Docket: IMM-2266-15
Citation:
2016 FC 164
Ottawa, Ontario, February 9, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Brown
BETWEEN:
|
FAKHRIA AMENI
EHSAN FAIZEE
NAJEB FAIZEE
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Applicants
|
and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is an application for judicial review under
subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001,
c 27 [the IRPA] by Fakhria Ameni [the Applicant] and her two sons, Ehsan
Faizee and Najeb Faizee [collectively the Applicants], of a decision by an
Islamabad Visa Officer, High Commission of Canada, Visa Section (Pakistan) [the
Officer], dated March 17, 2015, and communicated to the Applicant on the same
day, in which the Officer found the Applicant and her two sons ineligible for
permanent residence in Canada as members of the Convention refugee class or as
members of the country of asylum class under section 96 of the IRPA and sections
139 and 147 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations [IRPR].
Leave to apply for judicial review was granted on October 28, 2015.
[2]
As a procedural note, at the beginning of the
hearing counsel for the Applicants moved with consent of the Respondent to
amend the style of cause to add the two sons. Such order is granted with
immediate effect; these reasons reflect the now-amended style of cause.
I.
Facts
[3]
The Applicant is Afghani. She filed her claim
with the High Commission in Islamabad where she was interviewed. She claimed to
have resided in Pakistan since 1993. Her application was initiated by her
husband, who passed away in January 2015. The remaining persons on her
application were two of her sons. Not included in the application are one
married daughter in Pakistan, one married daughter in Kabul, and one son in the
USA. The Applicant and her family are sponsored by Association Éducative
Transculturelle of Sherbrooke, Québec.
[4]
The Applicant and her family said they had moved
to Peshawar from Afghanistan in 1993. At that time, amidst fighting taking
place in their locale, a mujahedeen shot a brother-in-law and the husband’s
sister in front of the Applicant and her family. Fearing for their safety, the
Applicant and her family fled on foot to Peshawar, Pakistan.
[5]
In 1999, the family returned to Afghanistan in
the hope that the country was safer with a changed regime. However, one month
after the family’s return, the Applicant’s husband was taken and tortured by
the Taliban for a week. After this incident, the family returned to Pakistan.
The husband’s injuries from this torture remained until his death.
[6]
The Applicant and her sons provided the
following evidence to the Officer in support of their residence in Pakistan:
•
A letter in the initial application in 2010,
signed by husband, stating “We have tried to get the
POR card few times but due to the disorganized process and inefficient way we
failed to get one.” The Applicants did not have “POR”
cards, which are identity documents issued to registered Afghan refugees in
Pakistan through cooperation between the Pakistani government and the UNHCR;
•
Afghani Tazkiras (national identity cards)
renewed in 2009 and 2012;
•
According to the Applicant’s affidavit, though
absent from the Certified Tribunal Record [CTR], school ID cards for the
Applicant’s sons, without report cards or other school records. At the hearing
I asked that the departmental file be searched for the school ID documents, but
the report was the same: no such documents are in the file. On this basis, I am
not prepared to allow the alleged school ID documents to be admitted as new
evidence in the face of a direct finding by the Officer that they were not
presented, although I do note the Tazkiras referred to above are also not in
the CTR;
•
Tenancy Confirmation Letter by the Applicants’
landlord, Dr. Sediqullah Sediq, stating the Applicant and her family have been tenants
of his in Peshawar, Pakistan since 2005, and that the Applicant provided
caregiving services for his children and mother;
•
Utility bill for the leased property for January
and February 2015;
•
Letters from the sons’ employer, a restaurant
owned by an Afghani person, stating the sons’ roles in the restaurant in
Peshawar, Pakistan, on paper without letterhead, with a handwritten number
replacing the printed number at the bottom of the letters. A business card for
the restaurant was attached to these letters.
[7]
The Applicants did not give the Officer their
Afghani passports, which in fact they had renewed in Kabul in February 2015.
[8]
The Officer sent a letter to the Applicant in
January 2015, dated after her husband’s passing, giving the family notice of an
interview scheduled for March 4, 2015, but the letter came back undelivered
from the address on the Applicants’ record. On February 26, the principal
applicant notified the Commission that the family had moved since January 1,
2015, and that her husband had passed away. She informed the Commission of her
new address. The Commission sent out the interview notice to this new address
and the Applicant received the letter without issue.
[9]
The Officer determined that the Applicant did
not meet the requirements for immigration to Canada under either class.
II.
Issues
[10]
In my view the issues are:
1.
