Date: 20111021
Docket: IMM-3833-10
Citation: 2011 FC 1209
Ottawa, Ontario, October 21, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
BETWEEN:
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OLEG KOLOSOV
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Applicant
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and
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MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
Oleg
Kolosov [the Applicant], seeks judicial review pursuant to subsection 72(1) of
the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the Act], of
a decision the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board
[the Board] dated June 1, 2010, wherein the Board determined that the Applicant
is neither a Convention refugee nor a person in need of protection [the
Decision].
[2]
For
the reasons that follow, the application is allowed.
THE FACTS
[3]
In
2007, when the relevant events occurred, the Applicant was a twenty-two year
old gymnast and a student at a Sports’ Academy in Tbilisi, the capital
of Georgia. He lived at
home in Tbilisi with his
parents and his sister. While at school, he met a twenty-one year old fellow student
named Nani Mamiani. Her family home was in a region of Georgia called
Svanetia. For this reason, while she studied at the Sports’ Academy, she stayed
with her uncle in Tbilisi.
[4]
The
Applicant and Nani started dating and eventually she became pregnant.
[5]
The
Applicant testified that:
(i)
The
Applicant knew that Nani’s father wanted her to marry a man in Svanetia;
(ii)
The
Applicant and Nani knew about birth control but decided they wanted to marry
and have a family so they did not use contraceptives;
(iii)
The
Applicant learned two days after the fact that Nani had visited a gynaecologist
at a Tbilisi hospital and
had been advised of her pregnancy.
(iv)
A
nurse who worked with the gynaecologist was a neighbour of Nani’s uncle and she
told him that Nani was pregnant.
(v)
Nani’s
father and uncle beat her and she divulged the Applicant’s name. She was taken
home to Svatenia and forced to have an abortion.
(vi)
Nani’s
father and other relatives visited the Applicant’s home in Tbilisi. They shouted
threats saying they would kill the Applicant. These threats were overheard by
the Applicant’s sister, by one of his friends and by neighbours. The Applicant
was not at home when the threats were made.
(vii)
After
he was warned of the threats, the Applicant hid with a friend and later at his
grandparents’ house. Then, in October 2007 he came to Canada with his sport’s
team when it visited Quebec City. There he claimed
asylum.
THE DECISION
[6]
The
Board found that the Applicant is not a refugee and no issue is taken with that
finding.
[7]
However,
the Board also found that:
(i)
The
Applicant is not in need of protection because his account is not credible;
(ii)
The
Applicant failed to rebut the presumption of state protection.
[8]
The
two findings are linked. The Board said “Because I have found the claimant not
to be credible, I preferred the information from the country documents to that
of the claimant because it is gathered from independent objective human rights
organizations with no interest in this or any refugee claim.”
THE ISSUES
[9]
In
my view, the issues are:
1) Are the
credibility findings reasonable?
2) Is the
conclusion about state protection reasonable?
THE STANDARD OF REVIEW
[10]
Both
credibility and state protection are issues of mixed fact and law and therefore
attract the reasonableness standard, see Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008
SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at para. 51.
DISCUSSION
[11]
The
first negative credibility finding reads as follows:
[…] The claimant stated that Nani went to
the hospital because she was feeling unwell and there found out she was
pregnant. I do not find this statement to be credible. Nani was, according to
the claimant, a university student who knew about birth control but decided not
[to] practice it. When she missed having a period, because according to the
claimant, she was two months pregnant, it is reasonable that she would suspect
that she was pregnant and would seek medical advice on discomfort and illness
and perhaps confirmation that she was pregnant. It is not reasonable that she
would go to seek medical help simply because she felt ill and not because she
thought she was pregnant. Therefore, on a balance of probabilities, I find the
claimant not to be credible or a trustworthy witness.
[12]
In
my view, this conclusion is unreasonable because it does not accurately state
the Applicant’s evidence. When asked why Nani went to see a gynaecologist, he
said that she felt “ill, dizzy and nauseous”. He did not say that she felt
“unwell”. These symptoms plus Nani’s decision to visit a gynaecologist make it
clear that she thought she was pregnant when she visited the hospital.
[13]
For
these reasons, the Board’s negative credibility finding based on the premise
that Nani felt unwell and did not suspect a pregnancy cannot stand.
[14]
The
Board also found that the Applicant’s evidence that the gynaecologist’s nurse
told Nani’s uncle of her pregnancy lacked credibility. However, the Board’s
discussion of this evidence was unreasonable because it omitted mention of the
fact that the nurse was a neighbour of the uncle with whom Nani lived. It is
therefore likely that she would have recognized Nani and known her uncle. We
cannot be sure why she passed on the news of Nani’s pregnancy. She may have
been malicious or may have thought it right that the family should know. In
either case, because she was a neighbour, it is entirely possible that she told
Nani’s uncle of her pregnancy.
[15]
Dealing
with the same issue, the Board also found it unlikely that a nurse would risk
breaching patient confidentiality and jeopardize her career by gossiping about
Nani. However, in my view, it is unreasonable to decide, without evidence, that
our standards relating to patients’ privacy rights and professional
responsibility apply in Georgia.
CONCLUSIONS
[16]
In
my view, the first two adverse credibility findings were unreasonable because
they were not based on an accurate appreciation of the relevant evidence. The
third finding is unreasonable because it imports Canadian values into a setting
where they likely do not apply.
[17]
Finally,
because these credibility findings caused the Tribunal to completely disregard
the Applicant’s evidence about state protection, the finding on this issue is also
unreasonable and cannot stand.
Certified Question for
Appeal
[18]
No
question of general importance was posed for certification pursuant to section 74
of the Act.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that,
for the above reasons, the application is allowed
and the Applicant’s request for protection is sent back for reconsideration by
a different Board. All parties may file fresh evidence before the Board hearing
the reconsideration.
“Sandra
J. Simpson”
FEDERAL
COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-3833-10
STYLE OF CAUSE: Oleg
Kolosov v The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration
PLACE OF HEARING: Toronto,
Ontario
DATE OF HEARING: March 24, 2011
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: SIMPSON
J.
DATED: October 21, 2011
APPEARANCES:
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David Yerzy
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FOR THE APPLICANT
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Sybil Thompson
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FOR THE RESPONDENT
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SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
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David Yerzy
Toronto, Ontario
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FOR THE APPLICANT
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Myles J. Kirvan Deputy Attorney General
of Canada
Toronto, Ontario
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FOR THE RESPONDENT
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