Docket: IMM-5466-13
Citation:
2014 FC 1218
Ottawa, Ontario, December 18, 2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
BETWEEN:
|
OMER CENGIZ DEMIR, MELIKE DEMIR, AND MUSTAFA SAMET DEMIR AND
HATICE MELEK DEMIR
(BY THEIR LITIGATION GUARDIAN
OMER CENGIZ DEMIR)
|
Applicants
|
and
|
MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
For the following reasons, the Court agrees with
the applicants that it would be unsafe to rely on the decision under review.
Their claims for refugee protection must be determined anew.
Background
[2]
The applicants are a family from Turkey. They claimed refugee protection on three bases: (1) their Alevi religion, (2)
membership in the Freedom and Solidarity Party [ODP], and (3) the actions of
the husband’s mother-in-law.
[3]
It is candidly acknowledged that there were
discrepancies in the evidence of both Omer and his wife that required
explanation. Among other concerns, the Member did not accept the explanations
offered and found that they failed to establish that there is a serious
possibility of persecution on a Convention ground or that they would personally
be subjected to a danger of torture or face a risk to their lives or a risk of
cruel and unusual treatment or punishment. The determinative issue was
credibility.
[4]
The Member found that on the parent’s IMM 5669
form that they got the name for ODP wrong. They wrote “Ozgurlik
ve Demokras Partisi” instead of the correct “Özgürlük
ve Dayanışma Partisi”. The Member drew a negative credibility
finding from this discrepancy as well as from Omer’s limited knowledge of the
party’s platform: “If the claimant were truly a
sympathizer or supporter of a particular political party for over 15 years,
surely he would be able to provide the correct name of the party.”
[5]
Omer’s brother, Mustafa Demir testified at the
hearing. He had been found by the Board to be a refugee following his arrival
in Canada from Turkey in 2001. He testified that the culminating incident that
led to him leaving Turkey was the treatment he and Omer received following a
meeting of the ODP. His evidence in that respect was as follows:
We participated in a planning meeting for the
international peace day. It was August of 2011. We had several friends with
us after we left that place. We were stopped by the police and were detained
with shoving and pushing. Then afterwards we were detained and questioned. It
was about what we were doing there and what we were talking about. This is one
of the incidents that we experienced together.
He testified that he was a sympathizer of
the ODP and that he and Omer had attended activities of the party “several times.”
[6]
The Member asked no questions of Mustafa and
disposed of his testimony in a single paragraph of her decision, as follows:
The brother of the principal claimant testified
at the claimants’ hearing on their behalf. The principal claimant’s brother
cannot be said to be a disinterested party to this proceeding and as the panel
has found the allegations and testimony put forth by the claimants themselves
not to be credible or reliable, the panel places little weight on the testimony
provided by the principal claimant’s brother.
[7]
The Member correctly notes that the refugee
determination process is forward looking. As such, she compares the testimony
of the applicants’ treatment as members of the Alevi faith with “the current situation for Alevis in Turkey” and
concludes that their fears are not consistent with objective documentary
evidence. In this regard, at paragraphs 31 and 32, the Member writes as
follows:
[31] The objective evidence before the panel
suggests that although Alevis are still subject to some discriminatory state
practises, they are able to practice their beliefs relatively freely and their
situation has improved in recent years.
Alevis freely practiced their beliefs
and built cem houses (places of gathering), although these have no legal status
as places of worship and were often referred to as “cultural centers.” …
[footnote reference: Exhibit 2, National Documentation Package (NDP) for Turkey 29 June 23012, Item 2.3 – Turkey Operational Guidance Note v 6.0 Issued August
2011.]
[32] Indeed an RIR dealing with the situation
of Alevis notes that the Alevi community is “one religious minority that does
not appear to face increased pressure in the current intolerant climate.” The
report also states that while criticism is widespread in the private sphere, it
is no longer socially acceptable for traditionalist Sunnis to disparage Alevis
in public and the Alevi sector was expected to form an important section of the
electorate supporting the ruling Justice and Development Party. [footnote
reference: Exhibit 3, National Documentation Package (NDP) for Turkey 29 June 2012, Item 12.2 – RIR TUR43515.E.]
[8]
The Operational Guidance Note issued by the UK
Border Office which is quoted by the Member in paragraph 31 above, states that
it relies on the US State Department International Religious Freedom Report
2010: Turkey http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/irf/2010/148991.htm [US Religious
Freedom Report 2010].
