Date:
20130227
Docket:
IMM-844-13
Citation:
2013 FC 203
Toronto, Ontario,
February 27, 2013
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Martineau
BETWEEN:
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ARSHAD MUHAMMAD
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The
applicant has been under immigration hold since his arrest on July 22, 2011.
There have been several detention reviews and numerous bondsmen have been
proposed, but each detention review found the applicant to be unlikely to
appear for his removal. Today, he attacks the legality of a decision rendered
on January 31, 2013 by the Immigration Division of the Immigration and Refugee
Board [Board] ordering his continued detention, again based on the finding that
he is unlikely to appear for removal.
[2]
This
is an expedited judicial review caused by the fact that the present application
will become moot if it is not heard or decided prior to the next detention
review which is scheduled to take place before March 1, 2013. The relevant
facts are not in dispute.
[3]
The
applicant is a failed refugee claimant from Pakistan who is excluded from the
definition of Convention refugee, based on his alleged membership in the
Sipah-e-Sahaba. As far back as February 2002, the respondent has instituted
proceedings to remove the applicant from Canada. The applicant was arrested in
July 2011 a few days after the Canada Border Services Agency [CBSA] released
his name, photograph, and last known whereabouts on its website under the
heading “Wanted by the CBSA”. The applicant now fears a risk that, upon return
to Pakistan, he would face extreme physical abuse while in custody, unlawful
detention, extrajudicial killings, and a risk from sectarian groups or vigilantes.
On February 16, 2012, the Minister’s delegate nevertheless rejected his most
recent Pre-Removal Risk Assessment [PRRA] application, but the latter decision
was set aside on December 18, 2012 and the matter was remitted back to a
different Minister’s delegate for redetermination: Muhammad v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 1483 [Muhammad].
[4]
Before
the Court, the applicant asserts that the Board has failed to consider the
impact of the Muhammad decision and to properly evaluate both the
elapsed and expected length of time in detention, and has also arbitrarily
rejected the proposed alternatives to detention. The respondent argues, to the
contrary, that the Board considered the totality of the evidence and that,
while the elapsed length of time weighed in the applicant’s favour, no clear
and compelling reasons justified a departure from prior decisions since the
proposed alternatives to detention were not sufficient to address the valid
concerns raised by the Board.
[5]
The
parties agree that the applicable standard of review is that of
reasonableness. Despite the able presentation of the applicant’s learned and
experienced counsel, I am unable to find any reviewable error on the part of
the Board. While a different decision maker may have come to a different
result, this is not the test, and overall, I must find that the continued
detention of the applicant, until the next detention hearing, is an acceptable
outcome in light of the law and the evidence on record.
[6]
The
applicable law and legal principles are not in dispute in this case. It is not
challenged that, in addition to the mandatory factors found in section 248 of
the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227
[Regulations], the Board may also consider other relevant factors in balancing
the competing interests of a detainee not to be unduly deprived of his freedom
with the public interest in upholding the law. Indeed, the Board’s
responsibility is an “onerous” one since it calls for an assessment of future behaviour
based on past events. Accordingly, there is rarely one correct answer to cases
like this one (see B072 v Canada (MCI), 2012 FC 563 at para 34). It is
also accepted that in order for the Board to depart from previous decisions,
“clear and compelling reasons for doing so must be set out.”: Thanabalasingham
v Canada (MCI), 2004 FCA 4 at paras 6,10, 247 FCR 572 and B147 v Canada (MCI), 2012 FC 655 at para 38 [B147].
[7]
I
find that the Board considered all relevant factors. Here, the ground for the
continued detention has not changed. While there are no reasonable grounds to
believe that the applicant is a danger to the public, the Board strongly
believes that he is unlikely to appear for removal and that the proposed bonds
persons will not be in a position to exercise influence on the applicant,
despite the amounts of the bonds. Such factual determinations come within the
ambit of the exclusive and specialized functions of the Board and should not be
disturbed unless they are found to have been made in a perverse or capricious
manner or without regard for the material before it. This is not the case here
and it is not the function of the Court to re-weigh the evidence and various
factors set out in section 248 of the Regulations.
[8]
I
find the Board’s reasoning well articulated and I dismiss any suggestion made
by the applicant that the Board did not consider the totality of the evidence,
including the new features of the proposed alternatives to detention. The
Board also refers to the reasons for refusing the bonds in the past and sees no
reason to come to a different conclusion. While the Board notes that it is free
to take a fresh look at the case, the Board maintains that it is still
concerned (1) that the proposed individuals for posting bond did not seem to
have a relationship with the applicant, and (2) that the applicant had not
adhered to prior CBSA proceedings, which the Board takes as an indication that
he would not appear for removal. Again, this finding is reasonable in the
circumstances.
[9]
On
the one hand, there is evidence on record that in 1999 the applicant lied to
the immigration authorities about his true identity, that he did not attend his
removal interview with the CBSA in January 2003, and that he told his lawyer
that he was leaving Montreal to return to Pakistan, but then instead moved from
Montreal to Toronto. A warrant having been issued for his arrest in July
2003; the applicant thereafter remained in Canada illegally. The applicant
retained counsel in December 2010 and his counsel scheduled an interview with
the CBSA for the applicant on January 25, 2011, but again he did not appear for
the interview. The Board could reasonably conclude that the applicant is
someone “who has absolutely no desire, whatsoever, to appear for removal” and
that his history demonstrates that he is “willing to do things, whether legal
or illegal, to stay in Canada.”
