Date: 20110114
Docket: IMM-3882-10
Citation: 2011 FC 44
[UNREVISED ENGLISH
CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario,
January 14, 2011
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Shore
BETWEEN:
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AMBROISE MAPANGU ISHAKU
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I. Preliminary
[1]
“Those
who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it ...”: Elie Wiesel (Nobel
Peace Prize, 1986).
[2]
A
court can only determine what has already happened, as a testament to
the history that is recorded by evidence, once it has been determined, as a fait
accompli, creating simply another precedent.
[3]
In
this case, the applicant, a lawyer, should have known the consequences for
himself when he joined an organization known for its actions and its history,
and thus its present and future consequences.
[4]
The
Court is in complete agreement with the position so eruditely argued by counsel
for the respondent, Normand Lemyre, that excluding the applicant is not
unreasonable because the exclusion is not vitiated by any reviewable error of
law.
II. Introduction
[5]
This
is an application under subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (IRPA) for judicial review of a decision
of the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) of the Immigration and Refugee Board
dated June 4, 2010, in which the applicant’s refugee protection claim was
rejected because there are serious reasons for considering that he has
committed crimes against humanity.
III. Facts
[6]
The
applicant, Ambroise Mapangu Ishaku, is 50 years old and a citizen of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). He arrived in Canada at the Lacolle,
Quebec, port of entry on January 2, 2008, and claimed refugee protection
in Canada on that date, under section 96 and paragraphs 97(1)(a)
and (b) of the IRPA. He was carrying a Congolese passport and had spent
16 days in New York, in the United States, to attend a conference
of the International Criminal Bar.
[7]
The
applicant has 17 years of education and is a member of the bar of Kinshasa-Gomba
in the DRC.
[8]
The
Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness intervened in this case to
seek to have the applicant excluded by virtue of sections 96 and 97, under
section 98 of the IRPA, because in the Minister’s opinion the applicant is
a person referred to in paragraphs 1F(a) and 1F(c) of the
Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (Convention). In the Minister’s opinion,
there are serious reasons for considering that the applicant has committed
crimes against humanity and is guilty of acts contrary to the purposes and
principles of the United Nations.
[9]
The
applicant claims to fear for his life because of his political activities as a
member of the Movement for the Liberation of the Congo (MLC), a
political/military movement founded in 1998 and supported by Uganda, armed by Libya and led by Jean-Pierre
Bemba. By his own admission, the aim of the movement was to overthrow the
dictatorial government of the DRC by political methods and armed struggle
(Decision of the RPD at paras. 2 and 9).
[10]
The
applicant’s problems allegedly began in late 2006 and culminated in his
detention in 2007. The applicant was then supposedly released under
pressure from the bar and managed to flee the DRC and go to the United
States,
where he was to attend a meeting of the International Criminal Bar. As noted
earlier, the applicant entered Canada on January 2, 2008, and claimed
refugee protection that day (Decision of the RPD at para. 2).
[11]
The
RPD agreed with the parties that it would first decide the issue of the
exclusion of the applicant and, in the event that it did not exclude him, the
parties would be reconvened for a hearing concerning inclusion, that is, his
alleged fear of persecution (Decision of the RPD at para. 5).
[12]
On
June 4, 2010, the RPD concluded that there are serious reasons for considering that
the applicant “was complicit in crimes against humanity” (Decision of the RPD
at para. 54).
[13]
Accordingly,
on that date, the RPD determined that the applicant is excluded from the
application of the Convention under paragraph 1F(a) and therefore could
not be granted the protection of Canada, as provided by
section 98 of the IRPA (Decision of the RPD at para. 58).
[14]
It
is that decision that the applicant is contesting in this proceeding.
IV. Issue
[15]
Is
the exclusion of the applicant under paragraph 1F(a) of the Convention
reasonable, having regard to the evidence and the applicable law?
V. Analysis
[16]
In
the opinion of the Court, the decision is entirely justified in its context.
The Court is entirely in agreement with the respondent’s position.
Applicable
standards of review
[17]
The
purely factual findings on which the RPD based its reasoning in making its
determination are subject to the reasonableness standard (Tayar v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 567, [2009] F.C.J. No. 733
(QL/Lexis), at para. 14; Noha v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2009 FC 683, 347 F.T.R. 265, at para. 20; Harb v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2003 FCA 39, 238 F.T.R.
194, at para. 14).
[18]
Purely
legal questions of general importance decided by the RPD are subject to the
correctness standard (Chieu v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2002] 1 S.C.R. 84, 2002 SCC 3, at para. 20; Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190; Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v. Khosa, 2009 SCC 12, [2009] 1 S.C.R.
339, at para. 44).
[19]
The
question of whether the evidence discloses serious reasons for considering that
the applicant is a person described in paragraph 1F(a) is subject to the
reasonableness standard (Ndabambarire v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2010 FC 1, [2010] F.C.J. No. 40 (QL/Lexis), at
para. 27; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Imeri,
2009 FC 542, 353 F.T.R. 230, at para. 5; Tayar, above, at
para. 14; Jayasekara v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2008 FC 238, 324 F.T.R. 62, at para. 10, affirmed on other grounds: 2008
FCA 404, [2009] 4 F.C.R. 164).
