Docket: IMM-1202-11
Citation: 2011 FC 1253
Ottawa, Ontario, November 2, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
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MAURO WILLIAM SANCHEZ MOLANO
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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]
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 26 January 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 Colombia. He has a common-law
spouse and four children, all of whom remain in Colombia.
[3]
In
late 1979 or early 1980, the Applicant and his wife joined the FESTRAM trade
union in Villavicencio, Meta, Colombia. During
his time in Colombia, the Applicant
was a member of the Union Patriotica (UP), a political party associated with
the Communist Party. The Applicant was also involved in community work through
his local church, under the Archdiocese of Villavicencio. By 1986, the Applicant
had risen to the position of “Union Organizer.” Also in 1986, other members of
the Applicant’s trade union began to be targeted by either the FARC guerrillas
or paramilitary organizations. Because members of his Union had been targeted,
the Applicant moved with his family to Bogota, Colombia.
[4]
Sometime
before 1992, the Applicant, his common-law spouse, and his daughter were
leaving a cinema together with their bodyguards who had been assigned to them
by the FESTRAM. As they were travelling in their car, their bodyguards noticed
another car following them and told the Applicant and his spouse to get down. The
second vehicle pulled up alongside and one of the occupants pointed a machine
gun at them. The bodyguards managed to steer the car away from their attackers
and save the lives of the Applicant and his spouse.
[5]
In
1992, because members of his union were being targeted for disappearance and
killing, and because of the attack he and his spouse had already suffered, the Applicant
fled with his family to Argentina. They remained in
Argentina until 2000, though during this period the Applicant travelled back
and forth to Colombia several
times.
[6]
For
reasons which are unclear, the Applicant and his family returned to Colombia in 2000. The
Applicant has stated that their return was motivated by the poor economic
situation in Argentina at that
time, and because he thought that the FARC or the paramilitaries, or whoever
had been targeting members of his union, were no longer interested in finding
and killing him. Having given up his union activities when he moved to Argentina, the Applicant
resumed membership in FESTRAN when he returned to Colombia in 2000.
[7]
In
2001, while the Applicant was walking along the street in the evening, he was
abducted by three or four armed men. After he was tied, blindfolded, and loaded
into their vehicle, his abductors asked his name. When he told them, they said
“Yes, this is the son of a bitch we’re looking for.” They took him to another
location and beat him into unconsciousness, fracturing his skull and leaving
him with memory loss. Thinking he was dead, the Applicant’s captors abandoned
him. Somehow, the Applicant made his way to his sister’s house, where she
untied him, cleaned him up, and took him to the hospital.
[8]
This
event did not drive the Applicant out of Colombia. He remained
in the country and stayed with relatives in various places. Also during this
period, the Applicant had a small business selling natural health products
around Colombia. Until 2008,
the Applicant did not experience any further persecution.
[9]
In
2008, while he was staying at his sister’s house, the housekeeper was out
buying groceries. She noticed a suspicious vehicle outside the house and, using
a public phone, called the Applicant and warned him of the danger. The Applicant
looked out the window and saw four people in a car. He was frightened and
jumped from his house to the house next door. When he told his neighbour
what was going on, the neighbour hid him in the back of his car and drove the Applicant
to safety.
[10]
Later
on the same day, the Applicant called his sister’s house and spoke with the
housekeeper. She told him that four heavily-armed men had forced their way into
the house and demanded she tell them where he was. She told them that he had
been there overnight but had left early in the morning. She also told him that
the men had searched the house for him but did not find him.
[11]
After
this event, the Applicant decided that it was no longer safe for him in Colombia. He first
travelled to Barranquilla, where he
stayed with a friend. From his friend’s house, he called his nephew and
arranged to stay with him in Guatemala. He stayed with his
nephew until January 2009, when his nephew took him to Mexico, where he
obtained a false Mexican driver’s licence and passport. From Mexico, the Applicant
flew to Canada, where he
landed in Toronto on 13 March
2009.
