Docket: IMM-3457-15
Citation:
2016 FC 602
Ottawa, Ontario, May 30, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Roy
BETWEEN:
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UBAH IBRAHIM
OMAR
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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]
Ubah Ibrahim Omar, the applicant in this case,
seeks the judicial review of the decision of the Refugee Protection Division of
the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (RPD) to vacate a previous finding
of refugee protection in favour of the applicant. The application for judicial
review is made pursuant to section 72 of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 (IRPA). For the reasons that follow, the
judicial review application must fail.
[2]
Essentially, the applicant was successful in
being awarded the protection of section 96 of the IRPA after having provided
the RPD with a version of events that has proven to be a fabrication, either
completely or at the very least materially. Events that involved the applicant
starting in 1995, in what she claims is her country of origin, Somalia, could
not have taken place because she has since admitted that she was a resident of the
United States between 1995 and 2009. Furthermore, while in the United States
she was convicted of an offence for which she received a sentence of 81 months
in prison, conviction that was not disclosed to the Canadian authorities when
she came to Canada in 2009 and sought refugee status. As such, the respondent
claims that the applicant is not a Convention refugee or a person in need of
protection, according to section 98 of the IRPA, because the offence committed
in the U.S. falls under Article 1F of the Refugee Convention.
I.
Facts
[3]
The applicant, who claims to be born on January
1, 1982, came to Canada some time in 2009. According to her Personal
Information Form (PIF) of July 27, 2009, she would have arrived in Winnipeg in
May 2009. Until some time in May 2009, she, according to that PIF, was residing
in Nairobi, in Kenya. She flew from Nairobi, through London, England and
arrived in Toronto on May 26, 2009; she then travelled by car to Winnipeg
arriving in Winnipeg on May 28, 2009. In her Statutory Declaration to Inland
Enforcement Officers of the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) on May 14,
2014, the applicant, once she has been confronted with the fact that her
fingerprints show that she resided in the United States, indicates that she
came to Canada on May 25, 2009 and she crossed the border by being driven into
Canada. As we shall see, it has been difficult to ascertain the facts
concerning this applicant on many other issues.
[4]
The PIF provides a narrative of what prompted
the applicant to leave her country of origin, Somalia, and seek refugee status
in this country. I shall focus on the portion of the narrative that starts in 1996.
Prior to that year, it seems that there were difficulties for members of her
clan, but the situation worsened significantly starting in 1996.
[5]
The applicant speaks of militias terrifying her
family, being specific that she remembered how her cousin, a baby at the time,
was crying when her uncle was shot many times in the stomach. The applicant
states that she studied in elementary school in a village in Somalia until
1999.
[6]
In 1999, the applicant’s parents decided to flee
and they ended up in villages 100 miles away. She states that “after 3 days of walking, we arrived at Dhobley.” The
fear, she says, was constant. They would have to flee in the bush for days when
they were attacked in the camps. According to her PIF, the applicant and her
family stayed in Dhobley until 2004. At that time, they moved back to their
village of origin to find the city under the rule of Islamic courts. The applicant
claims that she got married on October 15, 2004. From that union, two children
were born, one in August 2005 and the other in May 2007.
[7]
As stated by the applicant, a most tragic event
would have occurred in January 2007. At paragraph 9 of her narrative, one can
read:
In January 2007, I faced the biggest tragedy
in my family. I was 5 months pregnant with my second child, Ednan. Our
house was raided by the Islamic courts militias. I was terrified and it was
horrible. My husband was beaten up and they took him. Later, he was killed and
we buried him. I couldn’t tolerate the situation. I was pregnant and had
another small kid.
[8]
The decision was made to leave Somalia in January
2009 because the situation in the city was, according to the applicant, getting
worse. They therefore went back to Dhobley where the applicant met another man
whom she married in secret despite the disapproval of her family. The applicant
then says that her husband was taken away by the Al-Shabaab militia which,
according to the applicant, “were looking for me. If
they found me, they would have killed me. Because I was too scared, I decided
to flee Dhobley leaving my family there. So I fled to Kenya in February 2009,
before they came back.”
