Docket: IMM-2112-11
Citation: 2011 FC 1292
Toronto, Ontario, November 9,
2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
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MICHAEL OLUSEGUN OLAOPA
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION and THE MINISTER OF
PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
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Respondents
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
Michael Olusegun Olaopa seeks judicial review of a decision refusing his
application for permanent residence from within Canada on humanitarian and
compassionate grounds. He argues that the H&C officer’s reasons were
insufficient, that he ignored evidence and that he failed to properly consider
the best interests of Mr. Olaopa’s children. Mr. Olaopa further submits that
the issue of risk was not properly dealt with.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, I am not persuaded that the H&C officer
erred as alleged. As a consequence, Mr. Olaopa’s application for judicial
review will be dismissed.
Background
[3]
Mr. Olaopa is a citizen of Nigeria who came to Canada in 2001. In 2003, his claim for
refugee protection was rejected on credibility grounds and leave to judicially
review this decision was denied by this Court. A negative Pre-removal Risk Assessment
[PRRA] was issued on January 15, 2010.
[4]
In 2006, Mr. Olaopa married a Nigerian citizen
living in Canada. At the time
of the H&C decision, the couple had three Canadian-born sons, who were born
between 2004 and 2009. A fourth child has since been born.
[5]
Mr. Olaopa has been economically self-sufficient
since his arrival in Canada,
and is the sole financial provider for his family. He has upgraded his skills and
has worked as a support worker for the developmentally disabled since 2006. He
is also very active in his church and his community.
[6]
Mr. Olaopa submitted his initial H&C
application in April of 2003 and filed additional updated submissions on a
number of occasions after that. A decision was finally rendered in relation to
the application in 2010.
The Risk
Component of the H&C Decision
[7]
Mr. Olaopa based his application for H&C
relief in part on allegations that he faced a risk to his life in Nigeria as a result of his Christian
religious beliefs and his former membership in the Yoruba tribe. These were the
same claims that had been advanced before the Refugee Protection Division.
[8]
The risk component of Mr. Olaopa’s H&C
application was assessed by a PRRA officer, who noted that the serious
inconsistencies and omissions in Mr. Olaopa’s evidence before the Refugee Protection
Division had led to it rejecting his claim as not credible. The PRRA officer
observed that the risk portion of Mr. Olaopa’s H&C application was based on
essentially the same allegations, and that Mr. Olaopa had not addressed the
negative credibility findings made by the Refugee Protection Division.
[9]
While recognizing that he was not bound by the
Refugee Protection Division’s findings, the PRRA officer nevertheless chose to
give these findings considerable weight. This he was entitled to do.
[10]
The PRRA officer then examined the country
condition information before him at some length before concluding that although
there was religious and ethnic tension in Nigeria, Christians and Yorubas are able to live peacefully in the
south-west of the country. The officer further noted that Mr. Olaopa had been
living outside of Nigeria for some eight years, and that he had not shown that
anyone would be interested in harming him should he return to Nigeria.
[11]
The PRRA officer’s risk opinion was provided to
Mr. Olaopa and to his representative, and both were afforded the opportunity to
make submissions as to any errors or omissions in the report. They chose not to
avail themselves of this opportunity.
[12]
Mr. Olaopa now submits that the PRRA officer
erred by using the tests for persecution and risk to life under sections 96 and
97 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 [IRPA]
in assessing the question of risk, rather than examining the issue as one of
hardship. He submits that the H&C officer in turn erred by relying on the
risk opinion, without explicitly acknowledging that different standards
are applicable in the PRRA and H&C contexts.
[13]
However, it is clear from a review of the risk
opinion as a whole that the PRRA officer understood that the opinion was being
offered in the context of an H&C application and not for the purposes of a
Pre-removal Risk Assessment. Nowhere in the opinion does the PRRA officer refer
to either section 96 or 97 of IRPA, nor does he refer to the tests that
have to be satisfied in those contexts. Rather the PRRA officer carried out a
factual inquiry based upon the evidence before him in order to determine
whether or not Mr. Olaopa was at risk in Nigeria, concluding that he would not be not at risk if he were to return
to the south-west of the country.
[14]
It is also clear that in evaluating Mr. Olaopa’s
application for an H&C exemption, the H&C officer understood the test
to be applied in the context of an application for an H&C exemption. The
officer examined the risk opinion, and found that the evidence provided had
been adequately considered and that the risk opinion was reasonable. This led
the H&C officer to conclude that Mr. Olaopa would not face personal risk or
hardship that would be unusual, undeserved or disproportionate should he return
to live in south-western Nigeria.
[15]
The H&C officer’s conclusion that a return
to south-western Nigeria would not amount to disproportionate hardship for Mr.
Olaopa or his family was reasonable. The risk opinion determined that religious
and ethnic violence was a problem in the northern parts of Nigeria. Mr.
Olaopa’s family had previously resided in the south-western part of the
country.
