Docket: IMM-2748-15
Citation:
2016 FC 902
Ottawa, Ontario, August 8, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Elliott
BETWEEN:
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PELLUMB MIKELAJ
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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 subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA] of a decision of the Refugee Appeal Division of the
Immigration and Refugee Board [RAD] dated May 29, 2015, [Decision] confirming
the decision of the Refugee Protection Division [RPD] of January 29, 2015. The
Decision denied the Applicant’s claim for Convention refugee status on the
basis that he is excluded from refugee protection under Article 1E of the United
Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees [the Convention].
[2]
For the reasons that follow I have determined
the application must be dismissed.
I.
Background
[3]
The Applicant is a citizen of Albania who moved,
with his family, to Italy in 1996. In 2001 he received temporary status in
Italy and became a permanent resident in 2010. In January 2013, the Applicant
returned to visit his elderly parents in Albania. After a series of incidents
with the neighbouring Babaj clan in February 2013 the Babaj declared a blood
feud against the Applicant and his family. After the police, Elders and the
Commune could not resolve the feud, the Applicant left Albania for Canada. He
arrived on September 14, 2013. The Applicant did not return to Italy fearing he
would not be safe because there is a large Albanian community in Italy and his
belief that he could not obtain state protection.
[4]
The Minister intervened in writing before the
RPD to advise that on November 4, 2013 the Rome Visa Post confirmed Italian
authorities indicated the Applicant was a permanent resident of Italy whose
permit was still valid and had no expiry date.
[5]
The RPD accepted the Applicant is an Albanian
national. They found the determinative issues were credibility and exclusion
pursuant to Article 1E of the Convention. The credibility concerns included
that when he first made his refugee claim he did not mention he was a permanent
resident of Italy. Approximately one year later he filed an amended claim
stating his residency in Italy and claiming he believes it is a country where
he has a risk of serious harm. He also did not initially disclose that he
returned to Albania from Italy in January 2013. The Applicant blamed the advice
of a smuggler. Although the RPD drew a negative inference about his credibility
because of these omissions the Applicant noted before the RAD that the only
finding the RPD made was that he was excluded under Article 1E.
[6]
The RPD found, on a balance of probabilities, that
the Applicant had status in Italy, as of the date of the hearing and it was
substantially similar to that of Italian nationals. In the alternative, they
found that if he had lost his status in Italy the reason for the loss was
voluntary in that he stayed outside of Italy for a period of more than 12
months.
[7]
The RPD had no credibility issues regarding the
blood feud in Albania. They concluded though that the Applicant was excluded
pursuant to Article 1E of the Convention because of his residency status in
Italy. The RPD also found the Applicant failed to rebut the presumption of
state protection in Italy.
II.
The RAD Decision
[8]
The RAD focused on two issues: (1) did the RPD
err in finding the Applicant was excluded from refugee protection based on
Article 1E of the Convention; (2) did the RPD err in finding there was adequate
state protection available in Italy?
[9]
The RAD concluded that the Applicant was
excluded under Article 1E of the Convention and he had not rebutted the
presumption of state protection existing in Italy. In arriving at the exclusion
finding the RAD relied upon several documents including the November 4, 2013
email from the Rome Visa Post, a recent RIR, the Ministry of the Interior
publication “Staying in Italy Legally” and
information from the website of the Italian State Police. After careful review
and fresh analysis, the decision of the RPD was confirmed.
[10]
In determining the standard of review to apply
to the RPD decision the RAD followed the guidance in Huruglica v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 799. The RAD indicated
they would review all aspects of the RPD decision and come to an independent
assessment of the Applicant’s claim and where their assessment differed from
the RPD the RAD would substitute their own determination.
[11]
After setting out the basic background of the
RPD decision, the RAD acknowledged the Applicant put forward various errors he
said were made by the RPD including failing to consider the best evidence about
his permanent residence status in Italy. They then reviewed the evidence, made
their findings and confirmed the RPD decision.
III.
Standard of Review
[12]
The Applicant submitted the proper standard of
review of findings made by the RAD is correctness because there is no oral
hearing. However since the hearing of this matter the Court of Appeal in Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v. Huruglica, 2016 FCA 93, at paragraph
35 confirmed the standard of review of the decision made by the RAD is
reasonableness. That is the standard I will apply.
IV.
Arguments, Analysis and Conclusion
[13]
Section 98 of IRPA provides that a person
to whom Article 1E applies is not a Convention refugee nor a person in need of
protection. Article 1E states:
1E. This Convention shall not apply to a person who is recognized by
the competent authorities of the country in which he has taken residence as
having the rights and obligations which are attached to the possession of the
nationality of that country.
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1E. Cette Convention ne sera pas applicable
à une personne considérée par les autorités compétentes du pays dans lequel
cette personne a établi sa résidence comme ayant les droits et les
obligations attachés à la possession de la nationalité de ce pays.
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[14]
In Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v
Zeng, 2010 FCA 118 [Zeng] the Court of Appeal considered Article 1E.
They held the relevant date for determining status under the Convention is the
date of the hearing.
[15]
The Court noted in Zeng that the purpose
of Article 1E is to exclude persons who do not need protection. It is also
intended to prevent asylum shopping. They articulated a multi-part test to be
applied by a tribunal such as the RPD to determine whether Article 1E applies.