[9]
What is remarkable about the story, other than
showing the applicant in a remarkably sympathetic way, being an innocent victim
having survived such extraordinarily difficult circumstances, is that it did
not happen. The applicant acknowledged to the authorities in 2014, once she was
confronted with information coming from the United States, that she lived in
the United States between 1995 and 2009.
[10]
It is on May 14, 2014 that the applicant was
interviewed by CBSA officers, years after having sought successfully refugee
status in this country. In her Statutory Declaration, she attests being born on
January 1, 1982. At first, she denied having ever lived in United States from
1995 to 2009. However, once told that her fingerprints had been sent to the
United States, she acknowledged having lived in the United States. She also
acknowledged that she had been convicted for assault following an incident in
1998. If the date of birth is truly January 1, 1982, that means that she came
to North America when she was 13 years old and was convicted at 18 for a crime
committed while she was 16 years of age.
[11]
When asked at the interview with CBSA what her
real name was, she would have answered “Laila Mohamed”
and her real date of birth was indicated as being January 1, 1974, and not
January 1, 1982 as she had indicated in her PIF as well as in her claim for
refugee protection in Canada. At the end of the Statutory Declaration, the applicant
would have said that “[t]o be honest, my real name is
Ubah Omar. I used the Laila Mohamed name to go to the U.S. My Auntie said I was
her daughter.” The matter of her age was not resolved however.
[12]
The story of the applicant did not become any clearer
with her testimony before the RPD in the present case where the government
seeks to vacate the refugee status. The applicant answered questions from her own
counsel, yet the story remained murky. There was confusion, for instance, as to
when the applicant first went to Kenya. To a question from her counsel, she
answered “1990” (page 20 of the transcript). The
applicant would have been 8 years old in 1990. However, just a few pages later
(p. 28), after having indicated to counsel that the applicant lived in Nairobi,
she was asked how old she was when she left Kenya. The answer was “[r]oughly 20. It was a long time ago. I am not really sure.”
Here, it is one of two things. In order to have been around 20 when she
left Kenya in 1995, the applicant would have had to be born around 1974-1975.
The other option, if it is true that she was born in 1982, would have been that
the applicant stayed in Kenya for 12 years in order to have left when she was
around 20. That means that, according to that story, she would have left Kenya
in 2002, which is impossible because she was incarcerated in Minnesota by year
2000.
[13]
That difficulty did not escape counsel for the
applicant. Probably because counsel recalled that the applicant had first
supposedly gone to Kenya in 1990 and that she claims that she was born in 1982,
counsel asked at page 28: “So you were in Kenya about
12 years?” The answer was simply “We always
lived in a camp.”
[14]
The applicant seems to double down at page 25 of
the transcript when she answers a question about her age when she was in
Dhobley by saying “[a]bout eight or nine. It was around
the time we left Somalia.” That suggests being born in 1982. The
narrative was not made any clearer where, a few pages later (page 31 of the
transcript), questions are asked about the assistance the applicant would have
received in order to leave Nairobi to come to North America in 1995. One can
read at lines 15-19 of page 31:
Q: It says here, “she made contacts
with an agent Chet (phonetic), a dark skinned man.” Did that happen?
A: Before coming along with my aunt,
I was planning to leave on my own and that’s when she was looking for an agent
for me.
In 1995, the applicant would have been 13
years old if she was born in 1982, but 21 if born in 1974. It is hard to fathom
that someone 13 years old would be looking for an agent and was planning to
leave on her own to come to America. Being around 20 would be more plausible.
