Date: 20070814
Docket: IMM-612-07
Citation: 2007 FC 841
OTTAWA, Ontario, August 14, 2007
PRESENT: The Honourable Max M. Teitelbaum
BETWEEN:
PRIYANA SWARN KIRINDAGE DE
SILVA
ARAVINDA WEERATHUNGA
THILINI WEERATHUNGA
KEISHI WEERATHUNGA
Applicants
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a decision of an immigration officer
(the “Officer”), dated December 28, 2006, wherein the Officer denied the
applicants’ Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) application and determined that
the applicants would not be at risk if returned to their country of
nationality.
[2]
The
applicants are a family from Sri Lanka. Priyana Swarn
Kirindage De Silva, the principal applicant, her husband and their two
daughters came to Canada on visitor visas in December 2002.
[3]
The
applicants fear for their security and their lives because they believe their
family has been targeted by members of the Special Police Unit for trying to
determine who is responsible for the death of the principal applicant’s sister.
The principal applicant’s sister, Thushari, was killed on July 14, 2000. She
was reportedly killed in a police shoot out when the car she was in drove
through a police check point. The applicants do not believe the reported
version of Thushari’s death. They believe that Ranjith Wanaraja, the head of
the Police Special Unit squad, killed Thushari while she was in police custody.
Their belief is based on the following factors:
-
According
to a newspaper article, a week before Thushari was killed she had written a
letter to the president of Sri Lanka informing her she was receiving threats
from Ranjith Wanaraja who wanted Thushari to give him a loan and also wanted
her to have an affair with him.
-
The
principal applicant found a love letter addressed to Thusari and written by
Ranjith Wanaraja in her sister’s purse after her death.
-
According
to the medical report of Thushari’s death, she had been shot on her right ear,
in the middle of her chest and on her left wrist. The applicants believe that
she could not have been shot in that manner if she was shot in her car as the
police claim.
-
Thushari’s
assistant was informed the day of Thushari’s death that Thushari was being held
in police custody.
A court in Sri Lanka determined
that Wanaraja was not guilty. After the principal applicant found the love
letter from Wanaraja addressed to her sister, her father informed the
authorities about his letter. He was detained and Wanaraja demanded that he be
given the letter. The primary applicant was in possession of the letter and she
alleged that the police threatened to kill her if she did not give them the
letter.
[4]
The
primary applicant went into hiding and then later fled to Bahrain where her
husband was working. In 2001, the applicants returned to Sri Lanka allegedly
because they read in the newspapers that the Police Special Unit had been
dissolved. According to the applicants, former members of the Police Special
Unit started to follow and threaten the primary applicant upon her return to Sri Lanka. The
applicants apparently tried to lodge a complaint against the police and they
also allegedly contacted a lawyer to instigate legal action against the Police
Special Unit. The applicants claim that they continued to face harassment
throughout 2002: they received anonymous death threats over the phone; the male
applicant was assaulted by unknown attackers; the principal applicant’s brother
was stabbed and his attackers left a note threatening to do the same to the
principal applicant; and the applicants were shoot at while in their car. After
this final incident the applicants decided to leave Sri Lanka.
[5]
The
Refugee Board determined that the applicants have no nexus to a Convention
ground and that they are not persons in need of protection since they did not
produce credible or trustworthy evidence in support of their claims that there
is a serious possibility they would face a danger of torture or a risk to their
lives. The Refugee Board found the applicants were not credible based on a
number of inconsistencies between their oral and written testimony.
[6]
With
respect to evidence to corroborate their claim, the Board stated the following:
In the panel’s opinion, the Court
decision or the inquiry report would have shed some light to the circumstances
surrounding the killing of the principal claimant’s sister. It would have
corroborated the testimony of the adult claimants that Wanaraja was personally
involved in the killing and what prompted the Court to acquit the defendants.
Given that there was no official documentation on the evidence presented in the
Court proceedings, the tribunal relied on the second hand information of the
adult claimants and the documentation filed.
THE DECISION UNDER
REVIEW
[7]
The
Officer noted that the majority of the applicants’ PRRA submissions related to
allegations already dealt with by the Refugee Board. She held that the
documents relating to the allegations about the murder of the female
applicant’s sister did not constitute new evidence because the Board had
already found that these allegations do not relate to any Convention refugee
ground and that there was not enough credible evidence to support these
allegations. Consequently, the Officer considered only those documents
submitted by the applicants that related to the principal applicant’s
psychological well-being and those documents dealing with the general country
conditions in Sri
Lanka.
[8]
The
Officer concluded that the applicants did not have a profile that would put
them at risk and that, in any event, state protection was available and that
they had an internal flight alternative.
