Docket: IMM-7597-10
Citation: 2011 FC 1062
Ottawa, Ontario, September
8, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mandamin
BETWEEN:
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GUANG CHEN
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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
[1]
Mr. Guang Chen applies for judicial review of
the December 15, 2010 decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the
Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (RPD) finding the Applicant is not a
convention refugee and not a person in need of protection.
[2]
The Applicant is a citizen of the People’s
Republic of China (PRC) and
claimed refugee protection because he feared persecution for being a
practitioner of Guan Yin Fa Men which is banned as a “cult” in the PRC. Cult
members may be sentenced to 3 to 7 years in prison.
[3]
The RPD refused the Applicant’s claim because it
decided he filed a fraudulent summons to bolster his claim, failed to observe a
basic tenant of Guan Yin Fa Men to abstain from intoxicants (smoking tobacco),
was unclear as to the requirement not to be involved in politics and took two
years to join up with a group of Guan Yin Fa Men practitioners in Canada.
[4]
For reasons that follow, I am granting the
application for judicial review.
Background
[5]
The Applicant was saved from serious injury at
his work place by his supervisor in December, 2006. The supervisor was injured
and hospitalized. The Applicant visited the supervisor in the hospital and was
impressed by the fact that the supervisor, despite being badly injured, was
optimistic about life. He later learned the supervisor was a Guan Yin Fa Men
believer and practitioner. The Applicant was so impressed he began to practice
the belief and regularly attend group sessions.
[6]
On November 4, 2007, the Applicant’s group
session was raided by the Public Security Bureau (PSB). He escaped to his
cousin’s home. On November 6, 2007, his father informed him that the PSB had
been to their home searching for the Applicant to arrest him. The PSB returned
two days later and continues to search for the Applicant.
[7]
The Applicant exited China with the assistance of a smuggler and arrived in Canada on January 21, 2008. He applied for
refugee protection on February 8, 2008.
Decision Under
Review
[8]
The RPD decided the Applicant was not a credible
witness. It concluded the Applicant submitted a fraudulent summons as
corroborating documentary evidence. It further found that the Applicant was not
a genuine practitioner of Guan Yin Fa Men.
[9]
The RPD concluded the summons submitted by the
Applicant was fraudulent because:
a. it did not contain information that is ordinarily contained in a
summons as evidenced by the sample summons contained in the National
Documentation Package for China;
b. the manufacture of forged documents including summons was common in China;
c. the Applicant did not mention the summons at the Citizenship and
Immigration Canada (CIC) intake interview and he stated he has never committed,
been arrested for, charged with, or convicted of a criminal offence; and
d. he did not mention the summons in his initial Personal Information
Form (PIF) narrative.
[10]
The RPD also decided that Applicant was not a
genuine practitioner of Guan Yin Fa Men because:
a. the Applicant did not adhere to the fifth precept prohibiting the
use of intoxicants which includes smoking tobacco;
b. the Applicant was evasive when asked if followers of Guan Yin Fa Men
are permitted to be involved in politics;
c. the Applicant did not make a concerted effort to practice Guan Yin Fa
Men in Canada.
[11]
The RPD refused the Applicant’s refugee claim
and found he was not a person in need of protection.
Issue
[12]
The Applicant submits the issue is simply:
Was it
reasonable for the RPD to conclude the Applicant was not a genuine practitioner
of Guan Yin Fa Men?
Standard of
Review
[13]
The Supreme Court of Canada has held in Dunsmuir
v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at paras 50 and 53 [Dunsmuir],
that there are only two standards of review: correctness for questions of law
and reasonableness involving questions of mixed fact and law and fact. The
Supreme Court has also held that where the standard of review has been
previously determined, a standard of review analysis need not be repeated: Dunsmuir
at para 62.
[14]
This
Court has held that on matters of credibility, the standard of review is
reasonableness: Huang v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 346 at para 7.
Analysis
[15]
The Applicant submits the RPD erred in deciding
that the Applicant did not adhere to the fifth precept prohibiting the use of
intoxicants which include smoking tobacco. Further, the Applicant submits this
tainted the balance of the RPD’s findings about the Applicant not being a
practitioner of Guan Yin Fa Men.
[16]
The Respondent submits the RPD was correct in
concluding the Applicant had submitted a fraudulent summons and this finding
supports the RPD conclusion that the Applicant was not credible.
The Summons
[17]
The summons was mailed to the Applicant by his
father. It was issued November 9, 2007, and delivered to the Applicant’s father
on the second visit by the PSB.
[18]
The RPD convened a second hearing to address the
issue of whether the summons was genuine. At that hearing the RPD stated, “The
summonses I’ve seen in the past usually have two officers who identify
themselves on it. In addition to that, they usually indicate a procedural
number, a law regulation and they indicate, I already said this I think, an
address. Yours doesn’t have any of those features.”
