Date: 20130125
Docket: IMM-6594-12
Citation: 2013 FC 78
Ottawa, Ontario, January 25, 2013
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Snider
BETWEEN:
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S.K.
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER
OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION CANADA
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Respondent
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REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I.
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant is a farmer from Sri Lanka, of Tamil
heritage, who arrived in Canada in 2010 as one of 492 passengers on the M/V
Sun Sea. He denies any involvement with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE), which is designated as a terrorist organization in Canada. Nevertheless he claims refugee protection in Canada on the basis that he is at risk
of persecution because he will be perceived to be associated with the LTTE since
he arrived on the M/V Sun Sea. Moreover, he claims that he is at risk
from the Sri Lankan authorities who will undoubtedly persecute him as a
returning refugee claimant who travelled on the M/V Sun Sea.
[2]
In a decision dated June 14, 2012, a panel of the
Immigration and Refugee Board, Refugee Protection Division (the Board) denied
the Applicant’s claim for protection under s. 96 and ss. 97(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 (IRPA). The key findings
of the Board were that:
•
The government of Sri Lanka did not suspect the Applicant
of being associated with the LTTE while he was living in Sri Lanka;
•
The Applicant would not face persecution as a returning
failed Tamil asylum seeker; and
•
The Applicant is not likely to be at risk on the basis of
perceived association with the LTTE as a result of his coming to Canada on the M/V Sun Sea (the sur place claim).
II.
Issues
[3]
The Applicant seeks to overturn this decision, raising the
following issues:
1.
Did the Board err by failing to consider central, relevant
and probative evidence relating to the Applicant’s sur place claim?
2.
Was the Board’s conclusion that the Applicant was not perceived
as having LTTE association before he left Sri Lanka unreasonable?
3.
Was the Board’s sur place analysis unreasonable
because it was based on incorrect information, assumptions unsupported by the
evidence and speculation?
[4]
For the reasons that follow, I have concluded that the
decision should stand.
III.
Standard of Review
[5]
The standard of review applicable to the decision is that
of reasonableness. The role of the court when a reasonableness standard is
appropriate is to determine “whether the decision falls within a range of
possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and
the law” (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para 47,
[2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 [Dunsmuir]). A court should also
examine whether the decision displays “justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process” (Dunsmuir, above at
para 47).
IV.
Preliminary Issue
[6]
As part of his case before the Board, the Applicant
submitted affidavit evidence related to the return to Sri Lanka of one of the M/V Sun Sea migrants. The Minister objected to the admission of this
evidence at the hearing. Nevertheless, the Board accepted the documents as
exhibits on the basis that they “have a significant potential of holding
probative value in this hearing” (Certified Tribunal Record (CTR) Vol 8 at
1441). Before me, the Minister renews his objection.
[7]
I have little doubt that, under the rules of evidence,
these documents would not have been admitted in a court proceeding. The
information is unreliable and based almost exclusively on hearsay. However, the
strict rules of evidence normally do not apply to the proceedings of an
administrative tribunal such as the Board. I can see no reason to rule
that the Board erred by admitting the documents. At the end of the day, it is
clear, from reading the Board’s decision, that the documents were given the
weight they deserved.
V.
Analysis
A.
Issue #1: Failure to have regard to the evidence
[8]
The first issue raised by the Applicant is whether the
Board erred by failing to have regard to a particular document directly
relevant to his sur place claim. That document is a speech given by the
Sri Lankan Minister of National Defence. The text of the speech is posted on the
Ministry of Defence website and a copy was provided to the Board. In the
speech, the following remarks are made:
[W]e must realize that although the LTTE has been
militarily defeated in Sri Lanka, its international network remains largely
intact. In May this year, a vessel named the MV SUN SEA was reported to be off Thailand waters. The MV SUN SEA is a general cargo ship believed to be carrying more that
200 immigrants including a considerable number of LTTE cadres, and is heading
towards Canadian waters. This voyage is part of the LTTE activists human
smuggling operation that began after the military defeat of the LTTE in Sri Lanka.
Charging anything between US$15,000 to US$40,000 per
immigrant, this human smuggling operation poses a significant threat, because
it allows trained terrorist cadres to enter other nations while disguised as
civilians or refugees.
