Docket: IMM-3637-14
Citation:
2015 FC 138
Montréal, Quebec, February
4, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Shore
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BETWEEN:
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THIRUSUTHAR THURAISINGAM
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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.
Background
[1]
The Applicant is a 35-year-old Sri Lankan
citizen of Tamil origin, from the Jaffna Peninsula, in northern Sri Lanka. The Applicant claims a well-founded fear of persecution by the Eelam People’s
Democratic Party [EPDP] and the Sri Lankan Army [SLA] on the basis of his
membership in the particular group of young male Tamils, and by reason of his
race and nationality.
[2]
Upon arrival in Canada at the
St-Bernard-de-Lacolle point of entry, the Applicant was interviewed by a Canada
Border Services Agency officer [CBSA officer].
[3]
A hearing was held before the RPD on
March 18, 2014. In its decision dismissing the Applicant’s claim, the RPD
found that the Applicant lacked overall credibility.
[4]
This is an application for judicial review
pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001 c 27 [IRPA] of a decision dated April 8, 2014, wherein the Refugee
and Protection Division [RPD] determined that the Applicant is not a Convention
refugee or a person in need of protection pursuant to sections 96 and 97 of the
IRPA.
II.
Impugned Decision
[5]
First, the RPD found that the Applicant lacked
credibility in respect of the following issues, deemed central to the
Applicant’s claim:
i)
The Applicant’s alleged arrests and
detentions in Sri Lanka: The Applicant stated, in
both his interview with CBSA and in response to questions 37 and 42 of his
Claim for Refugee Protection Form [CRPF], that he was detained by the EPDP for
seven days; whereas, in his Personal Information Form [PIF], in response to
question 31, and at the hearing, the Applicant stated that he was detained for
four days. In response to question 9‑B, the Applicant failed to mention
his seven-day detention by the EPDP.
The
Applicant explained that the omissions can be attributed to errors by the
interpreters who assisted him in his claim. The RPD rejected the Applicant’s
explanations and found that the Applicant’s alleged three-month detention by
the SLA was a fabrication.
ii)
The Applicant’s alleged fear of the SLA: In his PIF, in response to questions 9‑B and 31, the
Applicant stated that he was arrested by the SLA and detained for three months,
in June 2010. The RPD noted that in response to question 42 of the CRPF, the
Applicant did not mention his fear of the SLA.
iii)
The Applicant’s brother’s involvement in the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam [LTTE]: At question 31 of his
PIF, the Applicant claims that his brother Prabaharan was a member of the LTTE,
whereas at the interview with the CBSA officer, the Applicant indicated that
none of his family members had any ties with the LTTE.
At
the hearing, the Applicant explained that his sister and his brother-in-law
advised him not to mention any of his family members’ involvement with the
LTTE, as this may lessen his chances of acquiring refugee status in Canada. The RPD rejected the Applicant’s explanations for the omissions.
iv)
The Applicant’s travel and length of stay in
the Bahamas: At question 23 of his PIF, the Applicant
indicates that he spent two days in the Bahamas, whereas in response to the
CBSA interview, he stated that he spent one month there. At the hearing, the
Applicant testified that he was tense, which led him to provide inconsistent
evidence, and that his actual length of stay in the Bahamas was one month. The
RPD rejected the Applicant’s explanations.
[6]
Second, the RPD rejected the Applicant’s sur place claim. The RPD found that, on a
balance of probabilities, the Applicant did not face persecution in Sri Lanka by virtue of having sought refugee status in Canada. Rather, the RPD found that the
Applicant would not personally be subjected to a risk to his life or cruel and
unusual treatment or punishment upon return to Sri Lanka.
III.
Issue
[7]
The Court considers that the determinative issue
at hand is whether the RPD’s credibility findings are reasonable.
IV.
Analysis
[8]
Constant jurisprudence has established that the
RPD’s findings of credibility and weighing of the evidence attract the
deferential standard of reasonableness (Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12; Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, [2008]
1 SCR 190).
[9]
Thus, it is not open to this Court to reweigh
the evidence or substitute its own reasons for those of the RPD. The Court must
rather assess the reasonableness of the decision under review, in light of the
evidence put before the RPD (Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’ Union
v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62 at para 15).
[10]
The Applicant submits that the RPD focused on
minor inconsistencies and demonstrated overzealousness in finding discrepancies
in the Applicant’s narrative. In his memorandum of fact and law, the Applicant
put forward explanations for the discrepancies in his testimony, which are
largely attributed to errors by the different interpreters who assisted the
Applicant in completing his refugee claim forms, to the fact that the Applicant
was tense, and to the Applicant’s fear in disclosing his brother’s involvement
with the LTTE.
[11]
The Applicant further argues that the RPD failed
to assess the documentary evidence as a whole and to weigh the evidence
accordingly (Myle v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2006 FC 871; Bacchus v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 616).
[12]
First, it is this Court’s view that the RPD
carefully considered and compared the evidence as a whole. As noted by the RPD,
the inconsistencies in the Applicant’s written and oral evidence are
significant and numerous, and unsupported by valid explanations.
[13]
Second, in regard to the Applicant’s sur place claim and alleged risk upon return
to Sri Lanka, the RPD considered the evidence pertaining to the Applicant’s
subjective and objective fear, by relying on the Applicant’s evidence and on
documentation relating to country conditions.
[14]
More precisely, the RPD relied on evidence from
the National Documentation Package on Sri Lanka (May 3, 2013) such as the Country
of Origin Information (COI) Report of the United Kingdom Home Office on Sri
Lanka, and the Home Office of the United Kingdom Operational Guidance
Note on Sri Lanka, and found that the Sri Lankan government’s current
concern is not with individuals with past membership or sympathy with the LTTE,
but rather with individuals who represent a destabilizing threat in
post-conflict Sri Lanka. The RPD also considered the fact that the Applicant
legally left Sri Lanka with his own passport, and that he had neither a
criminal record or an outstanding arrest warrant, nor a record of his detention
in Sri Lanka, to conclude that the Applicant possessed none of the additional
factors linking him to the LTTE which would expose him to treatment giving rise
to the need for refugee protection.
[15]
Relying on the evidence, the RPD thus found that
the Applicant does not fit the profile of one who would be perceived as a
threat by the Sri Lankan government and that he does not face a risk upon
return to Sri Lanka as a failed refugee claimant. The RPD also provided
extensive reasons to support its conclusions.
[16]
In light of the above, it is this Court’s view
that the RPD’s findings are anchored in the evidence, and defensible in respect
of the facts and the law. The RPD provided a reasonable basis for its decision
(Alberta (Information and Privacy Commissioner) v Alberta Teachers’
Association, 2011 SCC 61 at para 55).
V.
Conclusion
[17]
In sum, the RPD’s findings are reasonable and
correspond to the evidence before it. Therefore, the application must be
dismissed.