Docket:
IMM-11756-12
Citation: 2013 FC 1184
Vancouver, British Columbia, November 26, 2013
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
BETWEEN:
|
FERENC LASZLO BIRKAS
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
Notwithstanding that this application was
initiated by all members of the family, only Ferenc Laszlo Birkas is
challenging the decision under review. Accordingly, and with the consent of
the parties, the style of cause will be amended to reflect Mr. Birkas as the
sole Applicant.
[2]
Mr. Birkas challenges the decision of the
Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board [RPD] that he
is not a Convention refugee nor is there a serious possibility that he would be
at risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment, torture, or a risk to his
life if returned to Hungary.
[3]
Mr. Birkas is a homosexual Roma who fled to Canada from Hungary on January 22, 2010, and filed for refugee protection. He claimed to have been a
victim of numerous threats and physicals assaults due to his Roma ethnicity and
his homosexuality. He also claimed to have been unsuccessful in the attempts
he made to seek state protection.
[4]
The RPD found that Mr. Birkas “was not credible
regarding his efforts to seek state protection in Hungary.” It further found
that he was not credible when testifying about the attacks he suffered in Hungary as a result of his sexual orientation and ethnicity.
[5]
The RPD states that “the determinative issue in
the case at hand is the presumption that a country is capable of protecting its
citizens, and this underscores the principle that international protection
comes into play only when a refugee claimant has no other recourse available”
(emphasis added).
[6]
Mr. Birkas challenges only the finding of the
RPD on the “issue of state protection of Roma in Hungary.” He does not
challenge the negative credibility findings. Accordingly, the finding of the
RPD that the persecutory events did not happen and the finding that no efforts
were made to seek state protection, must stand.
[7]
Justice Barnes in Camacho v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 830 at para 10, referencing the
decision in Hinzman v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2007 FCA 171, observed that “in the absence of a compelling
explanation, a failure to pursue state protection opportunities within the home
state will usually be fatal to a refugee claim – at least where the state is a
functioning democracy with a willingness and the apparatus necessary to provide
a measure of protection to its citizens.”
[8]
Applying that principle to the case at hand, Mr.
Birkas - having failed to provide any evidence of personal persecution or
efforts to seek protection that the RPD found to be credible - could only
succeed in his claim for protection if there was clear and convincing evidence
that:
1. All
gay Roma men in Hungary have a well-founded fear of persecution or are
subjected to a risk to their lives or to a risk of cruel and unusual treatment
or punishment; and
2. There is no adequate state protection available to
them.
[9]
In this case, that clear and convincing evidence
would have to be found in the country condition documents [CCD] before the RPD.
[10]
First, there is no evidence in the CCD that all
gay Roma in Hungary have a well-founded fear of persecution or are subjected to
a serious risk to their lives or to a risk of cruel and unusual treatment or
punishment just because of their identity as gay Roma. Second, there is no
evidence in the CCD that all gay Roma in Hungary have inadequate
state protection.
[11]
The RPD in this decision noted that the CCD
discloses that some Roma in Hungary are persecuted or at risk and there
are issues of inadequate state protection in some cases. Those
findings, in my view, are reasonable based on the CCD. But those findings fall
well short of that which would have been necessary for Mr. Birkas to succeed in
his application for protection.
[12]
Therefore, even if I were to find that the RPD’s
analysis of state protection in Hungary vis-à-vis Mr. Birkas was unreasonable,
he has failed to establish that merely because he is a gay Roma, he is at risk
in Hungary and has inadequate state protection. Accordingly, even if he were
to succeed in this application, exercising my discretion as to remedy, I would
not have remitted his application back to be re-determined by a different
Member of the RPD, because his application cannot succeed.
[13]
For these reasons this application is
dismissed. No question for certification was proposed.