Did the Officer act incorrectly or unreasonably by
requiring the Applicant and her sons to prove “residence”
or “continuous residence” in Pakistan as a pre-condition
to be accepted under either the Convention refugee class, or the country of asylum
class, pursuant to section 96 of the IRPA and sections 139 and 147 of
the IRPR?
2.
Did the Officer act unreasonably in finding the Applicant
and her sons misrepresented their country of residence as Pakistan instead of
Afghanistan?
3.
Did the Officer breach the rules of natural
justice by not putting reavailment concerns to the Applicants so as to give
them an opportunity to respond?
III.
Discussion and Analysis
A.
Standard of Review
[11]
As to the standard of review, in Dunsmuir v
New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir] at paras 57 and 62, the Supreme
Court of Canada held that a standard of review analysis is unnecessary where “the jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory
manner the degree of deference to be accorded with regard to a particular
category of question.” It is well established that reasonableness is the
standard of review applicable to determining whether an Applicant is a member
of a class of Convention refugee: Sakthivel v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015
FC 292 at para 30; Bakhtiari v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 1229 at para 22. In Dunsmuir at para 47, the Supreme
Court of Canada explained what is required of a court reviewing on the reasonableness
standard of review:
A court conducting a review for
reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable,
referring both to the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In
judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with the existence of
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making
process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.
[12]
Issues of procedural fairness and natural
justice are reviewable under the correctness standard of review: Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009
SCC 12 at para 43; Sketchley v Canada (Attorney General),
2005 FCA 404 at paras 53˗55. In Dunsmuir at para 50, the Supreme
Court of Canada explained what is required of a court reviewing on the correctness
standard of review:
When applying the
correctness standard, a reviewing court will not show deference to the decision
maker’s reasoning process; it will rather undertake its own analysis of the
question. The analysis will bring the court to decide whether it agrees
with the determination of the decision maker; if not, the court will substitute
its own view and provide the correct answer. From the outset, the court must
ask whether the tribunal’s decision was correct.
IV.
Analysis
[13]
The first issue concerns what one might term the
quality of a claimant’s connection to a country other than Canada as a
pre-condition of claims for Convention refugee class or country asylum class
status. For example, is it enough that a person “is”
in such a country, or need he or she establish that they are “living” there, or is it necessary for the claimant to
establish he or she is actually a “resident” of that
country? A second component of this inquiry asks why a claimant must establish
the necessary quality of connection: the reason may derive from a statutory
condition set out in the IRPA or IRPR, or it may be self-imposed in
that the claimant claimed a set of facts in his or her application which they
must then establish. Failure to meet a degree of connection set out in statute
may lead to rejection of the claim. Failure to establish the facts on which an
application is based may also lead to rejection of a claim based on a determination
that there has been misrepresentation or lack of credibility or otherwise.
[14]
In this case, it is alleged that the Officers
who rejected the Applicants’ claims mistakenly required that the Applicants be “resident” in Pakistan while, it is alleged by the
Applicants, neither the IRPA nor IRPR contain any such residency requirement.
It is argued that if the Officers imposed a requirement to reside in Pakistan to
establish claims as Convention refugee or country of asylum class refugees, and
did so under the mistaken belief they did so as a legal matter, the decision is
unreasonable or incorrect and should be set aside on judicial review.
[15]
In opposition, the Respondent says that the
Officers were not wrong and that the Applicants as a legal matter were required
to show they resided in Pakistan in order to make either a Convention refugee
or country of asylum class refugee claim in Pakistan. In the alternative, and particularly
at the hearing of judicial review, the Respondent emphasized that the Officers’
determination to that effect, if unreasonable, was not dispositive; instead,
the claim was rejected due to the Applicants’ misrepresentation. That is, the
Applicants stated that they resided in Pakistan whereas in fact they resided in
Afghanistan, and having misrepresented their claims, it was reasonable for the
Officers to reject them.
[16]
With this in mind I will deal with the issues.
A.
Issue 1 - Did the Officer act incorrectly or
unreasonably in misstating the applicable legal test by requiring the Applicant
and her sons to prove “residence” or “ continuous
residence” in Pakistan as a condition of
acceptance either under the Convention refugee class, or the country of asylum
class, pursuant to section 96 of the IRPA and sections 139 and 147 of the IRPR?