[12]
The
Applicant made his claim for refugee protection on 28 May 2009. The hearing
before the RPD was held on 20 January 2011 and the Decision was rendered on 26
January 2011.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
[13]
The
Applicant fears persecution under section 96 of the Act based on his membership
in a trade union, a group which has been targeted by guerrillas and paramilitaries
in Colombia.
[14]
The
RPD’s Decision turned on the Applicant’s credibility. Although the RPD found
that he had established his identity, it concluded that he had not established
either a subjective fear of persecution or an objective basis for that fear. As
such, he was not eligible for protection as a convention refugee under section
96. The RPD also found that he was not at risk of torture, or cruel and unusual
treatment or punishment and so was ineligible for protection under section 97
because there was no evidence that he would face more than a general risk of
violence.
[15]
The
RPD’s finding that the Applicant did not have a subjective fear of persecution has
several grounds. First, the RPD found his claim not credible because he stayed
in Colombia between 1980
and 1992. It found that his fear of the Paramilitaries and guerrillas began in
1980. The RPD found that, because members of his union were being targeted
during this period and the Applicant stayed in Colombia, he did not
have a subjective fear of persecution.
[16]
The
RPD also found that the Applicant’s failure to file an asylum claim in Argentina, after he
had moved there with his family, coupled with his travel back and forth between
the two countries during that period, indicated that he did not have a
subjective fear of persecution. From 1992 to 2000, while the Applicant was
travelling back and forth between Colombia and Argentina, several people who
had been working in the same capacity as the Applicant were killed, yet he returned
to Colombia in 2000. This showed the RPD that the Applicant did not have a
subjective fear of persecution.
[17]
Further,
because he claimed to be both in hiding and conducting business at the same
time, the RPD did not find credible the Applicant’s assertion that he travelled
around Columbia from 2000 to
2008. He said that he was in hiding and conducting business in Colombia from 2000 to
2008. The RPD said it was not reasonable to be doing both at the same time, so
he was not hiding in Colombia during this period.
[18]
Given
the Applicant’s statement that he returned to Colombia because of the economic
crisis in Argentina, the RPD
rejected the Applicant’s explanation that he had returned because he thought
that the FARC or paramilitaries had forgotten about him. His return for
economic reasons in a situation where it was unreasonable for him to believe
the FARC or paramilitaries had forgotten about him further supported the
conclusion that he lacked subjective fear of persecution.
[19]
With
respect to his story about being abducted and beaten in 2001, the RPD rejected
the Applicant’s assertion that this attack had been at the hands of either the
FARC or paramilitaries. The RPD said that during counsel’s questioning at the
hearing, the Applicant said he was abducted and tortured by FARC. The RPD also
said that “in his PIF narrative and during the panel’s questioning, he
indicated he had no knowledge as to who abducted and tortured him in 2001. When
asked to explain the inconsistency, he said that his assailants were wearing
civilian clothes and did not identify themselves.” Based on his testimony and
the fact that the medical report related to his attack did not mention the
identity of his assailants, the RPD found that it could not be established that
either the FARC or the paramilitaries had attacked him. The RPD found that the Applicant
had falsely connected this attack with these groups to shore up his refugee
claim.
[20]
The
RPD also found the Applicant’s claim that the attack on his sister’s house had
been perpetrated by the FARC or paramilitaries was not credible. Once again,
the RPD noted that the perpetrators were in civilian clothing and did not
identify themselves. Further, there was no documentary evidence before the RPD
as to who had attacked the house, so the RPD found that it was neither the FARC
nor paramilitaries. The RPD found that, once again, the Applicant had falsely connected
this attack to these groups to strengthen his refugee claim.
[21]
On
all the evidence before it, the RPD was not convinced that the Applicant was
ever targeted by the FARC or paramilitaries after he returned to Colombia in 2000. The
RPD rejected the Applicant’s assertion that these groups had continued to ask
his family about him after he left Colombia and found that his
family was never contacted by these groups. Based on these findings, the RPD
found that there was no objective basis for the Applicant’s fear in Colombia. Since it
did not find his story credible and it found that he had no objective basis for
his fear, the RPD found that the Applicant faced “less than a mere possibility
that he would be persecuted by FARC should he return to Colombia at this
time.”