[15]
The matter of those dates came back at the
bottom of page 32 and top of page 33 of the transcript. First, there is the
part of the testimony where the applicant claims that she received $4,000.00USD
from her uncle in order to allow her to travel to the United States. The applicant
states that she used only a part of the money for the travel and sent the rest
to her family. That seems to have taken by surprise counsel who asked about his
understanding that the applicant was not in touch with her mother at that
point. The applicant countered that she would get information about her mother
when she was in a refugee camp. Thus, counsel asked about where the money could
be sent if they did not have a stable address and she did not know where they
were. The applicant answered by saying:
A. There were
people who would travel from the camp and go to Doblay [sic] to take
food over to those people in general who are struggling and I would just tell
them to find them.
Q: I see. Were they at Doblay [sic]?
A: Yes, because Doblay [sic] and
Kismayo are very close.
[16]
It is somewhat surprising because in her PIF,
the applicant contended that when they left Kismayo, they fled to villages 100
miles away. She then says that“[a]fter 3 days of
walking, we arrived in Dhobley.” It must also be remembered that the applicant
claimed she was 13 years old at the time she would have made those arrangements
to send money, received from an uncle, to her parents who lived in a refugee
camp. That led directly to the last exchange about the age and the period of
time during which the applicant would have stayed in Kenya.
Q: Ok. What year did you come to the
U.S.?
A: 1999.
Q: 1999. Earlier you said 1995. Was
that wrong?
A: Sorry I didn’t mean to say 1999.
1995.
Q: Ok. But you were born in ’82. In
’95 you’d be 13, not 20.
A: I came on false passport and that
passport – my aunt brought me to the United States pretending me to be her
daughter and her daughter was an actual person. Her age was 20, so I came with
her information which said that she was 20. She was born in 1975.
Q: Is this the daughter who died of
sickness?
A: Yes.
Q: So you were – you were in Somalia
not for 12 years, you came – you were in Kenya for 5 years, is that right?
A: Yes.
[17]
As can be seen, the arithmetic is deficient. It
was never made clear how old the applicant was when she came to the United
States in 1995, but common sense dictates that there is a significant
difference between a young girl of 13 (if born in 1982) and a young woman of 20
or 21 (if born in 1974). Furthermore, sending money to a refugee camp where her
parents are residing was never explained. And coming to the United States on
her own from Kenya, using an agent, at age 13 is remarkable. Again, common
sense dictates that this is an endeavour that is quite significant for a young
girl of 13 years old.
[18]
There is also the matter of the American work
permit. At the revocation hearing before the RPD on November 14, 2014, the
applicant was examined by counsel for the Minister. The applicant stated that
she had “legal status” in the United States
between 1995 and 1998, when she was charged for the crime that resulted in an
imprisonment term of 81 months. She explained that she had a “work permit”, a “green card”
(transcript, p.7). Evidently, getting a “green card”,
in 1995, makes sense if you were born in 1974, much less so if born in 1982.
[19]
Then, there is the conviction entered in the
state of Minnesota against the applicant. An altercation occurred in July 1998
between the applicant and another Somalian woman. As a result of the
altercation, the other Somalian woman suffered 7 cuts to her face. Two of the
cuts in the cheek area were deep and the eyelid of that person was also cut.
Was also noted by the policeman who interviewed that person a cut below her
left earlobe.
[20]
There were apparently witnesses to the incident
and the police interviewed them. One of the two witnesses indicated that the applicant
used a “ring knife,” which is shaped like a
hook.
[21]
The applicant had a version of events that was,
in the words of the RPD member, quite “sanitized.”
Among other things, the applicant denied having used a knife in the altercation.
[22]
In the end, according to the information
in the records held in the U.S. (Minnesota Criminal history), the applicant was
convicted of the more serious offence of assault in the first degree, a felony
under Minnesota state law which carried a maximum penalty of 20 years
imprisonment. According to the evidence, the offence reads:
Whoever assaults
another and inflicts great bodily harm may be sentenced to imprisonment for not
more than 20 years or to payment of a fine of not more than $30,000, or both.
[23]
For a first offender, the applicant was
sentenced to 81 months in prison, the sentence being imposed on April 7, 2000.
According to the record, the applicant served close to four years of her
sentence in custody, being released on February 19, 2004. Her sentence expired
on May 15, 2006.
