Docket: IMM-998-14
Citation:
2015 FC 650
Ottawa, Ontario, May 20, 2015
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
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BETWEEN:
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YANG, XUE KE
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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
[1]
The Applicant, Xue Ke Yang, has applied for judicial
review of a decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and
Refugee Board [the Board] dated January 27, 2014, wherein the Board determined
that the applicant is neither a Convention refugee nor a person in need of
protection [the Decision]. This application is made pursuant to subsection
72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the
IRPA].
I.
Background
[2]
The Applicant is a Chinese citizen who lived in
Guangzhou City in Guangdong Province.
[3]
After the Applicant’s wife gave birth to their
first child, she was fitted with an IUD. However, she became pregnant and was
required to submit to an abortion in the spring of 2010.
[4]
In early September of that year, the Applicant
joined a Roman Catholic house church because he approved of its anti-abortion
stance. The Applicant testified that he was told that the church took precautions
and had not had problems with the Public Security Bureau [the PSB] for many
years.
[5]
The Applicant testified that on December 25,
2010, the PSB raided his church. Everyone escaped and the Applicant went into
hiding.
[6]
Two days later, his home was searched by the PSB
and his wife was questioned and was required to sign a search warrant. The
next day the PSB returned with a summons for the Applicant’s arrest. The PSB
also looked for him at his in-laws’ home.
[7]
On March 3, 2011, the Applicant travelled to
the U.S. with the help of a smuggler. He arrived in Canada on March 25, 2011.
II.
The Decision
[8]
The Board concluded, inter alia, that the
Applicant was not credible when he said that his wife had been asked to sign a
search warrant because that fact was omitted from his Personal Information Form
[PIF]. The Board also found that the PSB summons was a fraudulent document and,
for these reasons, it concluded that the Applicant’s house church had not been
raided and that he was not a fugitive from the PSB.
[9]
However, the Board did accept that the Applicant
worshipped at a Catholic house church in China, and that he continued to
practice his faith in Canada.
[10]
The Board therefore considered whether there was
a serious possibility that the Applicant would be persecuted if he returned to
China and continued to worship in an unregistered Catholic house church.
[11]
Since there was no documentary evidence before
the Board showing any raids on house churches in Guangdong Province, and since there
was no evidence of any worshippers having been arrested or fined, the Board
concluded that, on his return to China, the Applicant would be free to worship
in any church of his choosing because the risk of persecution of worshippers in
house churches in Guangdong Province was low.
III.
The Issues
[12]
Against this background there are two issues:
i.
Is the Decision unreasonable because the Board
failed to address the Applicant’s risk of persecution under the one child
policy?
ii.
Is the Decision unreasonable because the Board
failed to address the submissions made by counsel for the Applicant about the
nature of religious persecution?
IV.
Issue I
[13]
In my view, there is no error arising from the
Board’s failure to address whether the Applicant faced persecution by reason of
China’s one child policy because the Applicant did not raise that policy as a
reason for his fear of returning to China. He presented his refugee claim based
only on religious grounds, and this was confirmed in his Counsel’s closing
submissions. The only relevance of China’s one child policy was that the
abortion his wife experienced served as the catalyst for the Applicant’s decision
to join a Roman Catholic house church.
V.
Issue II
[14]
The Applicant says that the Decision is
unreasonable because the Board failed to consider the following submissions
made by his Counsel at the hearing:
- Notwithstanding
the absence of evidence of raids or arrests, was the fact that the Applicant
would have to worship at an underground Catholic house church persecutory
because his human right to practice his religion openly and freely would
be denied? [The First Submission]
- Was the fact that the Applicant would have to worship at an
underground Catholic house church, which was illegal and seen as a
political threat, persecutory because it meant that he was vulnerable to detention
and arrest at any time? [The Second Submission]
VI.
