Docket:
IMM-767-13
Citation: 2014 FC 158
Toronto, Ontario, February 20, 2014
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
BETWEEN:
|
SUKRU BASBAYDAR
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
|
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board of
Canada [RPD] denied the Applicant’s application for refugee protection on the
grounds that he did not provide sufficient and credible evidence to support a
well-founded fear of persecution as required by section 96 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27. It further found that he had
failed to provide evidence that he faces a danger of torture pursuant to
paragraph 97(1)(a) of the Act.
[2]
At the conclusion of the oral hearing, I informed the parties that this
application would be granted because the decision of the RPD was perverse.
These are my reasons for so concluding.
Background
[3]
Mr. Basbaydar is a 23 year old citizen of Turkey and is of Kurdish
ethnicity. He supported the Democratic Society Party [DTP] (and subsequently
the Peace and Democracy Party [BDP] which was the successor to the DTP) by
joining demonstrations and rallies, distributing brochures and pamphlets,
arranging tables and chairs and serving tea to guests during the party’s
meetings. He is not, however, a member of any political party.
[4]
Mr. Basbaydar claims he was arrested and beaten up by the authorities on
four separate occasions, as follows:
(i)
In March 2007, he was suspected, together with this friend, of hanging a
political placard relating to Kurdish issues close to his school. During this
incident, he was detained overnight, beaten, slapped, and kicked before being
released without a charge;
(ii)
In July 2007, he was distributing election pamphlets supporting the
DTP’s candidate for parliament. During this incident, the police arrested him,
transferred him to the security directorate in Aksaray, interrogated him and
threatened to break his legs if he was caught supporting the DTP again;
(iii)
In December 2009, he participated in a demonstration protesting the
banning of the DTP by the Turkish Constitutional Court on the grounds of
separatist activity. During this incident, the police arrested him and
transferred him to the security directorate in Aksaray, beat his legs with
truncheons and reminded him of their earlier threat to break his legs; and
(iv)
In August 2010, he distributed pamphlets with a friend, protesting the
death of Sezran Kurt, a Kurd who had been shot and killed by police. During
this incident, the police arrested him and transferred him to the security
directorate in Aksaray. He was accused of association with the PKK (the
Kurdistan Workers’ Party), threatened with death, his testicles were squeezed,
he was given falaka (foot whipping), and beaten. He was released on the
condition that he act as an informer for the police.
[5]
With the exception of the March 2007 incident, on each occasion he was
arrested on the spot together with other activists.
[6]
He fled Turkey to the United States of America on September 26, 2010,
and then moved to Canada on November 11, 2010, where he immediately filed his
claim for refugee protection.
[7]
Mr. Basbaydar also claims to be a conscientious objector. Turkey has a compulsory military service requirement of 15 months for men. People who fail
to report for service can be prosecuted and incarcerated. Mr. Basbaydar was
required to report for service in February 2012.
[8]
The RPD found that there was insufficient evidence to support that Mr.
Basbaydar held a well-founded fear of persecution on the basis that he is of
Kurdish ethnicity and a periodic political protestor. It found that his
testimony regarding his experiences was not plausible because:
(i)
It was unlikely that the officers who threatened to break Mr.
Basbaydar’s legs in 2007 would have remembered the threat in 2009, particularly
because the documentary evidence shows that there is a high number of arrests
of ordinary activists and demonstrators;
(ii)
There was evidence that a high profile oppositionist remained in Turkey and was very active in advocating Kurdish rights. This undermined Mr. Basbaydar’s
subjective fear given that someone who was seemingly more at risk chose to
remain in the country;
(iii)
There was no evidence that the police had a special interest in Mr.
Basbaydar and he was not a high profile oppositionist. His political
activities were sporadic and he did not have any problem at the airport when he
left Turkey notwithstanding his previous arrests and detentions for his
political activities; and
(iv)
There was no evidence that the police wanted Mr. Basbaydar to report
back as an informer and it was unlikely that he would be an interest for the
police because he was merely a supporter and not a member of the party.
[9]
On the issue of Mr. Basbaydar’s conscientious objection to military
service, the RPD found that he had failed to discharge his onus of adducing
objective evidence of being a conscientious objector. The RPD specifically
noted that although he had been in Canada for two years, he had not attempted
to find out if there was an organization opposed to military service in Turkey that could support his claim. This, it was found, also undermined his claim to have
a genuine moral or political opposition to military service.
[10]
Given these credibility issues, the RPD accorded minimal weight to the
psychiatric reports tendered in evidence as they were based on his recounting
of those same events. The RPD also noted that it did not notice any signs of
emotional or psychological problems at the hearing. Finally, the RPD found
that Mr. Basbaydar had adduced no evidence that he would face a danger of
torture.
Issues
[11]
The Applicant raises three issues:
1.
The RPD applied the incorrect test for persecution in that it required
Mr. Basbaydar to demonstrate that he would face persecution if returned
to Turkey as opposed to requiring him to demonstrate that there is more than a
mere possibility of persecution;
2.
The RPD’s credibility findings were unreasonable and directly
contradicted by the documentary evidence; and
3.