[9]
Although the US Religious Freedom Report 2010
was current when the hearing was held, the Member took 70 days to issue her
decision and by that time, the report had been updated. At the date of
decision, the most recent report was the Turkey International Religious Freedom
Report for 2012 [2012 Report]. This 2012 Report is contained within the Board’s
National Documentation Package. This is relevant because the applicants submit
that the content of that 2012 Report does not reflect the statement quoted by
the Member at paragraph 31 nor her finding that the applicants are not at risk
in Turkey because of their religion.
Issues
[10]
There are only two issues that require the
Court’s attention: (1) Whether the Member erred in not considering the most
recent country condition document, namely the 2012 Report and (2) whether the
Member erred in her treatment of the evidence of the principal claimant’s
brother.
Analysis
[11]
The respondent points out that while the US documentation may have changed, the UK document, which was also updated in May 2013, contains the
same passage relied upon by the Member. As a result, the Minister submits that
the key document relied on by the Member is unchanged and her decision is
reasonable.
[12]
This Court has held that while it is not
its role to undertake a detailed review of documents not discussed to determine
their effect on the ultimate decision, it is the Court’s role to assess whether
those documents could have affected the result. Justice Mactavish in Lee v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 782 expressed the test to be
whether the Court was persuaded that an unreferenced document “was clearly not material to the application or that it could
not have affected the result.”
[13]
Counsel for the Minister correctly acknowledged
that if upon review of the two US reports, the Court was persuaded that the
more recent 2012 Report was material to the claim or could have affected the
result, then this application must be allowed and the refugee claim
redetermined. I have reached that conclusion.
[14]
The 2012 Report is a substantial rewrite of the
previous report. Substantial portions that support the finding of the Member,
including that which was expressly relied on by the UK Guideline have been
deleted from the earlier report, including the following:
The government generally respected religious
freedom in practice. There was no change in the status of respect for
religious freedom by the government during the reporting period.
…
Alevis freely practiced their beliefs and built
cem houses (places of gathering), although these have no legal status as places
of worship and were often referred to as "cultural centers."
[15]
More critically, the 2012 Report contains new
information that strongly suggests that Alevis are persecuted in Turkey, including the following passages:
There were reports
of societal abuses and discrimination based on religious affiliation, belief,
or practice. Christians, Bahais, non-Sunni Muslims, including the Alevi
population, and members of other religious minority groups faced threats and
societal suspicion. Jewish leaders expressed growing concern within the Jewish
community over the continued expression of anti-Semitic sentiments in the media
and by some elements of society. Persons wishing to convert from Islam
experienced harassment and violence from relatives and neighbors.
…
Alevis stated they
often faced obstacles when attempting to establish cemevis (places of worship).
…
Threats against non-Sunni Muslims created an
atmosphere of intimidation for some members of minority religious groups. In
July an angry mob threw stones at the home and burned down the stables of an
Alevi family in the village of Surgu in Malatya, after the family allegedly
asked a Ramadan drummer not to wake them for the meal before sunrise. After
the incident, prosecutors indicted both the Alevi family and the Sunni mob. Prosecutors
asked for a sentence of 14 years imprisonment for family members for allegedly
inciting the mob to burn down their own stables, and they asked for 10 years
for the drummer and a maximum of six and a half years for 48 “protestors.” In
October prosecutors filed another case against the Alevi family for “aspersion,”
requesting 15 years’ imprisonment for allegedly giving the wrong date for the
attack in their first statement. Both cases continued at year’s end.
[16]
As was noted in the Applicants’ Memorandum,
these changes to the treatment of Alevis is also reflected in the 2013 Country
Reports on Human Rights Practices and the UK’s 2013 Operational Guidance Note
for Turkey.
[17]
This Court is of the view that these documents
are relevant and could impact the determination previously made. Accordingly,
the application must be allowed.
[18]
The Court is troubled by the very short shrift
given to Mustafa’s testimony. It has been previously observed that it is not a
sufficient basis to give testimony little weight only because the witness is a
family member: Gonzales Perea v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2008 FC 432; Leonce v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2011 FC 831; Safi v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2005 FC 714.
[19]
Here, the brother testified that he and the
principal claimant attended meetings many years ago of the very political party
the claimant says he supported. That evidence should not be given “little weight” merely because it was offered by a
relative. As the applicants noted, if the Member wished to test that evidence,
the brother’s PIF was available to the Board as he had previously been accepted
as a refugee – apparently in part based on attendance at such meetings.
[20]
For these reasons, his evidence was deserving of
some weight. It appears to have been given none.
[21]
Neither party proposed a question for
certification.