Date:
20130703
Docket: IMM-6124-12
Citation:
2013 FC 737
Ottawa, Ontario,
July 3, 2013
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Strickland
BETWEEN:
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DAVID BEN CHEKROUN
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a decision by a pre-removal risk assessment
(PRRA) officer, dated April 26, 2012. The officer found that the Applicant would
not be subject to risk of persecution, danger of torture, risk to life, or risk
of cruel or unusual punishment if removed from Canada and, as previously
decided by the Refugee Protection Division, was not a Convention refugee or
person in need of protection pursuant to sections 96 and 97, respectively,
of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 (IRPA)
(IMM-6124-12). The same officer on the following day refused the
Applicant’s application for permanent residence based on humanitarian and compassionate
(H&C) grounds pursuant to section 25 of the IRPA (IMM-6125-12). This is
also an application for judicial review of that decision. Both applications are
brought pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the IRPA.
[2]
The
background is essentially the same for both applications.
Background
[3]
The
Applicant, Mr. Ben Chekroun, submits that he was born in 1966 in Algeria to French Jewish parents. His father, as an Algerian Sephardic Jew, was neither a
French nor an Algerian citizen until 1944, when a legislative change admitted
him to French citizenship. With a subsequent change of government, his
citizenship was revoked. The Applicant therefore believes that he is
stateless, a citizen of neither France nor Algeria.
[4]
He
reports that at age 10 he developed obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and was
harassed by villagers for his odd behaviour. At age 12 or 13, he began to
experiment with his sexuality. It became known that he was homosexual and he
claims, as a result, he was beaten and harassed. On one occasion he was called
a “fag” and had hot coffee thrown on him, on another he was beaten and had his
nose broken, and, on another he required hospital treatment to extract broken
glass from his foot because he had been forced to use his foot to break a glass
door to escape from a mob.
[5]
When
he was 18 years old he applied for a national identification card but was
denied because he refused to declare that he was Muslim. He was detained for
four months and tortured with a form of waterboarding. He later developed post
traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
[6]
By
1992 persecution of Jews in Algeria and the violence of the Islamic military
had increased to dangerous levels. The Applicant considered fleeing but did
not want to abandon his mother.
[7]
The
Applicant reports that on March 25, 1997, his mother was given permission to
travel to visit his father’s grave in Algiers. The bus she was travelling on
was stopped at a roadblock by terrorists who slaughtered and decapitated many
of the passengers. His mother was among the victims.
[8]
The
Applicant, then aged 31, no longer had a reason to stay in Algeria. He fled and eventually arrived in Canada on June 4, 1999, claiming asylum at Pearson Airport in Toronto.
[9]
The
Applicant states that he moved into the gay village neighbourhood of Toronto and made friends in the community. He joined the 519 Community Centre and the
YMCA, he met men in the YMCA steam room for casual relationships. He subsequently
developed haemorrhoids and began to worry about AIDS. By the time of his PRRA
and H&C applications, he had been celibate for three years. He suffers
from depression, PTSD, OCD and Tourette’s Syndrome. His mental illnesses,
although treated with medication, tend to isolate him from others and have
prevented him from working. He has upgraded his education, mainly taking
information technology courses, and has done a great deal of volunteer work
with many community organizations over a long period of time.
[10]
In
June 1999 the Applicant made a claim seeking refugee status on the basis of
religious persecution in Algeria. The Immigration and Refugee Board, Refugee
Division, (the Board) denied the claim in a decision dated March 8, 2000. The
Board did not pronounce on his nationality but explained that in cases where
nationality could not be clearly established claimants were handled similarly
to stateless persons. The Board then assessed his situation based on residence
in Algeria. He applied for leave for judicial review of that decision which was
denied in January 2001.
[11]
The
Applicant submits that he did not disclose his sexual orientation and mental
health issues in his Personal Information Form (PIF) made in support of his
claim for refugee status made in 1999 because he was ashamed. He did disclose
this to his lawyer before his refugee claim hearing, an adjournment was sought but
denied, with the result that evidence was not submitted concerning
discrimination he had suffered based on those grounds.
[12]
From
2000 until 2009 there was no activity pertaining to the Applicant’s status. On
July 2, 2009, the Applicant applied to be permitted to remain in Canada on H&C grounds and on December 16, 2010, he applied for a PRRA. The basis for
the H&C application was unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship
and substantive establishment in Canada. The basis of the PRRA request was that
there was clear and convincing evidence that the Applicant faces persecution on
the basis of his religious and sexual orientation, that his mental health
conditions are stigmatized, and, that Algerian state and local communities are
ill equipped to provide adequate treatment of and support for mental illness.
[13]
Both
the PRRA and H&C applications were heard by immigration officer R. Mekhael
(the Officer) and were denied on April 26 and 27, 2012, respectively. This
is the judicial review of the PRRA decision (PRRA Decision) and of the H&C
decision (H&C Decision).
Decision Under Review
- PRRA
[14]
The
Officer noted that the risks identified by the Applicant were that he is gay,
Jewish, and struggles with depression, OCD, PTSD, and Tourette’s Syndrome. The
Officer noted that the Applicant expected to be unable to receive appropriate
medical care in Algeria, to become homeless, and to be stigmatized.
[15]
The
Officer next reviewed the case history, noting that the Applicant’s June 1999 failed
refugee claim was based on religious persecution in Algeria and the Board’s
finding that there was no credible evidence to support, on the balance of
probabilities, that the Applicant was Jewish. For that reason the Board had determined
he was not a Convention refugee.
