Docket: IMM-4451-15
Citation:
2016 FC 462
Ottawa, Ontario, April 22, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Tremblay-Lamer
BETWEEN:
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AHMEDNOOR FARAH
HUSIAN
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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]
This is an application for judicial review
pursuant to s. 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC
2001, c 27 [the IRPA], of a decision of the Refugee Appeal Division [RAD] of
the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada wherein the RAD confirmed the
Refugee Protection Division [RPD] finding that the Applicant was neither a
Convention refugee nor a person in need of protection.
I.
Facts
A.
Background
[2]
The Applicant alleges to be a citizen of Somalia
and a member of the Reer Hamar clan and Dhabarweyne sub-clan. He claims to fear
members of the rival Habir Gedir clan as well as Al-Shabaab, which allegedly
killed one of his brothers. The RPD and RAD both held that the Applicant had
not established his identity and rejected his claim for refugee status in
Canada.
[3]
The RPD found that the Applicant had not
established on a balance of probabilities that he was a Reer Hamar from
Somalia. Mrs. Jamad Dhafe, allegedly the Applicant’s great aunt, testified as
an identity witness. Mrs. Dhafe was deemed not credible because her statements
contradicted the Applicant’s on many points. The Applicant also testified at
the hearing but was found not credible with regard to his clan affiliation. The
RPD was not satisfied by his answers to factual questions about the Reer Hamar
and did not accept his explanation for knowing very little about the clan.
[4]
On appeal, the RAD confirmed the RPD’s decision.
In doing so, it refused to admit the testimony of Ms. Amina Iman Farah,
allegedly the Applicant’s second cousin, since it was not new evidence and
should have been submitted earlier.
[5]
Justice Roger Hughes granted the application for
judicial review of this decision on the basis that the RAD had made new
credibility findings without giving notice to the parties or giving them the
opportunity to make submissions (Husian v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2015 FC 684).
II.
Decision under Review
[6]
The RAD, on its redetermination of the appeal,
held that the Applicant failed to provide persuasive evidence that he was a
national of Somalia, or of any other country, and confirmed the RPD’s decision.
Its main conclusions are summarized at para 63 of its reasons:
[63] The RAD has reviewed the
submissions of the Appellant as well as all of the evidence in this claim. The
RAD has found:
• The Appellant failed to provide credible personal
testimony to ascertain his identity as a national of Somalia.
• The Appellant may have resided in Somalia at some time
during his life. One of the affiants stated he had knowledge of the Appellant’s
father in Mogadishu, but did not identify a date. The RAD notes the Appellant’s
BoC document state [sic] that his father disappeared in 1992. The Appellant
provided no persuasive supporting evidence as to when he was last present in
Somalia.
• The Appellant was unable to provide persuasive evidence
that he is a national of Somalia or any other country.
• The RAD finds the Appellant has provided evidence and
information to corroborate he speaks the Somali language and that he has
association with the Reer Hamar and Dhabarwyene [sic] clan. The RAD notes that
these characteristics may be possessed by an individual who has a parent who is
of Somali heritage, , [sic] but it does not identify that individual as a
Somali national.
[7]
The RAD first addressed the new evidence
submitted by the Applicant. It mostly considered the new evidence to be
admissible but of little use in establishing the Applicant’s identity as a
Somali national.
[8]
It refused to grant the Applicant an extension
of time to file further submissions. It noted that the Applicant had filed his
Appellant record in time, and mentioned that the Applicant had not followed the
formal process for applying for extensions of time or for filing late
documents, if there were any.
[9]
It reviewed the record and concluded that the
Applicant had not established his identity. First, it listened to the audio
recording of the RPD hearing and found that the Applicant’s testimony was at
times vague and evolving. It was not satisfied by his answers to several
questions and considered that he should have had a greater knowledge of his
alleged clan’s heritage and of other clans in the area. Second, it reviewed the
abovementioned Ahmed and Ali affidavits and gave them little weight as evidence
of the Applicant’s nationality.
[10]
Last, it refused to grant the oral hearing
requested by the Applicant. It found that subsections 110(3), (4) and (6) of
the IRPA provide for oral hearings where there is new evidence that raises a
serious issue with respect to the credibility of the Applicant, which is
central to its decision, and which would justify allowing or rejecting the
refugee protection claim.
