Date: 20070801
Docket:
IMM-558-07
Citation:
2007 FC 810
Ottawa,
Ontario, the 1st day of August 2007
PRESENT:
The Honourable Mr. Justice Max M.
Teitelbaum
BETWEEN:
RUSUDAN
MIKIANI & LEVANI OSASHVILI
Applicants
and
THE
MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an
application for judicial review under section 72 of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (IRPA) of a decision by a PRRA
Officer, dated January 10, 2007, rejecting the applicants’ application for a
pre‑removal risk assessment (PRRA).
FACTS
[2]
The
applicants are citizens of Georgia. The principal applicant’s ethnicity is
mixed, being half Georgian and half Abkhazian. She is the mother of two
children, both of whom are also included in this application.
[3]
On April
24, 2003, the applicants arrived at the Canadian border in Lacolle, from the
United States, in order to claim refugee status, having travelled with forged
passports. The principal applicant claimed a fear of persecution by reason of her
dual Abkhazian-Georgian ethnicity in that it was difficult for her to find
employment because of her ethnic background. The applicants also claimed a fear
of persecution by reason of the principal applicant’s political involvement in
the Round Table‑Free Georgia Party (Zviadists). Their claim was rejected
by the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) for reasons of credibility.
[4]
After having
heard their application for judicial review, Mr. Justice Pinard dismissed it on
September 28, 2005. He found that intervention in the RPD’s decision was
not warranted.
[5]
The PRRA application
was received by CIC on October 4, 2006. In it, the applicant referred to the
risks of returning to Georgia by reason of her dual ethnicity and to her fear
of persecution for political reasons. She also claimed that because of Georgia’s
current economic situation, her single‑parent status and her ethnic
background, it was difficult for her to find employment and support herself and
her children.
[6]
On March
16, 2007, the Court declined to hear the stay motion submitted by the
applicants.
IMPUGNED DECISION
[7]
In his decision
of January 10, 2007, the PRRA Officer found that the application, although it
was a different submission, dealt with the same risks and facts submitted to
and assessed by the RPD. The PRRA Officer also found that the applicants would
not be subjected to a danger of torture or persecution or to a risk of cruel or
unusual punishment or to a risk to their lives were they to be removed to
Georgia.
PARTIES’ SUBMISSIONS
Applicants
[8]
The
applicants’ principal argument is that the PRRA Officer did not consider the
documentation submitted to him about the situation in Georgia for Abkhazians,
and therefore did not consider the risks presented by the applicants, and,
moreover, did not give reasons for why he had accepted or rejected certain
pieces of evidence. Indeed, that is the applicants’ principal argument.
Respondent
[9]
The
respondent’s principal argument is that the PRRA Officer did not make an error
since he found that the applicants were essentially claiming the same risks and
facts as they had before the RPD, and he could not find otherwise. Moreover,
the respondent maintains that the PRRA Officer did take into account the
documentation submitted by the applicants in his risk analysis, along with finding
that this documentation did not establish that the applicants would face any
risks.
ISSUE
[10]
Did the
PRRA Officer make an error warranting the intervention of the Court?
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[11]
In
general, decisions by PRRA Officers must be given a great deal of deference. If
there is nothing unreasonable about the PRRA Officer’s decision, there is no
serious issue. In Kandiah v. Canada (Solicitor General), 2005 FC 1057, [2005]
F.C.J. No. 1307 (QL) at paragraph 6, Mr. Justice Dawson explains the
appropriate standard of review:
As to the appropriate standard of review to be
applied to a decision of a PRRA officer, in Kim v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] F.C.J. No. 540, Mr. Justice Mosley,
after conducting a pragmatic and functional analysis, concluded “the
appropriate standard of review for questions of fact should generally be patent
unreasonableness, for questions of mixed law and fact, reasonableness simpliciter,
and for questions of law, correctness”. Mr. Justice Mosley also endorsed the
finding of Mr. Justice Martineau in Figurado v. Canada (Solicitor General),
[2005] F.C.J. No. 458, that the appropriate standard of review for the decision
of a PRRA officer is reasonableness simpliciter when the decision is
considered "globally and as a whole". This jurisprudence was followed
by Madam Justice Layden-Stevenson in Nadarajah v. Canada (Solicitor
General), [2005] F.C.J. No. 895 at paragraph 13. For the reasons given by
my colleagues, I accept this to be an accurate statement of the applicable
standard of review.