[17]
In my view, the Applicants correctly assert that
their claim was unreasonably rejected because the Officers required them to
establish that they were residents outside of their country of nationality. This
is overwhelmingly clear from the decision letter. The decision letter concluded
by making specific reference to section 96 of the IRPA, which sets out
the criteria for a Convention refugee claim, and Regulation 147 which sets out
the criteria for a country of asylum class claim:
(…) I am not satisfied that you reside in
Pakistan as stated and find it more likely that you have repatriated or
otherwise reside in Afghanistan, your country of nationality. … As a result,
you do not meet the criteria set out at section 96 of the Act or section 147 of
the Regulations. Consequently, with reference to section 139(1)(e) of the
Regulations and section 11 of the Act, the application is refused.
[18]
The Officer’s notes, which form part of the
decision, repeatedly refer to residence in terms as if it was a legislative
requirement. This is illustrated in the highlighted portions of the material part
of the GCMS notes:
…. My name is Douglas and I am the visa
officer assigned to your file. …. I will be the officer making a
determination whether or not you reside outside your country of nationality and
whether you meet requirements and are admissible for a visa to Canada. Clients
indicated that they understood.
…. RESIDENCY (Confirm with IMM8) (Proof
of Residency) …. In her submission Mother states that she has been
residing in Peshawar Pakistan since 1993. She did not have POR Cards
(Refugee ID Cards issued by Pakistani Gov’t for Afghan refugees living in
Pakistan) in 2006. No school records were available. Our interview letter was
returned by the post office. There was no one there to receive the registered
letter. The envelope has hand written remarks that states the contact number
was called but the person answering said that they would not accept the letter.
PA claimed that this is a new address but our envelope was sent to the new
address in January 2015. PA provided utility bills but only from Jan. 2015 to
March 2015. A tenant confirmation letter from Dr. Sediqullah signed on
28/02/2015 states that she and her family are living in a one bedroom plus bathroom
accommodation at his house since 2005. She also provided a tenant agreement
from Dr. Sediqullah’s son that she has a one year’s lease from his property.
These letters do not in my opinion substantiate residency as they are
easily obtainable from this third party.
There is much evidence that this family has
returned to Afghanistan. The two sons claim to be working at a restaurant
in Peshawar but the employment letter has a sticker on the back and no
legitimate company logo on the front portion of the letter. On the front of the
letter there was a private number written for verification. The purported
official telephone number of the restaurant on the sticker that was on the back
of the letter was no in service. Tazkiras (Afghani ID documents) were issued and
certified in Kabul in 2009 and 2012. One son had a machine readable Afghani
passport issued in February 2015. Machine readable passports are issued only in
Kabul. I am not satisfied that PA and two sons are residing outside their
country of nationality. OFFICER REVIEW: I have considered this application
carefully and believe from the documentation and interview process that this
family is not living outside their country of nationality. As noted above they
have failed to establish that they are residents of Pakistan. The documents
presented did not substantiate continuous residency in Pakistan. They
were unable to present POR cards that Afghani nationals carry while living in
Pakistan. They had no viable explanation for not obtaining these identity documents
prior to 2006 when they were living in Peshawar. Their Afghan identity cards
(Tazkiras) were issued in Kabul. No Educational documents were presented to
prove attendance at school over the years. There is insufficient
documentation to establish residency, school attendance or employment in
Pakistan. There is a high incidence of fraud and a high number applicants
incorrectly claiming Pakistani residency. In recent years more than 4.7 million
Afghanis left Pakistan and returned to Afghanistan under a UN voluntary return
programme. The UN also estimates that a further 900,000 Afghanis returned under
their own volition. They have failed to satisfy me that they meet the
requirement that they are residents outside of their country of nationality.
As noted above and communicated to the applicants during the course of the
interview, I do not believe that the applicants reside outside of their
country of nationality, and therefore do not meet the eligibility criteria for
resettlement to Canada as refugees as set out at section 96 of the Act and
section 147 of the Regulations. I have considered all of the information
and material available to me, as well as the applicants’ responses to all of my
stated concerns, yet I find that my final assessment is that they have
misrepresented their country of residence, and that in fact they do not
reside outside of their country of nationality.
[19]
I will not repeat all the highlighted passages,
but based on them I have no difficulty concluding the Officers considered these
Applicants to have been under a legal obligation to prove they were residents
of Pakistan as a precondition of making claims to be Convention refugee or country
of asylum class refugees. The statement that “[t]hey
have failed to satisfy me that they meet the requirement that they are
residents outside of their country of nationality” is in my view
representative of the analysis underlying the decision.