[9]
The Applicant submits that the failure of the Board to
specifically deal with this important and relevant piece of evidence is a
reviewable error.
[10]
The court may presume that the RPD has considered all the
evidence, and the Board is not required to specifically refer to each piece of
evidence presented (Yu v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2007 FC 1157 at para 8, 66 Imm LR (3d) 153; Lai v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FCA 125 at para 90, 253 DLR (4th) 606).
However, the RPD may commit a reviewable error by failing to specify central
evidence to the applicant’s claim which contradicts its reasoning or conclusion
(Iordanov v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration (1998), 145
FTR 289 at para 11, [1998] FCJ No 367 (TD); Cepeda‑Gutierrez
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (1998), 157 FTR 35 at paras 15-17, 27, [1998] FCJ No 1425 (TD)).
[11]
In the context of a record in which there are multiple
items of documentary evidence relating to country conditions, the Board does
not have to refer to every single document. Nonetheless, if the Board fails to
mention the substantive content of critical evidence that contradicts its
findings, then it has erred (Osorio v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 37 at para 41, [2012] FCJ No 36).
[12]
I agree that there is no direct reference, in the decision,
to the Minister of Defence speech. However, the Applicant’s argument that this
is an error is not persuasive.
[13]
We have to consider why the speech and other documents of
this nature were put forward in the first place. These documents were obviously
submitted to demonstrate that there was more than a mere possibility that the
Sri Lankan government would perceive all passengers on the M/V Sun Sea
to be associated with the LTTE.
[14]
The Board dealt with documents of a similar nature in paragraph
74 of its reasons:
There is no doubt that the arrival of the M/V Sun Sea
generated significant interest on the part of the public and government
authorities in both Sri Lanka and here in Canada. A statement was made by a Sri
Lankan official from the Sri Lankan High Commission in Ottawa to the effect
that most passengers on the M.V. Sun Sea were hardcore LTTE people. This
statement was made before the ship arrived in Canada and before CBSA had done
any investigation regarding the passengers. There is insufficient credible
evidence before me to conclude that this utterance represents the current
position of the Sri Lankan government at this time. [Emphasis added.]
[15]
The first problem with the Applicant’s argument is that the
speech in question was made before the M/V Sun Sea arrived in Canada. It was not made after the ship arrived or after the extensive examination of the
passengers by Canadian authorities, with the assistance of Sri Lankan
authorities. The fact that the speech remains on the website is certainly not
persuasive evidence of the current views of the Sri Lankan government.
[16]
The second reason for dismissing this argument is that I am
satisfied that the Board did deal with the substance of the document and, more
importantly, the reason for which it was put forward.
[17]
The statement identified in paragraph 74, which was made at
about the same time as the document in question, goes even further than the
Minister’s speech. While the Minister of Defence noted that “a considerable
number of LTTE cadres” were on board the M/V Sun Sea, the referenced
remarks were that “most passengers on the M.V. Sun Sea were hardcore
LTTE people”. The Board obviously recognized that the issue was whether all of
the passengers aboard the vessel would be suspected to be LTTE. Whether or not
this particular document was referred to, the final sentence of the paragraph
74 is correct; there was nothing before the Board that demonstrated that the
current position of the government is that most of the passengers on the M/V
Sun Sea were associated with the LTTE.
B.
Issue #2: Unreasonable finding on LTTE perception in Sri Lanka
[18]
With respect to the Applicant’s claims that he was
perceived to be associated with LTTE while in Sri Lanka, the Board concluded
that “the government of Sri Lanka did not suspect the claimant of being
associated to the LTTE in any manner, after he was released from custody in
1987, and while he was living in Sri Lanka” (Decision at paragraph 39). The
Applicant submits that this finding is unreasonable given that the Applicant
had been forced to go into hiding for a lengthy period of time. I do not agree.
[19]
The Board recognized the facts of the Applicant’s earlier
detention and his going into hiding; the Board believed the Applicant. However,
the Board considered this evidence and balanced it against other evidence. For
example, in spite of the fact that he allegedly was suspected of ties to the
LTTE, the Applicant was able to obtain a legitimate Sri Lankan passport in 2010
and to leave for Thailand with his own passport. Further, the search for the
Applicant was not extensive and the Applicant was permitted to report
voluntarily, even after disappearing for months. The Board’s conclusion that
the Sri Lankan government no longer had an interest in the Applicant is supported
by the evidence; it is not unreasonable.