II.
Decision under review
[24]
On June 26, 2015, the so-called “vacation application” pursuant to s 109 of the IRPA
was the subject of a decision. The RPD concluded that the previous panel did
not know about the time spent in the United States, the true identity, and the
criminal record of the applicant. The panel was of the view that the facts
withheld or misrepresented were material.
[25]
Furthermore, the panel was of the view that the
offence committed and for which the applicant was convicted in Minnesota
constitutes a serious non-political crime committed outside the country. In
reaching that conclusion, it equated the American offence with sections 267 and
268 of the Criminal Code of Canada. These offences carry terms of
imprisonment of 10 years and 14 years; receiving a sentence of 81 months’
imprisonment for an offence that is punishable in Canada by 14 years’
imprisonment was, in the view of the panel, a serious crime.
[26]
In the view of the panel, the previous panel
would have concluded that the applicant had committed a serious non-political
crime outside of Canada.
[27]
Given that a person found to have committed a
serious non-political crime outside of the country of refuge cannot be found to
be a Convention refugee or a person in need of protection, the panel declined
to consider if there would be other sufficient evidence before the first panel
to justify refugee protection (subsection 109(2) of the IRPA).
III.
Analysis
[28]
The applicant mounts an attack on the RPD
decision on a number of fronts.
Natural justice
[29]
First, after the hearing before the RPD in the
instant case (decision issued on January 26, 2015), it was discovered that the
hearing before the RPD which led to the granting of the refugee status to the applicant
(January 13, 2011) had not been recorded. The applicant tried to make hay out
of that absence. She relied on the case of Toussaint v MCI, 2011 FC 216
for the proposition that the failure to produce the transcript may constitute
the denial of natural justice if the reviewing court is unable to properly
dispose of the issues raised.
[30]
This is not a new proposition. The matter was
decided authoritatively by the Supreme Court of Canada in Canadian Union of
Public Employees, Local 301 v Montreal (City), [1997] 1 S.C.R. 793 [Canadian
Union of Public Employees]. The Court puts the proposition thus, at
paragraph 83:
As I have stated, in the absence of a
statutory right to a recorded hearing, a party’s rights to natural justice will
only be infringed where the court has an inadequate record upon which to base
its decision.
[31]
The hearing to vacate a decision focuses on the
misrepresentations or the withholding of material facts. Here, those facts
relate the applicant’s true identity, her criminal record and, of course, her
time spent in the U.S. The issue is therefore whether identity, criminal record
and time spent in the U.S. and not in Somalia were before the first RPD. If
they were, there were no misrepresentations or withholding of material facts.
[32]
Because there is no recording or transcript of
the proceedings that led to the January 13, 2011 decision, the applicant
contends that it cannot be established that facts about her identity, her
presence in the U.S. and her criminal record were withheld. That argument
cannot succeed.
[33]
In the case at hand, what we have are two
diametrically opposed sets of facts that cannot be reconciled. On the one hand,
the record before the first RPD describes the very difficult circumstances in
which the applicant alleged she found herself in Somalia and Kenya between 1996
and 2009. Clearly those circumstances were before the first RPD panel; they are
featured in the short decision rendered on January 13, 2011, concluding that “there is a serious possibility of persecution if you
returned to Somalia and I accept your claim under section 96 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act.” Obviously, two paragraphs in the decision that
lead to the conclusion of the RPD are the two most salient features of the events
over a period of time when, in fact, the applicant was in the United States:
[34]
I reproduce the two paragraphs for better
clarity:
In 1999 your family fled to Dhobley 100
miles away and lived in a camp without work, school or proper security. You
remained there until 2004 when you returned to Kismayo and got married. You and
your first husband had two sons. In 2007, while still pregnant with one of your
sons, your husband was killed by a militia.
You and your parents and children returned
to Dhobley in 2009 where you met and married your second husband. He was
abducted by Al-Shabaab shortly after and after you came to Canada you learned
he was killed. You fled to Kenya and your friends and relatives assisted you in
your passage to Canada. You feel that if you return to Somalia as a woman from
a minority clan without protection, you will be harmed or killed.
