Docket: IMM-7999-14
Citation:
2015 FC 1133
Ottawa, Ontario, October 05, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
BETWEEN:
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CAIJUAN CHEN
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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]
Ms. Chen seeks to set aside the decision of the
Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Board [RPD]
rejecting her claim for refugee protection. Specifically, she challenges its
finding that “there is no credible or trustworthy evidence
before the Panel that could have supported a positive determination in this
claim.”
[2]
Ms. Chen’s claim for protection was based on her
fear of persecution by the government of China on account of being a
practitioner of Falun Gong. The evidence presented to the RPD was Ms. Chen’s
oral testimony, a letter from the father of an alleged co-practitioner in China
who was arrested, and a summons issued by the Zhongshan City Public Security
Bureau addressed to Ms. Chen. The summons reads:
As you are suspected guilty of Participating
illegal Falun Gong activities, according to Article 82 of the “People’s
Republic of China Public Security Administration Punishment Law” you are now
summoned to report to Criminal Investigation Branchon of Zhongshan City Public
Security Bureau on April 1, 2014 at 15:40 for questioning. [sic as
translated]
[3]
The RPD found that there were numerous
inconsistencies between the oral evidence of Ms. Chen and her written
narrative. Moreover, she had no knowledge regarding many of the basic
principles of Falun Gong. The RPD found that she was not credible. There is
no challenge to the reasonableness of that finding.
[4]
The RPD acknowledged that the claim “is not devoid of corroborative or consistent evidence.”
The letter was “given little weight” because it
was untested as the father was not called as a witness. The RPD found that the
summons “has no obvious flaws.” The RPD wrote:
This document has no obvious flaws. However
the cumulative effect of the negative inferences detailed above [regarding Ms.
Chen’s oral testimony], even in the face of this summons and the consistent
testimony, is that the Claimant is not credible. In coming to this conclusion
the Panel notes that fraudulent official documents are widely available in
China and that the summons contains no security features other than a red
stamp.
[5]
In addition to finding that Ms. Chen was not a credible
witness, the RPD made a finding that there was no credible basis for her claim:
The Panel finds that there is no credible or
trustworthy evidence before the Panel that could have supported a positive
determination in this claim. The Claimant’s central allegations have all been
rejected for lacking credible evidence. … Pursuant to subsection 107(2) of the
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, the Panel finds that this claim
has no credible basis.
[6]
Subsection 107(2) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act reads as follows:
107. (2) If the
Refugee Protection Division is of the opinion, in rejecting a claim, that
there was no credible or trustworthy evidence on which it could have made a
favourable decision, it shall state in its reasons for the decision that
there is no credible basis for the claim.
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107. (2) Si elle
estime, en cas de rejet, qu’il n’a été présenté aucun élément de preuve
crédible ou digne de foi sur lequel elle aurait pu fonder une décision
favorable, la section doit faire état dans sa décision de l’absence de
minimum de fondement de la demande.
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[7]
The consequences of a “no
credible basis” determination are significant. Pursuant to paragraph
100(2)(c) of the Act, Ms. Chen is denied an opportunity to appeal the RPD
decision to the Refugee Appeal Division [RAD]. Moreover, because subsection
231(1) of the Act provides an automatic stay of removal only for applicants seeking
leave to judicially review decisions of the RAD, Ms. Chen would have been
required to seek a stay from the Court had the respondent taken steps to remove
her from Canada before this application was determined.
[8]
Ms. Chen submits that the RPD made an unreasonable
assessment of the genuineness of the summons and an unreasonable decision in
finding there was no credible basis for her claim.
[9]
I am unable to say with any certainty that the
RPD made any finding as to the genuineness of the summons. While the RPD says
that the summons has no obvious flaws, which would suggest that it is accepted,
it also observes that fraudulent official documents are readily available in
China.
[10]
This Court has consistently held that documents
issued by a foreign authority are presumed to be valid: Ramalingam v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] FCJ No 10, at para 5, and
Manka v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 522 at
para 8. Accordingly, in the matter before the RPD one must ask: What evidence
was there to rebut that presumption of validity? The only observations made by
the RPD were that fraudulent official documents are available in China and that
the summons “contains no security feature other than a
red stamp.”