[16]
The
Officer stated that the Board’s decision did not bind the H&C process. The
Officer acknowledged a letter from Mr. Alain Checroune indicating that Ben
Chekroun was a “North African (Algerian) Jewish name” and documentation describing
incidents of discrimination and violence against Algerian Jews submitted by the
Applicant in support of the PRRA application. However, the Officer found that
there was still not enough objective evidence to rebut the Board’s credibility
findings and to establish the Applicant’s Jewish faith. The Officer was not
satisfied that the Applicant was Jewish and therefore concluded, like the
Board, that he was not a Convention refugee. Further, the Officer found that the
Applicant was not more likely than not to face a danger of torture, or a risk
to life or a risk of cruel and unusual punishment as a result of his Jewish
faith and, accordingly, was not a person in need of protection pursuant to
section 97 of the Act.
[17]
The
Officer then reviewed the new evidence of sexual orientation, noting the Applicant’s
above described account of homosexual experimentation and activity as contained
in his January 6, 2011 affidavit
accompanying his PRRA application and a letter attesting to his membership in
the 519 Church Street Community Centre. The Officer found that he had not been
provided with sufficient personal evidence to establish, on a balance of
probabilities, the Applicant’s sexual orientation, as a homosexual. Without
more corroborative evidence, he could not be determined to be homosexual and personally
at risk in Algeria.
[18]
The
Officer next considered the Applicant’s mental health conditions, his
submission that mental health treatment is not widely available in Algeria and that local communities are ill equipped to provide adequate treatment. Based
on the new evidence the Officer accepted that the Applicant suffered from depression,
OCD, PTSD and Tourette’s syndrome, but found that medical care was available in
Algeria. The Officer quoted at length from a 2011 UK Home Office Border
Agency Country of Origin Information Report, finding that this research did not
support a conclusion that medical treatment would not be available to the Applicant,
although it might be limited.
[19]
The
Officer also reviewed the latest U.S. Department of State Country Report on Human
Rights Practices and found that there was insufficient evidence that the
Applicant would face a risk of persecution or a risk to life or cruel or
unusual treatment or punishment as a result of his mental illness should he
return to Algeria. The Officer found that the Applicant’s assertions were
rebutted by a lack of documentary evidence confirming that such practices
occurred.
[20]
The
Officer added that the Applicant had claimed to have suffered from mental
illness while in Algeria but that he did not provide sufficient objective
evidence to found a conclusion that he was subjected to societal discrimination
or was homeless as a result. Even if he had been homeless he did not establish
that this was caused by his race, religion, nationality, membership in a
particular social group or political opinion pursuant to section 96 of the IRPA
nor that, due to his personal circumstances, he is at risk as defined by
section 97 of the IRPA.
[21]
The
Officer concluded that the Applicant faced no more than a mere possibility of
persecution as described in section 96 of the IRPA and was not likely at risk
of torture, or likely to face a risk to life, or a risk of cruel and unusual
treatment or punishment, if returned to Algeria as described in section 97 of
the IRPA. Accordingly, the Applicant was neither a Convention refugee nor a
person in need of protection.
Decision
Under Review – H&C
[22]
The
Officer noted that the Applicant’s H&C grounds for requesting an exemption
which would allow him to apply for permanent residence from within Canada were his establishment in Canada and the risks he would face if returned to Algeria.
[23]
The
Officer reviewed the Applicant’s history, in particular his extensive volunteer
work with: CANORAA, an African Canadian development organization; the Parkdale
Activity Recreation Centre; Auberge Francophone; Food Share; the gardens at
Earlscourt Park; the STOP Community Food Centre; the Wychwood Open Door Drop
In; and the 519 Centre. The Officer also noted that the Applicant had upgraded
his education through various courses with the Toronto District School Board, George Brown College, Seneca College, and Centennial College, all of which was supported by
corroborative evidence.
[24]
The
Officer noted the Applicant’s moderate level of establishment, his lack of
supportive connections in Algeria, and that because he had left Algeria fifteen years ago this may cause him some hardship if he were required to return. The
Officer found that the Applicant should not have had a reasonable expectation
that he would be able to remain in Canada permanently given his immigration
history. He had spent the first 31 years of his life in Algeria and had been able to adapt to living in Canada. There was insufficient evidence to indicate
that he could not return to his country of habitual residence, Algeria, and re-adapt to it.
[25]
The
Officer stated that the Applicant’s own actions had hindered his removal or
departure from Canada and that he must bear some responsibility for his
actions.
[26]
The
Officer stated that careful consideration had been given to the psychologists’
and medical evidence but that the medical practitioners were not experts in the
Algerian medical and housing systems. The Officer quoted a 2011 UK Home Office
Border Agency Country of Origin Information Report as saying that Algeria was setting up public facilities in the five regional capitals to deal with the
country’s growing number of homeless people. The Officer noted that the
Applicant had been able to find housing in Canada and concluded that the
evidence did not show that he would be likely to be homeless in Algeria as a result of his mental health.
[27]
The
Officer found that there was insufficient evidence to demonstrate that the Applicant
has been successfully established in Canada to a degree where he would suffer unusual
or undeserved or disproportionate hardship should he be required to leave
Canada to make an application for permanent residence and that a H&C
exemption on that basis was not warranted.
[28]
The
Officer next turned to the allegation of risk should the Applicant return to Algeria. The Officer noted the March 8, 2000 decision of the Board finding that the Applicant’s
assertion that he was a Jew was not credible and denying his application for
refugee status, as well as the PRRA Decision which the Officer had rendered the
day before. While not bound by the PRRA tests or the Board’s decision, the
Officer found that the Applicant had failed to provide sufficient evidence which
rebutted the Board’s credibility findings and determination that his claim to
be Jewish was not credible. His alleged personal risks due to being Jewish
were not corroborated nor did the evidence support his claim that he would
suffer risk of harm that would amount to hardship that is unusual and
undeserved or disproportionate if he was required to apply for permanent
residence in the normal manner.
[29]
The
Applicant had also not provided sufficient personal evidence to establish that
he was homosexual or sufficient corroborative evidence to establish his
homosexuality on the balance of probabilities (the evidence being the same as
that submitted in support of his PRRA application) and, as a result, that he
faces a risk to his life upon return to Algeria amounting to hardship
sufficient to meet the H&C requirements.