[35]
The applicant suggests that the current Board’s
reasoning, to the effect that the time spent in the United States, the true
identity and the criminal record of the applicant were not brought to the
attention of the previous Board, holds only if these would have been mentioned inevitably
in the reasons of the panel granting refugee status, had the applicant stated
them in the original application. I have my doubts that such is the test. That
seems to require a level of certainty beyond even reasonable doubt,
inevitability carrying arguably a complete absence of doubt, approaching
Descartes’ metaphysical certainty. Assuming for the sake of the discussion that
doubt should favour the applicant, I have no doubt that identity, criminal
record and especially the time spent in the U.S. would have been considered and
mentioned. That is so because the two versions are so irrevocably opposed. One
cannot suffer in Somalia, and for those facts to be noted specifically in the
RPD’s ruling, and be in the United States at the same time. If the whereabouts
of the applicant during that period had been put to the RPD, it is impossible
that they would not have been noted such that the RPD would have failed to
consider the matter fully. We are not talking small incremental discrepancies.
It is rather the narratives for a period of 15 years that are impossible to
reconcile. There is no need for the transcript before the first RPD panel to
know that a completely different set of facts were not presented. It is not
only unlikely that the episode in the United States was never alluded to before
the first RPD panel, it is impossible. It follows that the rights to natural
justice for lack of transcript have not been infringed because this Court has
an adequate record in order to base its decision on whether there should have
been a vacation of the refugee claim.
Vacating the decision
[36]
Second, the applicant takes issue with the
decision to grant the application under section 109 of the IRPA. Such decision
is reviewed on a standard of reasonableness, as most matters are nowadays. In Frias
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 753, my colleague Justice
Luc Martineau wrote:
9 The standard of review that
applies to the panel’s decision regarding the vacation of refugee protection
status is reasonableness. The same is true for the question of whether a person
is subject to Article 1F(b) of the Convention…
I share that view which is supported by the
authorities.
[37]
The application to vacate is made pursuant to
section 109 of the IRPA which reads:
109 (1) The Refugee Protection
Division may, on application by the Minister, vacate a decision to allow a
claim for refugee protection, if it finds that the decision was obtained as a
result of directly or indirectly misrepresenting or withholding material
facts relating to a relevant matter.
|
109 (1) La
Section de la protection des réfugiés peut, sur demande du ministre, annuler
la décision ayant accueilli la demande d’asile résultant, directement ou
indirectement, de présentations erronées sur un fait important quant à un
objet pertinent, ou de réticence sur ce fait.
|
(2) The Refugee Protection Division
may reject the application if it is satisfied that other sufficient evidence
was considered at the time of the first determination to justify refugee
protection.
|
(2) Elle peut
rejeter la demande si elle estime qu’il reste suffisamment d’éléments de
preuve, parmi ceux pris en compte lors de la décision initiale, pour
justifier l’asile.
|
(3) If the application is allowed,
the claim of the person is deemed to be rejected and the decision that led to
the conferral of refugee protection is nullified.
|
(3) La
décision portant annulation est assimilée au rejet de la demande d’asile, la
décision initiale étant dès lors nulle.
|
[38]
In order to be successful, the applicant will
have to satisfy this Court that the decision under review does not fall within
the range of possible, acceptable outcomes defensible in law and in facts.
Under subsection 109(1), the RPD must be satisfied that the misrepresenting or
withholding was with respect to material facts, that those facts relate to a
relevant matter and that the decision to be vacated was obtained as a result of
the direct or indirect withholding or misrepresenting of facts.
[39]
It is difficult to see how this set of facts is
not material as the applicant told a very sympathetic story that simply did not
occur; it was a fabrication. Where the applicant was and what she had to endure
are relevant matters in refugee protection cases. Knowing what the true
circumstances of the applicant were when she made her refugee claim in 2009, it
is in my view perfectly reasonable for the second RPD panel to conclude that
the decision would have been otherwise. It is not for this Court to substitute
its view of the facts to the extent that the decision falls within a range of
possible, acceptable outcomes.