C.
Issue #3: Unreasonable sur place decision
[20]
The Applicant presented to the Board (and to this Court),
the following line of reasoning supporting a conclusion that the Applicant
would face more than a mere possibility of persecution upon his return to Sri Lanka:
1.
The evidence before the Board demonstrates clearly that
agents of the government of Sri Lanka engage in a systemic use of torture of
Tamil males as a means of securing information or confessions from detainees.
2.
All returning Tamil males who were on the M/V Sun Sea
will be subjected to interrogation to determine whether they might have LTTE
associations or information related to those LTTE members who were responsible
for this people smuggling operation.
3.
It follows that there is more than a mere possibility that
the Applicant will be subject to systemic torture upon his return.
[21]
The flaw in the Applicant’s argument arises with his third
step. The Board acknowledged the human rights abuses of the Sri Lanka government and accepted that the Applicant would be detained and questioned upon
his return. However, the Board refused to conclude that there was a serious
possibility that this particular Applicant would be subjected to torture
upon his return. The Board reasoned that, taking into account the specific
circumstances of the Applicant, the Sri Lankan authorities were not likely
to conclude that he was associated with the LTTE. Thus, there was not more
than a mere possibility that he would have a lengthy detention with the risk of
torture.
[22]
The question is whether there was evidence before the Board
supporting this reasoning. In my view, there was. For example, the Board had
before it – and referred to – the fate of other returning failed asylum seekers.
The Board also referred to the unrefuted fact that the Applicant had been
cleared by Canadian officials of LTTE association after a “detailed
investigation” which, the Board logically assumed, would be known to the Sri
Lankan officials. As well, the Board explained that even individuals with
known, low level LTTE connections have been released, suggesting that someone
in the Applicant’s situation would not be subject to intense scrutiny.
[23]
The Applicant submits that the Board erred in its
assumption that the decision of the Board would be persuasive evidence to the
Sri Lankan authorities that he is not LTTE. In this argument, the Applicant
fails to appreciate the entire context in which reference is made to the
Canadian decision. The Board’s suggestion that the Applicant show his Board
decision to the Sri Lankan authorities is not unreasonable in the context of
the decision as a whole. As assumed by the Board and by the Applicant, the Sri
Lankan authorities would know that the Applicant travelled to Canada on the M/V Sun Sea, and would logically conclude that he applied for refugee
protection. Therefore, theoretically speaking, the Board decision could not
place him at greater risk and could be helpful in demonstrating why the
Canadian authorities believed that the Applicant is not a member of the LTTE.
Although there is no evidence that the Board decision would necessarily be
probative to the Sri Lankan authorities, the Board acknowledges that the Sri
Lankan government will conduct its own independent evaluation and this is
phrased merely as an option.
[24]
In support of his argument, the Applicant provided me with
a number of Board decisions in which different panel members of the Board
accepted M/V Sun Sea claimants as Convention refugees, allegedly following
the Applicant’s proposed line of reasoning. The problem is that these Board
decisions do not have precedential value – for very good reason. The individual
facts and records in each case must be examined. For example, in one of the
cases referred to, the panel concluded that the claimant’s profile was one
suspected of having links with the LTTE, thereby exacerbating the risk on his
return.
[25]
Moreover, and more importantly, the decision is reviewable
on a standard of reasonableness. It is possible for different conclusions to be
reached on similar facts. I acknowledge that the Applicant put forward a
rational line of reasoning for finding that the Applicant was at risk because
of his passage on the M/V Sun Sea. However, that does not mean that the
line of reasoning followed by the Board is unreasonable. The existence of a
range of possible outcomes is the hallmark of the reasonableness standard and
is the foundation of the deference owed to decision makers. Whether this
Applicant would face more than a mere possibility of persecution is a factual
question to be determined by the Board. While I or another panel member might
have come to a different conclusion, the decision of this Board was reasonably
open to it on this particular evidentiary record. The Court should not
intervene.
VI.
Conclusion
[26]
The decision is not unreasonable and should not be
overturned.
[27]
Neither party proposes a question for certification.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1.
the
application for judicial review is dismissed; and
2.
no
question of general importance is certified.
“Judith
A. Snider”