[22]
The
RPD also found that the Applicant’s fear had no objective basis, so he did not
face a risk under section 97 if he were returned to Colombia. There was
no documentary evidence that indicated more than a general risk of violence, so
the Applicant was not a person in need of protection.
ISSUES
[23]
The
sole issue raised by the Applicant is whether the Decision was reasonable.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[24]
The
following provisions are applicable in this case:
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,
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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,
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STANDARD OF REVIEW
[25]
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.
[26]
The
RPD based its Decision solely on the Applicant’s credibility. Findings of
credibility and assessment of the evidence are within the RPD’s areas of
expertise and, therefore, deserving of deference. They are reviewable on a
standard of reasonableness. See Ched v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2010 FC 1338 at paragraph 9, Aguirre v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 571 at paragraph 14, and Aguebor v
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1993] FCJ No. 732 (FCA)
at paragraph 4.
[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
The Findings of the RPD Were
Unreasonable
[28]
The
Applicant argues that, based on a multiplicity of errors, the Decision was
unreasonable and should be overturned.
The Finding There
Was No Subjective Fear Was Unreasonable
[29]
The
Applicant argues that it was unreasonable for the RPD to conclude that he had
no subjective fear of persecution based on his failure to flee Colombia before 1992.
He says he was not targeted prior to 1992, when he and his wife were threatened
while they were driving. He says this was shortly before he fled Colombia, so the
conclusion he should have fled earlier was unreasonable. Further, the Applicant
says that while his colleagues were being targeted in Colombia from 1980 to
1992 he was moving around Colombia. Because there was no
evidence that he had been personally targeted prior to 1992, it was
unreasonable for the RPD to expect him to leave earlier. Also, since he was
hiding out in Colombia by moving
around, his delay in leaving the country was reasonable. It was unreasonable
for the RPD to draw the inference it did from that delay because this delay
does not show a lack of subjective fear.
[30]
The
Applicant also argues that it was unreasonable for the RPD to conclude that he
lacked subjective fear from the fact that he did not claim asylum in Argentina. Although he
was in Argentina for eight
years, he had no intention of remaining there permanently. As he told the RPD,
he was only there to wait for the situation in Colombia to cool off, and he
returned to Colombia once he
thought FARC was no longer interested in him.
[31]
The
RPD’s finding that he lacked subjective fear was also unreasonable insofar as
it was based on his return to Colombia in 2000. It was
reasonable for him to believe that all those who had been members of FESTRAM with
him had been killed by the time he returned in 2000. It was reasonable for him
to believe that FARC or the paramilitaries would no longer be interested in him
because all the members of the UP who had been targeted were dead.
The RPD’s Conclusion That he Falsely Connected
the Attacks to FARC or Paramilitaries was Unreasonable
[32]
The
Applicant says that the RPD was unreasonable in concluding that it was not the
FARC or paramilitaries who attacked him in 2000. This conclusion was based on a
misapprehension of the evidence he gave. In its Decision, the RPD said that
there were inconsistencies between his PIF, his answers to the RPD’s questions
and his answers to his counsel’s questions. The RPD wrote that the Applicant
said, in response to counsel’s questions, that he was attacked by the FARC. The
RPD also wrote that, in his responses to the RPD’s questions and in his PIF
narrative, he said he did not know who had targeted him. Based on this
inconsistency and the lack of corroboration from the medical report, the RPD
found that the Applicant had not established that it was FARC or the
Paramilitaries who attacked him. Contrary to the RPD’s finding that there were
inconsistencies in his testimony, the Applicant says he has maintained
throughout that he was attacked by either FARC or paramilitaries.
This, he says, is supported by documentary evidence.
[33]
The
Applicant points out that, because he was a trade unionist and the UNHCR
Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection Needs of Asylum-Seekers
from Columbia indicate that trade unionists are at risk of persecution by
FARC or paramilitaries, it was reasonable for him to believe that he was
targeted by FARC or paramilitaries. He says that, when his counsel asked him if
it was FARC or paramilitaries who targeted him, this called for speculation.