[40]
The applicant argues, in effect, that the
decision would have been the same the second time around because of her gender
and her nationality, thus relying on subsection 109(2). In other words, it
would suffice to establish that she is Somalian for the refugee protection to
be granted. No authority was offered in support of such a bold proposition.
[41]
At any rate, the applicant, had all of the
circumstances been presented to the first RPD panel, would have been faced with
being excluded from consideration as a refugee by the operation of section 98
of the IRPA. It reads:
98 A person referred to in section E or F of
Article 1 of the Refugee Convention is not a Convention refugee or a person
in need of protection.
|
98 La personne visée aux sections E ou F de
l’article premier de la Convention sur les réfugiés ne peut avoir la qualité
de réfugié ni de personne à protéger.
|
[42]
Is relevant to this case Article 1F(b) which
reads:
F The
provisions of this Convention shall not apply to any person with respect to
whom there are serious reasons for considering that:
|
F Les
dispositions de cette Convention ne seront pas applicables aux personnes dont
on aura des raisons sérieuses de penser :
|
…
|
…
|
(b) he has
committed a serious non-political crime outside the country of refuge prior
to his admission to that country as a refugee;
|
b) Qu’elles
ont commis un crime grave de droit commun en dehors du pays d’accueil avant
d’y être admises comme réfugiés;
|
…
|
…
|
[43]
The second RPD panel came to the conclusion that
the offence for which the applicant has been found guilty and convicted in the
state of Minnesota falls squarely within the confines of Article 1F(b). Using a
knife that cuts like a razor, according to the version given by one of the
witnesses to the incident to the police, and cutting deeply into the face of
the victim is an offence punishable by 14 years imprisonment if committed in
Canada. Section 268 of the Criminal Code describes the offence in the
following fashion:
268 (1) Every
one commits an aggravated assault who wounds, maims, disfigures or endangers
the life of the complainant.
|
268 (1)
Commet des voies de fait graves quiconque blesse, mutile ou défigure le
plaignant ou met sa vie en danger.
|
…
|
…
|
[44]
The applicant seems to be making two arguments
concerning the offence in the United States. First, she relied on her sanitized
version of the assault to suggest that the offence as committed was not as
serious as it may seem when reading the provision creating the said offence.
Second, she claims that she did not have a good understanding of the offence
for which she was being convicted and for which she claimed she entered a
guilty plea.
[45]
There is no value to the argument that the
guilty plea is such that there is no resolution to the contestation of the seriousness
of the offence. A guilty plea is the recognition that the individual has
committed the crime as charged. The essential elements of the offence are acknowledged
formally; in this case, the applicant concedes that she was convicted of “assault second degree dangerous weapon” and “assault first degree great bodily harm”. The more
serious of the two offences, punishable by 20 years’ imprisonment, requires that
the assault result in the infliction of great bodily harm. As for “assault second degree dangerous weapon”, it is the
use of the dangerous weapon which inflicts substantial bodily harm that is
prohibited. Whether the applicant pled guilty to these offences or was found
guilty, it remains that she has caused bodily harm. There is no point in
arguing that, in her mind, the applicant did not consider the bodily harm to be
significant. Actually, it was reasonable for the second RPD panel to conclude
that the bodily harm was significant in view of the police reports of
interviews with witnesses.
[46]
The version of events offered by the applicant
is simply not consistent with the guilty pleas that would have been entered.
She has acknowledged in the most formal way that she inflicted substantial
bodily harm and great bodily harm. Evidently, with maximum penalties as high as
those provided by the Minnesota statute, they are considered to be objectively
serious offences. The fact that a prison sentence of 81 months was imposed on a
first offender would tend to signal that the offence as committed was also
subjectively serious.