[20]
If
the impugned decision has qualities that make it reasonable, that are concerned
with the existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within
the decision-making process and with whether the decision falls within a range
of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts
and law, it is reasonable (Dunsmuir, above, at para. 47).
[21]
The
issue in that regard is therefore whether there was evidence on which the RPD’s
conclusion that there are serious reasons for considering that the applicant is
a person referred to in paragraph 1F(a) could reasonably be
based. It is important to note that this Court does not perform the same
functions as the RPD. The role of this Court is not to decide whether, based on
the evidence submitted to the RPD, there were “serious reasons for
considering”; it is solely to decide whether it was unreasonable for the
RPD to reach that conclusion (Thanaratnam v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2005 FCA 122, [2007] 1 F.C.R. 474, at paras. 32-33; Rizwan
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 781, [2010] F.C.J.
No. 957 (QL/Lexis), at para. 29; Mohammad v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 51, 361 F.T.R. 184, at para. 49;
Dunsmuir, above).
Applicable
provisions relating to grounds for exclusion
[22]
Section 98
of the IRPA reads as follows:
98. A person referred to in
section E or F of Article 1 of the Refugee Convention is not a Convention
refugee or a person in need of protection.
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98. La personne visée aux
sections E ou F de l’article premier de la Convention sur les réfugiés ne
peut avoir la qualité de réfugié ni de personne à protéger.
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[23]
Under
subsection 2(1) of the IRPA, the expression “Refugee Convention” means the
above-mentioned Convention.
[24]
The
relevant parts of section F of article 1 of the Convention read as
follows:
F. The
provisions of this Convention shall not apply to any person with respect to
whom there are serious reasons for considering that:
(a) He has
committed a crime against peace, a war crime, or a crime against humanity, as
defined in the international instruments drawn up to make provision in
respect of such crimes;
…
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F.
Les dispositions de cette Convention ne seront pas applicables aux personnes
dont on aura des raisons sérieuses de penser :
a) Qu'elles ont commis un
crime contre la paix, un crime de guerre ou un crime contre l'humanité, au
sens des instruments internationaux élaborés pour prévoir des dispositions
relatives à ces crimes;
[…]
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[25]
The
RPD concluded that it had serious reasons for considering that the applicant
had committed crimes against humanity.
[26]
Contrary
to the applicant’s submission, when an exclusion clause applies, the RPD need
not rule as to inclusion, in particular by reason of section 98 of the
IRPA (Howbott v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007
FC 911, 160 A.C.W.S. (3d) 856, at para. 5; Xie v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FCA 250, [2005] 1 F.C.R. 304, at
para. 38; Gonzalez v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),
(1994) 3 FC 646, 48 A.C.W.S. (3d) 388 (CA); Arica v. Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration) (1995), 182 N.R. 392, 55 A.C.W.S. (3d) 1017 (FCA)).
Standard
of proof
[27]
The
applicable standard of proof is set out in section 1F of the Convention, under
which the provisions of the Convention do not apply to persons with respect to
whom there are serious reasons for considering that they have committed,
inter alia, a crime against humanity as defined above.
[28]
An
“exclusion” hearing under section 1F is not of the same nature as a criminal
trial, at which the Minister must prove guilt or innocence beyond a reasonable
doubt. Rather, the Minister has the burden of proving, having regard to the
evidence presented to the Board, that there are “serious reasons for
considering” that the applicant has committed a crime set out in paragraph 1F(a)
or 1F(b) or has been guilty of acts contrary to the purposes and
principles of the United Nations (1F(c)) (Lai v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FCA 125, 139 A.C.W.S. (3d) 113, at
para. 23; Sumaida v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2000] 3 FC 66, 79 F.T.R .148 (CA); Bazargan v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) (1996), 205 N.R. 282, 67 A.C.W.S. (3d) 132 (FCA)).
[29]
In
general, the RPD must assess and weigh the evidence that it has found to be
credible or trustworthy in the case and decide whether the minimum test of
“serious reasons for considering” that the alleged crime(s) or act(s) were
committed has been met. The standard of proof that must be used in applying the
minimum test requires something more than mere suspicion, but less than the
standard applicable in civil matters of proof on the balance of probabilities.
In essence, reasonable grounds will exist where there is an objective basis for
the belief which is based on compelling and credible information (Lai, above,
at para. 25; Mugesera v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2005] 2 S.C.R. 100, 2005 SCC 40 at para. 114; Charkaoui
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2007] 1 S.C.R. 350,
2007 SCC 9, at para. 39).
[30]
That
standard applies to decisions as to the facts. The issue of whether the act or
omission in question constitutes a crime referred to in paragraph 1F(a) is
a question of law (Zazai v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] 2 F.C.R. 78, 262 F.T.R. 246, aff’d
2005 FCA 303, 142 A.C.W.S. (3d) 828 at para. 26).
Exclusion of
the applicant under paragraph 1F(a)
What is a “crime against humanity, as
defined in the international instruments drawn up to make provision in respect
of such crimes”?