The RPD has based its conclusion as to his credibility on a speculative answer
which is unreasonable.
[34]
The
Applicant also says that it was unreasonable for the RPD to base its conclusion
that he was not attacked by the FARC or paramilitaries on the lack of
corroboration by the medical report. First, he says that the RPD ignored
evidence in the medical report that, after the 2000 attack, he was disoriented,
could not answer questions, and had memory loss. Because of the state he was
in, as attested to in the medical report itself, he was in no condition to tell
the medical staff who had attacked him. The RPD did not consider evidence of
his memory problems when it came to its conclusion on credibility, so this
renders the conclusion unreasonable.
[35]
Further,
it was unreasonable for the RPD to reject his testimony. The Applicant relies
on Maldonado v Canada (Minister of Employment
and Immigration), [1980] 2 FC 302 (FCA) for the proposition that sworn
testimony should be presumed true unless there is evidence to contradict it. At
paragraph 5 of Maldonado, the Federal Court of Appeal wrote that
It is my opinion that the Board acted arbitrarily in choosing
without valid reasons, to doubt the applicant’s credibility concerning the
sworn statements made by him and referred to supra. When an applicant swears to
the truth of certain allegations, this creates a presumption that those
allegations are true unless there be reason to doubt their truthfulness. On
this record, I am unable to discover valid reasons for the Board doubting the
truth of the applicant’s allegations above referred to.
The Applicant says the RPD
had no reason to doubt his testimony that it was the FARC or paramilitaries who
targeted him, so it was unreasonable for the RPD to conclude he was not
targeted by either of these groups.
[36]
The
Applicant further says it was unreasonable for the RPD to conclude that the
attack on his sister’s house was not made by the FARC or paramilitaries. There
is no evidence that either the FARC or paramilitaries identify themselves when
attacking people. It was unreasonable for the RPD to conclude neither of these
groups attacked the house based on his statements that his attackers did not
identify themselves. The RPD also ignored evidence that there were reports form
the police and human rights groups confirming that the FARC or paramilitaries
had attacked his sister’s house. He points to the sworn statement of his
common-law spouse that
Mr. Sanchez Molano appeared before the
fiscally and human rights offices in this region of the country, with the company
and advice of his lawyer, Mr. Pedro Nel Jiminez Restrepo to file a report of
these facts against his physical integrity.
By this reason I want to state, as his
wife, that I went to the before mentioned offices asking for a copy of the
report, where I was told that those documents do not exist to date.
Since there was evidence before the RPD
that such documents existed, though they were not themselves before the RPD,
the conclusion that there was no corroborating evidence as to the identity of
the attackers was unreasonable.
[37]
The
RPD’s finding that his sister’s house was not attacked by the FARC or
paramilitaries was also unreasonable because it ignored evidence that he had
been persecuted by these groups in the past. The Applicant points to letters (Tribunal
Record, p. 87-92) from FESTRAM, the Permanent Committee for the Defence of
Human Rights, and the priest of the Metropolitan Cathedral of Villavicencio
issued between 5 April and 15 May 2009, which confirm that he was forced to
leave the country because he was the subject of attacks. Because these were not
mentioned in the Decision and they were evidence contrary to the finding that
was made, the Applicant argues, based on Cepeda-Gutierrez v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] FCJ No 1425, that the Court can
infer that they were not considered by the RPD.
[38]
The
Applicant says that the RPD’s finding he would not face a risk beyond that
faced by the general population was unreasonable. The documentary evidence
before the RPD, in the UNHCR Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the
International Protection Needs of Asylum-Seekers from Colombia that trade
unionists like the Applicant are at increased risk of being targeted by the
FARC or paramilitaries. The RPD ignored this evidence, so its conclusion that
the Applicant is no a person in need of protection under section 97 was
unreasonable.