III.
Issues
1.
Was the RAD’s decision as to the Applicant’s
identity reasonable?
2.
Was the RAD’s decision not to hold an oral
hearing reasonable?
3.
Did the RAD breach natural justice or procedural
fairness?
IV.
Standard of Review
[11]
The RAD’s decision as to the Applicant’s
identity is to be reviewed on a standard of reasonableness, and accordingly its
assessment of the evidence is entitled to deference (Ibrahim v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 11 at para 12).
[12]
The standard of review for the decision not to
hold an oral hearing is reasonableness, as it involves the RAD’s interpretation
of its home statute (Balde v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC
624 at para 21).
[13]
Issues of procedural fairness are subject to the
standard of correctness (Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa,
2009 SCC 12 at para 43; Mission Institution v Khela, 2014 SCC 24 at para
79).
V.
Analysis
A.
Submissions of the Applicant
[14]
The Applicant argues the RAD’s finding that he
did not prove his Somali nationality was inconsistent with the evidence before
it. His argument is twofold. First, the Applicant suggests that the RAD
accepted or was willing to accept that he was Reer Hamar and that his father
was a Somali national. Second, Somalia’s citizenship law states that people
with either of these characteristics are Somali nationals. The Applicant
suggests this error is due to the RAD’s failure to take into consideration the
national documentation package for Somalia, which included Somalia’s
citizenship law (Myle v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC
1073 at para 20).
[15]
Regarding the RAD’s findings of fact, the
Applicant emphasizes that it found (1) that he had a Somali father, (2) that he
was an ethnic Reer Hamar who has lived in Somalia, and (3) that there was no
evidence he had status in any other country. These facts establish that the
Applicant is a citizen of Somalia. Alternatively they establish that he has a
right to claim Somali citizenship, and therefore his refugee claim must be
assessed against Somalia (Pavlov v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2001 FCT 602).
[16]
The Applicant further contends that the
underlying context of Somali citizenship law is a reason for giving it a broad
scope and recognizing as Somali those of Somali heritage. He also suggests that
his interpretation of RAD’s reasons – that the RAD recognized that his father
was Somali and that he had Somali heritage – is preferable as it is coherent.
B.
Submissions of the Respondent
[17]
The Respondent submits that the RAD did not find
the Applicant’s father was a Somali national. The RAD reasonably found that
Ibrahim Mahi Ahmed did not have direct or persuasive knowledge of the
Applicant’s existence or identity in Somalia, and it fully appreciated that Mr.
Ahmed claimed to know the Applicant’s uncle and father and claimed to know that
the man he believed to be the Applicant’s father had children. The Respondent
also contends that the RAD found that the Applicant “may”
have lived in Somalia, not that he had in fact lived in Somalia.
C.
Analysis
[18]
In my view, the RAD erred in its treatment of
the new affidavit evidence introduced by the Applicant. The RAD admitted two
affidavits which stated that the Applicant was a member of the Reer Hamar clan
and Dhabarweyne sub-clan. I find that the RAD’s findings with respect to these
affidavits were capricious and unsupported by the facts.
[19]
The first affiant, Mr. Ahmed, is a member of the
Dhabarweyne sub-clan who claimed to know the Applicant’s uncle and father. The
RAD reasoned that his affidavit did not constitute evidence of the Applicant’s
nationality because the two men had never met in Somalia. What the RAD failed
to consider was that they met in Toronto and that the Applicant had spoken to
him about his father and uncle. This conversation satisfied Mr. Ahmed that the
Applicant was indeed who he claimed to be. It would be pure speculation to
endorse the RAD’s analysis on the basis that either Mr. Ahmed or the Applicant
might have been lying or mistaken.
[20]
The second affiant, Mr. Ali, is a former
settlement counselor who for many years worked closely with the Somali
community in Toronto and provided statements in support of identity which were
accepted and relied upon by the Immigration and Refugee Board. In his affidavit
Mr. Ali states that he interviewed the Applicant and believes him to be a
member of the Reer Hamar clan and Dhabarweyne sub-clan, considering the Applicant’s
knowledge of his clan and his description of his family relations and the area
he lived in. The RAD gave little weight to the affidavit because it found that Mr.
