question to be determined in
each case on the facts. The jurisprudence of the Federal Court of Appeal and of
this Court clearly establishes that the question of generalized risk is highly
fact specific; in some cases, personal targeting can ground protection, and in
some it cannot. As Justice Mainville said in Innocent, at paragraph 74,
“I see no point in framing a question that the Federal Court of Appeal has
clearly indicated it will not answer.” For these reasons, it is my view the
Applicant’s proposed question should not be certified.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that
1.
The
application is dismissed;
2.
There
is no question for certification.
“James
Russell”