[20]
However, and with respect, in doing so the
Officers (there appear to have been two officers involved) did not follow the
law in respect of either class. Section 96 of the IRPA governs
Convention refugees and states:
96 A Convention refugee is a person
who, by reason of a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race,
religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political
opinion,
|
96 A
qualité de réfugié au sens de la Convention — le réfugié — la personne qui,
craignant avec raison d’être persécutée du fait de sa race, de sa religion,
de sa nationalité, de son appartenance à un groupe social ou de ses opinions
politiques :
|
(a) is outside each of their
countries of nationality and is unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling
to avail themself of the protection of each of those countries; or
|
a) soit
se trouve hors de tout pays dont elle a la nationalité et ne peut ou,
du fait de cette crainte, ne veut se réclamer de la protection de chacun de
ces pays;
|
(b) not having a country of
nationality, is outside the country of their former habitual residence
and is unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling to return to that
country.
[emphasis added]
|
b)
soit, si elle n’a pas de nationalité et se trouve hors du pays dans
lequel elle avait sa résidence habituelle, ne peut ni, du fait de cette
crainte, ne veut y retourner.
[soulignement a ajouté]
|
[21]
Section 147 of the IRPR governs country
of asylum class claims and states:
147 A foreign national is a member of
the country of asylum class if they have been determined by an officer to be
in need of resettlement because
|
147
Appartient à la catégorie de personnes de pays d’accueil l’étranger considéré
par un agent comme ayant besoin de se réinstaller en raison des circonstances
suivantes :
|
(a) they are outside all of
their countries of nationality and habitual residence; and
|
a) il se
trouve hors de tout pays dont il a la nationalité ou dans lequel il avait
sa résidence habituelle;
|
(b) they have been, and continue to
be, seriously and personally affected by civil war, armed conflict or massive
violation of human rights in each of those countries.
[emphasis added]
|
b) une
guerre civile, un conflit armé ou une violation massive des droits de la
personne dans chacun des pays en cause ont eu et continuent d’avoir des
conséquences graves et personnelles pour lui.
[soulignement a ajouté]
|
[22]
Section 139 of the IRPR states:
139 (1) A permanent resident visa
shall be issued to a foreign national in need of refugee protection, and
their accompanying family members, if following an examination it is
established that
|
139 (1)
Un visa de résident permanent est délivré à l’étranger qui a besoin de
protection et aux membres de sa famille qui l’accompagnent si, à l’issue d’un
contrôle, les éléments suivants sont établis :
|
(a) the foreign national is outside
Canada;
|
a)
l’étranger se trouve hors du Canada;
|
(b) the foreign national has submitted
an application for a permanent resident visa under this Division in
accordance with paragraphs 10(1)(a) to (c) and (2)(c.1) to (d) and sections
140.1 to 140.3;
|
b) il a
fait une demande de visa de résident permanent au titre de la présente section
conformément aux alinéas 10(1)a) à c) et (2)c.1) à d) et aux articles 140.1 à
140.3;
|
(c) the foreign national is seeking to
come to Canada to establish permanent residence;
|
c) il
cherche à entrer au Canada pour s’y établir en permanence;
|
(d) the foreign national is a person
in respect of whom there is no reasonable prospect, within a reasonable
period, of a durable solution in a country other than Canada, namely
|
d)
aucune possibilité raisonnable de solution durable n’est, à son égard,
réalisable dans un délai raisonnable dans un pays autre que le Canada, à
savoir :
|
(i) voluntary repatriation or
resettlement in their country of nationality or habitual residence, or
|
(i)
soit le rapatriement volontaire ou la réinstallation dans le pays dont il a
la nationalité ou dans lequel il avait sa résidence habituelle,
|
(ii) resettlement or an offer of
resettlement in another country;
[emphasis added]
|
(ii)
soit la réinstallation ou une offre de réinstallation dans un autre pays;
[soulignement a ajouté]
|
[23]
With respect, there is no requirement in section
96, nor in Regulations 147 or 139, that a claimant must “reside” outside of the country of their nationality
or habitual residence (habitual residence only applies to stateless people,
which is irrelevant in this case and therefore will not be further mentioned). The
only country connection requirement for a Convention refugee class claimant is
that he or she “is outside” his or her country
of nationality: see subsection 96(a) and (b). Likewise, the only such requirement
for a country of asylum class claimant is that they “are
outside” their countries of nationality: see Regulations 147(a) and (b),
and 139(1) which require that the claimant establish he or she “is outside” all of their
countries of nationality and Canada. In other words, it
is enough that such claimants be outside their country of nationality.