[47]
In the circumstances of this case, the
presumption that a crime punishable in Canada by imprisonment for 10 years is a
serious crime (Febles v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 SCC 68, [2014] 3 S.C.R. 431 [Febles]) has not been displaced. As the
Court put it at paragraph 62 of Febles, “… the
ten-year rule should not be applied in a mechanistic, decontextualized, or
unjust manner.” However, in this case, it is anything but decontextualized
or unjust. It is not only that the offence is punishable in this country by 14
years of imprisonment, but also the fact that a significant term of
imprisonment was imposed in the circumstances. Accepting the evidence found in
the police reports in Minnesota, which is perfectly reasonable, obviously the
offence as committed has a measure of viciousness that brings it in the realm
of a serious crime.
[48]
As for the issue raised by the applicant about
the lack of interpretation in the judicial proceedings in Minnesota, there is no
evidence to support that contention. At any rate, it is not surprising that the
RPD concluded that it is highly unlikely that a guilty plea and the imposition
of a significant term of imprisonment would have taken place without the
accused, the applicant, being able to understand. As part of the police
investigation, the reports indicate that they resorted to the use of
interpreters in order to ensure that the then suspect understood the questions
as well as the process (Miranda warning). It is reasonable to conclude that it
is highly unlikely that a court in the state of Minnesota would not have taken
the steps to ensure that the applicant understood fully the process while the
police did.
[49]
In view of the reasonable findings concerning
the application of section 98 of the IRPA it was not necessary for the RPD to
consider further subsection 109(2) of the IRPA (Aleman v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 FCT 710). One never reaches subsection
109(2) if the person cannot claim to be a Convention refugee or a person in
need of protection. That is the case by operation of section 98 of the IRPA. The
consideration of whether there is sufficient evidence at the time of the first
determination to justify refugee protection simply does not arise. There was no
need to consider whether being a Somalian woman is sufficient to grant refugee
states as the applicant was disqualified by the operation of section 98.
[50]
I should say that, had the matter been argued by
counsel, I would have been tempted to conclude that establishing that a serious
crime of a non-political nature is sufficient to satisfy the requirements of
subsection 109(1). By definition, and through the operation of section 98, the
fact that such a crime was not disclosed constitutes a material fact relating
to a relevant matter: the applicant cannot be a Convention refugee or a person
in need of protection. As clearly found, there cannot be other sufficient evidence
at the time of the first determination because there should not have been a
first determination. But more fundamentally, the applicant would have been
disqualified by the operation of section 98. That disqualification, in and of
itself, would result from the withholding of material facts, without having to
go any further. However, the full argument was not presented to the Court and I
refrain from reaching a definitive conclusion.
Error in the RPD decision
[51]
The applicant argues that the RPD was wrong to
state at paragraph 16 of the decision that “the
respondent at the hearing testified that she had used an alias in entering
Canada and had misrepresented her whereabouts and her criminality in the U.S.” because
the applicant, the respondent in the vacate proceedings before the RPD, did not
testify that she used an alias.
[52]
The respondent in these proceedings concedes
that the applicant did not testify to using an alias, as this applicant claims
her real name is Ubah Ibrahim Omar. The error, or misunderstanding, is
understandable. After having operated under the name Laila Mohamed for more
than 13 years in the United States, the applicant would have used the name Omar
when she came to Canada. Even in her Statutory Declaration made to the Canada
Border Services Agency officers on May 14, 2014, the applicant presents herself
as Ubah Omar, with a date of birth of January 1, 1982, but also known as Laila
Mohamed, with a date of birth of January 1, 1974. That Statutory Declaration is
itself confusing as she presents herself as Ubah Ibrahim Omar and denies having
lived in the U.S. until she is advised that her fingerprints reveal the use of
a different name. When asked for her real name, the applicant answered “Laila Mohamed”, her real date of birth being January
1, 1974. There is then the final question and the answer:
Q. Where did the name you are using
now come from?
A. It’s just a Somalian name. To be
honest, my real name is Ubah Omar. I used the Laila Mohamed name to go to the
U.S. My Auntie said I was her daughter.