[31]
Paragraph
1F(a) must be interpreted so as to include international instruments
concluded since it was adopted in 1951, such that in applying that provision,
regard must also be had to the definition of a crime against humanity set out
in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, adopted on
July 17, 1998, and in effect on July 1, 2002 (Harb, above, at
para. 8).
[32]
Article 7
of the Rome Statute is important in applying paragraph 1F(a), since
it contains a contemporaneous definition of crimes against humanity. The
Statute is in fact the first multilateral international instrument of general
application that provides a detailed definition of the list of acts
characterized as crimes against humanity that were formerly recognized by
various international instruments (Harb, above, at para. 7; Lison
Néel, “La judiciarisation internationale des criminels de guerre : la
solution aux violations graves du droit international humanitaire ?” (2000),
33(2) Criminologie 151 at p. 166).
[33]
The
relevant parts of paragraph 7(1) of the Rome Statute read as follows:
…
"crime against humanity" means any of the following acts when
committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any
civilian population, with knowledge of the attack:
(a) Murder;
(b) Extermination;
(c) Enslavement;
(d) Deportation or forcible
transfer of population;
(e) Imprisonment or other severe
deprivation of physical liberty in violation of fundamental rules of
international law;
(f) Torture;
(g) Rape, sexual slavery, enforced
prostitution, forced pregnancy, enforced sterilization, or any other form of
sexual violence of comparable gravity;
(h) Persecution against any
identifiable group or collectivity on political, racial, national, ethnic,
cultural, religious, gender as defined in paragraph 3, or other grounds that
are universally recognized as impermissible under international law, in
connection with any act referred to in this paragraph or any crime within the
jurisdiction of the Court;
(i) Enforced disappearance of
persons;
(j) The crime of apartheid;
(k) Other inhumane acts of a
similar character intentionally causing great suffering, or serious injury to
body or to mental or physical health.
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[...] on entend par crime
contre l’humanité l’un quelconque des actes ci-après lorsqu’il est commis
dans le cadre d’une attaque généralisée ou systématique lancée contre toute
population civile et en connaissance de cette attaque :
a) Meurtre ;
b) Extermination
;
c) Réduction en
esclavage ;
d) Déportation ou
transfert forcé de population ;
e) Emprisonnement
ou autre forme de privation grave de liberté physique en violation des
dispositions fondamentales du droit international ;
f) Torture ;
g) Viol,
esclavage sexuel, prostitution forcée, grossesse forcée, stérilisation forcée
ou toute autre forme de violence sexuelle de gravité comparable ;
h) Persécution de
tout groupe ou de toute collectivité identifiable pour des motifs d’ordre
politique, racial, national, ethnique, culturel, religieux ou sexiste au sens
du paragraphe 3, ou en fonction d’autres critères universellement reconnus
comme inadmissibles en droit international, en corrélation avec tout acte
visé dans le présent paragraphe ou tout crime relevant de la compétence de la
Cour ;
i) Disparitions
forcées de personnes ;
j) Crime
d’apartheid ;
k) Autres actes
inhumains de caractère analogue causant intentionnellement de grandes
souffrances ou des atteintes graves à l’intégrité physique ou à la santé
physique ou mentale.
|
[34]
Paragraph 7(2)
of the Statute provides:
2. For the purpose of
paragraph 1:
(a) "Attack directed
against any civilian population" means a course of conduct involving the
multiple commission of acts referred to in paragraph 1 against any civilian
population, pursuant to or in furtherance of a State or organizational policy
to commit such attack;
…
(c) "Enslavement" means
the exercise of any or all of the powers attaching to the right of ownership
over a person and includes the exercise of such power in the course of
trafficking in persons, in particular women and children;
(d) "Deportation or forcible
transfer of population" means forced displacement of the persons
concerned by expulsion or other coercive acts from the area in which they are
lawfully present, without grounds permitted under international law;
…
(g) "Persecution" means
the intentional and severe deprivation of fundamental rights contrary to
international law by reason of the identity of the group or collectivity;
…
(i) "Enforced disappearance of
persons" means the arrest, detention or abduction of persons by, or with
the authorization, support or acquiescence of, a State or a political
organization, followed by a refusal to acknowledge that deprivation of
freedom or to give information on the fate or whereabouts of those persons,
with the intention of removing them from the protection of the law for a
prolonged period of time.
|
2. Aux fins du
paragraphe 1 :
a) Par « attaque
lancée contre une population civile », on entend le comportement qui consiste
en la commission multiple d’actes visés au paragraphe 1 à l’encontre d’une
population civile quelconque, en application ou dans la poursuite de la
politique d’un État ou d’une organisation ayant pour but une telle
attaque ;
[...]
c) Par «
réduction en esclavage », on entend le fait d’exercer sur une personne
l’un quelconque ou l’ensemble des pouvoirs liés au droit de propriété, y
compris dans le cadre de la traite des être humains, en particulier des
femmes et des enfants ;
d) Par «
déportation ou transfert forcé de population », on entend le fait de déplacer
de force des personnes, en les expulsant ou par d’autres moyens coercitifs,
de la région où elles se trouvent légalement, sans motifs admis en droit
international ;
[...]
