Docket: IMM-3827-14
Citation:
2015 FC 629
Toronto, Ontario, May 13, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Mosley
BETWEEN:
|
BEKELECH DENBEL
(A.K.A. BEKELECH SHIFER DENBEL,
BEKELECH SHIFERAW DENBEL)
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
In this application for judicial review brought
under subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC
2001, c 27 [IRPA], Denbel Bekelech challenges a decision rendered by the
Refugee Appeal Division [RAD], which dismissed her appeal from a decision of
the Refugee Protection Division [RPD] rejecting her claim for refugee
protection. For the reasons that follow, this application is dismissed.
I.
Background
[2]
The applicant is a citizen of Ethiopia. Her ethnicity is part Oromo and part Gurage. The ethnicity of her husband is
Oromo. According to the applicant, the Ethiopian authorities perceive her
husband as a member of the Oromo Liberation Front [OLF], a group that is
currently engaged in armed struggle against the government. She alleges that
the authorities arrested, imprisoned and tortured her husband in January 2012.
After she posted bail and secured his release in June 2012, he disappeared to
hide from the authorities.
[3]
The applicant alleges that she was arrested on
July 11, 2012 and held for one month because the authorities wanted to draw her
husband out of hiding. She alleges that she was arrested a second time on
January 3, 2013 and detained until January 5, 2013.
[4]
The applicant also alleges that she supports an
opposition party named Unity for Democracy and Justice [UDJ], having voted for
it and distributed pamphlets on its behalf. She attributes her persecution to
her support for this party and her husband’s affiliation with the OLF.
[5]
On May 28, 2013, the applicant entered Canada, where she has family, on a visa. Thereafter, she applied for refugee protection due
to her political opinion.
[6]
The RPD rejected the applicant’s refugee claim in
a decision dated September 6, 2013. The applicant filed a notice of appeal at
the RAD on December 20, 2013. She submitted an appeal record on January 6,
2014. On January 31, 2014, she brought a motion to admit new evidence to the
RAD record. The RAD dismissed the applicant’s appeal by decision dated April
10, 2014.
[7]
While the decision under review, properly
speaking, is the RAD decision, it makes sense to begin with an overview of the
RPD decision. The RPD panel declared that the determinative issue was
credibility. It drew several negative inferences against Mrs Bekelech’s
credibility.
[8]
First, the applicant was inconsistent about the
circumstances surrounding her arrest. In her basis of claim form [BOC], she
stated that she had been arrested twice. After her first arrest, she had been
told to report to the police station regularly, and she was arrested a second
time in January 2013 while reporting. At the hearing, the applicant testified
that the police had come to her home at night to arrest her the second time.
She could not explain this contradiction to the panel’s satisfaction. The panel
considered this contradiction highly material because her second arrest was the
event which allegedly motivated her to seek refuge in another country.
[9]
Second, the applicant was inconsistent about the
reasons the police arrested her. In her BOC, she stated that the police
arrested her in January 2013 because they believed that she had been
distributing political flyers for the UDJ party. At the hearing, the applicant
said that she had not distributed flyers and she did not know why the police
suspected her. She could not explain why she had written that she had been
arrested for distributing flyers in her BOC.
[10]
Third, the applicant did not offer credible
testimony on being followed by government officials. In her BOC, she alleged
that she had been followed for about two months. When asked to provide examples
at the hearing, she offered very general and vague testimony. She could not describe
a single specific example or incident.
[11]
Finally, the panel noted that there were
inconsistencies between the applicant’s knowledge of her husband’s activities
as expressed in her BOC and her oral testimony. In the BOC, she provided a
detailed account of her husband’s activities, replete with dates and background
information on the OLF. However, her oral testimony was vague and ambiguous.
[12]
The RPD concluded that the applicant’s
allegations lacked credibility. It determined that there was no serious
possibility that the applicant would be persecuted. It further determined, on
the balance of probabilities, that she would not face torture or a risk to life
or a risk of cruel and unusual punishment in Ethiopia.
[13]
In her appeal to the RAD, the applicant provided
the following pieces of new evidence:
1.
An affidavit she swore;
2.
An audiologist’s report;
3.
A letter from a friend dated August 1, 2013; and
4.
An article printed from the Internet about
hearing loss.
[14]
The RAD member considers the admissibility of
this new evidence. He explains that he will use the test developed in the
context of Pre-Removal Risk Assessment applications [PRRAs] in Raza v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FCA 385 [Raza]. Evidence is
admissible if it meets four criteria: credibility, newness, relevance and
materiality.
