Docket: IMM-570-15
Citation:
2015 FC 1249
Toronto, Ontario, November 5, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
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BETWEEN:
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EIMAN GLUBAWY
MOHAMED SALIH
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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]
Eiman Glubawy Mohamed Salih seeks judicial
review of the decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration
and Refugee Board dismissing her claim for refugee protection on credibility
grounds. Ms. Salih asserts that in finding that her story was not
credible, the Board erred by making plausibility findings regarding her conduct
without considering her cultural background as a woman in the repressive,
male-dominated society in Sudan.
[2]
I accept that Sudanese cultural norms may have
affected how a woman such as Ms. Salih would have reacted to her husband’s
detention by government authorities, and that the Board may not have taken this
into account in finding this aspect of Ms. Salih’s story not to be
credible. That said, the Board had a number of other reasons for disbelieving Ms. Salih’s
story which did not require consideration of her cultural background, and which
were entirely reasonable. Consequently, I have not been persuaded that the
Board’s overall decision was unreasonable, and Ms. Salih’s application for
judicial review will accordingly be dismissed.
I.
Background
[3]
Ms. Salih is a citizen of Sudan who was
forcibly married to Abdalaziz Alzbeir Altahir when she was 17 years old. Ms. Salih’s
description of her upbringing is consistent with the country condition
information regarding the subjugation of women in Sudanese society.
[4]
Ms. Salih claims that her husband is a
member of a group that opposes the government of Sudan and that in late
December 2013, Mr. Altahir was arrested by government security forces because
of his alleged involvement in anti-government activities. According to Ms. Salih,
Mr. Altahir was kept in detention by the security forces for approximately
three weeks, during which time he experienced torture and other inhumane
treatment. Mr. Altahir was then transferred to a hospital for treatment of the
injuries that he had sustained while in custody, where he remained under
government guard. Mr. Altahir was, however, able to escape his captors, and his
current whereabouts are unknown.
[5]
Ms. Salih says that after her husband
escaped from the hospital, she was kept under constant surveillance by the
security forces who were trying to locate her husband. This continued into
April of 2014, when Ms. Salih was herself admitted to hospital for
surgery. When Ms. Salih was released from hospital a week later, she says
that members of the security forces told her that if her husband did not turn
himself in within four weeks, they would arrest Ms. Salih for concealing
her husband’s whereabouts.
[6]
Ms. Salih states that she was then advised
by her husband’s associates to either go into hiding or leave Sudan. She
testified that she went into hiding until she was able to leave the country on
August 31, 2014, escaping with the assistance of an opposition member who was
employed at the airport. Ms. Salih travelled to New York, where one of her
brothers resides. After spending a couple of months in the United States, she
continued on to Canada, where she has another brother, making her refugee claim
at the border.
II.
The Detention of Ms. Salih’s Husband
[7]
The Board found that Ms. Salih’s claim that her
husband had been arrested by Sudanese security forces lacked credibility and to
be implausible for two reasons.
[8]
First, the Board found that it was not credible
that Ms. Salih would not know where her husband was being detained, nor was it
credible that her husband’s associates would not know where Mr. Altahir was
being held, given that these individuals had been detained at the same facility
as her husband. This finding was reasonably open to the Board to make based on
the evidence before it.
[9]
What is problematic, however, is the Board’s
finding that it was not plausible that Ms. Salih would not have taken
additional steps to find out where her husband was being held, or attempt to
get permission to visit him in prison. Given the repressive and violent nature
of the Sudanese regime, it was unreasonable to expect a woman in Ms. Salih’s
position to confront the Sudanese authorities in an effort to track down her
husband’s whereabouts. Given that the security forces were also allegedly
threatening to arrest Ms. Salih herself, it was also unreasonable for the
Board to expect her to ask those same security forces for permission to visit
her husband.
[10]
I am aware that the Board stated that it had had
regard to the Board’s Gender Guidelines in assessing Ms. Salih’s
evidence. I am nevertheless satisfied that the finding relating to the
detention of Ms. Salih’s husband did not take into account the cultural
environment in which she lived.
[11]
That said, as will be explained below, the Board
had a number of other reasons for disbelieving Ms. Salih’s story which did
not require consideration of her cultural background, which were entirely
reasonable.
III.
Ms. Salih’s Evidence about Going into
Hiding
[12]
The Board did not believe Ms. Salih’s claim
that she had gone into hiding after she was released from the hospital in April
of 2014 because she had had made no mention of this in her Basis of Claim form,
and her testimony on this point was inconsistent.