The RPD failed to consider evidence of the extra-judicial punishment Mr.
Basbaydar would face for military service evasion if returned to Turkey.
Analysis
[12]
I am satisfied that the RPD applied the correct test for persecution.
At paragraph 16 of its decision, the RPD states “[b]ased on the foregoing
analysis and considering the totality of the evidence, I find that there is no
reasonable chance or serious possibility of persecution and, on the balance
of probabilities, the claimant would not be personally subjected to a risk of
torture, a risk of life, or a risk of cruel and unusual treatment or
punishment, if he returns to Turkey” (emphasis added). This articulation of
the test accords with that of the Supreme Court of Canada in Chan v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 593, para 120, where the
court stated it as follows:
Both the existence of the subjective
fear and the fact that the fear is objectively well-founded must be established
on a balance of probabilities. In the specific context of refugee
determination, it has been established by the Federal Court of Appeal in Adjei
v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1989] 2 F.C. 680, that
the claimant need not prove that persecution would be more likely than not in
order to meet the objective portion of the test. The claimant must establish,
however, that there is more than a "mere possibility" of
persecution. The applicable test has been expressed as a "reasonable
possibility" or, more appropriately in my view, as a "serious
possibility" (emphasis added, references omitted).
[13]
I find, however, that the RPD misapplied the test and that is a
reviewable error.
[14]
The RPD focused on the fact that Mr. Basbaydar had not demonstrated that
he was a person of interest for the police. This was not what he was required
to show. He simply had to show that he has a well-founded fear of persecution
by reason of his political opinions or nationality and, in my view, this
well-founded fear is borne out in the documentary evidence. The evidence shows
that even peaceful demonstrators and ordinary activists are at risk of
disproportionate punishment and specifically that there is increasing
persecution of Kurdish demonstrators. In attempting to impugn the Applicant’s
credibility, the RPD itself observed that “many young and ordinary activists”
are arrested in Turkey.
[15]
A 2010 Report from Human Rights Watch [the Report] provides background
to the political Turkish-Kurdish tension. For decades, the Turkish Military
and the PKK have been locked in armed conflict in the southeast and eastern
provinces of the country with approximately 44,000 people having been killed.
There is a state policy of burning down villages, likely to prevent them from
being used as PKK bases, and this has led to the displacement of roughly one
million people. State agents conducted torture on a mass scale and both state
forces and the PKK attacked civilians.
[16]
In 2005, Turkey passed laws that allowed courts to convict demonstrators
(including peaceful demonstrators) under the harshest terrorism laws through
two articles of the Turkish Penal Code in combination with the Anti-Terror
Law. The Report found that there is increasingly harsh punishment of Kurdish
demonstrators that is not a response to violent acts but to perceived
ideological support of the PKK and expression of political opinion. Under
these laws, demonstrators can be prosecuted as if they were actually fighting
the government as armed members of the PKK. Most convictions have resulted in
prison terms of between 7 and 15 years.
[17]
Additionally, the report found that civilian demonstrators may actually
be treated more harshly because there is no opportunity for them to turn
themselves in, the same way that combatants would, and therefore amnesty
provisions in the Turkish Penal Code would not be available to them. This
treatment comes despite a lack of “logistical or material support for terrorism
involvement in plotting violent activities.”
[18]
In 2009, the President of the Justice and Development Party [AKP]
government stated that the government would move towards improving democratic
rights for Kurds. In response to this promise, in June 2010, eight ex-patriot
PKK members and 22 ex-patriot civilians returned to Turkey only to be put on
trial for “membership in the PKK,” “making propaganda for the PKK,” and
“committing crimes on behalf of the PKK.”
[19]
In 2009, despite the commitment to change from the President of the AKP,
the Constitutional Court banned the DTP party, accusing it of separatist activity.
In May 2010, the PKK escalated deadly attacks on military and police targets.
In June 2010, 151 officials from the DTP and the BDP were indicted for
membership in an alleged “Turkey Assembly” of the Union of Kurdistan
Communities [KCK], a body connected with the PKK. Prior to formal indictment,
53 of the 151 people facing trial had been held for over a year in pretrial
detention for alleged KCK/PKK connections.
[20]
The Report states that “as the tendency to protest Kurdish issues has
increased in recent years, so has the Turkish government’s drive to prosecute
protestors” and that “[n]ow, Kurdish demonstrators routinely face
prosecution and long prison terms” (emphasis added).
[21]
The RPD did not refer to any of this evidence in its decision.
[22]
By characterizing Mr. Basbaydar’s activities as “limited and
insignificant,” the RPD failed to recognize that any involvement in
pro-Kurdish demonstrations, attendance at Kurdish Newroz (New Year)
celebrations, or show of support for the Kurdish political party can all be
viewed as potential association with the PKK and terrorism. Although he was
not an active member of the DTP or BDP, Mr. Basbaydar engaged in the very
activities referred to in the documentary evidence.