g) Par « persécution », on
entend le déni intentionnel et grave de droits fondamentaux en violation du
droit international, pour des motifs liés à l’identité du groupe ou de la
collectivité qui en fait l’objet ;
[...]
i) Par « disparitions forcées de
personnes », on entend les cas où des personnes sont arrêtées, détenues ou
enlevées par un État ou une organisation politique ou avec l’autorisation,
l’appui ou l’assentiment de cet État ou de cette organisation, qui refuse
ensuite d’admettre que ces personnes sont privées de liberté ou de révéler le
sort qui leur est réservé ou l’endroit où elles se trouvent, dans l’intention
de les soustraire à la protection de la loi pendant une période prolongée.
|
Crimes
against humanity committed by the MLC during the relevant period
Time
period considered
[35]
The
RPD examined the crimes against humanity committed by the MLC from June 1999 to
the end of 2003, when the movement became a political party, properly
speaking.
Sources of
information
[36]
The
RPD relied on a very large number of excerpts from reports prepared by
international organizations that monitor the human rights situation in the
world, for example: Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the International
Federation of Human Rights, the United Nations Economic and Social Council and
Security Council, Reporters Without Borders and the United States Country
Reports on Human Rights. These are reliable sources.
[37]
Contrary
to the applicant’s submission, the RPD referred in its reasons concerning the
crimes against humanity committed by the MLC at the relevant time to a number
of specific documents from the above-mentioned sources of information (on this
point, see footnotes 5 to 14, inclusive, and 29 to 35, inclusive, of the
panel’s reasons).
Crimes
in issue
[38]
According
to extensive and overwhelming documentary evidence, members of the MLC
committed murders of civilians, rape against women, girls and boys, arrests and
arbitrary detentions, kidnappings, disappearances and arbitrary killings of
civilians, torture, abduction for the purpose of forced labour, massacres,
fires and pillaging of homes abandoned by fleeing populations with entire
villages destroyed from top to bottom, forcible transfers of populations (over
10,000 people), genocide and ethnic cleansing, in the DRC and Central
Africa, as premeditated tools of warfare. According to the evidence, all of
these horrors were committed on a large scale, and thousands and thousands of
innocent victims were targeted.
[39]
The
evidence also reports incidents of cannibalism by soldiers of the Armée de
Libération du Congo (ALC [army for the liberation of Congo]), the armed branch of the MLC, with the knowledge of MLC leaders.
The evidence further reports that the ALC recruited thousands of child soldiers
and that in certain areas they constituted up to 40% of the armed
forces. These children were subjected to unimaginable horrors, forced to fight
and often to kill their own families, forced to engage in cannibalism, raped
and used as sex slaves. It is important to point out that the ALC is an
integral part of the MLC, which is clearly stated in the MLC’s statutes.
Crimes against
humanity
[40]
Having
regard to that evidence, it was not unreasonable for the RPD to conclude that
the MLC had, from 1999 to 2003, systematically engaged in a very large number
of barbarous and inhumane acts and severe persecution, and that the persecution
was widespread and systematic against the civilian population and the groups
targeted.
[41]
These
crimes, committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against
a civilian population and with knowledge of the attack, pursuant to or in
furtherance of an organizational policy to commit such attack, are crimes
against humanity as set out in the following subparagraphs of the Rome
Statute: 7(1)(a) (murder), 7(1)(c) and 7(2)(c) (enslavement),
7(1)(d) and 7(2)(d) (forcible transfer of population), 7(1)(e)
(imprisonment or other severe deprivation of physical liberty in violation of
fundamental rules of international law), 7(1)(f) and 7(2)(e)
(torture), 7(1)(g) (rape, sexual slavery), 7(1)(h) and 7(2)(g)
(persecution), 7(1)(i) (enforced disappearance of persons) and 7(1)(k)
(other inhumane acts of a similar character) of the Rome Statute.
[42]
The
abuses committed by the MLC in Central Africa in 2002‑2003 were
denounced by the Central African Republic, which submitted the
case to the International Criminal Court in 2006. In 2007, an
international arrest warrant for war crimes and crimes against humanity was
issued against the leader of the MLC, Jean‑Pierre Bemba Gombo, who was
arrested in Brussels that year.
In January 2009, his trial was in progress.
[43]
In
the circumstances, it was not unreasonable for the RPD to conclude that the MLC
committed crimes against humanity during the relevant period.
Complicity
of the applicant by association
[44]
The
RPD considered whether there are serious reasons for considering that the
applicant was complicit in crimes against humanity, either as an actor or as an
accomplice, given that the evidence did not support a conclusion that the
applicant himself committed the acts referred to in the documentary evidence.
[45]
The
RPD therefore focused its analysis on the crimes against humanity committed by
the MLC at the relevant time, to determine whether they could support an
inference of complicity on the part of the applicant.
Period of
time during which the applicant was a member of the MLC
[46]
During his testimony at the hearing, the
applicant denied that he was member of the MLC during the period that this
movement committed the crimes mentioned. At the beginning of his testimony at
the hearing, he alleged that he only joined the MLC in 2004 and that
before that date, in 2002, he had briefly been a member of a welcoming
committee whose goal was to welcome the MLC if it ever arrived in Kinshasa. He explained that as an elite intellectual, he wanted to ensure that he
enjoyed certain benefits as soon as the MLC arrived, such as obtaining
prestigious government positions, for example, adviser to a minister. He also
claimed that after a few months, this welcoming committee had ceased to exist.
