Docket: IMM-7767-13
Citation:
2015 FC 375
Toronto, Ontario, March 25, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Brown
BETWEEN:
|
ADRIANA LUCIA SANCHEZ MESTRE ALBERTO ENRIQUE ORDONEZ FLOREZ
MELISSA ORDONEZ SANCHEZ
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is an application for judicial review by
Adriana Lucia Sanchez Mestre, Alberto Enrique Ordonez Florez and Melissa
Ordonez Sanchez [the Applicants] under subsection 72(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 of a decision by the Immigration
and Refugee Board of Canada, Refugee Protection Division [RPD], rendered orally
on November 21, 2013, wherein the RPD determined that the Applicants were not
Convention refugees or persons in need of protection. For the reasons that
follow the application is granted.
I.
Facts
[2]
Adriana Lucia Sanchez Mestre was born on October
5, 1984. Her husband, Alberto Enrique Ordonez Florez, was born on November 19,
1978. Their daughter, Melissa Ordonez Sanchez, was born on May 9, 2010. They
are citizens of Colombia. The Applicants made the following allegations in
support of their refugee claims, all of which were found truthful and credible
by the RPD:
- Ms. Sanchez is a General Physician and worked at the ESE
Cartagena de Indias as a family doctor from February 16, 2011 to March 15,
2013. On November 9, 2012, she attended a patient for an emergency due to
an injury to the left leg. The man, accompanied by two men, came back on November
12, 2012 and November 16, 2012 for checkups. On November 19, 2012, one of
the accompanying men came back and asked for a home visit for the patient
because he was in pain. There, the two men said that the patient was fine,
that they were from the Ejército de Liberación Nacional (the
National Liberation Army) [ELN] and needed her as a doctor to provide
services in some of their locations. Ms. Sanchez said it was not possible
for her and left.
- On November 28,
2012, Ms. Sanchez received an anonymous letter asking her for her answer
and telling her that the time was almost up for her to provide them with
her answer. Ms. Sanchez was afraid and took a vacation to see if things
would calm down. She visited the United States with her daughter, mother
and brother from December 1, 2012 to December 10, 2012. She returned to
work on December 11, 2012.
- On January 9,
2013, one of the men came to the Health Centre and asked for Ms. Sanchez.
She evaded him. She then saw the men on different occasions in the street
but they did not approach her. The Nurse Assistant told Ms. Sanchez that
some other men were coming to the house and were friends with the police
in that area. For that reason, Ms. Sanchez did not report these incidents
to the police. She started receiving phone calls and messages from unknown
numbers, asking her to go with them and that she would face consequences
if the answer was negative. They told her not to approach authorities or
things would be worse. Ms. Sanchez stayed calm because she did not know how
serious the situation was and thought the situation would be temporary at
that time.
- On January 29,
2013, Ms. Sanchez received an article at her office reporting the murder
of her university classmate. She feared the ELN sent her that article as a
warning.
- On February 4,
2013, Ms. Sanchez requested a transfer in writing but she was later
advised that there were no vacancies available elsewhere. She again
requested a transfer on February 13, 2013 and February 22, 2013 but did
not get an answer.
- On March 6,
2013, Ms. Sanchez received a phone call telling her that her time was up,
that they knew she was married, that there would be consequences for her
and her family, and not to contact authorities. She resigned from her
position on March 15, 2013 and her husband supported her. The Applicants
went to Medellin on March 23, 2013 to keep far from the city for a week.
Ms. Sanchez received a phone call on March 26, 2013 telling her that
nobody plays with them, that her life was in danger and that there would
be consequences. The Applicants returned to Cartagena on March 31, 2013
and they sent their daughter to stay with Ms. Sanchez’s mother and would
only visit her on the weekends.
- On April 26,
2013, Ms. Sanchez received an anonymous letter which said that they knew
where she was, that they will find her, and not to report to the
authorities. The Applicants moved to Ms. Sanchez’s mother-in-law’s home
for two weeks.