[15]
The applicant’s affidavit proffers evidence that
was not before the RPD. In particular, it states (1) that her hearing became
impaired when she was struck on her left ear during her second term of
imprisonment and (2) that her son called her a few weeks after the RPD hearing
to tell her that the authorities were searching for him. The RAD does not
accept the affidavit, since the applicant would have been aware of any hearing
impairment at the time of the hearing and could have given that evidence to the
RPD. There was no indication in the RPD record that the applicant raised the
issue or required accommodation for her hearing loss. The second piece of
information fails the Raza test because it lacks probative value. It
indicates that the authorities are looking for the applicant’s son, not the
applicant.
[16]
The RAD employs the Raza test to exclude
the three other pieces of evidence as well. The letter from the friend was
written after the RPD decision but it did not meet the relevance test as it was
vague and lacked probative value. The Internet article contained no date and
was of a general nature about improving communication when there was hearing
loss.
[17]
The RAD then turns to the evidence which the
applicant tendered by way of motion brought under Rule 29 of the Refugee
Appeal Division Rules, SOR/2012-257 [the Rules]: a letter from her son,
Wondemu Yohannes, and Canada Post tracking results for that letter. It is dated
December 15, 2013. The applicant received it on January 14, 2014. The author
inquires into the applicant’s health; states that her husband is alive and
probably joined the OLF; and affirms that he plans to travel to South Africa himself to claim refugee protection. The writer does not allege that anyone is
looking for the applicant.
[18]
According to the RAD, the letter does not
provide any new evidence which would justify altering the RPD decision. Nor has
the applicant provided an explanation as to why she was unable to obtain or
tender this document at an earlier point in time. The letter is inadmissible
under Rule 29 and so a full Raza analysis is not necessary.
[19]
The RAD member then conducts a lengthy standard
of review analysis. He concludes that the standard of reasonableness governs
the appeal.
[20]
The applicant alleged that the RPD erred in
failing to consider documentary evidence in support of her claim, including a
letter from Ali Keder, an affidavit from Konjit Mitiku and objective country
conditions evidence. The RPD also took no consideration of a receipt from the
UJD party corroborating a donation she had made to it.
[21]
The RAD recalls that the RPD is not required to
refer to each and every piece of evidence before it. A reviewable error occurs
only where the RPD omits to mention important evidence that is directly
relevant to a central issue.
[22]
The RAD reviews the evidence mentioned by the
applicant. The RAD is satisfied that no error occurred with respect to the
letter from Ali Keder, as it refers to the arrest in 2012. By contrast, the
RPD’s credibility findings related only to the arrest in 2013. The letter did
not speak to an issue central to the decision.
[23]
The RAD accepts that some important pieces of
evidence were not mentioned in the RPD decision, specifically the affidavit
where Konjit Mitiku swears to have visited the applicant while she was in
prison, the receipt of the donation to the UDJ and the country conditions
evidence. The RAD determines that it was unreasonable for the RPD to conduct
its analysis without mentioning this evidence in its reasons.
[24]
The RAD disagrees with the applicant that the
RPD erred by failing to conduct an objective risk assessment under section 97.
The language used by the RPD shows that it did conduct a section 97 assessment
in the RAD’s view. The applicant’s lack of credibility was equally fatal to her
claim under section 96 and section 97. It is trite law that a negative
credibility finding in relation to section 96 may obviate the need to consider
section 97. Given the RPD’s concerns with the applicant’s credibility, the
cursory nature of its section 97 analysis was reasonable.
[25]
The RAD turns to the issue of credibility. In
light of the numerous concerns identified by the RPD and the deference which
credibility findings deserve, the RAD concludes that these findings pass muster
on the standard of reasonableness. Consequently, the RAD confirms the RPD’s
decision.
II.
Issues
[26]
This application raises three issues:
1.
Did the RAD err in its standard of review
analysis?
2.
Did the RAD err in its analysis of the new
evidence?
3.
Did the RAD err in its analysis of credibility?
III.
Standard of Review
[27]
The standard of review which the Court ought to
apply to the RAD’s selection of a standard of review is the subject of
differing jurisprudence in this Court. In Huruglica v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2014 FC 799 at paras 25-34, Justice Phelan selected the
standard of correctness, characterizing the RAD’s choice of a standard of
review as a question of law of general interest to the legal system. Other
members of the Court have taken a different view and preferred the standard of
reasonableness, characterizing the issue as a legal question within the
expertise of the decision-maker: see e.g. Akuffo v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 1063 and Djossou v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2014 FC 1080.
[28]
I do not deem it necessary to express an opinion
on this matter in this case. As an appeal has been brought against Huruglica,
the Court of Appeal will soon have an opportunity to answer this question. In
any event, nothing turns on the Court-to-RAD standard of review here, since the
RAD’s selection of a deferential standard of review was both correct and
reasonable, as I explain below.