[12]
In this
case, I am going employ the standard of reasonableness simpliciter since
the decision has been considered globally and as a whole.
ANALYSIS
Did the PRRA Officer make an error
warranting the intervention of the Court?
[13]
The
applicants argue that the PRRA Officer did not consider the documentation
submitted to him about the situation in Georgia for Abkhazians, and therefore
did not consider the risks presented by the applicants. The applicants also
argue that the PRRA Officer adopted the RPD decision as his own without conducting
an assessment of the risks.
[14]
First of
all, the PRRA Officer first considered the RPD decision and, during the PRRA, found
that the PRRA application was based on the same risks and facts as those presented
by the applicants to the RPD. In such a case, a PRRA Officer may reach the same
conclusions as the RPD:
14 PRRA officers are not bound
by the conclusions reached by the RPD. However, when the evidence before the
PRRA officer is essentially the same as that before the RPD, it is reasonable
for the PRRA officer to reach the same conclusions (see Klais
v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 783 at paragraph
11). In addition, PRRA officers do not sit on appeal or judicial review and
therefore may rely on conclusions reached by the RPD when there is no new
evidence (see Jacques v. Canada (Solicitor General),
[2004] F.C. 1481).
(See Isomi v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2006] F.C.J. No. 1753 (QL)).
[15]
In my
opinion, the applicants submitted the same risks and facts as those presented
to the RPD. Therefore, the Officer did not err in this respect.
[16]
Second,
with regard to the applicants’ argument that the PRRA Officer did not take into
account the documentary evidence submitted by the applicants relating to the
risks and did not give reasons for why he had accepted or rejected certain
pieces of evidence, I am of the opinion that the PRRA Officer did not err in
this respect either.
[17]
Unless the
contrary is shown by the applicant, a PRRA Officer is assumed to have considered
all the evidence presented to him (Florea v. Canada (M.E.I.), [1993]
F.C.J. No. 598 (QL); Houssou v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2006 FC 1375, [2006] F.C.J. No. 1730 (QL)).
[18]
In his
decision, the Officer referred to the documentation that he had considered. Furthermore,
according to settled caselaw, notwithstanding the submission of fresh documentary
evidence, the applicants must establish an individualized risk (Ahmad v.
Canada (M.C.I.), [2004] F.C.J. No. 995 (QL); Jarada v. Canada (Minister Citizenship
and Immigration), 2005 FC 409, [2005] F.C.J. No. 506 (F.C.) (QL); Ould v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 83, [2007] F.C.J.
No. 103 (QL)).
[19]
The
Officer twice indicated that the documentary evidence filed by the applicants did
not allow him to find that there were changes in the situation in Georgia constituting
fresh evidence that would enable him to find differently than the RPD or that the
applicants would face an individualized risk.
[20]
Accordingly,
I am of the opinion that the PRRA Officer’s decision, considered globally and
as a whole, was not unreasonable.
[21]
Moreover,
according to the evidence in the file, it is possible that the applicants could
be the subjects of discrimination if they had to be returned to Georgia, but
nothing confirms the possibility of persecution.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT ORDERS that the application for judicial review be dismissed. No
question was submitted to be certified.
“Max
M. Teitelbaum”
Certified true
translation
Gwendolyn May, LLB
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-558-07
STYLE OF CAUSE: RUSUDAN
MIKIANI et al. v. THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
PLACE OF
HEARING: Montréal, Quebec
DATE OF
HEARING: July 23, 2007
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT BY: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Teitelbaum
DATED: August
1, 2007
APPEARANCES:
Andrea C.
Snizynsky
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
Brendan Naef
|
FOR THE
RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
Andrea C.
Snizynsky
8772 Lajeunesse
Street
Montréal,
Quebec
H8N 3G9
|
FOR THE
APPLICANTS
|
John H. Sims,
Q.C.
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
Montréal,
Quebec
H2Z 1X4
|
FOR THE
RESPONDENT
|