[30]
The
Officer accepted the diagnoses of complex PTSD, OCD, and Tourette’s. However,
found that there was insufficient evidence to establish that treatment had not
been and would not be available in Algeria. Further, a 2011 UK Home Office Border
Agency Country of Origin Information Report Algeria showed that treatment,
although limited, was available.
[31]
Counsel
had submitted that the mentally ill were actively condemned and persecuted by
state authorities in Algeria, but the Officer found that the documentary
evidence did not establish this. There was also insufficient objective
evidence to establish that due to a lack of family support the Applicant will
be denied treatment by health care authorities in Algeria and insufficient
corroborative evidence that the Applicant had previously been homeless due to
his mental illness.
[32]
The
Officer found that the Applicant had not established that he would be subject
to undue hardship due to his mental health or face a personalized risk
resulting in undue hardship if he was returned to Nigeria [sic] that
constitutes unusual and undeserved and disproportionate hardship and accordingly
refused the H&C application.
Issues
[33]
PRRA
Decision:
1.
Did
the Officer ignore or misconstrue evidence related to the Applicant’s perceived
Jewish religion?
2.
Did
the Officer err by requiring corroborating evidence of the Applicant’s sexual
orientation?
3.
Did
the Officer make veiled credibility findings and breach procedural fairness in
refusing an oral hearing?
[34]
H&C
Decision:
4.
Was
the Officer’s discretion fettered?
5.
Was
the Officer’s decision reasonable?
6.
Did
the Officer ignore or misconstrue evidence of hardship related to the Applicant’s
claim that he is Jewish or his perceived Jewish religion?
7.
Did
the Officer err in requiring corroborating evidence?
Standard of Review
[35]
A standard of review analysis need not be conducted in every
instance. Instead, where the standard of review applicable to a particular question
before the court is well settled by past jurisprudence, the
reviewing court may adopt that standard. (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC
9 [Dunsmuir] at para 57).
[36]
The
standard of review of decisions of PRRA and H&C officers has been
determined to be reasonableness (Wang v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 799 [Wang] at para 11; Aleziri v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2009 FC 38 at para 11; Din v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2013 FC 356 at para 5; Kisana v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2009 FCA 189 at para 18). In reviewing such decisions on
the standard of reasonableness the court should not intervene unless the
officer came to a conclusion that is not transparent, justifiable and
intelligible and within the range of acceptable outcomes based on the evidence.
It is also not the role of a reviewing court to substitute its own view of a
preferable outcome nor to reweigh the evidence (Jiang v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 1511 at paras 28-31; Dunsmuir, above, at para 47 and Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa,
2009 SCC 12 [Khosa] at para 59).
[37]
The appropriate standard of review for issues of procedural fairness is correctness (Wang, above,
at para 11; Khosa, above, at para 43, and Liu v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 836 [Liu] at para 11).
No deference is owed to decision makers on these issues (see Dunsmuir,
above, at para 50).
[38]
The
standard of review for errors of law is also correctness (Liu at para10;
Quann v Canada (Attorney General), 2013 FC 460 at para 21). As the
Supreme Court said in Dunsmuir, above, at para 50, “it is also without question that the standard of
correctness must be maintained in respect of jurisdictional and some other
questions of law.”
[39]
In the present case, the jurisprudence has satisfactorily
determined that the standard of review for the first, second, fifth, sixth and seventh
issues, which all pertain to the Officer’s treatment of the evidence, is
reasonableness (Brown v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2012 FC 1305 at para 14; Nagy v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2013 FC 640 at paras 21-22).
[40]
Reasonableness is also the standard of review with respect to the question
of veiled credibility findings (Lopez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2012 FC 1022 at paras 20 and 24; Mares v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2013 FC 297 at para 29) contained in the third issue.
As to the question of whether granting an oral hearing is one of procedural
fairness, requiring correctness as the standard of review, or one of mixed
fact and law, attracting the standard of reasonableness, the jurisprudence
varies (see for instance Ponniah v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2013 FC 386 (Justice de Montigny) at para 24). In my view,
the standard of reasonableness applies because, as stated by Justice Shore in Ikechi
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 361 at para 26 a
PRRA officer decides whether to hold an oral hearing by considering a PRRA
application against the requirements in subsection 113(b) of the IRPA and
the factors in section 167 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations,
SOR/2002-227 (the IRP Regulations). Thus, applying subsection 113(b)
is essentially a question of mixed fact and law.
[41]
The fourth issue, as framed by the Applicant, is
whether the Officer’s discretion was fettered by requiring the Applicant to
demonstrate a reasonable expectation that he would be allowed to remain in Canada permanently. That is, the Officer improperly applied a test when determining this
issue. Prior jurisprudence has held that the standard of review with respect
to fettering of discretion is correctness. (Zaki v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1066; Benitez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 461; Thamotharem v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FCA 198).
Argument and Analysis – PRRA
Decision
Applicant’s Position
[42]
The
Applicant argues that his evidence was meant to demonstrate not only that he
was Jewish, but that he would be perceived to be Jewish in Algeria. However, the Officer only considered whether he was Jewish. The failure to address the
risk of his perceived religious affiliation supports an inference that the Officer
ignored and misconstrued evidence. Even if an officer mentions the evidence,
if it is not assessed for the purpose for which it was provided, this is an
error. In this case, the risk was to people perceived as Jewish, and the Officer
should have analyzed the evidence in that light.
[43]
The
Applicant notes that it is well-established in refugee law that the risk of
persecution must be viewed from the perception of the persecutor. From the
perception of the persecutor, whether or not the Applicant was a practicing Jew
is irrelevant.
[44]
The
Applicant argues that the Officer completely mischaracterizes the Applicant’s
statement as containing only brief and generalized information about his
homosexuality, when it actually provides several paragraphs with many specific
details. Further, the Applicant identifies himself as gay twice in his
affidavit - “I did not want to tell my lawyer that I was gay” and “because I am
Jewish and gay”.