The Respondent
The RPD’s
Decision was Reasonable
[39]
The
Respondent argues that the Decision of the RPD was reasonable based on all the
evidence before it.
[40]
The
Respondent relies on Hemmati v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2008 FC 383 for the proposition that the
RPD is in the best position to determine credibility, and that findings of
credibility are deserving of deference. Because the RPD actually had the
opportunity to observe the Applicant in the hearing, its findings that he was
not credible should not be disturbed. The RPD found that the Applicant was not
credible, which amounts to a finding that there is no evidence on which his
claim could be allowed. Jarrah v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2002 FCT 180 supports this position.
[41]
The
Respondent points to the Applicant’s return to Colombia in 2000 as
evidence on which the RPD relied in coming to its conclusions. The Applicant
was also unable to identify his assailants in 2001 and there was no documentary
evidence as to the identity of the perpetrators of the attack on his sister’s
home.
ANALYSIS
[42]
The
Applicant has chosen to attack the credibility findings of the RPD as those
findings relate to subjective and objective fear.
[43]
This
is not an easy task because this Court has consistently found that the RPD is
in the best position to make determinations on credibility, which determinations
should be granted a high level of deference. See, for example, Hemmati,
above, at paragraphs 39 and 41 where Justice Orville Frenette said that
Mr.
Hemmati has pleaded elements of credibility and implausibilities which were the
basis of the Board’s decision. Findings on these points are within the domain
of the Board who, with its experience on these matters and having heard and
seen the witnesses testify before them, are in the best position to determine
these elements.
[…]
Credibility findings are to be granted a high level of deference
because the Board has had the benefit of hearing and seeing the witnesses and
considered their interests (Aguebor v. (Canada) Minister of
Employment and Immigration (1993), 160 N.R. 315, [1993] F.C.J. no. 732,
(QL) (F.C.A.)).
Remaining in Columbia Between
1980-1992
[44]
The
RPD finds that the Applicant’s “long stay in Colombia after 1980, when he began
fearing the FARC and the paramilitaries, is an indication of a lack of
subjective fear of persecution at their hands.”
[45]
The
Applicant says this finding is unreasonable because there was no threat to him
personally until the attack. Before then, he had no reason to leave. It seems
to me, however, that there was sufficient evidence to support the RPD’s
conclusions on this point. His evidence in his PIF was that he had much to fear
during the 1980s. He says that his “suffering began in the 1980s and that many
people from the UP party were brutally murdered during this period by terrorist
groups, FARC and the paramilitaries.” Also, many people just disappeared. He
specifically refers to people he knew during this period who lived in the province of Meta and who were
killed during this period. He also says in his PIF that “with me being a trade
unionist (syndicalist) and also a member of the Union Patriotica party, it was
dangerous for us.” A support letter from the president of FESTRAM says that
[The Applicant] was a popular civic and
union leader from 1979 in the province of Meta.
[The Applicant] was a victim of threats
and criminal attacks in [sic] several occasions by illegal groups
(paramilitaries). Those groups created panic in many of our leaders and killed
so many of them.
[46]
Given
this evidence, I do not think it can be said that the RPD’s conclusion that his
“long stay in Colombia after 1980, when he began fearing the FARC and
paramilitaries, is an indication of a lack of subjective fear of persecution at
their hands” is unreasonable. However, as the Decision makes clear, his long
stay is only an “indication” and is not conclusive. Much depends upon other
evidence and other findings.
Failure to
Seek Asylum in Argentina
[47]
It
looks to me as though the RPD did not regard the Applicant’s failure to seek
asylum in Argentina as a
negative factor in its subjective fear analysis. The RPD appears to accept, in
paragraph 13 of the Decision, that “the claimant did not seek asylum nor did he
seek information about asylum because he could enter, live and exit from Argentina at any time
he wished to.”
Travel
Between Argentina And Colombia
[48]
The
RPD finds the Applicant’s “constant travel between Argentina and Colombia, the country
he [sic] allegedly feared persecution, [that] is an indication of a lack
of subjective fear of persecution in Colombia.”
