Docket: IMM-5302-15
Citation:
2016 FC 674
Ottawa, Ontario, June 16, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Fothergill
BETWEEN:
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FIRAS SALEM
MUNEF AJAJ
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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
I.
Introduction
[1]
Firas Salem Munef Ajaj is a citizen of Yemen. He
sought refugee status in Canada based on an alleged fear of persecution due to
his conversion from Islam to Christianity. The Refugee Protection Division
[RPD] of the Immigration and Refugee Board [Board] found that he was neither a
Convention refugee nor a person in need of protection pursuant to ss 96 and
97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27
[IRPA]. The Refugee Appeal Division [RAD] of the Board dismissed his appeal of
that decision. Justice Gascon allowed Mr. Ajaj’s application for judicial
review of the RAD’s decision in July 2015.
[2]
This application for judicial review concerns
the redetermination of Mr. Ajaj’s appeal, which the RAD again dismissed in a
decision dated November 4, 2015. Mr. Ajaj says that the application should be
allowed because the RAD denied him procedural fairness in three respects: (i)
rendering its decision before he was able to retain legal counsel; (ii)
declining to convene an oral hearing; and (iii) failing to assess a substantive
ground of his claim for refugee protection.
[3]
In the course of the hearing that took place in
Toronto on May 26, 2016, counsel for the Minister, in his role as Officer of
the Court, conceded that the RAD had committed a reviewable error by failing to
convene an oral hearing pursuant to s 110(6) of the IRPA. I therefore allowed
the application for judicial review with brief reasons to follow. These are the
reasons.
II.
Background
[4]
The pertinent facts of this case may be found in
Justice Gascon’s previous decision (Ajaj v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2015 FC 928), and will not be canvassed at length here.
[5]
Mr. Ajaj is a citizen of Yemen and of no other
country. Prior to his arrival in Canada, he had lived his entire life in Saudi
Arabia. However, he never became eligible for Saudi citizenship. He held
temporary resident permits that were renewed every two years.
[6]
Mr. Ajaj testified before the RPD that he
decided to convert to Christianity after attending university. When he informed
his family of his decision to abandon Islam, his father was furious. He
threatened to kill Mr. Ajaj and report him to the religious police. Mr. Ajaj
was forced to leave his home and go into hiding. He fled Saudi Arabia and arrived
in Canada in November 2013.
[7]
Mr. Ajaj claimed refugee protection in December
2013 on the ground that he would be persecuted in Yemen for converting to
Christianity. While in Canada, he became a member of the St. Matthew the
Apostle Oriole Anglican Church and was baptized in February 2014.
[8]
The RPD rejected Mr. Ajaj’s claim on the ground
that he was not credible, given his inability to correctly answer basic
questions about the Christian faith. This decision was upheld by the RAD.
[9]
Following Justice Gascon’s judgment granting the
application for judicial review, the RAD provided Mr. Ajaj with an additional
20 days to make submissions with respect to the redetermination of his appeal.
Mr. Ajaj informed the RAD that he would submit new evidence: Mr. Ajaj’s mother
had recently sent him a copy of an arrest warrant and a circular letter issued
by the Yemeni authorities against him. Upon request, he subsequently provided
the RAD with the original documents and their certified translations.
[10]
The RAD dismissed Mr. Ajaj’s appeal on November
4, 2015 without convening an oral hearing.
III.
Decision under Review
[11]
The RAD acknowledged its responsibility to
conduct an independent assessment of the evidence, citing the applicable
jurisprudence at the time of its decision (Huruglica v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2014 FC 799). The RAD nevertheless adopted the
credibility findings of the RPD, holding that the RPD had engaged in a
thoughtful and fair assessment of the genuineness of Mr. Ajaj’s religious
conversion.
[12]
The RAD admitted the arrest warrant and circular
letter issued by the Yemeni authorities as new evidence pursuant to s 110(4) of
the IRPA, noting that they arose after the RPD’s decision and contained
information that was relevant to Mr. Ajaj’s claim. However, the RAD found that
both documents exhibited visible printing flaws and inconsistent markings. The
RAD concluded as follows:
[47] Based on the concerns identified in
both documents submitted by the Appellant, the RAD finds, on a balance of
probabilities, the documents are fraudulent. The RAD further finds that this
finding severely undermines the credibility of the Appellant in respect of his
allegations of persecution in both Saudi Arabia and Yemen.