ISSUE
[9]
The
issue before the Court is whether the Officer erred by not considering the
documents as new evidence under subsection 133(a) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2000, ch. 27.
[10]
The
applicants have made a number of other claims which are very vague and
unsupported by argument and jurisprudence. At the hearing counsel informed the
Court that I should not rule on the following issues at this time:
First, the applicants submit that the PRRA officer who
decided the applicants’ case is not impartial or independent. They submit that
“there is no real judicial independence for the PRRA officers” and that all of
the decisions rendered by the PRRA officers show a systematic bias in favour of
deportation and against the application of international human rights law.
Second, the applicants submit that article 2(3), the right
to access a remedy, and article 14, the right to an independent and impartial
tribunal, of the Covenant have been violated. They do not state what the
Covenant they are referring to but I believe it is the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
Third, they submit that the Officer was obligated to take
into account all of the evidence under the Charter including evidence
previously submitted and without any restriction in terms of the new evidence.
Finally, they submit that section 113 of the Act violates
the Charter if evidence is not considered that would permit a violation of the
rights guaranteed by the Charter without clearly stating what sections of the
Charter are violated and why they are violated and any jurisprudence in
relation to the said section.
The respondent has made very few submissions, if any.
ANALYSIS
[11]
Section
113 of the Act deals with PRRA applications. Subsection (a) reads as follows:
Consideration of an application
for protection shall be as follows:
(a) an applicant whose claim to
refugee protection has been rejected may present only new evidence that arose
after the rejection or was not reasonably available, or that the applicant
could not reasonably have been expected in the circumstances to have
presented, at the time of the rejection;
|
Il est disposé de
la demande comme il suit :
a) le demandeur d’asile débouté ne peut présenter que des éléments
de preuve survenus depuis le rejet ou qui n’étaient alors pas normalement
accessibles ou, s’ils l’étaient, qu’il n’était pas raisonnable, dans les
circonstances, de s’attendre à ce qu’il les ait présentés au moment du rejet;
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Standard of review
[12]
The
Court in Elezi v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, 2007 FC 240,
considered the standard of review applicable to the issue of whether a PPRA
officer properly applied subsection 113(a). The Court held:
[22] When assessing
the issue of new evidence under subsection 113(a), two separate questions must
be addressed. The first one is whether the officer erred in interpreting
the section itself. This is a question of law, which must be reviewed against a
standard of correctness. If he made no mistake interpreting the
provision, the Court must still determine whether he erred in his application
of the section to the particular facts of this case. This is a question of
mixed fact and law, to be reviewed on a standard of reasonableness.
[13]
I
adopt this analysis of the applicable standards of review.
New evidence
[14]
The
applicants claim that the Officer erred by not considering new evidence
submitted by the applicants. The evidence includes the following:
1) the court
record of the inquiry into Thushari’s death;
2)
a police
complaint, dated January 10, 2006, made by the principal applicant’s mother
stating that unknown people were looking for the applicants and threatened to
kill the principal applicant and her family;
3)
a letter
from the Asian Human Rights Commission to the National Human Rights Commission
of Sri Lanka, dated May 2005, urging the Commission to investigate Thushari’s
death;
4)
a
newspaper article published in January 2001 that tells of a petition by her
sister addressed to the present of Sri Lanka
about threats from the police that she had sent a few days before being killed;
5)
the love
letter allegedly written by Wanaraja; and,
6)
general
documents as to country conditions in Sri Lanka
with respect to human rights.
[15]
The
Officer refused to look at new evidence because it related to allegations
already dealt with by the Refugee Board. She also held that the documents
regarding the murder of the female applicant’s sister were already before the
Refugee Board and therefore do not constitute new evidence.
[16]
The
respondent submits that the only purpose of the PRRA program is to assess those
risks that a person could face if they were to be removed to their native
country, in light of new facts arising after the Refugee Board’s decision on
the refugee claim. The respondent cites a number of cases where the Court has
held that the PRRA process is not intended to be an appeal of a decision of the
Refugee Board and that the PRRA is designed to assess new risks (Perez v.
Minister v. Citizenship and Immigration, 2006 FC 1380, Kaybaki v.
Soliciter General, 2004 FC 32, Quiroga v. Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration, 2006 FC 1306, Raza v. Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration, 2006 FC 1385).
[17]
Although
the PRRA process is meant to assess only evidence of new risks, this does
not mean that new evidence relating to old risks need not be considered.
Moreover, one must be careful not to mix up the issue of whether evidence is
new evidence under subsection 133(a) with the issue of whether the evidence
establishes risk. The PRRA officer should first consider whether a document
falls within one of the three prongs of subsection 113(a). If it does, then the
Officer should go on to consider whether the document evidences a new risk.