[49]
The
RPD rejects the Applicant’s explanation for this travel on the following
grounds:
His testimony that he remained in hiding
while he was in Colombia is not reasonable since he conducted business in Colombia and, therefore, he could not
have been in hiding in Colombia.
Moreover, the documentary evidence
submitted by the claimant indicates that a number of people, who had worked in
the same capacity as the claimant, were killed in Columbia between 1992 and 2000. Therefore, the
panel is not persuaded to believe that it was safe for him to travel to
Columbia frequently and, as a result, he lacked subjective fear of persecution
in Colombia.
[50]
On
this point, the RPD is misstating the evidence. At the hearing the Applicant
testified that he could go back to Colombia without fear because he
went to “different places with different relatives….” In other words, he did
not remain in hiding; he traveled about as part of his job and stayed with
different relatives.
[51]
In
addition, this negative credibility finding is also based upon documentary
evidence about people who were killed in Colombia and who
worked in the same capacity as the Applicant. But this does not really
undermine the Applicant’s account that he could go back to Colombia because he
was moving around and staying with various relatives.
Return in
2000
[52]
The
RPD also felt that the Applicant’s “return to Colombia and January
2000 is also indicative of lack of subjective fear of persecution in Colombia since he
feared persecution in the country he returned to.” The Applicant’s explanation
is rejected because
His explanation that he returned to
Colombia because the FARC and paramilitaries have forgotten him is not
reasonable, given he stated in his PIF narrative that he returned because of
economic crisis in Argentina.
[53]
In
his PIF the Applicant said that
We were afraid to be killed so I moved my
family to Argentina….Years passed by and we lived
there; feeling safe in Argentina. I went back to Colombia
because of the economical crisis in Argentina.
[54]
In
other words, what prompted the Applicant to return to Argentina was the
economic crisis. If this had not occurred, no move back to Colombia would have
been attempted because the family felt safe in Argentina. But in the
same paragraph of his PIF, the Applicant also explains that “I thought that the
guerrillas or paramilitary have forgotten about us.”
[55]
Economic
reasons prompted the return, but this does not contradict his explanation that
he returned because he felt that the guerrillas or paramilitary had forgotten
about him. If the Applicant had said that he returned for economic reasons
without the additional explanation, there would have been an indication of lack
of subjective fear. That was not the evidence before the RPD.
[56]
To
provide additional support for this finding, the RPD also says in paragraph 16
of the Decision that
Also, at the time he decided to return,
the documentary evidence indicates that a number of people from the UP party
were still being killed or disappeared in Colombia. Therefore, the panel is not persuaded
to believe that the claimant returned to Colombia because the FARC and the paramilitaries
have forgotten people like him. The panel finds that the claimant returned to
Colombia because there was economic crisis in Argentina, as a result he lacked subjective fear
of persecution in Colombia.
[57]
The
documentary evidence in question is identified in a footnote at paragraph 16 as
“6 Exhibit c-2, page 24 thru 36.” There is no further indication as to what the
RPD is relying upon for this documentary finding. I have read the reference in
question and can find no clear support for the RPD’s finding. The RPD is
obliged to state its credibility findings in clear and intelligible terms. See Vila
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2005 FC 415 at paragraph
5, Sandhu v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1997] FCJ
No. 500, at paragraph 2, and Wilanowski v Canada (Minister of Employment and
Immigration), [1993] FCJ No 371. There is no clarity on this point. In my
view then, the RPD’s findings about lack of subjective fear as a result of the
Applicant’s return to Colombia lacks an evidentiary
basis and is unreasonable. See Hatami v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2000] FCJ No. 402 at paragraphs 23-25, Kazi v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 FCT 178 at paragraph 23,
and Tameh v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2003 FC
1468 at paragraph 24.
[58]
In
footnote 6, the RPD refers to pages 24 to 36 of C-2 – the Applicant’s materials
submitted. There are four documents, along with translations of the same,
included in these pages. They are: a card about one Carlos Kovacs; a
compilation of pictures of UP members; a newspaper article about four people
who disappeared in 1996; and an edict from the First Family Court of Meta.
