Docket: IMM-7199-14
Citation:
2015 FC 651
[UNREVISED ENGLISH CERTIFIED
TRANSLATION]
Ottawa,
Ontario, May 20, 2015
Present: The Honourable Mr. Justice Martineau
BETWEEN:
|
FABRICE
MATINGOU-TESTIE
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The applicant challenges the legality of the
decision of a senior immigration officer (officer) dated August 20, 2014,
rejecting his pre-removal risk assessment (PRRA).
[2]
The applicant is a citizen of the Democratic
Republic of Congo. He arrived in Canada in December 2010 and applied for
refugee protection on the ground that his life would be in danger because he witnessed
an incident where the Congolese police arrested, beat and forcibly took a human
rights activist, Armand Tungulu, who later died in detention. The applicant entered
into Canada using a genuine passport bearing the name Fabrice Milambwe Kabwe, but
a search of luggage revealed that he was also in possession of an altered
French passport, which bore the name Charles Reynes. The applicant then presented
a certificate of lost identity documents and a driver’s licence issued to Fabrice
Matingou-Testie, with which he applied for refugee status and filed a PRRA
application.
[3]
On June 30, 2011, the Refugee Protection
Division (RPD) dismissed the applicant’s application for refugee protection because
he did not discharge his burden of proving his identity, as required by section 106
of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 (Act). Therefore,
the RPD did not rule on the credibility of the allegations made by the
applicant under sections 96 and 97 of the Act. The applicant submitted this application
for judicial review, and on April 3, 2012, the Court confirmed its
legality: Matingou-Testie v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC
389. However, we note that the question of the applicant’s identity has since
been resolved in his favour from a practical viewpoint.
[4]
On July 18, 2013, the applicant filed an application
for permanent residence in the spousal category. However, on January 30,
2013, the applicant pleaded guilty to two charges of theft under $5,000 which gives
rise to inadmissibility for criminality under subsection 36(2) of the Act.
On November 20, 2013, a removal order was issued against the applicant. On
February 26, 2014, the applicant filed a PRRA application. On August 20,
2014, the officer dismissed it on the grounds that he would not be at risk if
he was returned to the DRC, hence this application for judicial review.
[5]
In this case, the officer accepted a great deal
of new evidence and noted that she was satisfied with the applicant’s identity.
However, the officer did not give any weight to the applicant’s allegations that
he was in danger because of the Tungulu case. The officer noted that the allegations
of risk were contradictory to some information provided by the applicant in the
past and that the only evidence provided in support of the applicant’s story was
his affidavit and the two letters from his ex-wife. Moreover, the applicant had,
in the past, already used his contacts to defend fabricated stories. In
addition, the officer noted that the objective evidence did not show that the
mere fact of witnessing this incident was sufficient for the applicant to be at
risk and that although the authorities were looking for him in 2010, the
applicant did not show that he would still be a person of interest today.
[6]
Today, the applicant first challenges the fact that
the officer did not hold a hearing, although the regulatory factors were met in
this case, which was disputed by the respondent. Certain decisions of the Court
indicate that the standard of review in such cases is reasonableness, and “on the basis that the appropriateness of holding a hearing
in light of a particular context of a file calls for discretion and commands
deference ” (Adetunji v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2012 FC 708 at para 24; see also Kanto v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 628 at paras 11-12; Bicuku v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 339 at paras 16-20). However, other decisions indicate that it is an
issue of procedural fairness to which the standard of correctness applies (Fawaz
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 1394 at para 56; Ahmad v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 89 at para 18; Negm v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 272 at para 33). Personally, I
agree with this second interpretation. Although paragraph 113(b) of
the Act gives departmental officers the discretion to grant a hearing in light
of the prescribed factors set out in section 167 of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 (Regulations)), the impact
of such a refusal on the life and safety of the person in question raises an
issue of procedural fairness to which the standard of correctness applies, inasmuch
as in this case, it is the first time that there is a final decision dealing
with the merit of the allegations of persecution or risk made by the applicant under
sections 96 and 97 of the Act.