The applicant alleged that he was not involved in any political activities
until August 2004, when he officially joined the MLC.
[47]
In
the form he completed when he claimed refugee protection, the applicant
indicated, however, that he became a member of the MLC’s legal college in
May 2000; he did not indicate that he had ceased being a member.
Confronted with these major contradictions, the applicant first corrected his
testimony and stated that he did indeed join the welcoming committee in 2000,
and not in 2002. As for the contradiction between a [TRANSLATION] “welcoming
committee” and a [TRANSLATION] “legal college”, the applicant explained that
these terms refer to the same organization.
[48]
As
for why he did not indicate in his form at the port of entry that he had ceased
being a member of the “welcoming committee / legal college” in 2000 and
that he did not join the MLC itself until 2004, but rather indicated that
he had been a member of the MLC since 2000 without interruption, the applicant
testified that it is in his nature to explain everything and that there was not
enough space in the form to write down every detail.
[49]
The
evidence contains another key statement from the applicant: he was summoned for
an expedited interview on January 8, 2009. During the interview, which was
recorded, the RPD officer explained to the applicant that his membership in the
MLC could be problematic, given the human rights violations committed by that
movement. After this clearly worded warning, the applicant stated that he was
indeed a member of the MLC; when asked since when, he stated that he had been
[TRANSLATION] “a contributing member since 2000”. On that statement, the
expedited interview ended (Tribunal Record (TR), at pp. 75-76, 1090-1108,
1115-1116).
[50]
At
the hearing before the RPD, the applicant was confronted with the statements he
made at the expedited interview. He then changed his account and indicated that
he had meant to say welcoming committee when he said MLC. He was going to explain
himself at the end of the interview, but found himself in the situation of
being unable to explain.
[51]
When asked at the hearing for his definition of
“contributing member,” the expression that he had used at the expedited
interview, the applicant testified that he was talking about the welcoming
committee.
[52]
At
the hearing in March 2010, the applicant tried to change testimony that he
subsequently realized was highly incriminating, given the Minister’s
intervention submitted in March 2009. It can reasonably be considered that both
at the port of entry in January 2008 and at his expedited interview in
January 2009 he spontaneously told the truth about his membership
in the MLC.
[53]
A
person’s first story is usually the most genuine and,
therefore, the one to be most believed (Mohacsi v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2003 FCT 429, 231 F.T.R. 276, at para. 21;
Chavez v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 10,
159 A.C.W.S. (3d) 266, at para. 14).
[54]
There
is no reason here to doubt the truth and accuracy of the statements made by the
applicant to the immigration officer at the port of entry and before the RPD at
the expedited process stage. Moreover, the applicant is an educated man, given
that he is a lawyer, and speaks excellent French. It is therefore reasonable to
expect him to be able to give the immigration officer and the Board a clear
explanation of his reasons for leaving his country. Finally, this is not a case
in which the evidence on record shows that real prejudice was caused to a
claimant for refugee protection because of flagrant mistakes in interpretation
made by an interpreter at the hearing or at the initial interview with the
immigration officer (Chavez, above, at para. 15).
[55]
Given
his level of education and especially his profession, the applicant should have
known the importance of the statements he was making to the Canadian
immigration authorities, whom he was asking to protect him.
[56]
Accordingly,
it was not unreasonable for the RPD to conclude that the applicant had been a
member of the MLC since 2000 and that he had not ceased to be a member
until he left the DRC in 2007.
The
caselaw on complicity by association
[57]
Accomplices as well as principal actors may be
found to have committed crimes within the meaning of international criminal
law: international crimes. The concept of complicity is recognized in the
caselaw, defined as personal and knowing participation, and complicity by association,
whereby individuals may be rendered responsible for the acts of others because
of their close and voluntary association with the principal actors in an
organization that commits international crimes. Complicity rests on the
existence of a shared common purpose and the knowledge that the individual in
question has of the commission of the crimes (Zazai, above, at
para. 27, aff’d 2005 FCA 303; Ryivuze v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 134, 325 F.T.R. 30, at
para. 28).
[58]
Mere
membership in an organization which from time to time commits international
offences is not normally sufficient to bring one into
the category of an accomplice. At the same time, where the organization’s primary
objective is achieved by means of crimes against humanity, or it is
directed to a limited, brutal purpose, membership will generally be sufficient
to establish complicity (Zazai, FC, above, at para. 28; Thomas v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 838, 317 F.T.R. 6,
at para. 23).
[59]
A person who is a member of the persecuting
group and who has knowledge that activities are being committed by the group
and who neither takes steps to prevent them from occurring (if he or she has
the power to do so) nor disengages himself or herself from the group at the
earliest opportunity (consistent with safety for himself or herself) but who
lends his or her active support to the group will be considered to be an
accomplice.