- Ms. Sanchez
started to attend psychological therapies on May 18, 2013 because the
situation was affecting her. On June 4, 2013, she recognized one of the
men in the mall near her house. She and her husband moved out of the
house. This happened on different occasions and the threatening phone
calls kept occurring. Ms. Sanchez was desperate and did not know where to
go. She returned to her mother-in-law’s house on June 26, 2013 and started
searching for places, but found that places in Colombia were not safe as
the ELN has control around the country and in the big cities where Ms.
Sanchez can work. She researched online and called her father in Canada. The Applicants decided that Canada was the best option. Ms. Sanchez abandoned her
house on August 6, 2013, only took her personal belongings, and moved to
her mother’s house, where she would only go out of the house to attend her
psychological appointments.
- Ms. Sanchez also
testified that she feared the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de
Colombia (the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) [FARC] because
they work closely with the ELN.
[3]
The Applicants entered Canada from the United States as an exception to the Safe Third Country Agreement Ms. Sanchez’s
father is in Canada.
[4]
The RPD rejected the Applicants’ claims on
November 21, 2013. They filed an application for leave to apply for judicial
review which was granted January 5, 2015. In the interim this Court stayed the
Applicants removal to Colombia May 14, 2014.
II.
Decision under Review
[5]
The RPD accepted the Applicants’ evidence as set
out above as true; the Applicants were found credible. The RPD also found that
Ms. Sanchez was at risk, as a physician, because she fits the profile of a
person who would be targeted for forced recruitment at the hands of guerilla
groups such as ELN and FARC. The RPD also found that her husband fits the
profile of a person that would be targeted due to familial connection.
[6]
The RPD noted that the presumption of state
protection applied to Colombia and that the Applicants therefore had to rebut
the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the state is unwilling
or unable to provide adequate protection. The Applicants had to show that they
have taken all reasonable steps in the circumstances to seek protection in
their country before seeking international protection unless it was objectively
unreasonable to expect them to do so.
[7]
The RPD noted that the Applicants testified that
they did not approach the state for protection because they were afraid and
said that one cannot rebut the presumption of state protection by asserting
only a subjective reluctance to engage the state.
[8]
The RPD acknowledged that some problems
exist in Colombia but held that Columbia was making serious efforts to combat
those problems and that those efforts have been effective. Namely, the RPD
noted from the documentary evidence that “[t]he
military has re-established security along most main roads in the country and
increased the presence of police in most municipalities” and that “[t]he Canadian embassy’s political councillor notes that
urban security has improved dramatically in the last eight years.”
[9]
The RPD then found that, having considered the
totality of the evidence before it, the Applicants had failed to rebut the
presumption of state protection with clear and convincing evidence. The RPD was
not persuaded that Colombia would not be reasonably forthcoming with state
protection should the Applicants seek it, and consequently rejected the
Applicants’ claims.
III.
Issues
[10]
This matter raises the issue of whether the RPD
erred in its finding that the Applicants had failed to rebut the presumption of
state protection?
IV.
Standard of Review
[11]
In Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9
at paras 57, 62 [Dunsmuir], the Supreme Court of Canada held that a
standard of review analysis is unnecessary where “the
jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory manner the degree of
deference to be accorded with regard to a particular category of question.”
It is well established that reasonableness is the applicable standard of review
to findings relating to state protection, as these are questions of mixed fact
and law which, given the RPD’s expertise on this subject matter, attracts
deference: Bari v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014
FC 862 at para 19. In Dunsmuir at para 47, the Supreme Court of Canada
explained what is required of a court reviewing on the reasonableness standard
of review:
A court conducting a review for
reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable,
referring both to the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In
judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with the existence of
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making
process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.
V.
Submissions of the Parties and Analysis
[12]
The Applicants note that the RPD relied on only
one document, a 2011 Immigration and Refugee Board Response to Information
Request, to support its conclusion that state protection would be available
in Colombia for them. The Applicants submit that there was copious documentary
before the RPD that established that state protection is inadequate in
Colombia, pointing to the 2009 Country Conditions in Colombia Relating to
Asylum Claims in Canada by Dr. Marc Chernick who has been recognized as an
expert by the RPD in the past, a 2010 Special Report entitled “Continued Insecurity: Documenting the Permanence of the
FARC-EP within the Context of Colombia’s Civil War” by James J.