[59]
It
is not clear what the RPD means when, in the passage quoted above at paragraph
53, it says that “at the time he decided to return.” The return in question is
when the Applicant returned to Colombia from Argentina in 2000.
What isn’t clear is whether the RPD is actually referring to when the Applicant
went back to Colombia as the “time
he decided to return” or some other time while he was in Argentina but came to
the decision that he was going to go back to Colombia. If it means
the latter, there is nothing in the record to establish when he actually came
to that decision.
[60]
The
first piece of evidence footnote 6 points to is the card about Carlos Kovacs on
page 24 of C-2. I do not see how this can support the RPD’s finding that people
where being killed when the Applicant decided to return to Colombia. The card
says that Mr. Kovacs was assassinated in 1988, which is before the Applicant
left Colombia for Argentina the first
time (in 1992). He can’t have decided to return in 1988, as he had not left at
that point. Also, an assassination in 1988 cannot show that people were still
being killed or disappeared in 2000.
[61]
The
second piece of evidence footnote 6 refers to is a compilation of photographs
of “Victims of Political Genocide against the Unión Patriótica” beginning on
page 26 of C-2. There are five pages of pictures and associated names, but the
document does not say how these people are victims. The use of “genocide”
certainly suggests they were killed, but there are no dates associated with any
of the names and pictures; there is no way of knowing when the people in the
list were victimized. There are what appear to be references or cited articles
at the end of the list which suggest that the list was produced no earlier than
2006, but this is a far cry from saying that the people in the list were
victimized at the time that the Applicant returned to Colombia. I do not think
the list can support the RPD’s conclusion.
[62]
The
third piece of evidence is what appears to be a newspaper article dated 11
September 1998, entitled “Still Missing,” on page 32 of C-2. The article
discusses four people who were last heard from on 26 December 1996. This also
can not support the RPD’s conclusion, as this disappearance was approximately three
years before the Applicant returned to Colombia. It may be
that the RPD thinks the Applicant decided to return sometime before 2000, which
might make this article relevant, but it does not explicitly come to that
conclusion. The article also does not mention the UP in any way, so the link to
“people from the UP party” is tenuous at best.” One of the people mentioned in
the article, Nelson R. Mira has a similar name to a person mentioned in the
Applicant’s PIF narrative. That said, the PIF refers to this person as a
“co-worker” so it is not clear that he is a UP member whose killings and
disappearances the RPD says show the Applicant did not have subjective fear.
[63]
The
fourth piece of evidence, on page 36 of C-2, is an edict of the First Family
Court in Villavicencio, Meta, Colombia, which declares that
Jorge Enrique Hurtado Riveros is presumed dead by disappearance. The edict,
dated either 6 February 2006 or 21 June 2006, (it is not clear which of these
is the official issue date) gives Mr. Riveros a presumed date of death of 12
August 1996. I do not see how this can support the finding that people were
being killed and disappearing in 2000, particularly since the Applicant’s PIF
says that Mr. Riveros disappeared on 13 August 1994. Whether the correct date
is in 1996 or 1994, this document cannot show what the RPD says it does. This
document also does not mention the UP at all and, as with Nelson R. Mira in the
newspaper article, Mr. Riveros is mentioned in the Applicant’s PIF as a
“co-worker.”
[64]
The
RPD concluded that the Applicant did not have subjective fear of persecution
because he returned to a place where people were being killed and disappeared
at the time he returned (or contemplated returning). The evidence the RPD
refers to, in my view, simply does not support the finding that people were
being killed or disappeared at that time.
Inconsistencies
Over January 2001 Attack
[65]
One
of the RPD’s key findings is found in paragraphs 17-19 of the Decision:
In his PIF narrative and his testimony,
the claimant indicated that he resumed his membership in FESTRAN when he
returned to Colombia. His PIF narrative indicates
that, soon after he returned in January 2001, he was attacked and tortured.
