Date: 20070813
Docket: IMM-343-07
Citation: 2007 FC 836
OTTAWA, Ontario, August 13, 2007
PRESENT: The Honourable Max M. Teitelbaum
BETWEEN:
NADIATH RADJI
LEYLA APITHY
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 14, 2006, wherein the Officer determined that
there are no humanitarian and compassionate (H&C) considerations justifying
an exemption from the requirement to apply for permanent residence from outside
of Canada. The
applicants are also contesting in a separate application to this Court the
Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) decision rendered by the same immigration
officer on the same date.
[2]
Nadiath
Radji, the principal applicant, is a citizen of Benin. Her
daughter Leyla Apithy, a citizen of the United States, is the
other applicant. The principal applicant is a Muslim. She fears her family
because they allegedly tried to force her into a marriage and because of the
fact that she had a Christian boyfriend. In 2002, the applicant followed her
boyfriend to the U.S. While in the U.S. the
applicant became pregnant. Shortly thereafter the applicant and her boyfriend
began having problems and the applicant moved alone to Chicago where she
gave birth to her daughter. Several months after the birth, the applicant left
with her daughter for Benin. She alleged that while in Benin her mother
threatened to poison her and her daughter. As a result of this incident, they
returned to the U.S. The applicants arrived in Canada from the United
States
on January 6, 2004 and claimed refugee status upon arrival. In a decision dated
October 7, 2004, the Refugee Determination Division of the Immigration and
Refugee Board (the “Refugee Board”) denied the applicants’ claim on the grounds
that the principal applicant was not credible and had no subjective fear.
[3]
The
applicants made a motion for a stay of removal but this motion was refused on
January 31, 2007. Shortly after learning that she was to be deported the
applicant had to be hospitalized due to concerns about her mental health.
Consequently, the applicants were not removed. The applicants filed an appeal
of the decision denying their application for a stay of removal which was
quashed by the Federal Court of Appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
THE DECISION UNDER
REVIEW
[4]
The
applicants requested H&C relief on a number of grounds. First, they
submitted that the principal applicant would be at risk in Benin because her
family is still angry with her. Second, the applicants submitted that the
status of women in Benin is low and that consequently they are at risk
of violence. Third, they argued the minor applicant would be subjected to
female genital mutilation in Benin. Finally, the applicants claimed that
their degree of establishment in Canada warrants H&C
relief.
[5]
To
support her allegations of risk, the principal applicant submitted seven
letters. Two of these letters were before the Refugee Board. Of the five new
letters, three were from health professionals. These letters indicate that the
principal applicant has severe depression with suicidal tendencies and that her
problems stem from her rejection from her family and her abandonment by her ex-boyfriend.
The letter from Dr. Renée Pelletier indicates that the primary applicant’s condition
has improved greatly. The Officer concluded that while these letters indicate
that the primary applicant suffers from some psychological problems they are
not evidence of the risks alleged by the applicant. The remaining two letters
are personal letters: one from the applicant’s sister and the other from an
acquaintance of the applicant’s. The Officer concluded that these letters were from
individuals not disinterested and, consequently, gave them little probative
value.
[6]
With
respect to the principal applicant’s allegation about forced marriage, the
Officer noted that a law was passed in 2004 which prohibits forced marriage yet
it remains a problem in Benin. She went on to conclude that the
applicant had not proven that she is at risk of forced marriage. The Officer
considered the status of women in Benin and noted that according to a report
presented at the United Nations there has been a decisive improvement in the
promotion of women’s rights in Benin. She also referred to documentary evidence
which indicates that Muslim Yorouba women who have children out of wedlock risk
temporary expulsion from their family homes if they do not marry.
[7]
Although
the applicants’ submissions did not directly raise the issue of whether the
applicant’s mental health puts her at risk, the Officer addressed this issue
and held that mental health services would be available to her in Benin noting that
there is a psychiatric hospital in the area where the applicant previously
lived in Benin.
[8]
With
respect to the risk allegations relating to the minor applicant, the Officer
noted that the applicant had provided no evidence to support the allegation
that she would be at risk of female genital mutilation if she returned to Benin. The Officer
noted that although there is now a law which prohibits female genital
mutilation in practice the government has not succeeded in completely
eradicating the practice. The Officer also referred to an IRB Request for
Information document that cited the assistant executive secretary of the Benin
chapter of the l’Organization Femmes, Droit et Développement en Afrique as
stating that Benin was in a
period of transition with respect to this practice and that there was currently
an education campaign to inform people about the new law. According to the
documentary evidence approximately 17% of women in Benin have been
subjected to female genital mutilation and that 70% of women from the Bariba,
Yoa-Lokpa and Peul ethnic groups are subjected to it. The Officer noted that
the applicant is not from one of these groups. She concluded that the applicant
had not established that her daughter is at risk of female genital mutilation.