[7]
It is appropriate to intervene in this case. I
am satisfied that the prescribed factors were met and that the officer violated
procedural fairness by deciding on determinative issues of credibility without
holding a hearing or giving the applicant the opportunity to provide explanations
regarding the so-called contradictory versions that he was able to provide
regarding the allegations made under sections 96 and 97 of the Act. Here, the
officer did not even assess the merit of the applicant’s express request to
hold a hearing and did not explain in her decision why she was not holding a
hearing, which is a violation of procedural fairness (Zokai v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2005 FC 1103 (Zokai)), or otherwise makes her
finding unreasonable, because when a PRRA officer personally makes a
credibility finding, he or she must explain the reasons for which a hearing is
not being held (Chekroun v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC
737 at para 72). Therefore, the application for judicial review will be allowed.
[8]
First, I do not agree with the respondent that
the majority of the risk factors raised by the applicant in his PRRA
application do not involve his credibility. Indeed, although some risk factors resulting
from the applicant’s status in Canada refer to the objective evidence, the fact
remains that all the applicant’s allegations of risks that led him to leave the
DRC call his credibility into question. Moreover, it is clear that the officer calls
into question the applicant’s subjective fear and his credibility on the basis
of real or apparent inconsistency. Furthermore, she did not believe the two
letters from the applicant’s ex-wife because the applicant had lied previously
regarding his identity and his reasons for making a refugee claim. In any event,
the officer pointed out that the applicant involved [translation] “in his lies the testimony of two people living in Canada”.
Although she worded some findings in terms of probative value, it is clear that
the officer made findings of credibility.
[9]
Second, the respondent pointed out the fact that
the officer stated in her decision that she would have come to the same result
even if she had found the applicant credible, since he did not objectively show
that being a witness to the incident was sufficient to be arrested or he would
still be a person of interest for the authorities today. Nevertheless, it is
not up to the reviewing court to reassess the evidence on file (Hughes v
Canada (Attorney General), 2014 FCA 43 at para 11). Although it is possible
that the same findings of lack of personalized risk could be made after a
hearing where the applicant’s credibility would truly have been tested at that
time, the violation of procedural fairness is a fatal flaw. Regardless, if I am
mistaken on the latter point, I would come to the same result in examining the
merit of the officer’s reasoning, which seems unreasonable in this case.
[10]
At first glance, given the documentary evidence
and his status as a failed refugee claimant and inadmissible to Canada for
criminality, the applicant had very serious arguments to make before the PRRA
officer regarding the existence of a personalized risk whether one believes his
story or not. In considering the lack of an objective risk of returning to the
DRC, the officer noted that the applicant filed a great deal of evidence showing
that some failed refugee claimants, and particularly those returning from the
United Kingdom, are at risk. But the officer hastened to specify that it is
only because they are considered by the DRC to be “combatants” – since the DRC
considers the diaspora from the United Kingdom to be militants who are against
the government. Therefore, the officer found that the applicant did not show
that a failed refugee claimant, returning from Canada, runs a personalized risk.
[11]
I am not persuaded in this case that the officer’s
higher reasoning provides a logical and rational basis for finding that the risk
is not personalized, insofar as the objective documentary evidence speaks
eloquently regarding numerous violations to human rights perpetrated by the DRC
authorities. Furthermore, there currently exists in Canada a moratorium on deportations
to the DRC except in cases of criminality: the deportation of the applicant draws
the attention of the authorities, who can easily determine that not only he was
returned for criminality, but also that he is a failed refugee claimant. In
addition, the applicant presented the officer with a great deal of evidence, in
particular from the United Kingdom, which describes the numerous risks that failed
refugee claimants face when returning to the DRC, including arrest,
interrogation and mistreatment that may go so far as torture. Contrary to the
findings made by the officer, it does not seem clear, on its face, that this
mistreatment is limited to individuals deported from Great Britain or who are
militants, activists or politicians.
[12]
The application for judicial review will be
allowed and the matter referred back for redetermination by a different officer.
No question was proposed for certification by the respondent and I agree with its
counsel that it is not timely to certify today the question proposed by counsel
for the applicant relating to exercising ministerial authority on whether to
hold a hearing, in the case where the RPD did not rule specifically on the
credibility of the allegations made by a refugee claimant under sections 96 and
97 of the Act.