A shared common purpose will be considered to exist. That
statement is not one in which isolated incidents of
international offences have occurred but where the commission of such offences
is a continuous and regular part of the operation (Zazai,
CF, above at para. 28; Ndabambarire, above, at para. 38).
[60]
Association
with an organization responsible for international crimes may imply complicity
if the person concerned personally or knowingly participated in the crimes, or
knowingly tolerated them (Sivakumar v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),
[1994] 1 FC 433, 44 A.C.W.S. (3d) 563 (CA)).
[61]
The mental element required to
establish complicity in crimes against humanity has been characterized
variously as “shared common purpose”, “personal and knowing participation or
toleration of the crimes”, and participation in an organization knowing it
commits crimes against humanity, when combined with a failure to stop the
crimes or disassociate oneself. (Sabadao v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 292, 146 A.C.W.S. (3d) 698, at
para. 24).
[62]
A person’s rank within an organization, among
other things, speaks to the likelihood of that person’s knowledge and
involvement in the organization’s bad acts. However, one need not be in a
leading position in order to be found complicit. Thus, the person’s position in the organization may demonstrate that
person’s personal and knowing participation, and ultimately the person’s
complicity in the organization’s commission of crimes. The higher the person
concerned is in the ranks of the organization, the more likely it is that he or
she was aware of the crimes committed and shared the organization’s purpose in
committing them. Accordingly, a person who remains in a high position in the
organization, knowing that it has been responsible for crimes against humanity,
may be considered to be complicit (Escorcia v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 644, 158 A.C.W.S. (3d) 796, at
paras. 15-16; Thomas, above, at paras. 26-48; Ryivuze, above,
at paras. 44-45, 58; Collins v . Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 732, 276 F.T.R. 60, at
para. 25).
The MLC was
an organization with a limited, brutal purpose
[63]
It
is therefore important to determine whether, during the period when the
applicant was a member, starting in 2000, the MLC may be described as an organization
with a limited, brutal purpose.
[64]
The
caselaw indicates that an organization whose very existence “is premised on achieving political or social ends by any means
deemed necessary” creates a presumption that mere membership in the
organization implies complicity, without the need to connect the applicant’s
complicity to a particular crime committed by the organization (Moreno v.
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1994] 1 FC 298, 42 A.C.W.S.
(3d) 1048 (CA), at para. 45).
[65]
In
this case, from 2000 to the end of 2003, the years when the applicant was a
member, the MLC’s primary objective was to succeed in having the MLC overthrow
the dictatorship of President Kabila and take power. That objective is
even set out in the statutes of the movement. In addition, although the
applicant was a member of the political branch of the movement and not its
armed branch, as a member of the “legal college”, it is clear that the MLC
intended to achieve its objectives primarily through the actions of its armed
branch, which was not separate from it. The statutes of the movement, again,
are clear on that point, and it is confirmed by the documentary evidence.
[66]
The
evidence is that all means considered necessary were used by the MLC to achieve
its objective, as described earlier: arbitrary arrests, murders, rapes, summary
executions, cannibalism, massacres, systematic torture, pillaging, fires, the
use of child soldiers, genocide and ethnic cleansing.
[67]
In
the circumstances, it is not unreasonable to conclude that, beyond a doubt,
during the years when the applicant was a member, the MLC continuously and
regularly engaged in crimes against humanity to achieve its political
objective. This suggests that the MLC was an organization with a limited,
brutal purpose (Imeri, above, at para. 12). It should be noted that
in that case, membership in such an organization is generally sufficient to
establish complicity (Thomas, above, at para. 23).
[68]
The
RPD could therefore reasonably have presumed that the applicant had the mental
element required, the necessary mens rea, for a finding of complicity,
and that he was therefore complicit in the crimes against humanity committed by
the MLC from 2000 to the end of 2003.
[69]
However,
that is a rebuttable presumption (Imeri, above, at para. 6; Thomas,
above, at para. 24; Yogo v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2001 FCT 390, 205 F.T.R. 185, at para. 15; Saridag v.
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1994), 85 F.T.R. 307, 50 A.C.W.S.
(3d) 1284).
[70]
The
case law has laid down the factors to be taken into consideration in
determining whether there genuinely are serious reasons for considering that a
claimant may be considered to be complicit in the commission of crimes or acts
referred to in section 1F of the Convention. Those factors are: the method
of recruitment, the applicant’s position and rank in the organization, the
nature of the organization, the applicant’s knowledge of the crimes or acts
committed, the length of his or her participation in the organization’s
activities, and the opportunity to leave (Ndabambarire, above, at
paras. 38-44; Thomas, above, at para. 20; Muchai v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 944, 160 A.C.W.S. (3d)
682, at para. 7).
[71]
If
these factors are applied in this case, they confirm the applicant’s
complicity.
Nature of the
organization
[72]
At
the relevant time, the MLC was a rebel movement and not a political party.
[73]
As
noted earlier, according to the abundant evidence cited by the RPD, in the
years when the applicant was a member of the MLC it continuously and regularly
engaged in crimes against humanity to achieve its political objective.