[16]
In light of my conclusion on the merits of this
argument, I do not need to address the respondent’s submission with respect to
the failure of Mr. Olaopa to identify this issue in either his Notice of
Application or in his original Memorandum of Fact and Law. Nor do I need to
address the respondent’s argument that by failing to respond when he was afforded
the opportunity to comment on the risk opinion, Mr. Olaopa should be deemed to
have waived his right to object to it.
The Best
Interests of Mr. Olaopa’s Children
[17]
Mr. Olaopa also asserts that the H&C officer
erred by failing to properly evaluate the best interests of his children. In
particular, Mr. Olaopa says that the H&C officer failed to consider the
interests of the three Canadian-born children in light of the risks they might
face in Nigeria.
[18]
I am not persuaded that the officer erred as
alleged.
[19]
The onus was on Mr. Olaopa to support his application
with relevant information as it related to the best interests of his children: Owusu
v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FCA
38, [2004] F.C.J. No. 158 at para. 5. The reasonableness of an officer’s
decision must be assessed in light of the evidence submitted with the
application: Zambrano v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2008 FC 481, [2008] F.C.J. No. 601 at para. 68.
[20]
While Mr. Olaopa made fleeting references to his
family in his H&C submissions, little if any information was provided about
the children, beyond the fact that the oldest child was a fan of the Toronto
Maple Leafs. The only submission specifically addressing the interests
of his children concerned the lack of nurturing they would experience if their
mother were removed from Canada. Moreover, Mr. Olaopa did not make any specific
submissions addressing the degree of risk his children might face in Nigeria.
[21]
As the Federal Court of Appeal observed in Hawthorne v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2002 FCA 475, [2002] F.C.J. No. 1687
at para. 5, immigration officers are presumed to know that living in Canada can afford many opportunities to a
child that may not be available in the child’s country of origin. The task of
the officer is thus to assess the degree of hardship that is likely to result
from the removal of the child from Canada, and then to balance that hardship
against other factors that might mitigate the consequences of removal: see also
Ruiz v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 1175,
[2009] F.C.J. No. 1474 at para. 31.
[22]
In this case the officer did just that,
considering the limited information that Mr. Olaopa had submitted and
explaining clearly why it was in the children’s interests to remain with their
parents, regardless of where the family had to live.
Ignoring
Evidence and Insufficiency of Reasons
[23]
Mr. Olaopa submits that the H&C officer
erred by ignoring the narrative provided in support of his application and in
choosing to give little weight to letters of support from certain individuals.
He also says that the reasons given by the officer for discounting this
evidence were insufficient.
[24]
I am not persuaded that the H&C officer
ignored Mr. Olaopa’s narrative (an issue that I note was not raised in either
of Mr. Olaopa’s memoranda of fact and law). While the document is not
specifically referenced in the reasons, a decision-maker is presumed to have
considered all of the evidence before him or her. Moreover, there is specific
reference to information contained in the narrative in the officer’s reasons,
making it clear that the officer had indeed reviewed the document in question.
[25]
Insofar as the treatment accorded to the
letters of support is concerned, it is up to the officer to decide the weight
to be attributed to evidence. The officer explained why he chose to give the
documents little weight and that explanation was not unreasonable. More
fundamentally, however, the information contained in the letters regarding Mr.
Olaopa’s employment, his contribution to his church and his volunteer
activities was not in dispute. The officer accepted that Mr. Olaopa was
gainfully employed and that he had contributed to his church and to his
community.
Conclusion
[26]
In Irimie v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2000] F.C.J. No. 1906, 10 Imm. L.R. (3d) 206, Justice
Pelletier stated that:
I return to
my observation that the evidence suggests that the applicants would be a
welcome addition to the Canadian community. Unfortunately, that is not the
test. To make it the test is to make the H & C process an ex post facto
screening device which supplants the screening process contained in the Immigration
Act and Regulations. This would encourage gambling on refugee claims in the
belief that if someone can stay in Canada long enough to demonstrate that they
are the kind of persons Canada wants, they will be allowed to stay. The H &
C process is not designed to eliminate hardship; it is designed to provide relief
from unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship. There is no doubt that
the refusal of the applicants' H & C application will cause hardship but,
given the circumstances of the applicants' presence in Canada and the state of
the record, it is not unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship.
The same may be said about this
case.
[27]
Having failed to persuade me that the H&C officer committed a
reviewable error, the application for judicial review is dismissed.
Certification
[28]
Mr. Olaopa proposes the following question for
certification:
Within the
context of an H&C application when the risk component
analysis is outsourced to a PRRA officer, does the H&C officer have an
obligation to examine the reasonableness of the PRRA officer’s decision and
evaluate the risk factors in light of the best interests of the children?
[29]
I am not persuaded that this is an appropriate question for
certification. The question would not be dispositive of this case as the H&C
officer did examine the reasonableness of the PRRA officer’s risk opinion.
Moreover, the law regarding the evaluation of the best interests of children is
well-settled, and no new issue arises here.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1. This
application for judicial review is dismissed; and
2. No
serious question of general importance is certified.
“Anne
Mactavish”