Docket: IMM-505-14
Citation:
2014 FC 759
Ottawa, Ontario, July 29,
2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Locke
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BETWEEN:
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ALRADIA WEDAH ELBAKER
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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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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for judicial review pursuant to section 72(1) of
the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act [IRPA] following a
decision of a member of the Refugee Protection Division [RPD] of the
Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada [Board] to deny a claim for refugee
protection.
[2]
The applicant, Alradia Wedah Elbaker, is a citizen of Sudan whose family was caught between warring parties in the Darfur region of that country. She was
denied protection under both sections 96 and 97 of the IRPA.
[3]
For the purposes of this decision, I need only address the denial under
section 96, which applies when a claimant has “a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion,
nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion.”
For the reasons set out below, I have concluded that this application should be
granted and the RPD’s decision set aside.
II.
Facts
[4]
Ms. Elbaker is from El Daein, in the Darfur region of Sudan, and lived in Maali (about 30 km from the city). She had a farm with her husband and children,
seven boys and one girl. After civil war began in 2003, Ms. Elbaker and her
family were caught between government and rebel forces due to the specific
location of the farm. Each of the sides in the conflict imposed taxes on local
people, and each side considered those people to be traitors for giving support
to the other side.
[5]
On February 14, 2010, government forces surrounded Ms. Elbaker’s farm
and began shooting at their house. The forces entered the house and beat Ms.
Elbaker’s husband and accused him of being a traitor. When one of Ms. Elbaker’s
sons intervened, both the husband and the son were taken to an unknown
location. They have not been seen since. The house was burned down, the livestock
were taken and Ms. Elbaker’s children were scattered. To this day, Ms. Elbaker
has no news from her children and does not know where they live, or even if
they remain alive.
[6]
In an attempt to find her missing husband and son, Ms. Elbaker later went
to the offices of the government forces who took her husband and son. She was
not well-received. She was called a traitor, mistreated, and threatened.
[7]
Ms. Elbaker left Maali to rejoin her brother in El Daein. He organized
for her to come to Canada on a false Dutch passport where she submitted a
refugee claim.
III.
Analysis of the RPD’s decision
[8]
In assessing the section 96 aspect of Ms. Elbaker’s refugee claim, the
RPD acknowledged at paragraph 11 of its decision that:
It may very well be that the members of the government forces
who attacked the claimant’s farm and apprehended her husband and son may have
believed at the time that the claimant’s family had helped the rebels.
[9]
However, later in the same paragraph 11, the RPD states: “The panel finds that insufficient evidence
has been provided to support [Ms. Elbaker’s] allegation that she and her family
were personally targeted because of their political opinion or perceived
political opinion.” A similar statement is made later in the
decision at paragraph 14:
The panel … does not find any evidence that the claimant and her
family were personally targeted or that the government forces or even the rebel
forces have any particular interest in her. The panel also finds that there is
insufficient evidence to support her claims of persecution and is not persuaded
that her fears are well-founded.
[10]
These statements concerning the lack of evidence that Ms. Elbaker and
her family were personally targeted are difficult to reconcile with the earlier
acknowledgement of the attack on her farm on February 14, 2010, which is
clearly a personal targeting.
[11]
I have attempted in several ways to reconcile the apparent
inconsistency, but without success.
[12]
I have considered whether the RPD was of the view that section 96 did
not apply because the persecution to which Ms. Elbaker and her family were
subjected applied generally and was not particular to her family. The RPD’s
decision does discuss, still in paragraph 11, the fact that the family was
simply in the wrong place and that many other families were similarly targeted.
There is further discussion of the generalized nature of the risk to Ms.
Elbaker at paragraph 17. However, while the generalized nature of a risk may be
relevant to section 97 of the IRPA, it is not a proper consideration for
section 96. Ms. Elbaker and her family were personally targeted, and the fact
that others were also targeted does not change that.
[13]
I have also considered whether the RPD was not satisfied that the
persecution that Ms. Elbaker and her family faced had a nexus to one of
the grounds enumerated in section 96: race, religion, nationality, membership
in a particular social group or political opinion. But it seems clear that the
attack on Ms. Elbaker and her family, and her later mistreatment at the offices
of the government forces, were due to a perception that she and her family had
supported the rebel forces. This would seem to constitute a perception of a
political opinion, even if Ms. Elbaker and her family were not politically
active (Canada (Attorney General) v. Ward, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 689 at p
746-747). In my view, a nexus appears to have been established, even though
none was explicitly stated in the RPD’s decision.
[14]
The final possibility that I considered in an attempt to reconcile
(i) the RPD’s acknowledgement of the attack on Ms. Elbaker and her family;
and (ii) its insistence that insufficient evidence exists to show personal
targeting, is as follows: perhaps the RPD meant to conclude that, though Ms.
Elbaker was personally targeted at her farm on February 14, 2010, she ceased to
be a target after that. In support of this hypothesis is the phrase “at the time” in the
above-quoted passage from paragraph 11 of the decision: “government forces … may have believed at the time that the
claimant’s family had helped the rebels.”
[15]
The main problem with this hypothesis is that the RPD decision does not
state a conclusion that the risk no longer exists. In fact, the RPD states at
paragraph 17 that Ms. Elbaker would face a risk to life if she were to return.
Moreover, there does not appear to be any clear evidence to support a
conclusion that the risk no longer exists. For one thing, Ms. Elbaker’s
experience going to the office of the government forces appears to be
sufficient to show that the attack on her farm, the taking of her husband and
son, and the burning down of her house did not end the risk she faced.
[16]
The RPD’s decision notes that Ms. Elbaker has not experienced any
further difficulties at the hands of either government or rebel forces, and
that there is no evidence that they have any interest in the claimant. Those
are facts, but they are not evidence that the targeting to which Ms. Elbaker
and her family were subjected has ended. But the uncontradicted evidence is
that the government forces have continued to threaten Ms. Elbaker. I have seen no
evidence to indicate that this state of things has changed or that the
government forces no longer believe that Ms. Elbaker supports the rebels.
[17]
I am also mindful that the burden for a refugee claimant to satisfy s.96
is relatively low. A claimant must prove on
the balance of probabilities that there is more than a mere possibility – or a
reasonable chance – that the claimant will face persecution if returned to his
or her country of origin: Adjei v
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1989] 2 FC 680 at 683, 57 DLR (4th) 153 (FCA)
and Lopez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC
1156 (para 20).
[18]
The foregoing analysis concerns
issues of mixed fact and law and the parties are agreed that the standard of
review of the RPD’s decision is reasonableness.
[19]
I have been unable to reconcile the
RPD’s critical conclusion of insufficient evidence that Ms. Elbaker has been
personally targeted with its acknowledgement of Ms. Elbaker’s personal experiences.
For these reasons, I find this conclusion by the RPD to be unreasonable.