[24]
Turning to the phrases used in the decision, nowhere
do the IRPA or IRPR require a Convention refugee or country of asylum
class claimants to “reside outside of the country of
nationality”, be “residing in Pakistan”, “substantiate residency”, or be “resident” in Pakistan as insisted upon by the
Officers. Further, there is no requirement that the Applicants “substantiate continuous residency”, or “establish residency” in Pakistan.
[25]
For completeness, I note in the Officers’
reasons there is a reference to the Applicants “not
living outside their country of nationality.” The concept of “living” in the country in which a claim is made was alluded
to in Nassima v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008
FC 688 [Nassima]:
[13] The officer’s decision letter
makes reference to inconsistencies between the applicant’s and her son’s
stories, where they are living, and what they are doing in Pakistan, which
resulted in the officer not being satisfied that they are living in Peshawar and
thus that they are not living in Afghanistan.
[emphasis added]
[26]
With respect, while Nassima refers to “living” in the country in which the claim is made, Nassima
may not be taken as authority for the proposition that the language used by the
legislator in section 96 of the IRPA and sections 139 and 147 of the IRPR
underlined above are to be replaced with the word “living”
or variants thereon, any more than the words used in the legislation and
regulations are to be replaced with the word “reside”.
That was not the issue in Nassima, which turned on the reasonableness of
findings of fact made by an officer including on credibility. I note that in a
subsequent case, Wardak v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2015 FC 673 [Wardak], the Court considered its previous decision in Nassima
and mentioned the claimant family’s failure to establish their residence in
Pakistan led to the rejection of their claim. The issue arising in the case at
bar simply did not arise in either Nassima or Wardak.
[27]
I agree with the Applicants’ submission that simply
being outside one’s country of nationality is required. This ruling is
consistent with internationally accepted guidelines in that regard. The UNHCR’s
“Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Determining Refugee Status under the
1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees” states
at para 88: “It is a general requirement for refugee
status that an applicant who has a nationality be outside the country of
his nationality. There are no exceptions to this rule. International protection
cannot come into play as long as a person is within the territorial
jurisdiction of his home country” [emphasis added]. Note that the verb
is not “to reside”, nor is it “to live” but rather “to be”.
[28]
In my view, in terms of establishing the quality
of connection to a country other than that of their nationality, persons
claiming Convention refugee or country of asylum class protection outside
Canada need only establish what the statute requires, namely that one “is outside” their country of nationality, i.e., that
they be outside such other country. Officers lack the legal authority to
require applicants to meet any higher requirement. In my view they also act unreasonably
and without statutory authority to the extent they impose, as I find they did
in this case, a requirement that such claimants reside or live outside the
country of their nationality; being outside such their country of nationality
is enough.
[29]
The Officers summarized their finding by
stating: “…I do not believe that the applicants reside
outside of their country of nationality, and therefore do not meet the
eligibility criteria for resettlement to Canada as refugees as set out at
section 96 of the Act and section 147 of the Regulations.” This is an
impermissible cause and effect analysis. Therefore this finding is
unreasonable, and to the extent the decision depends on this finding and the
underlying but non-existent residency requirement, it must be set aside. For
completeness, in my respectful opinion the Officers applied an incorrect legal
test with the same result namely that the decision must be set aside.
[30]
Of course, and I want to make it very clear that
this finding does not absolve claimants of their legal obligations to tell the
truth in their claims. It is very well-established that claimants may suffer
the consequences, including rejection of their claims, if they misrepresent the
nature of their connection to a country outside their country of nationality. With
this in mind, I turn to the alleged misrepresentation aspect of the case at
hand.
B.
Issue 2: Did the Officers make an unreasonable
finding that the Applicants misrepresented their country of residence as
Pakistan when it was Afghanistan?
[31]
While the Officer technically made such a
finding, in my respectful view, it was unreasonable for several reasons.
[32]
First, the Officers’ analysis focused
overwhelmingly on an erroneous consideration of the degree of connection required
to sustain a Convention refugee or country of asylum class claim under section
96 of the IRPA and sections 139 and 147 of the IRPR, namely
residence. In my view, any consideration of misrepresentation was inextricably
bound up with the erroneous legal test and unreasonable analysis concerning
residing or living in the country other than that of the Applicants’
nationality. The analysis of misrepresentation, to the very minimal extent it
is actually present, appears added as an afterthought. With respect, the
decision assessed the facts through an inappropriate lens to such an extent
that it is now impossible to pull apart and separate the two different
analyses. In this circumstance, it would not be safe to rely on the
misrepresentation analysis and therefore judicial review must be granted.