[45]
An
Applicant’s sworn evidence is presumed to be true unless there is a good reason
to doubt it. In
the present case, the Officer cites no inconsistencies, contradictions, or implausibilities
in the sworn evidence. He simply disbelieves the Applicant on the basis that
there is no corroborating documentation that he is homosexual, which is
unreasonable and a reviewable error.
[46]
Furthermore,
it is questionable what corroborating
documentation the Officer could have expected him to provide. Proving one’s
sexual orientation is a challenge for all applicants. In this case the Applicant
had not had the kind of long-term relationships which would have supplied
letters, photos, or affidavits from partners; in fact, he had not had any
relationships for the last three years. In addition, he is a shy man who has
difficulty in communicating with others.
[47]
The
Applicant argues that the Officer made credibility findings with regard to the
Applicant’s sworn evidence and,
therefore, he should have convoked an oral interview. The Respondent cannot
hide a veiled credibility finding behind a claim of insufficient evidence. If
the Officer had believed the Applicant’s evidence, there would have been
sufficient proof that he was a gay Jewish man. Since the Officer did not
accept this, he should have convoked an interview and put his concerns to the Applicant.
Respondent’s Position
[48]
The
Respondent submits that for the claim for protection to succeed, the Applicant
had to establish his identity as a gay man, a Jew, and a person with mental
health issues. He led evidence that he was born to Jewish parents but did not
state that he practices the Jewish faith now. The only evidence as to his
perceived Jewish identity was from another person suggesting his surname is
recognized as Jewish in the region. The Applicant led evidence that he had
experimented earlier in his life with same-sex relationships but acknowledged
that he was not currently in such a relationship and did not state that he now identifies
himself as a gay man or had ever done so in the past. He explained that he has
mental health issues but did not present evidence that his treatment, medication
and counselling, would not be available in Algeria.
[49]
The
Respondent argues that the Officer did not have to consider whether the Applicant
would be perceived as Jewish because the evidence did not establish his
identity as Jewish. The only two pieces of evidence that he might be perceived
as Jewish were his assertion of the same and a letter claiming that he had a recognizably
Jewish last name. The letter did not explain how the author knew that it was a
Jewish name, nor whether identity would be perceived on the basis of the name
alone or that the surname itself would be considered as conclusive proof of the
Applicant’s perceived Jewish identity.
[50]
The
Officer did not ignore details about the Applicant’s testimony concerning
same-sex relationships. The Applicant admitted that he is not currently
involved in a same-sex relationship and he did not ever specifically state that
he identified himself as a gay man. His affidavit evidence alone was not
enough to establish that he was gay. The Officer’s finding that the Applicant
has not established his identity as a gay man was reasonable given the nature
of the evidence adduced.
[51]
The
Respondent argues that the Officer did not err in expecting more corroborating
evidence of the Applicant’s homosexuality. The Applicant could have adduced
evidence that he presents himself as gay to other people but did not.
[52]
The
Respondent argues that the Officer did not make credibility findings. Two
evidentiary concepts are in issue: the sufficiency and the believability of
evidence. It is only for believability that procedural fairness requires that
a concern be disclosed for comment. Applicants need not be confronted with
evidence which has fallen short of sufficiency. The Officer accepted the Applicant’s
evidence at face value but did not consider it to be sufficient to prove his
assertions.
Analysis
1. Did
the officer ignore or misconstrue evidence related to the Applicant’s perceived
Jewish religion?
[53]
The
alleged persecution and risk arising from a perception of the Applicant as
Jewish, should he return to Algeria, did not comprise a distinct basis of his
PRRA application. The application itself does not mention this, nor does the
Applicant’s supporting affidavit. Only one indirect reference is contained in
his counsel’s submissions being: “Given the new evidence that confirms his
identity as a Jew, and that his last name, Ben Chekroun would easily identify
him as a Jew within Algeria, it is submitted that on that basis alone, Mr. Ben
Chekroun is a Convention Refugee.”
[54]
The
only evidence which addresses this issue is the August 27, 2009 letter from Mr. Alain Checroune
(Checroune letter). This letter states that its author was born in Vilar, Algeria in 1935, Vilar being a city east of Tiemcen, the birth place of Mr. Ben Chekroun.
Mr. Checroune states “that Mr. Ben Chekroun is North African (Algerian) Jewish
and his name is recognized in the region.”
[55]
I
cannot accept the Respondent’s position that the Applicant first had to
establish his Jewish identity before the Officer was required to consider how he
would be perceived in Algeria. The question is not whether an applicant holds a
belief, it is whether potential persecutors would ascribe that belief to the
applicant as is illustrated by Canada (Attorney General) v Ward, [1993]
2 SCR 689 at para 83. The same view was stated in Kandiah v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1994] FCJ No
1876 (QL) (TD) at para 23, which also held that, regardless of the ground of
persecution, the question should be approached from the perspective of the
persecutor. And, in the context of membership in an ethnic group, this Court
has held that the relevant question as being was the claimant perceived as
belonging to an ethnic group and was the claimant persecuted because of this (Avdullahi
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 784
at para 30). Similarly, in the context of an applicant’s sexual
orientation see Ogunrinde v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2012 FC 760 [Ogunrinde] at para 38.
[56]
Regardless, in my view, the problem in this situation is that
neither the Checroune letter nor the submission by counsel for the Applicant
explicitly raised, before the Officer, the issue of the Applicant’s perceived
Jewish identity. Further, the intent of the Checroune letter, stating only that the
Applicant is North African (Algerian) Jewish and his name is recognized in the
region, is also unclear.
[57]
This is unfortunate when viewed in light of the unchallenged
history of Jewish persecution in Algeria as set out in the supporting documents
submitted by the Applicant. However, the result is that the Officer did not
make a reviewable error in failing to address a risk that was, at best, only
implicitly before him.