[29]
The standard of review for the second issue is
reasonableness, as it involves the RAD’s application of its home statute and
regulations to the facts before it: Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9
at paras 53-54.
[30]
The RAD did not make independent credibility
findings. Rather, it confirmed the credibility findings made by the RPD. Since
this required the RAD to evaluate the facts before it in light of its enabling
statute, the Court-to-RAD standard of review is reasonableness again.
IV.
Analysis
A.
Did the RAD err in its standard of review
analysis?
[31]
The RAD committed no error in deferring to the
RPD’s findings on questions of fact and credibility despite the live debate in
this Court on the appropriate standard of review,
[32]
The Court has sent back decisions where the RAD
showed deference on different issues. For instance, in Huruglica, the
RAD deferred to the RPD’s state protection analysis. In Alyafi v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 952, the RAD deferred to the RPD’s
findings on plausibility but also generalized risk – the latter was a question
of mixed fact and law.
[33]
In these cases, the Court has either interpreted
the RAD scheme as a hybrid procedure that is somewhat similar to a de novo
appeal or as a true appeal analogous to those performed by appellate courts.
Yet both strands in the jurisprudence accept the principle that findings of
credibility must be shown deference, since the RAD does not typically hold oral
hearings and is therefore at a disadvantage in comparison to the RPD.
[34]
In Huruglica, Justice Phelan expressed
the view that the RAD scheme functions as an appeal de novo. Yet he
recognized the need for deference when credibility is at issue (para 37).
Furthermore, he stated that the standard of review for credibility is not “palpable and overriding error” (paras 54-55). On my
interpretation, he implicitly endorsed the standard of reasonableness, as that
is the most common deferential standard in our law.
[35]
In Spasoja v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2014 FC 913 at para 39, Justice Roy took the view that the
RAD functions like an appellate court, relying on the analytical framework in Barreau
(Québec) c Québec (Tribunal des professions), 2011 QCCA 1498. When
credibility findings are at issue, he asserted that the RAD ought to apply the
standard of review of “palpable and overriding error”.
[36]
This debate is largely academic because neither
side would agree with the applicant that the standard of correctness applies.
If the RAD erred by naming the deferential standard it chose “reasonableness” instead of “palpable
and overriding error”, nothing turns on it.
[37]
Shortly before the hearing, the applicant
brought to my attention a recent case decided by my brother Justice Simon Noël:
Khachatourian v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 182. In
comments made in obiter at paras 30-34, Justice Noël questioned the
wisdom of allowing the RAD to defer to the RPD’s findings, even on questions of
credibility. I agree with Justice Noël that an appellate tribunal does not play
a judicial review function and deplore any language used by the RAD which points
in that direction. However, and with the greatest respect, I do not agree that
the RAD should routinely conduct a fresh assessment of credibility on appeals
brought before it.
[38]
It is difficult to understand how an
administrative tribunal could apply the standard of correctness to findings of
credibility on a paper-based appeal. The RPD has a situational advantage when
compared to the RAD, as it can observe the claimant in person while the RAD
does not do so except in unusual circumstances. If the RAD owed no deference to
the RPD’s findings on the issue which the RPD is best placed to decide, the
statutory scheme would involve unnecessary duplication. The RPD would have no raison d’être. This recommends RAD-to-RPD deference on issues of credibility.
[39]
I am satisfied, in any event, that the RAD made
its own assessment of the applicant’s credibility relying on the very thorough
discussion by the RPD of the inconsistencies which it had found between her BOC
and testimony.
B.
Did the RAD err in its analysis of the new
evidence?
[40]
The RAD was entitled to import the Raza
factors established for PRRAs when applying the new evidence rule in subsection
110(4). In Iyamuremye v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC
494 at para 45, Justice Shore held that:
Considering the dearth of case law
interpreting subsection 110(4) and given the essential similarity between the
provisions in question, the Court does not find it unreasonable for the RAD to
have referred to the factors set out in Raza, above, to analyse the
admissibility of fresh evidence. This case law established a legal meaning to
the general application of the words “new evidence,” which, in the Court’s
view, is consistent with Parliament’s clear intention with regard to subsection
110(4) to require that the RAD review the RPD’s decision as is, unless new,
credible and relevant evidence arose after the rejection, that might have
affected the outcome of the RPD hearing if that evidence had been presented to
it.
[Emphasis in original]
[41]
Moreover, the RAD relied on the express language of Rule 29(4) to
exclude new evidence tendered after the appeal record was filed. That Rule
explicitly lists some of the Raza factors.