Method of
recruitment
[74]
It
is clear that the applicant joined the MLC voluntarily: in fact, he testified
that he wanted to better position himself on the political ladder and become a
close government advisor when the MLC toppled President Kabila and assumed
power. He also testified, [TRANSLATION] “I espoused
their political convictions; I was hoping for a new political era” (Decision of the RPD at
para. 39).
Position
within the organization
[75]
The
applicant held a decision-making position, or at the very least an advisory
position, as a member of the movement’s legal college. He was not a subordinate
who did not know the direction his organization was taking. In view of his
activism and the positions he took against the government in place, he was
counsel to Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo, who was, as noted earlier, the leader of
the MLC, in the Supreme Court of Justice of the DRC (TR at p. 181).
Knowledge of
atrocities
[76]
The claimant’s testimony regarding his knowledge
of the atrocities committed by the MLC was not credible.
[77]
He initially testified that he did not know any
details concerning the armed branch of the MLC. However, the documentary
evidence indicates that the violations committed by the ALC were well-known and
highly publicized.
[78]
After several questions and confrontations, the
claimant finally testified that between 2000 and 2004, he was aware of the
human rights violations committed by the MLC (TR at pp. 992-993, 999,
1001, 1005-1006, 1008, 1010, 1012, 1035, 1043-1044, 1046). Concerning the massacres in North‑Kivu, the applicant testified that he had been aware of them, but not in detail (TR
at p. 994). He said that he heard through media reports that there was a
war and, according to him, stray bullets that might hit a civilian are normal,
that in a state of war, civilians sometimes died, but he was not aware that
civilians were the target of attacks (TR at p. 995). When asked whether he had heard of the systematic rape of women, girls and
boys as a weapon of warfare, and the murder of civilians, he claimed that he
had not (TR at pp. 995-996, 998), and then admitted that he was in fact
aware of that (TR at pp. 1043-1044, 1046) (Decision of the RPD at
para. 44).
[79]
When
he was asked whether the government talked about the
abuses committed by the MLC at that time, he testified that it was difficult to treat these reports as the truth and he put them down to political brainwashing (TR at pp. 998-999,
1001-1002). However, he did not try to verify whether
the reports were true because, according to his testimony, he was very busy
with his work at a law firm (TR at p. 1003) (Decision of the RPD at
para. 45).
[80]
When asked about the fires and massacres of
entire villages in April 2001, which were widely reported in the media, the claimant testified that he had heard
about the clash between the MLC and the mayi-mayi; but knew nothing
about that exact incident. However, he knew that there had been massacres
generally by the MLC (TR at pp. 1010-1011). Later in his
testimony the applicant tried to minimize the situation, essentially saying
that it depended on the meaning given to the word massacre. [TRANSLATION]
“When I hear that someone died, am I going to try to
find out if it was a massacre?” (Decision of the RPD at para. 46; TR at
pp. 1022-1024).
[81]
About
operation “Effacez le tableau” [wipe the slate], which
was widely reported in the documentary evidence, the applicant knew only that [TRANSLATION] “the MLC killed a group of pygmies and
attacked the pygmies” (TR at p. 1011). However, he added that at
first he had believed it, but then he doubted the information because it was
beyond human understanding that there was cannibalism in the Congo (TR at
pp. 1012-1013). When confronted with the fact that
even Bemba, the leader of the MLC, admitted in January 2003 that his movement
engaged in cannibalism (TR at p. 596), the applicant answered
that it might have happened, but [TRANSLATION] “the population doubts it” (TR
at pp. 1014, 1017).
[82]
It
was not unreasonable for the RPD not to accept these attempts to offer justification.
First, the conduct of the applicant in attempting to minimize the abuses
committed by the MLC, while at the same time claiming that he was not a member,
was contradictory. In addition, it is implausible that the applicant was not
aware of the gravity and the systematic and systemic
nature of the crimes committed by the MLC (Decision of the RPD at
para. 47).
[83]
If,
as in this case, an individual lives and works in a country where thousands of
people are victims of crimes against humanity and where one hears about it, it
is totally unbelievable that one would not have knowledge of what is taking
place (Shakarabi v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
(1998), 145 F.T.R. 297, 79 A.C.W.S. (3d) 133 at para. 25).
[84]
Concerning
the mass recruitment of child soldiers, the applicant testified that he was
aware of it, but according to him, it was done in 1998-1999 by soldiers of the
former Mobutu regime, to supplement its forces (TR at pp. 1036, 1039-1040).
When confronted with the fact that this practice continued in 2002, the
applicant stated that he was not aware of it (Decision of the RPD at
para. 48).
[85]
At
one point during the hearing, the applicant stopped his denials and admitted
that the MLC was an armed movement before 2004 and that he knew it (TR at
pp. 1046-1047), and that he knew that even the political branch supported
the armed conflict, in accordance with the movement’s statutes (Decision of the
RPD at para. 49).
Length of
time in the organization
[86]
As
noted earlier, the RPD did not believe the applicant when he alleged that he
did not join the MLC until 2004. Having regard to the evidence described
above, it was not unreasonable for the RPD to conclude that he was an active
member of the MLC starting in 2000 and until the end of 2003, during
a period when the movement was continuously and regularly committing the crimes
against humanity referred to earlier.