[58]
In any event, even if the Officer had considered the Checroune
letter as evidence as to the perceived religious affiliation of the Applicant, given
that it is an unsworn document which does not explicitly state that the
Applicant’s name would be recognized as Jewish in Algeria or explain why this
is so and how the author of the letter knows this to be the case, it would be
of little probative value in establishing that fact.
2. Did
the Officer err by requiring corroborating evidence of the Applicant’s sexual
orientation?
[59]
The
Officer refers to the new evidence supporting the Applicant’s claim of risk of
persecution or danger of torture, risk to life or risk of cruel or
unusual punishment if he were removed from Canada, a risk based on his sexual
orientation, which was not part of his 1999 refugee claim. This evidence was comprised
of his January 6, 2011 affidavit accompanying his PRRA application and a letter
from the 519 Community Centre confirming his membership since April 2010. The
Officer states that “Aside from the above referenced brief and generalized
statements and a single letter prepared by the Church Street Community Centre I
have not been provided with sufficient personal evidence to establish, on a
balance of probabilities the applicant’s sexual orientation, as a homosexual”. The
Officer notes that the Church Street Community Centre letter did not establish
the Applicant’s sexual orientation. Further, that hospital records were not
tendered to support the alleged injury in Algeria and that “The Applicant did
not provide sufficient corroborative evidence in support of his PRRA claim to
establish, on a balance of probabilities, his homosexuality”. The Officer
concluded that, without this, the current country conditions do not establish
that the Applicant is personally at risk in Algeria.
[60]
The
January 6, 2011 affidavit sets out in some detail the Applicant’s history in
the context of his homosexuality including his early experimentation at age 12
or 13; attacks based on his sexual orientation including one which occurred
when the Applicant “approached a guy and talked to him because I thought he was
attractive and I wanted to pick him up”; that when he came to Canada he was
ashamed about who he was and did not want to tell his lawyer that he was gay or
had mental health issues; that he would meet men in the YMCA steam room for casual
sex; that he has not had a relationship with another man for three years due to
haemorrhoids and his fear of disease; and, that if he returned to Algeria he
would likely be killed “because I am Jewish and gay.”
[61]
Given
this, I do not think that the Officer reasonably found that the Applicant’s
affidavit lacked sufficient detail to establish his sexual orientation. And,
as stated in Ogunrinde, above, at paras 41-42:
[41] The Court is mindful of the difficulties
that PRRA officers face when dealing with claimants who assert a risk of harm
because of their sexual orientation. Claimants bear the onus of satisfying the
officer evaluating their application they have a profile that will put them at
risk.
[42] At
the same time, the acts and behaviours which establish a claimant's
homosexuality are inherently private. When evaluating claims based on sexual
orientation, officers must be mindful of the inherent difficulties in proving
that a claimant has engaged in any particular sexual activities. Claimants may
not be in contact with past sexual partners for various reasons, including
relationship breakdown, distance, or simply the passage of time.
[62]
The
Officer also does not give any reasons for doubting the truthfulness of the Applicant’s
evidence as to his sexual orientation. As argued by the Applicant, the Officer
cites no inconsistencies, contradictions or implausibilities in the sworn
evidence. He simply refuses to accept or disbelieves the Applicant, on the
basis that there is no corroborating documentation, that he is homosexual.
[63]
In
my view, this approach is in error. As stated by Justice Near in Ayala v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 611 at paras 20-21:
[20] This reasoning
is out of line with the body of case law of this Court and is unreasonable in
that it plants as the seed of incredibility the lack of corroborating
documentary evidence instead of using the lack of documentary evidence to
buttress an existing adverse credibility finding. The Board points to no other
reason to disbelieve the Applicants' testimony. As the Respondent argues, a
lack of documentary evidence can be a valid consideration where a claimant's
story has been found to otherwise lack credibility. For example, in Bin,
above, cited by the Respondent, Justice Denis Pelletier went on to say at para
22:
[22] In the present case, the
applicant's claim had been discredited by a number of internal contradictions
and inconsistencies. It was therefore open to the CRDD to consider his failure
to produce corroborating evidence in further assessing his credibility [...]
[21] The Board was entitled to find
the Applicants' explanation for failing to produce the documents unreasonable.
But the Board was not entitled to discredit the Applicants' entire claim solely
on the basis of this failure. To do so would be to ignore the oft-cited ratio
of Maldonado, above.
[64]
The
Officer cites the case of Ferguson v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2008 FC 1067, for the proposition that the Applicant has
the burden of proof in a PRRA application to establish that he is at risk.
That is correct, however, as the Applicant points out, in that case the only
evidence presented concerning the applicant’s sexual orientation was a
statement of her counsel. Unlike this situation, there was no sworn affidavit
evidence of the applicant in support of that fact.
[65]
It
is settled law that
when a claimant swears to the truth of his testimony, that testimony is
presumed to be true unless there is a valid reason to doubt its truthfulness (Maldonado
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1980] 2 FC 302
(CA) at para 5).
In the absence of any such reasons, in my view, the Applicant met the burden of
establishing his sexual identity by way of his sworn affidavit. Accordingly, the
Officer unreasonably demanded corroborating evidence of that fact.
3. Did the
officer make veiled credibility findings and breach procedural fairness in
refusing an oral hearing?
