Date: 20090304
Docket: IMM-3601-08
Citation: 2009
FC 227
Ottawa, Ontario,
March
4, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Harrington
BETWEEN:
CARLOS JORGE RITO SUAREZ,
ADRIANA BUCIO RUIZ,
CARLOS RITO BUCIO,
DULCE FERNANDA RITO BUCIO
AND ARIADNA RITO BUCIO
Applicants
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
Mr. Rito
Suarez has had a tough time of it in Mexico City.
He is a taxi driver who was robbed several times. He witnessed a bank robbery and,
although he cooperated with the police, he was unable to identify any suspect
in a police line-up or the accused in a subsequent trial. Nevertheless a
relative of the accused threatened him at Court. Ominous-looking men who did
not identify themselves visited his father, looking for him, and various
telephone threats were received.
[2]
Putting it
all together with his immense distrust of the police, he concluded that they
would not protect him as a witness to a robbery and that he had earned their
enmity for failing to identify the accused, whom they may have framed.
[3]
He,
his wife and children, fled Mexico for Canada where they
filed a claim for refugee protection pursuant to sections 96 and 97 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act. This is a judicial review of the decision
dismissing that application.
[4]
The
case turns on state protection, as the Refugee Division of the Immigration and
Refugee Board did not consider the internal flight alternative in Mexico. Counsel for
the Rito Suarez family submits that the Panel simply paid lip service to the
principles of state protection and failed to carry out a specific analysis of
documentation both within the Board’s own library and others submitted to the
effect that the police, particularly in Mexico City, are corrupt, and that
there is no protection for a witness to crime. Consequently, the presumption of
state protection has been clearly rebutted.
[5]
The
decision should only be disturbed if I consider it unreasonable (Dunsmuir v.
New
Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190). In my opinion the
decision was reasonable and so I must dismiss this judicial review.
[6]
The
applicants are not refugees within the sense of the United Nations Convention
because there is no nexus between any of the five grounds set out therein and
their situation. Mr. Rito Suarez is a victim of crime and perhaps the target of
a personal vendetta. As such, the issue is whether he needs international
protection, there being a presumption that his own state is able to protect
him.
[7]
It
was submitted that the Panel had set out the wrong test as to the number of
approaches one must make to the authorities before abandoning one’s homeland.
Had the Panel stated that Mr. Rito Suarez had to exhaust every possible
recourse before leaving Mexico, this submission may well have been
correct. As noted by Madam Justice Tremblay-Lamer in Chaves v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 193, [2005] F.C.J. No.
232 (QL), one does not have to go to such lengths as to be killed in order to
establish that there is no state protection available. However that is not the
test set out by the Panel. It correctly noted that there is a presumption that a
state is capable of protecting its citizens except in situations were the state
is in a complete breakdown, and that the burden is on the claimant to show that
state protection is inadequate, a burden discharged on the balance of
probabilities. The Panel said: “The onus is on the claimant to approach the
state for protection in situations where state protection might reasonably be
forthcoming.” After reviewing the evidence the Panel concluded: “…there is
adequate state protection in Mexico and that the claimants have not taken all
of the reasonable steps in the circumstances to pursue the available state protection.”
This is a far cry from stating that they had to exhaust all recourses,
reasonable or not.
[8]
The
Panel is criticized for not carrying out an in-depth analysis of counsel’s
detailed submissions on country conditions. There is a presumption that the Panel
has considered all the evidence (Florea v. Canada (Minister of Employment
and Immigration), [1993] F.C.J. No. 598 (C.A.) (QL)). However that presumption
may be displaced. The more important the documentation is to the applicants’ specific
case, the more it should be specifically analyzed in the reasons for order (Cepeda-Gutierrez
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (1998), 157 F.T.R. 35,
[1998] F.C.J. No. 1425 (QL)).
[9]
In
this case the Panel readily acknowledged that police corruption is a serious
problem, but at the same time pointed out strenuous efforts are being taken to
remedy that situation, or at least to reduce the instances thereof. Despite
what was submitted, the Panel’s analysis does not indicate that it carried out
a “good times” review of country conditions. The Panel was not obliged to expressly
identify and deal with a document in its reasons simply because it was
specifically referred to by counsel, especially since the Panel readily
acknowledged police corruption.
[10]
Since
Mr. Rito Suarez had never identified any of the suspects presented to him by
the police as a robber, reference to lack of adequate witness protection is
somewhat misplaced.
[11]
Mr.
Rito Suarez’s own dealings with the police do not give rise to any hard evidence
of corruption. On the contrary, the bank robbery indicates they were trying to
solve the crime. It is outright speculation to suggest that they were complicit
with the robbers and were trying to frame an innocent person. When he reported
he was robbed in his taxi the police investigated. Furthermore, he never
informed them of the threat at the court house.
[12]
It
was not unreasonable for the Panel to have concluded that the applicants had
failed to establish that state protection is inadequate. A recent decision of
the Federal Court of Appeal dealing with state protection as applied to Mexico is Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v. Flores Carillo, 2008 FCA 94, [2008]
F.C.J. No. 399 (QL).
ORDER
THIS COURT
ORDERS that:
1. The
application for judicial review is dismissed.
2. There is no
serious question of general importance to certify.
“Sean Harrington”