[10]
On
the other hand, if we consider the “pull of bail”, to use a criminal analogy,
“the real effective force that it exerts, is that it may cause the offender to
attend his trial rather than subject his nearest and dearest who has gone
surety for him to undue pain and discomfort” (Canada (Attorney
General) v Horvath, 2009 ONCA 732 at para 40, citing with approval
this statement made by Lord Widgery CJ in R v Southampton
Justices, ex parte Corker (1976), 120 SJ 214). In the present
instance, the Board was simply not persuaded that “the trust that [the proposed
bondsmen] put in [the applicant] is well founded” since “history has
demonstrated that [the applicant] can’t be trusted.” Thus, the Board could
reasonably conclude that the proposed bonds are a factor that does not
sufficiently outweigh the other considerations: “[B]ecause you are someone who
essentially believes that your life is on the line, I have great difficulty
seeing what amount of money you would consider to be worth your life.”
[11]
The
applicant also focuses on the Board’s alleged refusal to consider the four
bondsmen that came forward, expressed their trust in the applicant, their awareness
of his situation, and, notably, that they were willing to post bonds that
represented significant sums of money considering their financial records. The
applicant asserts that the Board did not look at all of these “changed
circumstances” and did not adequately consider the influence the four
individuals would have, together, over the applicant. The Board doubted their
belief that the applicant would comply with the conditions imposed on him;
however, the Board did not cross-examine the bondsmen. As a result, the
applicant suggests that this constitutes an assumption that is not based on the
evidence presented.
[12]
The
Board did not say that no bonds would be acceptable but that they would have to
be “quite particular” in order to alleviate the Board’s concerns. The Board was
not convinced that four bondsmen would collectively assert more of an influence
on the applicant than simply one of them. Although another decision maker may
have come to a different conclusion, I nonetheless find that it was open to the
Board to find the alternatives proposed insufficient based on the past
behaviour of the applicant and the fact that the bondsmen are not closely
related to the applicant. The point is that an increased length of detention
“does not transform an unsuitable bondsperson into a suitable one. Nor does it
mitigate the assessment of the respondent’s flight risk from extremely high to
that of assured compliance.” (B147 at para 57).
[13]
The
Board did not ignore the other factors mentioned in section 248 of the Regulations.
In terms of the length of time the applicant had spent in detention and the
anticipated future length of detention, the Board notes that a year and a half
is a long time to be in detention, but finds that the length is outweighed by
other relevant factors. The Board also notes in reference to a portion of the
prior argumentation of the applicant’s counsel, that detention is not any kind
of punishment and that it is simply to ensure availability when the time comes
to remove the applicant.
[14]
The
length of time required for a matter to be dealt with by the Federal Court is
generally a “neutral” factor. As it has been stated by the Federal Court of
Appeal in Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Li, 2009
FCA 85 at para 38, 308 DLR (4th) 314:
Obviously, the multiplicity or challenges increases
the length of the foreign nationals’ detention. However, to the extent that
detainees or the Government are diligently exercising recourses under the IRPA
that are reasonable in the circumstances or resorting to reasonable Charter
challenges, the ensuing delays should not count against either party: see Charkaoui
v Canada, above, at para 114.
[15]
The
applicant relies heavily on statements made last December 2012 by my colleague
Justice Boivin in Muhammad, where the decision of the Minister’s
delegate was judged unreasonable. The applicant suggests, on the part of the
Minister’s delegate, that such behaviour amounts to a lack of diligence “since
the applicant is now in the same position as he was 18 months ago when he made
his new PRRA application.” However, Justice Boivin made no finding of bad
faith against the Minister’s delegate, and I have no evidence before me that
the other Minister’s delegate, who will be called to re-determine the matter, will
have a closed mind or will simply give lip service to the Court’s decision in Mohammad
and ignore its actual content.
[16]
While
the Board notes in its decision that it took four months for the Minister’s
delegate to make a decision the last time, the applicant also argues that the
Board did not make an explicit finding on this issue. I kindly disagree with
the applicant. The impugned decision was rendered orally and naturally does
not have the perfection of written reasons. It must be read as a whole and in
a comprehensive manner to give it effect (Construction Labour Relations v
Driver Iron Inc, 2012 SCC 65 at para 3, 352 DLR (4th) 487; Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury
Board), 2011 SCC 62, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 708). Clearly, the Board found that the
expected length of time of the future detention was not indefinite. The Board
was not obliged to come to a precise finding in terms of the exact time that
the Minister’s delegate will take to make a new decision.
[17]
Therefore
it is premature to suggest, at this point in time, that the other delegate will
not act diligently in re-determining the matter. Should the situation change,
there are remedies to force the Minister’s delegate to act promptly in
re-determining the matter (see Canada (Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness) v Lebon, 2013 FCA 18 (stay) and Canada (Minister
of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness) v Lebon, 2013 FCA 255 (merit),
aff’g Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness) v Lebon,
2012 FC 1500).
[18]
For
the above reasons, the application shall be dismissed. Counsel agrees that
there is no question of general importance raised in this case.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT’S JUDGMENT is that the application for judicial review is
dismissed and that no question is certified.
“Luc Martineau”