[66]
An
oral hearing is not available as of right in a PRRA application. Subsection
113(b) of the IRPA states that a
hearing may be held if the Minister, on the basis of prescribed factors, is of
the opinion that a hearing is required. The prescribed factors are set out in
section 167 of the IRP Regulations:
167. For the
purpose of determining whether a hearing is required under paragraph 113(b)
of the Act, the factors are the following:
(a) whether
there is evidence that raises a serious issue of the applicant's credibility
and is related to the factors set out in sections 96 and 97 of the Act;
(b) whether
the evidence is central to the decision with respect to the application for
protection; and
(c) whether
the evidence, if accepted, would justify allowing the application for
protection.
|
167. Pour
l’application de l’alinéa 113b) de la Loi, les facteurs ci-après
servent à décider si la tenue d’une audience est requise :
a)
l’existence d’éléments de preuve relatifs aux éléments mentionnés aux
articles 96 et 97 de la Loi qui soulèvent une question importante en ce qui
concerne la crédibilité du demandeur;
b)
l’importance de ces éléments de preuve pour la prise de la décision relative
à la demande de protection;
c) la
question de savoir si ces éléments de preuve, à supposer qu’ils soient
admis, justifieraient que soit accordée la protection.
|
[67]
This Court examined subsection 113(b) of the IRPA and section
167 of the IRP Regulations in Strachn v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2012 FC 984 at para 34 and held:
[34] This has been interpreted to be a conjunctive test: therefore, an
oral hearing is generally required if there is a credibility issue regarding
evidence that is central to the decision and which, if accepted, would justify
allowing the application: Ullah v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 221. While the
Court has acknowledged that there is a difference between an adverse
credibility finding and a finding of insufficient evidence, the Court has
sometimes found an officer to have improperly framed true credibility findings
as findings regarding sufficiency of evidence and therefore an oral hearing
should have been granted: Zokai v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1103 at para 12; Liban v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 1252 at para 14;
and Haji v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2009 FC 889 at paras
14-16.
[68]
In
the present case, the Officer stated that there was insufficient evidence to
establish the Applicant’s sexual orientation. However, the Officer does not
say why the Applicant’s affidavit evidence alone is insufficient to establish
this fact and, as noted above, there was no conflicting evidence or
inconstancies to bring that evidence into question.
[69]
In
my view, this case is similar to Liban v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2008 FC 1252. There the officer reviewed Mr. Liban’s evidence
relating to his relationship with another man and concluded that he had not
provided sufficient objective evidence to support his statement regarding that
relationship. The Court held at para 14:
[14] In my view, when the officer
stated that there was "insufficient objective evidence" supporting
Mr. Liban's assertions, he was really saying that he disbelieved Mr. Liban and,
only if Mr. Liban had presented objective evidence corroborating his assertions,
would the officer have believed them. To my mind, these findings are
conclusions about Mr. Liban's credibility. They were central to his
application. If the officer had believed Mr. Liban, the officer, in light of
the documentary evidence he accepted, would likely have found that Mr. Liban
was at risk.
[70]
Here, as in Liban, above, the Officer’s finding of insufficient
evidence was actually a conclusion as to the Applicant’s credibility, perhaps
influenced by the failed refugee hearing held thirteen years ago but which
addressed only whether the Applicant is an adherent of the Jewish faith.
[71]
Accordingly, here the Applicant’s affidavit evidence raised a
serious issue as to his credibility. The evidence as to his sexual orientation
was central to that portion of his application claiming persecution or risk arising
from same and the Officer’s decision in that regard. The Officer stated that
without sufficient evidence that the Applicant is homosexual, an assessment of
the current country conditions does not establish that he is personally at risk
in Algeria. Presumably, given the country condition documentary evidence
contained in the record, this means that if his evidence had been accepted that
it would have justified the application. Given that the factors set out in section
167 were met, the Officer was required to hold an oral hearing.
[72]
Further, the Applicant by way of his counsel’s submissions had requested
an oral hearing if credibility was an issue. Yet nothing in the PRRA Decision
indicates that the Officer considered this request. Given this, and in view of
my finding that the Officer was making a credibility finding, the Officer was
required to consider the request. His failure to do so was unreasonable as held
in Zokai
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1103
at paras 11-12:
[11] I agree with the applicant that a breach of
procedural fairness arises on the facts of this case. The applicant made a
detailed request in his PRRA application for an oral hearing, with specific
reference to the factors set out in section 167 of the Regulations. However,
the PRRA Officer makes no reference to these factors, or to any other factors
that led to the decision not to hold an oral hearing, despite the written
request for one. In fact, there is no evidence that the Officer turned his mind
to the appropriateness of holding an oral hearing.
[12] Furthermore,
it is clear, despite the respondent's submissions to the contrary, that
credibility was central to the negative PRRA decision. In refusing to accord
weight to the applicant's story without corroborating evidence, the PRRA
Officer, in effect, concluded that the applicant was not credible. In my view,
given these credibility concerns, it was incumbent on the Officer to consider
the request for an oral hearing and to provide reasons for refusing to grant
the request. The Officer's failure to do so in this case constitutes a breach
of procedural fairness. Moreover, in view of the special circumstances of this
case with respect to credibility, the Court is of the view that a hearing is
appropriate.
[73]
For
the above reasons the application for judicial review of the PRRA Decision is
granted.
Argument and Analysis – H&C
Decision
Applicant’s Position
[74]
The
Applicant argues that the Board in 2000 had found that his nationality could
not be determined and treated him as stateless. This was acknowledged by the
Officer in the H&C Decision which also lists his citizenship as “stateless”.
As the Officer accepted that the Applicant was stateless and as his July 19,
2012 affidavit filed in support of his H&C application stated that if he
were sent back to Algeria he would not be recognized as a citizen and permitted
entry, it was unreasonable for the Officer to find that the Applicant’s actions
prevented him from traveling to Algeria.
[75]
The
Officer twice stated that in order to demonstrate establishment, the Applicant
had to present sufficient evidence that he had a reasonable expectation of
being allowed to remain in Canada permanently. This test is found nowhere in the
IP-5 manual or the jurisprudence. The Officer’s finding that the Applicant had
not satisfied this requirement unreasonably and unfairly fettered the Officer’s
discretion. As the Officer repeatedly referred to this expectation it raises a
reasonable apprehension that the Officer viewed this as a prerequisite or
foundational factor to being granted a positive H&C exemption. Further,
what the Officer meant was that the Applicant should not be permitted to
benefit from having remained so long in Canada without regularized immigration
status.