[9]
The
Officer then went on to consider the best interests of the child. The Officer
considered benefits which Leyla had enjoyed while in Canada, including
her participation in a program called “Devenir grand ensemble” and her
participation in the Boys and Girls Club of Lasalle. She found that there was
every indication that Leyla is a well-adjusted child. She also noted that Leyla
would face less hardship being removed now because she is not yet of school age.
She noted that Leyla had travelled extensively and that there was nothing to
indicate that Leyla had not adapted well to these moves. In addition, she noted
that Leyla had spent over a year in Benin. The Officer noted that
Leyla is an American citizen but that she would be able to acquire citizenship
in Benin since her
mother is a citizen of Benin. The Officer concluded that Leyla’s best
interests lie with staying with her mother and that removal to Benin would not be
contrary to her best interests.
[10]
Finally,
the Officer considered the principal applicant’s degree of establishment in Canada. She noted
that the applicant was employed, that she had no family in Canada but had many
friends, that she has excellent French ability and that she is motivated to
improve herself.
ISSUES
[11]
The
applicant raised the following questions:
1.
Whether
the Officer erred in her determination of the best interests of the child?
2.
Whether
the Officer’s decision with respect to the applicant’s degree of establishment
and integration in Canada was unreasonable?
3.
Did the
Officer breach the duty of procedural fairness owed to the applicant by
unilaterally consulting and relying upon documentation found on the internet to
which the applicants were not given a chance to respond to?
ANALYSIS
Best interests of the
child
[12]
In
Hawthorne v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, 2002 FCA 475, the Federal Court of
Appeal held at paragraph 31 that an H&C decision will be found to be
unreasonable if the officer was dismissive to the best interests of the child
and was not “alive,
alert and sensitive” to the best interests of the child.
[13]
The
applicant submits that the Officer erred by failing to weigh the hardship
caused by removal with other factors and instead simply concluded that the
degree of hardship of removal would not constitute unusual or undeserved
hardship. The applicants cite the following passage from Hawthorne:
To
simply require that the officer determine whether the child's best interests
favour non-removal is somewhat artificial - such a finding will be a given in
all but a very few, unusual cases. For all practical purposes, the
officer's task is to determine, in the circumstances of each case, the likely
degree of hardship to the child caused by the removal of the parent and to
weigh this degree of hardship together with other factors, including public
policy considerations that militate in favour of or against the removal of the
parent. (para.6)
[14]
The
respondent submits that the Officer properly weighed the hardship that Leyla
might face if removed from Canada with other pertinent considerations and
did not, as the applicants suggest, disregard the negative impacts because they
did not amount to undue hardship.
[15]
In
my view, a failure to expressly weigh the likely degree of hardship caused by
removal against other factors is not a reviewable error where the Officer examined
the best interests of the child with a great deal of attention as required by Legault
v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration (2002), 212 D.L.R. (4th)
139 at para. 30 (C.A.) and gave substantial weight to the best
interests of the child as required by Baker v. Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration, [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817 at para. 75. Moreover, the majority in Hawthorne held that
there is no set formula that H&C officers must use when examining the best
interests of the child. At paragraph 7, Justice Décary stated:
The
administrative burden facing officers in humanitarian and compassionate
assessments - as is illustrated by section 8.5 of Chapter IP 5 of the Immigration
Manual reproduced at para. 30 of my colleague's reasons - is demanding
enough without adding to it formal requirements as to the words to be used or
the approach to be followed in their description and analysis of the relevant
facts and factors. When this Court in Legault stated at paragraph 12
that the best interests of the child must be "well identified and
defined", it was not attempting to impose a magic formula to be used by
immigration officers in the exercise of their discretion.
[16]
Finally,
I find that the majority’s conclusion in Hawthorne does not
state that the failure to expressly weigh the hardship caused by removal with
other factors is a reviewable error. The Court held:
[11] I
would dismiss the appeal and answer the certified question as follows:
Q.:
Is the requirement that the best
interests of children be considered when disposing of an application for an
exemption pursuant to subsection 114(2), as set out in Baker v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817, satisfied
by considering whether the removal of the parent will subject the child to
unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship?