[33]
Moreover, important aspects of the assessment on
the issue of misrepresentation are unreasonable or, at best, problematic. The
following are the points relied upon by the Officers and the Respondent, with
my comments following each:
A.
The letter initially sent out to give notice of
the interview to the Applicant was returned – the new address was the same as
the address to which the first letter was sent. Comment: this finding is
unreasonable. After the husband died the Applicant and her sons moved. At about
the same time in January 2015 the Officer sent the Applicants a letter that was
returned. It is suggested that the returned letter was sent to the Applicants’
new address; that is not possible because the Officer was not notified of the
new address until late February. Moreover, in reviewing the addresses on the
correspondence, these are in fact not the same addresses at all. The Officer
likely drew an unwarranted negative credibility inference based on this clear
error.
B.
No POR cards (Refugee ID cards issued by
Pakistani government to Afghan refugees living in Pakistan) prior to 2006. Comment:
this finding is unreasonable. POR cards for Afghanis in Pakistan were
essentially a product of a UNHCR census conducted in 2005; PORs were issued not
prior to, but after 2006. The Officer likely drew an unwarranted negative
credibility inference based on this error also.
C.
No school records available. Comment: in
my view this finding was reasonable, because in fact there are no school
records in the CTR. While the Applicants submitted copies of school IDs on
judicial review and deposed they had been filed, they cannot be accepted as new
evidence in the face of the clear determination they were not filed at the
hearing made by the Officers. That said I note that the Tazkiras apparently
accepted by the decision-makers are not found in the CTR either.
D.
Tenancy letters are “easily
obtainable from this third party”. Comment: this finding is
unreasonable because it is given without any explanation whatsoever. I am
unable to determine why it was made hence it lacks justification. It
essentially says the landlord was telling an untruth. Moreover, there is a
presumption that documents are genuine absent more: see Ma v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 838 at paras 40-45
(citing to Cao v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015
FC 315).
E.
The employment letter had a sticker on the back
and no legitimate company logo on the front portion of the letter. On the front
of the letter there was a private number written for verification. Comment:
this finding is problematic. The Officers demanded proof of employment for the
two sons; but in reality it is illegal for unregistered refugees such as the
sons to work in Pakistan. Documents submitted must be viewed with this reality
in mind.
F.
Tazkiras were issued and certified in Kabul in
2009 and 2012. Comment: these were used to show the Applicants were
living in Afghanistan, yet the evidence was they were obtained by a friend of
the late father’s and not as a result of attendance in Afghanistan.
[34]
In addition to concerns about the reasonableness
of the decision, I wish to note a concern regarding procedural fairness. The
Officers found that one of the sons had a machine readable Afghani passport
issued in February 2015. These are only issued in Kabul. There is no
explanation for the comment respecting the son’s passport, which also is not found
in the CTR. The Applicants say they were not given notice of this finding and
allege it was then used against them to suggest the Applicants resided in
Afghanistan not Pakistan, and had in effect reavailed to Afghanistan. There is
no transcript. Lack of notice breaches the duty of procedural fairness. In my respectful
view, the Applicants should have produced these passports to Canadian officials
because they had an undoubted duty to produce all relevant documents to their
applications. However, having failed to do so, the Officers nonetheless would
be under a duty to put their concerns regarding reavailment to the Applicants: Chandrakumar
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1997] FCJ No 615, 71
ACWS (3d) 537; Siddiqui v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2015 FC 329 (adopting test in Chandrakumar providing that applicants’
explanations for obtaining a passport needed to be considered by the Officers
before a credibility determination on reavailment could be made). I am
concerned these Applicants may not have been given an opportunity to reply to
the Officers’ reavailment concerns. However, I do not need to make a finding on
this point given the other difficulties with the decision identified above.
[35]
Judicial review does not consider the decision
in parts; instead, judicial review is concerned with the decision as an organic
whole. Moreover, judicial review is not a treasure hunt for errors: Irving
Pulp & Paper Ltd v CEP, Local 30, 2013 SCC 34 at para 54. Judicial
review instead is concerned with justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process.
[36]
Stepping back and viewing the decision as an
organic whole, in my respectful view, the decision does not fall within a range
of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts
and law as required by Dunsmuir.
[37]
Neither party proposed a question to certify,
and none arises.
V.
Conclusion
[38]
Judicial review should therefore be granted, and
no question certified.