[76]
The
Applicant argues that once the Officer accepted that the Applicant suffered
from depression, OCD, PTSD, and Tourette’s Syndrome and because of this cannot
work in Canada, it was unreasonable to conclude that he would be able to secure
housing in Algeria. The finding was based on documentation about future plans
by the Algerian government, rather than real evidence of the current
situation. Efforts, plans, and goodwill, in the similar context of provision
of state protection, are not enough. The Officer provided no analysis of
whether the envisaged facilities to assist homeless individuals with mental
illness had actually been set up or of the present situation. Of note is that
an almost identical statement about future facilities was made in the previous
2008 UK Home Office report, apparently demonstrating that none of those plans
came to fruition from then until 2011. The Officer misunderstood the evidence
and, as a result, came to an unreasonable conclusion that the Application would
be able to secure housing.
[77]
With
respect to the question of whether the Officer ignored or misconstrued evidence
of hardship related to the Applicant’s claim that he is Jewish, the Applicant
essentially repeats his argument made in his PRRA application, in relation to
risk, as described above. That is, the Officer only considered whether the
Applicant was Jewish and not whether Algerians would perceive him to be
Jewish. The Officer failed to consider the Checroune letter in that context
thus failing to analyze the hardship of the Applicant arising from that
perception. “Ben”, meaning “son of”, is part of a Jewish patronymic, used
similarly to “Bar” and for girls “Bat”.
[78]
As
to the requirement of corroborating evidence of the Applicant’s sexual
orientation, the Applicant essentially repeats his argument set out in issue 2,
above.
Respondent’s Position
[79]
The
Respondent argues that there is no objective evidence that the Applicant is
stateless. He has not provided any conclusive proof of this, such as a
document from the Algerian authorities confirming that they do not recognize
his citizenship. Also, after the rejection of his refugee claim in 2000, he
took no steps to either return to Algeria or regularize his status in Canada. The Applicant failed to demonstrate that his establishment resulted from a
circumstance beyond his control or that he had a reasonable expectation that he
would be allowed to remain in Canada permanently.
[80]
The
Respondent submits that the Officer was not creating a new requirement for
H&C relief by stating that the Applicant had provided insufficient evidence
to establish that he had a reasonable expectation that he would be permitted to
remain in Canada permanently. Rather, the Officer was simply making an observation.
This was consistent with the underlying H&C principles that such relief is
exceptional and discretionary.
[81]
The
Respondent argues that the Applicant bore the onus of demonstrating that he
would become homeless in Algeria and that his documentary evidence did not
persuade the Officer because it was inadequate. The letter from the
Applicant’s physician in Canada did not state the basis for the assertion that
the Applicant would probably become homeless and the physician was not an
expert in the Algerian medical or housing systems. Accordingly, the Officer’s
findings on this issue were reasonable. Moreover, the Officer did not have to
specifically assess whether the Applicant would be homeless in Algeria, just whether he presented evidence that he would be subject to undue hardship. The
documentary evidence on the record was not misconstrued, rather it indicated
that mental health facilities are available in Algeria. The Applicant’s contention
that the operational effectiveness of the mental health facilities is to be
assessed runs contrary to the jurisprudence and is not applicable.
[82]
The
Respondent argues the only evidence as to the Applicant’s perceived Jewish
identity was his own assertions and the Checroune letter. The Officer in the
PRRA Decision accepted that the Checroune letter indicated that the Applicant’s
“name was a ‘North African (Algerian) Jewish name”, however, determined that it
was insufficient to establish a risk on that basis. The Officer cannot be
faulted for not further considering an assertion based on perceived Jewish
identity when the evidence did not demonstrate such an identity.
[83]
Further,
the H&C submissions make no mention of the fact that the Applicant’s
surname alone would identify him as Jewish and the issue was not before the
Officer. In view of the evidence, the Officer’s analysis of the Applicant’s religious
identity was reasonable.
[84]
The
Respondent essentially repeats its argument as set out above with respect to
issue 2 in the PRRA application, being that the Applicant did not meet the onus
of establishing his sexual identity and that his affidavit evidence alone is
not sufficient. Even if the evidence is sworn, an officer may still determine
that it is insufficient to establish the fact for which it is tendered, without
making a credibility finding. The Officer did not make a credibility finding
but found that the evidence was insufficient. The Officer’s findings were concerned
with the weight of the evidence.
Analysis
4. Was the Officer’s
discretion fettered?
[85]
The
question is whether the Officer’s discretion was unreasonably fettered by
requiring the Applicant to demonstrate a “reasonable expectation” that he would
be allowed to remain in Canada permanently. This arises from the
Officer’s statements that “…I am not satisfied that the applicant had a
reasonable expectation that he would be able to remain in Canada permanently
given the course of his immigration history.”, and, “I have not been presented
with sufficient evidence that he had a reasonable expectation that he would be
allowed to remain in Canada permanently.”
[86]
An
applicant seeking the exceptional and discretionary relief that may be
permitted by subsection 25(1) of the IRPA does so on the basis that it is
justified by humanitarian and compassionate considerations relating to that
applicant. In that regard, the applicant must establish that he or she would
be subject to unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship if they were
returned to their country of origin (Singh v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2009 FC 11 at para 38; Chandidas v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 258 at para 81). Evidence of a
“reasonable expectation” that an applicant would be permitted to remain in Canada is not a pre-requisite or foundational criteria nor is it a test that an applicant
must meet to establish hardship. Accordingly, if the Officer had applied this
as a requirement or test and refused the H&C application on the basis of
the insufficiency of evidence establishing such a reasonable expectation, then the
Officer would have erred in law.