A.:
The requirement that the best
interests of the child be considered may be satisfied, depending on the
circumstances of each case, by considering the degree of hardship to which the
removal of a parent exposes the child.
(emphasis added)
[17]
Applying
Hawthorne in the present case, the Officer was required to consider the
degree of hardship that Leyla would be subject to if she was removed to Benin. This is
quite clearly what the Officer did and I find that she did not improperly
assess the best interests of the child.
[18]
The
applicant also submits that the Officer’s decision with respect to the best
interest of the child is unreasonable because it fails to examine the impact of
the applicant’s mental and psychological fragility on her daughter, as well as
the effects of deportation, interruption of continuity of care and removal from
the present stable environment on the applicant’s daughter and her mother’s
capacity to care for her. The respondent submits that the applicants in their
H&C application did not allege that the primary applicant’s mental health
was so fragile that her removal from Canada could potentially lead
to a serious deterioration in her mental health or her ability to look after
her child. In an H&C application, the burden is on the applicant to raise
any issue she wishes to be considered and to bring forth evidence to support
her submission. I would note that the evidence before the Officer indicated
that that the applicant’s mental health condition was improving but still,
nevertheless fragile.
Degree of establishment
[19]
The
Officer considered the primary applicant’s work, language, abilities, efforts
at self-improvement, family ties, community involvement and volunteer work.
[20]
The
applicants submit that the Officer’s decision with respect to the applicant’s
degree of establishment was unreasonable because the Officer failed to consider
the hardship that would ensue as a result of displacing the applicant from her
present environment and interrupting the continuity of her medical and
psycho-social care.
[21]
The
Officer considered all the relevant factors with respect to the primary
applicant’s establishment and it was open to her to determine that the
applicant’s level of establishment is not such that to leave would cause unusual
or undeserved hardship.
Unilateral consultation
of the internet
[22]
The
applicant submits that the Officer relied on seven documents in rendering her
decision and that the Officer’s failure to disclose these documents to the
applicants breached the duty of procedural fairness owed to the applicant. The
applicants raised this issue in the application for judicial review of the PRRA
decision rendered by the same officer on the same day as the H&C decision.
In my reasons for that application (IMM-342-07), I reviewed the jurisprudence
with respect to the duty to disclose documents with specific reference to
documents taken from the internet, including the Federal Court of Appeal’s
decision in Mancia v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, [1998] 3
F.C. 461 (C.A.) and this Court’s decision in Zamora v. Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration, 2004 FC 1414. I concluded that where an
immigration officer relied on a document from a non-standard site, i.e. a site
not regularly consulted by immigration officers or the IRB such as Amnesty
International or the U.S. Department of State, and the document is not
available in the IRB Documentation Centre, then there is a duty to disclose
such a document to the applicant if the document is novel and significant and the
evidence indicate changes in country conditions that may affect the decision.
[23]
The
seven documents relied on by the Officer in making her determination on the
applicants’ H&C application which the applicants claim should have been
disclosed to them are:
- Internet site of WiLDAF/FeDDAF –
Afrique de l’Ouest: Femme Droit et Développement en Afrique
- Rapport alternatif au Comité des
Nations Unies des droits de l’enfant sur la mise en œuvre de la Convention
relative aux droits de l’enfant au Benin prepared by the World
Organisation against Torture
- Article from Inter Press Services
Agency entitled Droits-Bénin: un ancien praticien abandonne l’excision et
veut sensibiliser les réticents
- Internet site of l’Association des
Femmes Juristes au Bénin
- Benin Development Gateway
- An article from Le Républician
entitled “Les patients de centre psychiatrique Jacquot honorés hier”
available on-line
- “Couverture sanitaire à Cotonou” from the website of the city of Cotonou
[24]
While
the address of the first website listed, WiLDAF/FeDDAF, was not included on the
Exhibits List for the IRB kit on Benin, a document by this organization is on the
Exhibits List (see Exhibit A of the affidavit of Jordan Toope). Moreover, the
website address is listed under references in the IRB Request for Information
document on female genital mutilation in Benin. Therefore, I conclude that this information
was available to the applicant. Of the remaining documents and sites, none is
from a standard website and none were listed on the Exhibits List for the IRB
kit on Benin.
[25]
Documents
#2-4 contain no information that was not already contained in any of the
documents available to the applicants in the Benin kit available at the IRB Documentation Centre.