[19]
The RPD, in its decision, states, “Upon review
of the claimant’s PSB summons, the Panel observed a number of deficiencies with
regard to this document when it was compared to a sample contained in the
National Documentary Package.” The RPD went on to note the proffered summons
did not contain the Applicant’s address, PSB officers’ names, any procedural or
administrative law, or an acknowledgement line.
[20]
The difficulty is that the RPD does not consider
the statement in Response to Information Request CHN42444.E (the “RIR”) which
identifies two types of summonses: Zhaunhaun, which is used to summon a
suspect for questioning without arrest, and Juzhaun, an arrest-summons.
The RIR states the Zhaunhaun summons for someone to appear for
interrogation must state the person, time, and place of appearance for
questioning. The duplicate copy is signed, dated and returned by the suspect
who keeps one copy. The description of the Zhaunhaun summons more
closely matches the summons presented by the Applicant. The same RIR goes on to
attach samples of an arrest warrant, an arrest-summons for interrogation and a
notice of summons to testify but not the Zhaunhaun summons. The failure
of the RPD to consider and analyse the existence of more than one type of
summons is a serious flaw in the RPD’s analysis.
[21]
The RPD also decided that the Applicant had
failed to mention the summons at the CIC intake interview and had said he has
never committed, been arrested for, charged with, or convicted of a criminal
offence. The Applicant did say the PSB were looking for him because he joined
Guan Yin Fa Men and that, “... we were told it was illegal.” The RPD fails to
have regard for this statement in its assessment of the CIC intake interview.
[22]
The RPD also draws an adverse inference for the
fact that the Applicant did not mention the summons in his initial PIF.
However, that approach disregards the Applicant’s amendment which included
reference to the summons. Applicants are permitted to amend their PIF
statements before a refugee board hearing once they have secured the assistance
and advice of counsel knowledgeable about the immigration process. The RPD’s
approach is problematic as it suggests that amendments may be readily
disregarded simply because they are amendments.
[23]
In result, I consider the RPD’s analysis
concerning the summons the Applicant submitted as documentary evidence to be
flawed.
The Applicant
as a Practitioner
[24]
The RPD also decided the Applicant was not a
genuine practitioner of Guan Yin Fa Men because the Applicant did not adhere to
the fifth precept prohibiting the use of intoxicants which includes smoking
tobacco. The RPD noted the Applicant was asked how he reconciled his smoking
with the fifth precept to refrain from intoxicants. The RPD then recorded the
response as, “The claimant admitted that Ching Hai says you should quit smoking
and indicated, ‘Now I am almost quitting.’” The RPD did not accurately restate
the Applicant’s answer (provided through a Mandarin interpreter). The
transcript records the Applicant’s answer as, “According to the Master you should
quit smoking eventually if you can. And now eventually, I am almost quitting.”
The RPD may have misremembered the Applicant’s response or misconstrued it;
either way, the RPD erred in assessing the Applicant’s answer when it misquoted
the Applicant’s response.
[25]
The RPD considered the Applicant was evasive
when asked if followers of Guan Yin Fa Men are permitted to be involved in
politics and observed the Applicant finally admitted he did not know that Ching
Hai indicates her followers are not to involve themselves in politics. The
Applicant’s imprecision is not necessarily evasive given the Applicant admitted
he did not know.
[26]
Finally the RPD decided that the Applicant did
not make a concerted effort to practice Guan Yin Fa Men with a group without
regard to any assessment of the small numbers of Guan Yin Fa Men practitioners
in Canada.
[27]
In contrast to the RPD’s narrow focus, the
Applicant explained how he became involved in Guan Yin Fa Men, testified about
his initiation, the tenets and methods of practicing the belief, and explained
the relatively small numbers of practitioners in Canada. The Applicant’s knowledge and adherence, taken as a whole, is not
perfect, but well within what would be expected of a relatively young man
recently introduced to the practice of Guan Yin Fa Men.
[28]
The RPD engaged in a narrow assessment of the
Applicant’s testimony focussing on shortcomings without having regard to the
whole of the evidence. It misstated the Applicant’s response on smoking. It
made much of the Applicant’s lack of knowledge about non-involvement in
politics and it assumed it is a simple matter to find adherents in Canada.
Conclusion
[29]
Both the RPD’s flawed analysis of the summons
leading it to conclude that the Applicant was not credible and its narrow assessment
of the Applicant’s testimony about being a practitioner of Guan
Yin Fa Men is unreasonable. The application for judicial review succeeds.
[30]
The RPD’s decision is quashed and the matter is
remitted to another member for redetermination.
[31]
Neither party proposes a question of general
importance for certification and none is certified.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that:
1.
The application for judicial review is granted.
2.
The matter is to be returned for redetermination
by a differently constituted panel.
3.
No
question of general importance is certified
“Leonard
S. Mandamin”