[23]
Further, there was evidence before the RPD of the experience of three of
Mr. Basbaydar’s brothers, all of whom had fled Turkey and sought refugee
protection either in Canada or the United Kingdom because of their political
activities. Mr. Basbaydar stated in his Personal Information Form that during
his interrogation in 2009, he was questioned about his brothers. Given his
stated intention to continue asserting his Kurdish identity and supporting the
BDP’s activities, I find it perverse for the RPD to conclude that there was no
more than a mere possibility of persecution, given the evidence of the Human
Rights Watch Report and the history of his family, neither of which was
addressed by the RPD. Its failure to do so renders the decision unreasonable
within the meaning of Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 SCR
190 at para 47.
[24]
Equally, I find that the credibility findings made by the RPD, in this
case, are perverse. The following passages from Miral v Canada, [1999]
FCJ No 254 [Miral] at paras 20 and 25 are apt: “The panel has engaged in
speculation as to regular or normal police procedures, and had no evidence
before it on which to base such conclusions, regardless of how obvious they may
appear to the member… The tribunal erred when it engaged in speculation about
police arrest practices without any foundation in evidence.”
[25]
In this case, the RPD simply stated “it is highly unlikely that these
officers could have remembered that they threatened to break the claimant’s
legs two years before” and that “relying on someone’s memory, who has seen,
dealt with and beaten hundreds of political activists, young and old,
low and high profile protestors, is simply not reasonable” (emphasis added).
[26]
First, the RPD’s own observation that the police would have beaten
hundreds of political activists undermines its comment that there was “no
evidence adduced that would support a finding that the claimant faces a danger
of torture.”
[27]
Second, there was no evidence that these officers in particular had
beaten hundreds of activists in the two year intervening period; however, even
if they had, it would be equally plausible that they had a standard practice of
threatening people and restating those threats upon subsequent interrogations.
Given that there is a record of previous arrests, the officers would not
necessarily have to remember each individual offender to be able to reiterate
the threats. The RPD merely speculates without any evidentiary foundation that
these officers would not have remembered Mr. Basbaydar and then draws a
negative and unreasonable inference as to his credibility.
[28]
Given my assessment of the RPD’s credibility findings, its treatment of
the psychiatric reports is also a reviewable error. The RPD must recall that
it is not endowed with any medical expertise and it was inappropriate to place
weight on the Member’s observation at the second hearing (the first having been
adjourned as Mr. Basbaydar was in obvious mental distress) that he “did not
notice or sense any signs of the claimant’s emotional and psychological
problems,” thereby suggesting that the expert psychiatric evidence was
suspect.
[29]
In its decision, the RPD states that it does not believe that Mr.
Basbaydar “is a conscientious objector as he alleged to be,” primarily because
he had failed to look for and join a group that opposed military service in
Turkey, in the two years that he had been in Canada.
[30]
In requiring Mr. Basbaydar to join a group devoted to opposing mandatory
military service, the RPD injected an evidentiary requirement that does not
exist in law. Mr. Basbaydar testified that he was a conscientious objector and
he provided reasons for his belief: he did not want to be complicit in the
treatment of Kurdish families like his own. For example, he stated that his
family was forced to either act as Turkish Guards or leave their village, and
that later, the village was burned down. The documentary evidence corroborated
that these types of events did occur in Turkey. There was nothing in the
evidence to refute Mr. Basbaydar’s testimony on this point.
[31]
When asked if he had ever expressed his views to the authorities, Mr.
Basbaydar explained that he did not need to because he delayed his military
service by attending university. Further, he testified that he knew of a group
of conscientious objectors in Turkey, but that it was illegal to be a
conscientious objector. This shows that Mr. Basbaydar took steps to
investigate his other options while in Turkey which was far more relevant than
doing so in Canada.
[32]
In my view, it was perverse to conclude that Mr. Basbaydar was not a
conscientious objector on the basis that he had not joined an organization in Canada that opposes military service. The RPD had before it evidence of what occurred to
Mr. Basbaydar’s family which was corroborated by documentary evidence, evidence
that he had postponed military service by enrolling in university, and evidence
that his brothers had all avoided military service (which would point to a
pattern in the family of being conscientious objectors). There is nothing in
the record that would undermine Mr. Basbaydar’s own testimony. These objective
facts supported his conscientious objection to military service.
[33]
The RPD further erred by failing to evaluate any of the
documentary evidence regarding the treatment of conscientious objectors in Turkey. There is evidence to support that after conviction, detainees are frequently
ill-treated and sometimes tortured during their detention.
[34]
This is not a country where conscientious objectors are subject only to
the ordinary laws of the country for their beliefs - they are also subject to
cruel and unusual treatment. Amnesty International reports that
“[c]onscientious objectors are frequently ill-treated in Turkish military
custody after being arrested and detained for their refusal to perform military
service.” There are also concerns that “there is a continuing pattern of
alleged ill-treatment of conscientious objectors in military custody” and that
“prison officials were not brought to justice” in many cases.
[35]
This objective evidence shows that conscientious objectors are subject
to extreme extra-judicial treatment. It was unreasonable for the RPD to not
address this evidence and the potential consequences to Mr. Basbaydar of
conviction for military evasion.
[36]
For all of these reasons, I find that the RPD decision is perverse and
unreasonable and must be remitted back for redetermination by a different
Member.
[37]
Neither party proposed a question for certification.