Brittain, the 2010 Report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights on the situation of human rights in Colombia, and the 2011 report by
the Canadian Council for Refugees.
[13]
The Applicants submit that the RPD erred for
four reasons: 1) it ignored key evidence, cited above, which contradicted its
conclusions; 2) it relied on the fact that the Applicants did not seek out
state protection in Colombia; 3) it failed to provide any reasoning as to why
she preferred the one document over the others; and 4) the one document it
relied upon was read selectively.
[14]
I acknowledge the presumption that tribunals are
presumed to have considered the entire record before them (Herrera Andrade v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 1490 at para
11). While I also recognize the RPD is not obliged to refer to every piece of
evidence before it (Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62 at para 16), the RPD’s reasons
in this particular case are seriously lacking.
[15]
Because state protection was the only issue in
the present case, and since the main ground for rejecting the Applicants’
claims was the RPD’s finding that state protection would be forthcoming if they
had approached authorities, the RPD should have provided at least some
reasoning regarding the evidence that directly contradicted this conclusion. I
note that the contradictory evidence submitted by the Applicants, which the
Applicants both referred in part at the hearing and specifically asked the RPD
to consider, not only corroborated the Applicants’ testimony that they were at
risk, but also corroborated their decision not to seek out state protection out
of fear of corruption by the authorities. I agree with the Applicants that this
is a case where “a blanket statement that the agency
has considered all the evidence will not suffice when the evidence omitted from
any discussion in the reasons appears squarely to contradict the agency’s
finding of fact” (Cepeda-Gutierrez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) (1998), 157 FTR 35 at para 17 (FC)) and where, “when there is relevant contradictory evidence that is
unacknowledged by the decision-maker, a reviewing Court may conclude that the
Board ignored or misapprehended key facts and came to an erroneous decision”
(Goman v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 643
at para 13. See also Urrea Bohorquez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2011 FC 808 at para 13). On this basis and in accordance with
jurisprudence, I find that this aspect of the RPD’s decision falls outside the
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.
[16]
Given the finding of credibility and the
corroborating evidence to the effect that a request for state protection would
be futile, I also agree with the Applicant that there was no need to seek state
protection just to prove that point. The law in this regard is comprehensively
stated by the Supreme Court of Canada in the seminal decision in Canada (AG) v Ward, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 689 at 724, where La Forest J. stated for a
unanimous Court:
Moreover, it would seem to defeat the
purpose of international protection if a claimant would be required to risk his
or her life seeking ineffective protection of a state, merely to demonstrate
that ineffectiveness.
The RPD’s finding in this respect falls
outside the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in
respect of the facts and law.
[17]
Further, as noted above, the RPD assessed state
protection in terms of safety on most main roads in the country, the level of
police presence in most communities, and general urban security: “[t]he military has re-established security along most main
roads in the country and increased the presence of police in most municipalities”
and “[t]he Canadian embassy’s political
councillor notes that urban security has improved dramatically in the last
eight years.” True as these findings may be, they are almost entirely
irrelevant to the issue before the RPD which is the operational adequacy of
state protection for a person specifically targeted by ELN and FARC. This
aspect of the RPD’s decision falls outside the range of possible, acceptable
outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.
[18]
I wish to address one additional matter. The
parties agree and the law is clear that a proper state protection analysis must
be individualized. In a situation such as that faced by these Applicants, this
Court has on many occasions held that the RPD must conduct an analysis of state
protection particularized for persons specifically targeted by groups such as
the ELN and FARC. I discussed this in Oscar Mauricio Paez Neira v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), IMM-6014-13 (October 21, 2014) [Neira].