The fifth document contains general information about the development of health
programming in Benin but contains no
information relevant to the applicant’s case because it does not discuss
whether mental health care is widely available. The final two documents appear
to be significant according to the Officer’s decision since she relied on them
in coming to the conclusion that the applicant would be able to receive mental
health services in Cotonou, the city where the applicant lived in Benin. Although the Officer
appears to have found the information from theses sites to be significant, I am
not convinced that these documents are significant. The article from Le
Républician discusses a ceremony held at the Centre National Hospitalier
Psychitrique Jacquot on the International Day of Mental Health. It discusses
the Benin government’s commitment
to mental health issues but does not indicate whether mental health services
are widely available. The last document, entitled “Couverture sanitaire à
Cotonou”,
is no longer
available at the address indicated in the Officer’s decision and, unlike the
other documents relied on by the Officer, is not included in the Certified
Tribunal Record. As a result it is impossible to verify the information on this
site. Despite the questions that remain about the relevance of these documents,
the fact remains that the Officer relied on these documents in determining that
mental health services would be available in Benin. For this reason, I conclude that the Officer
breached the duty of procedural fairness owed to the applicants by failing to
disclose these documents to the applicants.
[26]
The
respondent submits that should the Court find that there was a breach of
procedural fairness then the Court should not intervene because the result
would have been the same. The respondent cites Mobil Oil Canada Ltd. v.
Canada-Newfoundland Offshore Petroleum Board, [1994] 1 S.C.R. 202, wherein
the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that “a court may exercise its discretion not
to grant a remedy for a breach of procedural fairness where the result is
inevitable.” The respondent submits that the result was inevitable because the
applicants failed to meet their burden to establish that their individual
circumstances are sufficient to warrant an exemption.
[27]
I agree
with the respondent. The applicants made a significant number of claims but
failed to bring forth evidence to support these claims. As the respondent
noted, the applicants brought forward no evidence regarding the conditions for
women in Benin, forced marriages,
female genital mutilation and the availability of mental health care in Benin. Had the applicant
believed that she deserved H&C relief because her mental health condition
and that a return to Benin could affect her to the
point that her daughter was at risk, then she should have raised this issue in
the submissions and adduced evidence to support it. Given that the
burden is on the applicant in an H&C decision to establish that there are
circumstances warranting H&C relief and the applicants failed to bring
forth evidence to support their claims, I find that this is an appropriate case
for the Court to exercise its discretion not to allow the judicial review
despite the fact that the Officer breached the duty of procedural fairness.
[28]
The applicants
filed an application for a stay of a removal order. This application for stay
was heard and denied by Mr. Justice Shore. An application
for stay will only be granted if the following elements are clearly shown to
exist:
1) an arguable
case
2) irreparable
harm
3) the balance
of convenience is in favour of the applicants
[29]
I
am satisfied, after reading the reasons issued by Mr. Justice Shore that
had he found from the evidence presented that the applicant would suffer harm
if removed from Canada, harm of a severe nature or irreparable in
nature, he surely would have granted the application for stay.
[30]
I
am satisfied that, in denying the H & C application, the immigration
officer properly considered all the elements necessary.
[31]
The
application for judicial review is denied.
[32]
The
applicants filed the following question for certification in both IMM-342-07
and IMM-343-07:
“Under what condition
does the unilateral consultation of the Internet by an Immigration Office
rendering decision on an humanitarian and compassionate application or a
pre-removal risk assessment application constitute a violation of procedural
fairness, where unilateral consultation of the Internet is understood to
signify the consultation of documents found on the Internet without providing
the applicant(s) an opportunity to comment thereupon?”
[33]
Without
repeating what the respondent states in its written submissions of July 31,
2007, I agree with the respondent as to why the above question need not be
certified.
[34]
I
am satisfied that the proposed question is not determinative of the present
issues as, even if the officer considered documents obtained from the Internet,
the officer’s decision clearly show why she refused the H & C application.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES that the application for
judicial review is dismissed.
"Max
M. Teitelbaum"
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-343-07
STYLE OF CAUSE: NADIATH RADJI, LEYLA APITHY v. MCI
PLACE OF HEARING: Montreal, Qc
DATE OF HEARING: July 25th, 2007
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: Honourable
Max M. Teitelbaum
DATED: August
13, 2007
APPEARANCES:
Me
Jared Will
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
Me
Alexandre Tavadian
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Me
Jared Will
400
McGill Street, 2nd
Floor
Montréal (Québec)
H2Y 2G1
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
John H. Sims, c.r.
Department
of Justice Canada
Quebec Regional Office
Guy-Favreau Complex
200, René-Lévesque Blvd. West
East Tower, 5th floor
Montréal
(Québec)
H2Z 1X4
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|