[87]
However,
on review of the H&C Decision as a whole, I am not convinced that the
Officer applied a “reasonable expectation” test as a pre-requisite or test in
reaching the conclusion that there was insufficient evidence that the Applicant
has been successfully established in Canada to a degree where he would suffer
unusual or undeserved or disproportionate hardship should he be required to
leave Canada to make application for permanent residence. Rather, in the
context of the Applicant’s immigration history and his establishment in Canada, the Officer was noting that he had not taken any steps to demonstrate his
statelessness. Had he done so, this may have been a positive establishment factor
if it had demonstrated that the circumstances which kept him in Canada were beyond his control.
[88]
Although,
the Officer’s choice of words was poor, I do not find that the Officer’s
discretion was fettered when giving consideration to the Applicant’s establishment
in Canada.
5. Was the Officer’s
decision unreasonable?
[89]
In
the context of assessing the Applicant’s establishment in Canada and risk of homelessness
in Algeria the Officer acknowledged and accepted that the Applicant has been in
Canada since 1999; has done extensive volunteer work over the years and provided
corroborating evidence of this; has community ties here and no family or support
in Algeria; and, because of his mental health, cannot work and relies on social
assistance.
[90]
Given
this and my findings set out below with respect to issue 7, I do not find that
the Officer reasonably concluded that the Applicant would not be at risk of
unusual, undeserved or disproportionate hardship were he returned to Algeria.
6. Did the Officer
ignore or misconstrue evidence of hardship related to the Applicant’s claim
that he is Jewish or his perceived Jewish religion?
[91]
When
assessing the Applicant’s risk factor associated with his religious affiliation
the Officer referred to the 2000 Board decision and the Officer’s own PRRA
Decision and concluded that the Applicant had failed to establish his Jewish
religion. However, neither the Applicant’s H&C application nor the
September 24, 2009 submissions of his counsel in support of the H&C
application raised the concern now argued, being that the Applicant, whether or
not he adheres to the Jewish faith, will be perceived as Jewish and therefore at
risk of hardship, should he return to Algeria.
[92]
The
only reference in the application to the Checroune letter is as a footnote to
the following sentence “After the death of his father when he was young, his
mother, brother and himself attempted to leave Algeria but did not receive
permission to do so because his family was Jewish¹”
1. Letter from Alain
Checroune, Rabbi.
August 27, 2009
[93]
Given
this, I cannot accept that the Checroune letter was submitted for the purpose
now submitted by the Applicant nor that the Officer ignored or misconstrued
evidence of hardship related to the Applicant’s claim that he is or would be perceived
to be Jewish.
7. Did the Officer err
in requiring corroborating evidence?
[94]
As
in the Officer’s PRRA Decision, the evidence being the same in both applications,
the Officer found that in his H&C Application, the Applicant had again not
provided sufficient personal evidence to establish his sexual identity as a
homosexual and had not provided sufficient corroborating evidence to establish
his homosexuality on the balance of probabilities. Accordingly, the Officer
was unable to find that he would be subjected to hardship that is unusual,
underserved or disproportionate.
[95]
For
the reasons I set above concerning the PRRA Decision, in the circumstances of
this matter, I believe that the Officer erred in rejecting the Applicant’s
affidavit evidence as to his sexuality, and in requiring corroborating evidence
of the Applicant’s sexual orientation.
[96]
While
the Officer made no reference to the potential hardship that the Applicant
might be at risk of as a homosexual should he be returned to Algeria, the 2011
Algerian Country of Origin Information Report of the UK Border Agency,
otherwise referenced by the Officer, indicates that same sex relationships are
illegal, that an Amnesty International report of June 2003 indicates that
homosexuals may suffer harassment from security forces and society in general
and refers to a Canadian Immigration and Refugee Board Information request
dated July 30, 2007 reporting:
[…] An article in QX Magazine states that the Algerian
police do not protect “sodomites” from violence (18 Jan. 2005). According to an
article in the UK Gay News, the police and military reportedly “harass and
brutalize gay people with impunity” (21 Feb. 2005). Moreover, rape, beatings,
and torture are reported to be common for gay men in both civilian and military
prisons (QX Magazine 18 Jan. 2005; UK Gay News 21 Feb. 2005; Behind the Mask 21
Feb. 2005).
[97]
Accordingly,
there is reason to believe that the Applicant would be subject to hardship that
could amount to unusual, undeserved or disproportionate because of his
homosexuality should he be returned to Algeria.
[98]
IP-5
directs that individual H&C factors put forward by an applicant should not
be considered in isolation in a determination of the hardship that an applicant
would have. Rather, hardship is determined as a result of a global assessment
of H&C considerations put forth by the applicant. Hardship is assessed by weighing
together all of the H&C considerations submitted by an applicant. (Garas
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 1247 at para 30; Webb v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2012 FC 1060 at para 19).
[99]
Here,
the Officer accepted that the Applicant suffers from OCD, PTSD and Tourette’s
Syndrome. The Officer accepted that because of his mental health the Applicant
cannot work and relies on social assistance to sustain himself. The Officer
accepted that the Applicant has been in Canada since 1999 and his corroborating
evidence as to his extensive volunteer work over the years. The Officer
acknowledged the Applicant’s community ties here and that he has no family or
support in Algeria. The Officer unreasonably refused to accept the Applicant’s
evidence as to his homosexuality.
[100] In view
of the evidence as a whole and for the reasons set out above, I cannot conclude
that the Officer’s finding that the Applicant would not be subject to unusual,
underserved or disproportionate hardship if he were returned to Algeria was reasonable.
[101]
The
application for judicial review of the H&C Decision is also granted and the
matters are both remitted back for re-determination before a different officer(s)
at Citizenship and Immigration Canada. No question of general importance for
certification has been proposed and none arises.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT’S JUDGMENT is that the application for judicial review of
the PRRA Decision and of the H&C Decision is granted and the matters are
both remitted back for re-determination before a different officer(s) at
Citizenship and Immigration Canada. No question of general importance for certification
has been proposed and none arises.
"Cecily Y.
Strickland"