The first part of the test is to determine whether the claimant has status
substantially similar to that of the nationals in the third country. Both the
RPD and RAD found the Applicant had permanent residence status in Italy as of
the date of the hearing. They each concluded that the Applicant is therefore
excluded under Article 1E by virtue of section 98 of IRPA.
[16]
The dispute between the parties is a factual
one - whether, at the date of the hearing, the Applicant actually did have
status as a permanent resident of Italy. There is also the issue of whether
state protection is available to the Applicant in Italy.
[17]
The Applicant left Albania in January, 2013. At the
date of the hearing in October, 2014 he had been absent from Italy for more
than one year. After much confusion at the RPD hearing as to the kind of residency
card the Applicant possessed he agreed he held an “EC Residence
Permit for Long-Term Residents”. He says that card expires once he has
been absent from the country for 12 months or more. In support of that
allegation he produced at the RPD hearing an opinion letter written by a lawyer
in Varese, Italy to that effect.
[18]
The Applicant says the RAD should not have
relied upon the November 4, 2013 email from the Rome Visa Post in preference to
the legal opinion he submitted. The legal opinion was the best evidence; the
legislation was enclosed with the opinion and it was translated into English.
The legal opinion was written on the lawyer's letterhead, it was accompanied by
both his personal identification and his bar membership card. The Applicant
says it was an error in law when the RAD failed to consider the legal opinion
as little more than a personal opinion.
[19]
The Applicant also says that even if the legal
opinion was not persuasive it at least should have been sufficient to rebut the
prima facie evidence submitted by the Minister in the November 4, 2013
email. Regarding the email, the Applicant notes that at the time it was written
he had only been out of the country for 10 months so his status had not then
expired.
[20]
The Respondent says it is not surprising that
the RAD came to the same conclusion as the RPD given the Applicant did not file
any evidence before the RAD. They point out that once a prima facie case
of exclusion has been made out the onus shifts to the Applicant and that onus
was not met. They also say the Applicant between the date of the RPD hearing
and the RAD decision could have obtained new evidence from the authorities confirming
his status had expired but he chose not to.
[21]
With respect to the legal opinion, the
Respondent points out that the letter is very brief. Only a small part of the
legislation was translated and it was insufficient to provide context. The
letter did not provide any context either. The actual opinion itself
essentially referred to the wording of the legislation without any commentary
or explanation of process or reference to jurisprudence. They say that given
the totality of the evidence, including the RIR that indicates the status “may be” lost and the information on the police
website, the RAD did not commit any error in preferring the information in the
RIR. It is presumptively reliable.
[22]
The Respondent also says Italy is a multi-party
state democracy and the Applicant failed to prove he would not be protected.
Despite his claims that foreign workers are discriminated against and harassed,
he successfully lived in Italy since 1996 without incident. The finding with
respect to state protection was reasonable as the Applicant did not establish
the Bajaj family was established in Italy or posed a threat there.
[23]
Qi-Xiao v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2009 FC 195 [Qi-Xiao] at
paragraph 25, was relied on by the Applicant for the proposition that
statements by officials, in this case the police website, are not acceptable
because they are not expert evidence. However Qi-Xiao at paragraph 28
goes on to acknowledge that “the weight to be given
expert evidence is a matter for the trier of fact and an expert’s conclusion
which is not appropriately explained and supported may properly be given no
weight at all.”
[24]
The legal opinion provided is inadequate. It
contains a conclusion with no analysis. There is no legal reasoning and no
jurisprudence is cited. In Qi-Xiao this was referred to as a bare
opinion and that may properly be given no weight. When the RPD and then the RAD
weighed the lawyer’s letter against the documentary and other evidence dealing
with residence cards, they each reasonably preferred the other evidence to the
lawyer’s letter.
[25]
With respect to whether state protection is
available to the Applicant in Italy, the RAD found there was no evidence to
rebut the presumption that Italy is able to protect its residents. Before the
RPD the Applicant acknowledged he had not been in touch with Italian
authorities or the embassy since he came to Canada saying he feared returning
and had not been back since the blood feud began as he came straight to Canada.
He also did not know whether he could re‑instate his Permanent Resident
status if he had lost it. His fear in Italy was that Albanians can now enter
Italy because of EU Passports and the Bajaj family will find him and kill him.
His wife and two sons live in Albania.
[26]
When it comes down to it, the onus is on the
Applicant to prove his case on the balance of probabilities. The prima facie
evidence of exclusion under Article 1E was not persuasively rebutted by the
Applicant.
[27]
The RAD conducted a detailed, thorough and thoughtful
analysis of the evidence. They drew reasonable conclusions. The RAD even
considered that if the prima facie case of exclusion was not proven by
the Minister the Applicant still had the problem, identified as a factor in Zeng,
that he voluntarily left Italy to return to Albania.
[28]
Although counsel for the Applicant made strong
submissions at the RPD, the RAD and in this application the problem facing the
Applicant is his evidence is, at best, equivocal. While the Applicant disagrees
with the conclusions arrived at by the RAD, the reasoning process and the
outcomes are defensible on the facts and law. The reasons provided allow the
Applicant to understand why the RAD came to those conclusions.
[29]
The RAD’s decision is entitled to deference and
I cannot re-weigh the evidence in order to find in favour of the Applicant. The
application is therefore dismissed.
[30]
No serious question of general importance arises
on these facts.