Ali provided insufficient details regarding the questions he asked the
Applicant. If that were the case, then an oral hearing should have been
granted.
[21]
The RAD also failed to consider the application
of the facts to Somalia’s law of citizenship, the Law No. 28 of 22 December
1962 – Somali Citizenship, which states the following:
Article 1.
Acquisition of Citizenship
Somali citizenship
may be acquired by operation of law or by grant.
Article 2.
Acquisition of Citizenship by Operation of Law
Any person:
a) whose father is
a Somali citizen;
b) who is a Somali
residing in the territory of the Somali Republic or abroad and declares to be
willing to renounce any status as citizen or subject of a foreign country
shall be a Somali Citizen by operation of law.
Article 3.
Definition of "Somali"
For the purpose of
this law, any person who by origin, language or tradition belongs to the
Somali Nation, shall be considered a "Somali".
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[TRADUCTION]
Article 1. Acquisition de la citoyenneté
La citoyenneté somalienne peut être acquise par effet de la loi ou
par attribution.
Article 2. Acquisition de la citoyenneté par effet de la loi
Toute personne :
a) dont le père est un citoyen somalien;
b) qui est un Somali résidant sur le territoire de la République
fédérale de Somalie ou à l’étranger et déclare être prêt à renoncer à tout
statut de citoyen ou de sujet à un pays étranger détient la citoyenneté
somalienne par effet de la loi.
Article 3. Définition de « Somali »
Aux fins de la présente loi, toute personne qui par son origine,
sa langue ou sa tradition appartient à la nation somalie sera considérée «
Somali ».
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[22]
The RAD found that Mr. Ahmed knew a man he
believed to be the Applicant’s father back when he lived in Mogadishu. Had the
RAD properly considered the fact that Mr. Ahmed and the Applicant met in person
and discussed their mutual acquaintances, it may well have held that the
Applicant’s father was a Somali. Moreover, the RAD failed to consider the
significance of the Applicant’s sworn testimony to the effect that his father
disappeared in Somalia in 1992, in the midst of the civil war. At paragraph 63
of its decision, cited previously, the RAD wrote:
[…] One of the affiants stated that he had
knowledge of the Applicant’s father in Mogadishu, but did not identify a date.
The RAD notes the Appellant’s BoC document state [sic] that his father
disappeared in 1992. The Appellant provided no persuasive supporting evidence
as to when he was last present in Somalia.
[23]
The RAD placed a great deal of importance on the
dates when the Applicant and his father had resided in Somalia, yet this was
not determinative for the purposes of Article 2 of Somalia’s citizenship law.
If the Applicant’s father was a member of the Reer Hamar clan who spent his
entire life up until 1992 in Somalia, then it is hard to imagine he could have
been anything other than a Somali citizen.
[24]
The RAD further failed to consider whether there
was evidence that the Applicant was a “Somali”.
Article 3 of Somalia’s citizenship law describes a Somali in broad terms as “any person who by origin, language or tradition belongs to
the Somali Nation”. The RAD recognized that the Applicant spoke the
Somali language and that he “has association” with
the Reer Hamar clan and Dhabarweyne sub-clan, groups historically associated
with the city of Mogadishu. The RAD erred by finding there was insufficient
evidence to identify the Applicant as a Somali national without considering the
legal effects of his Somali heritage.
[25]
The comments of Justice Hughes in Abdullahi v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 1164 at para 10, are
appropriate in this situation. I find that the RAD was overly critical of the
new affidavit evidence provided by the Applicant. It was seemingly intent to
find fault with whatever was presented rather than to take a fair and
reasonable view of the material provided. Having reviewed the decision, I doubt
that there was any evidence that the Applicant could have supplied to satisfy
the RAD of his identity as a Somali national.
[26]
Given that the above findings are sufficient to
return the matter to the RAD for redetermination, it is not necessary to
consider whether it was reasonable not to hold an oral hearing or whether the
RAD breached natural justice by refusing to grant the Applicant a time
extension. I trust that counsel for the Applicant has made productive use of
the past few months and will ensure that his submissions to the RAD are made in
a timely manner.
[27]
For these reasons, the application for judicial
review is allowed. The matter is referred back to the RAD for redetermination
in accordance with these reasons. There is no question for certification.