[42]
In Khachatourian, above, at para 37, Justice Simon Noël expressed
reservations about the propriety of transposing Raza to the RAD context,
referring to the analysis of Justice Gagné in Singh v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2014 FC 1022 at paras 44-58. Once again, I respectfully
disagree. As Justice Shore observed in Iyamuremye, subsections 110(4)
and 113(a) contain virtually identical language. In light of the overall
structure of these provisions, I accord no significance to the slight
discrepancy in the French text (“qu’elle
n’aurait pas normalement présentés” versus “qu’il n’était pas raisonnable, dans les
circonstances, de s’attendre à ce qu’il les ait présentés”).
[43]
When interpreting legislative intent, the Court
must give priority to the written text in the absence of any lexical ambiguity.
The Court’s opinions on best policy cannot supplant the text of the law; nor
can select passages from the Hansard. In my view, Parliament intended these two
provisions to enshrine the same legal test. If Parliament had intended to
establish more flexible admissibility rules in RAD appeals, it would not have
replicated the restrictive language which governs PRRAs.
[44]
I am satisfied that the RAD reasonably excluded
the contested evidence for the reasons it provided. The applicant focused on
the RAD’s exclusion of her son’s letter under Rule 29(4). In my view, the RAD
reasonably excluded the letter due to its low relevance and probative value. It
also expressed reasonable concerns that the letter could have been available
earlier.
C.
Did the RAD err in its analysis of credibility?
[45]
The RPD based its numerous negative credibility
findings on significant inconsistencies and contradictions between the
applicant’s BOC narrative and her oral testimony. The applicant did not dispute
these findings during her appeal at the RAD, nor has she done so on this
judicial review application. Rather, she insists that the RPD erred by failing
to consider documentary evidence which corroborates her allegations and establishes
the risk she faces in Ethiopia.
[46]
The RAD lent some support to the applicant’s
argument, declaring that the RPD behaved unreasonably by failing to mention
that evidence. Yet the RAD ultimately upheld the RPD’s conclusions because its
credibility findings were reasonable in light of the record. The RAD committed
no reviewable error in this regard.
[47]
In Kanto v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 1049, Justice de Montigny found that the RPD had
erred in its state protection analysis but had still reasonably concluded that
the applicants lacked credibility. He dismissed the judicial review application
for the following reasons, expressed at para 45:
Although the
Applicants have demonstrated an error in the assessment of state protection, it
is of no consequence because they have failed to establish that they are in
need of that protection. The Board member has not found their story
credible and, as a result, their fear of persecution is not subjectively
grounded. As a result, this application for judicial review ought to be
dismissed.
[48]
The same can be said in this case. The RAD
implicitly and reasonably determined that the RPD’s error was immaterial due to
the applicant’s lack of credibility. It was reasonable for the RAD to conclude
that the unmentioned evidence could not remedy the significant contradictions
and inconsistencies in the applicant’s testimony. Although counsel for the
applicant forcefully argued at the hearing that the RAD should have given some
weight to the affidavit of Konjit Mikitu, who allegedly visited the applicant while
she was in prison, the failure do so does not establish a reviewable error in
my view. On reasonableness review, it does not matter that the Court might have
given a different weight to a particular piece of evidence, since the Court is not
“developing, asserting and enforcing its own view of
the matter”: Delios v Canada (Attorney General), 2015 FCA 117 at
para 28.
[49]
Counsel for the applicant also reproached the
RAD for summarily endorsing the RPD’s credibility findings, instead of
explaining in depth why they were reasonable. In my view, he seeks to impose a pro
forma and unnecessary requirement on the RAD to restate in different words
what the RPD had so convincingly explained in its decision. The RPD’s statement
of the inconsistencies spoke for itself.
[50]
Similarly, the RAD’s endorsement of the RPD’s
section 97 analysis was reasonable. In its reasons, the RAD correctly cited Ache
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 659 at para 15, for the
proposition that a negative credibility finding may obviate the need to
consider section 97. I also draw attention to the Court of Appeal’s
instructions in Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Sellan,
2008 FCA 381 at para 3:
…where the
Board makes a general finding that the claimant lacks credibility, that
determination is sufficient to dispose of the claim unless there is independent
and credible documentary evidence in the record capable of supporting a
positive disposition of the claim. The claimant bears the onus of demonstrating
there was such evidence.
[51]
In the case at bar, the applicant provided no
independent and credible evidence to show that she faces risk in Ethiopia. The objective documentary evidence describes risks faced by political dissidents
and their families. The RPD questioned the applicant’s credibility and did not
believe that either she or her husband were political dissidents. Consequently,
the applicant does not have a profile that places her at risk. The RAD
committed no error in confirming the RPD’s analysis in this respect.
[52]
This application is dismissed. The parties did
not propose questions for certification and none will be certified.