The Decisions on which the Applicant Relies
[15]
The Applicant relies on two decisions issued by
Mr. Justice de Montigny in 2009. The first is Zhang v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 1198 [Zhang]. In that case,
the Applicant practiced Christianity in an underground house church in Anhui
Province in China. However, because documents showed that only six people had
been arrested in that province, the Board concluded that the church would not
be raided, and that the Applicant would not be subject to arrest and
imprisonment.
[16]
Mr. Justice de Montigny dealt with this
conclusion in paragraph 19 and in part of paragraph 20 of his Decision. There,
he said:
[19] The RPD Member’s focus on the number of
arrests of Christians as an indicator of the likelihood of persecution is
misplaced and erroneous. The number of arrests of underground Christians in
China may speak to the ability of church members to stay underground and
conceal their activities from the authorities. But the extent to which
underground Christians are able to hide their activities and avoid detection is
irrelevant for the purpose of determining whether or not they are subject to
persecution for their religion, and unable to freely practice their religion
openly and in accordance with their fundamental belief system. The Court has
made it clear that religious persecution can take any number of forms:
The fact is that the right to freedom
of religion also includes the freedom to demonstrate one’s religion or belief
in public or in private by teaching, practice, worship and the performance of
rites. As a corollary to this statement, it seems that persecution of the
practice of religion can take various forms, such as a prohibition on
worshipping in public or private, giving or receiving religious instruction or,
the implementation of serious discriminatory policies against persons on
account of the practice of their religion.
Fosu v.
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1994] F.C.J. No. 1813;
90 F.T.R. 182, (F.C.T.D.) at para. 5.
[20] The case law makes it quite clear that
any meaningful restriction on the applicant’s ability to practice her religion
as she wished in her house church, including a brief period of detention or a
fine, would most certainly constitute religious persecution. The fact that it
is illegal to belong to an unregistered or non state sponsored church in China
would therefore tend to support a finding of religious persecution.
[17]
However, the quotation in Zhang from paragraph
5 of the decision in Fosu v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1994]
F.C.J. 1813; 90 F.T.R. 182, (F.C.T.D.), [Fosu], did not include the last
sentence of the paragraph. It showed that the Court in Fosu was
speaking of an applicant who was a Jehovah’s Witness.
[18]
In Fosu, the Applicant was from Ghana. Its
government passed legislation suspending the public activities of Jehovah’s
Witnesses and prohibiting all their services and meetings. After he met with a
friend for bible study, the Applicant’s home was searched and religious
pamphlets were found. He was arrested and charged with disobeying a government
order, and committing acts of sabotage prejudicial to the national security of
Ghana. In my view, it is noteworthy that the enforcement of the law and the
arrest and subsequent charges played a significant role in Mr. Justice
Denault’s finding that the applicant was a victim of religious persecution and
faced future risk.
[19]
Shortly after his Decision in Zhang, Mr.
Justice de Montigny issued his decision in Zhou v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2009 FC 1210, [Zhou]. It concerned an applicant
who had worshipped at an unregistered Christian house church in China. Yet the
Board found that he would not risk persecution at a registered church. Mr. Justice
de Montigny held that this conclusion was flawed either because the Board
misunderstood the differences between house and registered churches or because the
Board believed the differences were inconsequential.
[20]
However, another aspect of the Board’s decision
was also criticized. In that regard, Mr. Justice de Montigny referred
again to Fosu and this time, included the reference to Jehovah’s
Witnesses at the end of paragraph 5. He said at paragraph 29 of Zhou:
[29] It seems to me the RPD also erred in
equating the possibility of religious persecution with the risk of being
raided, arrested or jailed. This understanding of religious freedom is quite
limitated and does not take into account the public dimension of this
fundamental right. If one has to hide and take precautions not to be seen when
practising his or her religion, at the risk of being harassed, arrested and
convicted, I do not see how he or she can be said to be free from persecution.