[13]
The RAD agreed with the RPD that Mr. Ajaj’s sur
place claim must fail. The RAD held that Mr. Ajaj had not provided
sufficient evidence to demonstrate that the Yemeni authorities were aware of
his Christian activities in Canada. Furthermore, because it found that his
conversion to Christianity was not genuine, the RAD concluded that he would not
practise that faith if he returned to Yemen.
[14]
The RAD held that the new evidence did not raise
a serious issue of credibility capable of changing the outcome of the claim,
because the evidence was neither credible nor reliable. The RAD therefore
declined to convene an oral hearing pursuant to s 110(6) of the IRPA.
IV.
Issue
[15]
This application for judicial review may be
decided on the basis of a single issue: whether the RAD erred by not convening an oral hearing pursuant to
s 110(6) of the IRPA.
V.
Analysis
[16]
Mr. Ajaj argues that the right to an oral
hearing is a question of procedural fairness, and is subject to review against
the standard of correctness. He relies on this Court’s application of the
correctness standard to the analogous question of whether a pre-removal risk
assessment officer must convoke an oral hearing under s 113(b) of the IRPA
(see, e.g., Negrete Gudino v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2011 FC 283 at para 17).
[17]
However, in the context of the RAD, this Court
has found that s 110(6) of the IRPA imports a degree of discretion (see, e.g.,
Siddiqui v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC
1028 at para 104 [Siddiqui]). Most recently, in Ketchen v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 388 at para 19, Justice
Diner held that the RAD’s decision whether to hold an oral hearing involves the
application of s 110(6) of the IRPA to the facts, and is therefore a question
of mixed fact and law that attracts the reasonableness standard. This Court
adopted the same approach in Tchangoue v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2016 FC 334 at para 12 and Sanmugalingam v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 200 at para 36.
[18]
I am satisfied that the applicable standard of
review is reasonableness. However, nothing turns on this question. A breach of
procedural fairness that results in an unfair hearing is both unreasonable and
incorrect.
[19]
An applicant’s right to an oral hearing before
the RAD is governed by s 110 of the IRPA and the common law duty of procedural
fairness. Subsection 110(3) of the IRPA states that the RAD must generally
proceed without a hearing. This is subject to the exception found in s 110(6),
which provides that the RAD may hold an oral hearing where there is new
evidence:
110(6) […]
(a) that raises a serious issue with respect to the credibility of
the person who is the subject of the appeal;
(b) that is central to the decision with respect to the refugee
protection claim; and
(c) that, if
accepted, would justify allowing or rejecting the refugee protection claim.
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110(6) […]
a) soulèvent une question importante en ce qui concerne la
crédibilité de la personne en cause;
b) sont essentiels pour la prise de la décision relative à la
demande d’asile;
c) à supposer
qu’ils soient admis, justifieraient que la demande d’asile soit accordée ou
refusée, selon le cas.
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[20]
In Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Singh, 2016 FCA 96 at para 71 [Singh], Justice de
Montigny held that the RAD is not required to hold an oral hearing simply
because it admits new evidence. The three criteria listed in s 110(6) must
still be met. In Singh, the RPD had found several aspects of the refugee
claimant’s testimony to be deficient, including the establishment of his
identity. On appeal, the appellant sought to submit new evidence of a high
school diploma to confirm his identity. In light of the various shortcomings
identified by the RPD and RAD, Justice de Montigny held that it was “far from a given” that the new evidence would warrant
allowing the applicant’s claim. Similarly, in Siddiqui at paragraphs
102-14, the RAD’s refusal to hold an oral hearing was considered
reasonable because its decision was based on broader, unrelated adverse
credibility findings which would not have been altered by new evidence that was
relevant only to the applicant’s identity.
[21]
This may be contrasted with this Court’s
decision in Husian v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2015 FC 684. In that case, Justice Hughes found that where the RAD makes new
credibility findings, the parties must be given an opportunity to make
submissions.
[22]
The arrest warrant and circular letter that Mr.
Ajaj submitted raised a new credibility issue that was unconnected to the RPD’s
and RAD’s negative credibility findings regarding the genuineness of his
conversion from Islam to Christianity. The new evidence was central to the
decision regarding his sur place claim. If the documents had been
accepted by the RAD as authentic, then they would substantiate Mr. Ajaj’s fear
of persecution by the authorities in Yemen and his sur place claim could
potentially succeed. For that reason, the criteria of s 110(6) of the IRPA were
met, and the RAD erred in failing to convene an oral hearing.
[23]
The application for judicial review must be
allowed.