[11]
With respect to the issue of security features,
there is no evidence in the record, nor does the RPD cite any, that indicates
that the document should have any additional security features. From this I
infer that the RPD surmised that the document could be more easily forged than
one with greater security features. However, even if true, that is not evidence
that this document was fraudulent.
[12]
With respect to the observation that fraudulent
official documents are widely available in China, the Court reminds the RPD
that it has held that the RPD should exercise caution in relying on this factor
when reviewing the validity of a document. In Cheema v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 224 at para 7, the Court stated:
The documents may well be forgeries, however
evidence of widespread forgery in a country is not, by itself, sufficient to
reject foreign documents as forgeries. As the Respondent noted evidence of
widespread forgery merely demonstrates that false documentation could be
available to the Applicant.
[13]
As Justice Russell observed in Lin v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 157 at para 54,
if the fact that forged documents are widely available is a valid reason for finding
that a foreign document is a forgery then this “would
mean that even genuine documents would not be acceptable.”
[14]
In short, although it is not clear what finding
the RPD made regarding the summons, if the RPD found that the summons was not genuine
on the basis of the factors it raises, then its decision was unreasonable. The
only reasonable finding it could make, on these facts, is that the summons, while
accepted as a genuine document, only establishes that the Public Security
Bureau suspected Ms. Chen of being a Falun Gong supporter. It is not proof
that she was in fact a supporter of the Falun Gong. In other words, the
summons is not sufficient to overcome the finding of the RPD that Ms. Chen was
not a Falun Gong practitioner. However, the RPD ought then to have considered
whether the Public Security Bureau’s suspicion that Ms. Chen was Falun Gong, as
evidenced by the summons, could result in her being prosecuted in China. In many
respects, the summons is like the letter from the father of an alleged
co-practitioner in that the weight accorded it could not overcome the RPD’s finding
that Ms. Chen lacked credibility.
[15]
Even so, one must ask whether the summons and
letter provided “some” credible and trustworthy
evidence on which Ms. Chen’s claim could succeed.
[16]
In Sheikh v Canada (Minister of Employment
& Immigration), [1990] FCJ No 604 [Sheikh], the Court held that a
finding of “no credible basis” is not the same
as a finding that a claimant is not credible. However, if the only
evidence before the RPD is the testimony of the claimant, then a general finding
that he or she lacks credibility will amount to a finding that there is “no credible basis” for the claim. In Rahaman v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship & Immigration), 2002 FCA 89, as a
corollary of the principle in Sheikh, the Court of Appeal held that if a
claimant adduces independent and credible evidence that is capable of
supporting a positive decision, then his or her claim will have a “credible basis” even if the claimant’s
testimony is found not to be credible: See also Gill v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2003 FCT 656 at para 14.
[17]
Thus, while a “no
credible basis” determination may flow automatically from a finding that
the claimant is not credible where that is the only evidence offered to support
the claim, the same is not the case when there is other evidence tendered. In
those cases, as the Court held in Levario v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
& Immigration), 2012 FC 314 [Levario], the threshold for finding
that there is no credible basis for a claim is a high one. “Thus, if there is any credible or trustworthy evidence that
could support a positive determination the Board cannot find there is no
credible basis for the claim, even if, ultimately, the Board finds that the
claim has not been established on a balance of probabilities:”Lavario
at para 19.
[18]
In the decision under review, the RPD confused
and conflated its finding that Ms. Chen was not credible with its finding that
there was no credible basis for the claim. As it stated, it made this finding
because the “central allegations have all been rejected
for lacking credible evidence.” But it failed to consider whether the
summons and the letter was evidence that could support a positive
determination. It is not necessary that such evidence considered alone would
lead to a positive determination; it is only required that the evidence “could” support a positive decision. Absent a reasonable
finding rejecting this evidence entirely, or a finding that this evidence could
not sustain a positive determination on its own, it was unreasonable for the
RPD to conclude that there was no credible or trustworthy evidence on which a
positive determination could be made. Accordingly, this application must be
allowed.
[19]
Neither party proposed a question for
certification, and there is none on these facts.