During counsel’s questioning, he indicated that, in January 2001, he was
abducted and tortured by the FARC. However, in his PIF narrative and during the
panel’s questioning, he indicated that he had no knowledge as to who abducted
and tortured him in January 2001.
When asked to explain these
inconsistencies, the claimant admitted that the individuals who abducted him
were in civilian clothes and that they did not identify themselves. The
documentary evidence from various sources including the medical report do not
mention who abducted the claimant and tortured him in January 2001.
Based on the evidence adduced, the panel
is not persuaded to believe that the claimant was abducted and tortured by the
FARC and/or the paramilitaries in January 2001. The panel is of the opinion
that the claimant has connected the incident of January 2001 to the FARC to
bolster his refugee claim. Therefore, the panel does not find that it was the
FARC and/or the paramilitaries who abducted him and tortured him in January
2001.
[66]
A
review of the transcript and the PIF reveals that no such inconsistency exists.
In paragraph 9 of the PIF, the Applicant says
I did not know which group was that (sic),
either paramilitary or the FARC. They put a bag covering my head and started to
torture me; my hands were tied and they took me to a location.
[67]
When
counsel asked him at the hearing who he feared in Colombia he said the
“guerrilla and the paramilitaries.” When he was asked which guerrilla group he
feared he said the “FARC” and this was because it “is the largest of the
guerrilla groups because the others, they were disbanded.”
[68]
When
counsel asked him how he knew it was the FARC who had tortured him, his answer
made it clear that he did not mean that he knew it was the FARC who a tortured
him because he said “Who else carried heavy, you know, high-impact weaponry but
the guerrillas or the paramilitaries.”
[69]
When
counsel again asked him “But what made you conclude that they were members of
the FARC?” he again replied
Because both organizations were the ones
who carry out the killings of hundreds of -- or thousands of members of my
party.
[70]
A
reading of the transcript reveals that the Applicant:
a.
Indicated
in his PIF narrative that he had no knowledge as to who abducted and tortured
him in January 2001. He said it was either the paramilitary or the FARC, and he
explained why he thought this at the hearing; and
b.
Did
not indicate to counsel that he had been abducted by the FARC. His account was
consistent that it was either the FARC or a paramilitary group because of the
weaponry they had.
[71]
There
is no basis in the evidence for the RPD’s conclusion that there was an
inconsistency between the Applicant’s PIF, his answers to the RPD’s questions,
and his answers to his counsel’s questions. He consistently says that it was
either the FARC or the paramilitaries who abducted and tortured him.
[72]
In
addition, the RPD seeks to support this finding with reference to the
“documentary evidence from various sources including the medical report which
do not mention who abducted the claimant and tortured him.”
[73]
The
lack of any such information in the medical report is hardly surprising, given
that the medical evidence is that the Applicant did not initially have
any memory of what had happened. He did not understand anything he was asked at
the hospital: “Patient in a disoriented state, do not respond to questions.” So
the medical report is no kind of support for a finding that he did not know who
had tortured him. This looks like a negative credibility assessment based upon
what supporting evidence does not say, which is unreasonable. See Mahmud v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] FCJ No 729 at paragraph 11. In
addition, the “documentary evidence” referred to by the RPD includes documents
from the Permanent Committee for the Defence of Human Rights, and the Archdiocese
of the Villaviceusio, and FESTRAM, which speak to the facts that the Applicant
suffered threats against his life by terrorist groups and paramilitaries, and
which do lend support to the Applicant’s account of who attacked and tortured
him, which documents are, unreasonably, not referred to or dealt with by the
RPD.
[74]
There
are various other findings of the RPD that do not stand up to scrutiny.
However, I think I have to say at this point that I believe the Applicant has
made his case for reviewable error. There were reasons for the RPD to be
suspicious of the Applicant’s dilatoriness in leaving Columbia, but the
cumulative errors I have referred to above render the Decision unreasonable.
[75]
Counsel
agree there is no question for certification and the Court concurs.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that
1.
The
application is allowed. The decision is quashed and the matter is returned for
reconsideration by a differently constituted RPD.
2.
There
is no question for certification.
“James Russell”
Judge