It is not exactly surprising that Laila
Mohamed, with her criminal record, would have chosen to cross the border
between the United States and Manitoba using a different name. What is the
alias and what is not remain shrouded in some fog. Similarly, the applicant
stated before the RPD being born in 1982, yet it is unlikely that she was born
in 1982 in view of her testimony as a whole. 1974 would be more likely. However,
it is too strong to say that the applicant testified that she used an alias.
The transcript of the hearing before the RPD does not confirm testimony to that
the effect. We only know that two names have been used by this person.
[53]
However, as can be seen from the two preceding
paragraphs, the acknowledged error is inconsequential. It changes nothing, or
very little, to the withholding and misrepresentations made by the applicant at
the time she sought refugee status in this country. The misrepresentations
about her past, including the tragedies she would have suffered in Somalia and
her conviction in Minnesota, are of course much more significant.
[54]
The applicant argues that the real possibility
that the result was affected ought to be the test for errors of law as for
errors of fact. Even if that were to be the test, which is contested by the
respondent to be the appropriate test and on which I offer no view, it is clear
that the proposed test cannot be met on the facts of this case. If it is true
that the applicant did not testify that she used an alias, it remains
that she did misrepresent much more important facts having significant
probative value. It is also certainly true that this applicant has used
different names and dates of birth. And then, there is the complete fabrication
of more than 13 years of her life (1995 to 2009). There is nothing of
consequence that can be drawn from the error about what the applicant testified
to and there is no real possibility that the result was or even could have been
affected.
IV.
Question of general importance
[55]
Counsel for the applicant suggested that there
may be serious questions of general importance that would stem from this case
(section 74 of the IRPA). One is whether the duty of fairness is breached
because a recording or a transcript of the first RPD decision where refugee
status was granted is not available.
[56]
There is no statutory right to a recording or a
transcript. It follows that there is a violation of the duty of fairness only
if the Court cannot properly dispose of the application for review without the
transcript (Canadian Union of Public Employees, above). Here, I am fully
satisfied that it is impossible that the applicant could have testified before
the first RPD panel that not only did she suffer tragedies in Somalia between
1996 and 2009, but she was living in the U.S. at the time, even residing in an
American prison for close to four years. The conflict between the two sets of
events is complete and irremediable. The RPD panel would have had to explain
why one version is favoured over the other. It is clear that the true version,
involving residency in the U.S., was never presented by the RPD. It follows
that there is no question of general importance given the facts of this case.
[57]
The other proposed question is concerned with
the error made by the RPD about the testimony of the applicant having testified
that she used an alias. It is suggested that the question be whether the test
is that there is a real possibility that the error affected the result or
whether the result is reasonable absent the error. As I have found, even if the
applicant’s preferred test is applied to the facts of this case, there is no
doubt that the error was inconsequential and that there was no real possibility
it would have affected the result.
[58]
In this case, these two questions never really
arose because the facts of the case did not require a response. The law is
clear that a transcript is mandatory only if required by statute. The thing in
which the applicant was interested is whether the real story of the period 1995-2009
was before the first RPD. For the reasons given, it is impossible that it was
before the Board and this Court was able to dispose of the judicial review
application without a transcript showing that the matter was never raised
before the first RPD. In the peculiar circumstances of this case, the question proposed
does not transcend the interests of the parties (Singh v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FCA 96). This is not a serious question
of general importance.
[59]
As for the second proposed question, the issue
the applicant suggests be the certified question never arose. There was no need
to decide on a test because it was so clear that even the more advantageous
test for the applicant could not be met. That proposed question could not be
dispositive of the appeal (Lai v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness), 2015 FCA 21). As the Court of Appeal pointed out, “a certified question is not a reference of a question to
this Court”, which is why the question must have been dealt with by the
Federal Court before it can be certified. This Court did not opine on the
appropriate test. There was no need.
[60]
As a result, this judicial review application
must fail. No question is certified.