Opportunity to leave the
organization
[87]
The
applicant voluntarily remained with an organization that he knew was committing
or had committed serious human rights violations.
[88]
The
applicant’s testimony when confronted with the
atrocities committed by the MLC was nonchalant and completely lacking in
empathy for the thousands of victims. He spoke of this period in his country’s
history as a period of isolated incidents, [TRANSLATION] “pockets of
resistance,” the normal consequences of war. However, the massacres of
civilians, the systematic rape of women, girls and boys, and the recruitment of
child soldiers are not the collateral damage of a war. The applicant’s speech
is that of an active member of the MLC who knew what was going on but who, out
of political ambition, chose that movement, the only party that, in his
opinion, could have removed either of the Kabilas from power. He testified that
his goal was to become a close government advisor (TR at p. 1113; Decision
of the RPD at para. 52).
[89]
Having
regard to the foregoing, it was not unreasonable for the RPD to conclude that
the applicant had not rebutted the presumption that he was complicit in crimes
against humanity committed by the MLC between 2000 and 2004.
The RPD did not have to conclude that a
crime against humanity set out in paragraph 1F(a) committed by the
MLC was necessarily and directly attributable to the specific acts or omissions
of the applicant
[90]
The
applicant further submits that no crime set out in paragraph 1F(a) is
attributable to him personally.
[91]
In
the case of complicity by association, it is not the nature of the crimes with
which the applicant was charged that lead to his exclusion, but that of the
crimes alleged against the organization with which he was associated. On that
point, the Court of Appeal quoted with approval the following passage from the
reasons of the Court in Harb, above, in Zrig v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2003] 3 FC 761, 2003 FCA 178 (CA), at
paragraph 57:
[11] The first of these arguments
does not apply in the case at bar. It is not the nature of the crimes with
which the appellant was charged that led to his exclusion, but that of the
crimes alleged against the organizations with which he was supposed to be
associated. Once those organizations have committed crimes against humanity and
the appellant meets the requirements for membership in the group, knowledge,
participation or complicity imposed by precedent (see inter alia, Ramirez v.
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),
[1992] 2 F.C. 306 (C.A.); Moreno v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1994] 1 F.C. 298
(C.A.); Sivakumar v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1994] 1 F.C. 433 (C.A.); Sumaida v. Canada (Minister of Employment and
Immigration), [2000] 3 F.C. 66 (C.A.); and Bazargan v. Minister of
Employment and Immigration (1996), 205
N.R. 232 (F.C.A.)), the exclusion applies even if the specific acts committed
by the appellant himself are not crimes against humanity as such. ...
[92]
It
should also be noted that in exclusion cases the courts have never required, in
order for a claimant to be found to be complicit by association, that he or she
be connected with specific crimes or acts as the person who actually committed
them, or that the crimes or acts committed by an organization be necessarily
and directly attributable to specific omissions or acts by the claimant (Sumaida,
above, at paras. 31-32; Sivakumar, above; Bazargan, above, at
paras. 3-13; In the matter of B, [1997] E.W.J. No. 700
(CA), at paras. 7 et seq. (CA England and Wales); Harb, above,
at para. 11; Zrig, above, at paras. 55-56).
VI. Conclusion
[93]
In
light of the caselaw and the evidence, it was not unreasonable for the RPD to
have serious reasons for considering that the applicant has committed crimes
against humanity.
[94]
It
was therefore not unreasonable for the RPD to exclude the applicant from the
application of the Convention under paragraph 1F(a).
[95]
Accordingly,
the applicant may not be granted the protection of Canada, as set out
in section 98 of the IRPA.
[96]
The
applicant had knowledge of the crimes committed by the MLC at the relevant time
and he shared the criminal intentions of that organization.
[97]
The
applicant’s entirely voluntary association with the MLC for three years, in the
knowledge of the crimes committed by that organization, shows that he adhered
to the purposes and practices of that movement, and this makes him complicit in
those crimes.
[98]
As
noted earlier, citing lengthy caselaw, when an applicant is aware that the
group to which he or she belongs is continuously and regularly committing
crimes or acts referred to in section F of Article 1 of the
Convention and does not try to disengage himself or herself from that group at
the earliest opportunity, consistent with safety for himself or herself, the
RPD may then reasonably conclude that the applicant cannot have status as a
refugee or person in need of protection under section 98 of the IRPA.
[99]
It
is plain, moreover, that the crimes committed by the MLC at the relevant time,
as found by the RPD, were crimes against humanity within the meaning of
paragraph 1F(a).
[100] Accordingly,
based on the evidence and the applicable law, the applicant was complicit in
crimes against humanity, merely by reason of his close and voluntary
association with the MLC, since he knowingly tolerated them and did not leave
the movement at the earliest opportunity.
[101] For all of
the foregoing reasons, the exclusion of the applicant under paragraph 1F(a)
is not unreasonable and is not vitiated by any reviewable error of law.
[102] For all of
the reasons set out above, the applicant’s application for judicial review is
dismissed.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that
1. the applicant’s application for
judicial review be dismissed;
2. no serious question of general
importance be certified.
“Michel M.J. Shore”
Certified
true translation
Susan
Deichert, Reviser