As this Court said in Fosu v. Canada (Minister of Employment
and Immigration) (1994), 90 F.T.R. 182, [1994] F.C.J. No. 1813:
5. The fact is that the right to
freedom of religion also includes the freedom to demonstrate one’s religion or
belief in public or in private by teaching, practice, worship and the
performance of rites. As a corollary to this statement, it seems that
persecution of the practice of religion can take various forms, such as a
prohibition on worshipping in public or private, giving or receiving religious
instruction or, the implementation of serious discriminatory policies against
persons on account of the practice of their religion. In the case at bar I feel
that the prohibition made against Jehovah’s Witnesses meeting to practise their
religion could amount to persecution. That is precisely what the Refugee
Division had to analyze.
[21]
I am not persuaded that the decisions relied on
by the Applicant are helpful. I have so concluded because in both decisions
Mr. Justice de Montigny appears to have been primarily concerned with
restrictions on the public dimension of worship. He illustrated his concern in
both decisions with reference to Fosu which was a case about Jehovah’s
Witnesses for whom proselytizing is an essential aspect of their religious
practice.
[22]
However, the Applicant in the present case did
not testify that his religious practice was constrained by the fact that he
worshipped with others in private. In other words, there was no evidence of an
essential public dimension to his religion. For example, he did not testify
that pilgrimages were integral to his practice of his religion even though he
participated in one in Canada.
[23]
Mr. Justice de Montigny also appeared concerned
that a small number of arrests might be misinterpreted by the Board to suggest
tolerance on the part of the authorities when, in fact, it simply meant that
the worshippers had successfully hidden their services. This is a reasonable
concern which the Board might consider depending on the facts of a particular case.
However, in the present case, there was no evidence that any raids or arrests had
occurred in Guangdong Province.
[24]
Finally, I am unable to agree with Justice de
Montigny’s suggestion that the simple fact that house churches are illegal is
persecutory. In my view, the facts, including those dealing with enforcement
and government policy, must be ascertained to determine whether the illegality
of house churches actually creates a serious possibility of persecution.
VII.
The Evidence
[25]
The Applicant testified that a house church
service included a silent prayer, a reading from the Bible, an explanation of
the reading, a discussion of members’ testimony and a recitation of the rosary.
The worshippers could not sing and communion had to await a visit from a
priest. However, the Applicant did not testify that these matters impeded his
worship.
[26]
In his PIF, the Applicant described being
impressed by “a holy atmosphere around the house church”
and reported that on his second visit, he was given a Bible as a welcome
gift.
[27]
There was no suggestion in the evidence that
attending a house church meant that the Applicant was prevented from
worshipping according to the dictates and tenets of his religion. As well, the
evidence was clear that, at least in the Applicant’s case, the illegal nature
of the house church and the precautions taken against PSB raids did not detract
from the church’s holy atmosphere.
VIII.
Discussion
A.
The First Submission
[28]
Public worship in an unregistered church in
China is not an option. This means that if the Applicant had wanted to worship
in public, he would have been denied that freedom. However, there was no
evidence that the Applicant sought or required a public venue. In these
circumstances, the Board was not required to address the First Submission.
B.
The Second Submission
[29]
The law is clear that the assessment of whether
there is a serious possibility of future persecution can be informed by
evidence of past conduct on the part of potential agents of persecution. In my
view, the fact that house churches are tolerated and raids have not occurred in
Guangdong Province is evidence which suggests that, while house church
worshippers are theoretically vulnerable to arrest and detention, the risk is
low.
[30]
In my view, the Board dealt with and rejected
the Second Submission when it concluded that the Applicant was not at risk.
IX.
Conclusion
[31]
For all these reasons, the application will be
dismissed.
X.
Certified Question
[32]
The Applicant posed the following question for
appeal pursuant to section 74(d) of the IRPA:
Can a person be said to be free from
persecution if they cannot practice their faith openly, freely and according to
their religious convictions?
[33]
In my view, this question cannot be dispositive
because there is no evidence that the Applicant is unable to practice his faith
according to his religious convictions. Accordingly, this question will not be
certified.