The following comments from Neira apply equally to the case at bar:
Instead of conducting an individualized
analysis of state protection in the applicant’s case – a case of an individual
who has been specifically targeted by FARC - by clearly articulating what it is
the applicant needs to be protected from and what avenues of protection are
available to him, the RPD looked at state protection efforts generally and
equated those efforts to adequate state protection at the operational level.
Furthermore, the applicant points to four
very recent decisions of this Court directly applicable to the case at bar.
While not binding on me, I am obliged to give them most serious consideration
under the doctrine of stare decisis. These cases are substantially if
not completely on all fours with the case at bar. All deal with persons from Columbia specifically targeted by FARC, whose claims for refugee protection were rejected
by the RPD, and who succeeded on judicial review because the RPD failed to
conduct an analysis of state protection particularized for persons specifically
targeted by FARC:
1) In Vargas Bustos v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 114 [Vargas Bustos], the RPD
had also relied on country conditions documents before it concluded that there
was decreasing corruption in Colombia’s security forces and it had been
combating the FARC. At paragraph 40, Justice O’Keefe
held:
Although the Board understood the
test, [it] erred by failing to address the main question: is state protection
available for people who have been specifically targeted by FARC? Rather, the
Board’s review of the country conditions document was focused on corruption
within the security forces and military victories against FARC and other
guerillas. The applicants are not fleeing from front-line combat; they are
fleeing from crime. FARC’s reduced military capacity does not mean that the
state can protect people who have been specifically targeted by FARC for
harassment or extortion. The Board member was required to consider that issue
and the reasons do not show that he did. I find that the decision is therefore
unreasonable (see Martinez Gonzalez at paragraph 16; and Avila
Rodriguez at paragraph 46). [Emphasis added]
2) In Martinez Gonzalez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 898 at para 16, Justice Zinn
held:
In the decision under review, the
Board examined state protection generally, but failed to do so with an eye to
the specific circumstances facing these applicants, namely that they were
specifically targeted by the FARC. In doing so, the Board committed a
reviewable error […]. For this reason, the decision must be set aside.
[Emphasis added]
3) In Gutierrez Infante v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 846, the RPD had also
refused a refugee claim on the basis that the claimant had failed to make
sufficient efforts to obtain state protection in Colombia before seeking asylum
in Canada. The RPD had also focused on Colombia’s efforts against the FARC on a
national level and completed a general overview of efforts made by the
Colombian government to address corruption and crime. At paragraphs 17-18,
Justice O’Reilly held:
[17] Finally, the Board reviewed
the documentary evidence and reasonably found that the situation in Colombia is improving. However, it did not go on to consider whether those improvements
would help someone in Ms Gutierrez Infante’s circumstances. The fact that
FARC’s capabilities have generally been reduced does not necessarily mean that
Ms Gutierrez Infante, a person specifically targeted by FARC members,
was not at risk of serious harm.
[18] Again, the question to be
answered is whether she would likely face a reasonable chance of persecution if
she returned to Colombia. The Board did not address that question. Given the
evidence, its conclusion on the issue of state protection was unreasonable.
[Emphasis added]
4) In Navarrete Andrade v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 436 at para 24, Justice Rennie held:
[24] As the
applicants did not seek state protection in Columbia, the question is whether
state protection might reasonably be forthcoming, having regard to the applicant’s
particular circumstances. [Emphasis added]
[19]
The RPD decision was made November 21, 2013. The
decisions of this Court referred to above were made after or contemporaneously
with the decision by the RPD, which likely explains why these cases were
neither put to nor followed by the RPD. Regardless, in my view, they state the
law in this regard. Whether the law in this regard was stated before or after
the RPD decision, the Applicants are still in the system and are entitled to
have the benefit of these cases at the re-determination being ordered. The RPD
must conduct its analysis of state protection particularized for persons
specifically targeted by ELN and or FARC. Because that did not occur, the RPD
decision again falls outside the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which
are defensible in respect of the facts and law.
[20]
Neither party requested the certification of a
question, and none arises.
VI.
Conclusions
[21]
The application for judicial review should be
allowed, and no question is certified.