[13]
Ms. Salih initially testified that she left
Sudan within four weeks of her release from the hospital in April of 2014,
which would have been before the expiration of the deadline that had allegedly
been imposed on her by the Sudanese security forces for the surrender of her
husband. It was only when it was pointed out to her that she had not left Sudan
until August of 2014 - several months after her release from hospital - that Ms. Salih
claimed for the first time that she had gone into hiding in the intervening
period.
[14]
After claiming that she had gone into hiding, Ms. Salih
initially insisted that she had never left her hiding place prior to her
departure from Sudan. However, when she was confronted with the fact that she
had obtained a visa allowing her to enter the United States during this period,
she amended her answer to acknowledge that she had left her hiding place on
this one occasion, to attend an interview at the U.S. Embassy.
[15]
It was then pointed out to Ms. Salih that
she had also obtained a passport during the period that she was allegedly in
hiding, and she once again modified her evidence, acknowledging that she had
left her hiding place on a second occasion, in order to get her passport.
[16]
The Board’s finding that Ms. Salih’s claim
to have gone into hiding was not credible was not dependent upon an
understanding of the cultural environment for women in Sudan. In light of her
failure to mention going into hiding in her Basis of Claim form and the
shifting nature of her evidence on this point, the Board’s finding on this
point was entirely reasonable.
IV.
Ms. Salih’s Documents
[17]
The Board also attached little weight to the
documents that Ms. Salih had produced in support of her claim, providing
detailed reasons for its findings in this regard. Ms. Salih has not
challenged the Board’s findings with respect to her documents, and I am
satisfied that the Board’s reasons for discounting the documents were
reasonable.
V.
Ms. Salih’s Failure to Seek Other Documents
[18]
The Board also took issue with the fact that Ms. Salih
had not made any efforts to obtain documentary evidence of either her husband’s
detention or his subsequent hospitalization. Ms. Salih says that it was
unreasonable to expect her to personally approach either the hospital or the
security forces to try to get documentary proof of her allegations, given the
nature of the regime.
[19]
Even if it was not reasonable to expect Ms. Salih
to approach the Sudanese security forces to get proof of her husband’s
detention, the Board’s finding with respect to the lack of documents concerning
her husband’s hospitalization was entirely reasonable when regard is had to Ms. Salih’s
own evidence on this point.
[20]
However, Ms. Salih did not testify that she did
not try to obtain additional documentation because she was fearful of the
Sudanese authorities. What she said was that she had been unable to obtain
hospital records because she had been in a rush to leave the country. However,
according to Ms. Salih herself, she did not leave Sudan until August of 2013, more
than six months after her husband’s hospitalization. In light of this, it was
reasonable for the Board to reject Ms. Salih’s explanation for why she failed
to seek out documentary evidence of her husband’s detention and subsequent
hospitalization.
VI.
Ms. Salih’s Failure to Claim in the United
States
[21]
The Board also found that the credibility of Ms. Salih’s
story was undermined by her failure to seek refugee protection during the two
months that she spent in the United States before coming to Canada. Not only
did Ms. Salih not take issue with this finding in her memorandum of fact
and law, it is, moreover, well established that the failure of a refugee
claimant to seek refugee protection at the earliest opportunity can indicate a
lack of subjective fear on his or her part.
[22]
It also bears noting that the explanation
provided by Ms. Salih for her failure to claim in the U.S. has varied over
time. She says in her Basis of Claim form that her brother living in the United
States had invited her to come to the United States, but that associates of her
husband had recommended that she come to Canada to seek refugee protection
because of Canada’s historical support for victims of oppression.
[23]
In contrast, Ms. Salih stated in her
testimony that she did not make a refugee claim in the United States “because it takes a long time” and because she had a
brother in Canada and she preferred to come and stay with him.
[24]
In light of this, Ms. Salih has not
demonstrated that the Board’s finding with respect to her failure to seek refugee
protection in the United States was unreasonable.
VII.
Conclusion
[25]
The Board’s reasons may not have been perfect,
but perfection is not the standard against which the reasonableness of
administrative decisions is to be judged. The Board had numerous reasons for
disbelieving Ms. Salih’s story, and most of these findings were
reasonable. The decision therefore falls within the range of possible
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in light of the facts and the law as
contemplated by Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para. 47, [2008]
1 S.C.R. 190 and Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC
12 at para. 59, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 339.
[26]
The application for judicial review is therefore
dismissed. I agree with the parties that the case is fact-specific, and does
not raise a question for certification.