[18]
This
distinction was clear to the PRRA officer whose decision was reviewed in Perez
v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, 2006 FC 1379 and the Court then
reviewed both steps of the officer’s analysis. The Court described the PRRA
officer’s process in the following way:
[9]
The PRRA Officer found that the Applicants submitted new
evidence as per section 113(a) of the IRPA. However, the PRRA Officer
found that the new evidence did not provide any new risk that had not existed
and been considered by the RPD. The PRRA Officer, after reviewing current
country condition documents, was satisfied that there has not been a
deterioration of general country conditions since the RPD decision in June
2004.
The Court in Perez concluded that
the Officer had properly considered the new evidence and had reasonably
concluded that the new evidence was not sufficient to establish that the
applicants would be at risk.
[19]
In
Elezi, the Court found a PRRA officer cannot exclude all evidence simply
because it related to risks raised in front of the Refugee Board. The Court
held:
[38]
All of this evidence is obviously extremely
probative, and to a large extent, refutes all of the Board’s conclusions
against Mr. Elezi. Had he submitted this evidence at his Board hearing,
the Board may well have written a very different decision. Yet, these
documents do not raise any “new” risks, per se. The risks
outlined were the same as those Mr. Elezi claimed during his hearing before the
Board. Was it then reasonable for the PRRA officer to exclude all these
documents on that basis? In my opinion, no.
[39] I believe the
PRRA officer should have considered at least some of these documents pursuant
to the first branch of subsection 113(a) of the IRPA. First, the letters appear
to have been written after the Board’s decision. They were notarized after the
Board’s decision, and the date on the envelopes in which they were sent also
postdates the Board’s decision. More importantly, however, I think the officer
should have admitted the undated letters because they contain information that
goes beyond a mere repetition of what was already in front of the Board.
Unlike country condition reports and other documentary evidence of a general
nature, the six letters that were excluded all directly relate to Mr. Elezi.
The letters from his friends are first-hand witness accounts that corroborate
his story. Of even more significance are the letters from state officials of
the highest rank, which, lend credit to Mr. Elezi’s fear of reprisals and to
his claim that Albania cannot protect him.
[40] This approach, I
hasten to say, appears to be consistent with this Court’s findings in both Mendez,
above, and Raza, above. In the latter decision, Justice Mosley
went out of his way to distinguish the case before him from Mendez,
opining that the new evidence in Mendez was “central to the applicant’s
claim as it went to the very heart of the Board’s conclusion that he would not
be at risk as a HIV-positive gay man in Mexico” (Raza, above, at
paragraph 18). He added, at paragraph 22, that when assessing “new
information”, “it is not just the date of the document that is important, but
whether the information is significant or significantly different than the
information previously provided.”
[41] In other words,
the nature of the information, its significance for the case, and the
credibility of its source, are all factors that can and should be taken into
consideration in determining whether it can be considered “new evidence”, when
it appears to have been created after the Board’s decision. In the
context of the present case, I believe the information contained in the letters
from the Mayor and from the Deputy, at the very least, qualify as “new
evidence.”
[20]
Had
the Officer properly applied section 113, she would have found that some of the
documents relating to Thushari’s death, specifically the love letter and the
newspaper article, were not new evidence since they were before the Refugee
Board. Other documents could be considered new evidence. The Court inquiry
record could reasonably be considered new evidence since the applicants
provided an affidavit from the male applicant’s brother explaining the
difficulties he had in obtaining the document, i.e. why the document was not
reasonably available at the time of the applicant’s Refugee Board hearing. The
police complaint and the letter from the Asian Human Rights Commission are both
dated after the Refugee Board hearing and, therefore, could be considered as
new evidence according to the first prong of subsection 133(a), i.e. evidence that arose
after the rejection.
[21]
The
Officer excluded these documents solely based on the fact that they related to
the allegations raised in front of the Refugee Board. This is not the test for
new evidence set out in subsection 113(a). Consequently, I find that the
Officer erred in law by misinterpreting 113(a).
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that the
application for judicial review is allowed and the matter is returned for a new
hearing before a different immigration officer in accordance with these
reasons.
"Max M. Teitelbaum"
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-612-07
STYLE OF CAUSE: PRYANTHA
SWARN KIRINDAGE DE SILVA ET AL v. MCI
PLACE OF
HEARING: Montreal, Qc
DATE OF
HEARING: July
24, 2007
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: TEITELBAUM
D.J.
DATED: August
14, 2007
APPEARANCES:
Mr. Stewart
Istvanffy
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
Mr. Alexandre
Tavadian
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
ISTVANFFY,
VALLIERES & ASSOCIES
1061, rue
Saint-Alexandre
Montreal, QC
H2Y 1P5
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
John H. Sims,
Q.C.
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
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