Date: 20130416
Docket: A-377-11
Citation: 2013 FCA 103
CORAM: BLAIS
C.J.
PELLETIER
J.A.
TRUDEL
J.A.
BETWEEN:
FATEH KAMEL
Appellant
and
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Passport Canada
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
TRUDEL J.A.
Introduction
[1]
Mr. Kamel (the appellant) is
appealing from a judgment of the Federal Court (2011 FC 1061) [Kamel-FC 2011] rendered by
Justice Scott (the Judge), who dismissed his application for judicial
review of a decision by the Minister of Foreign Affairs (the Minister), on the
recommendation of the Passport Canada Security Bureau, to refuse to issue him a
regular passport (the 2010 Decision or Minister’s Decision). The appellant was
informed of that decision in a letter dated July 15, 2010. The Minister’s
refusal was based on reasons involving the “national security of Canada or another
country”, citing section 10.1 of the Canadian Passport Order, SI/81-86,
as amended by the Order Amending the Canadian Passport Order, SI/2004-113
(the Order).
[2]
This is the second
round of legal proceedings for Mr. Kamel, who was initially refused passport
services in 2005 (the 2005 Decision). The 2005 Decision was also judicially
reviewed by the Federal Court (2008 FC 338, Noël J.) [Kamel-FC 2008], resulting in an appeal
to this Court, which held that section 10.1 of the Order violated
section 6 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Part I
of the Constitution Act, 1982, being Schedule B to the Canada Act,
1982 (U.K.), 1982, c. 11 (Charter), which protects the right of Canadian
citizens to enter or leave Canada, but that this violation was justified under
section 1 of the Charter (Kamel v. Canada (Attorney General), 2009 FCA
21, leave to appeal to S.C.C. refused, 33088 (August 20, 2009)) [Kamel-FCA
2009]. It thus rejected the ruling of the Federal Court. Justice Noël
also declared that the principles of procedural fairness had not been respected
during Passport Canada’s administrative investigation and set aside the
Minister’s unfavourable decision. As this ruling was not challenged, it was not
affected by this Court’s judgment in Kamel-FCA 2009. It is the
appellant’s second passport application and the Minister’s resulting unfavourable
decision that are at issue here.
[3]
In this case, Mr. Kamel submits
that the 2010 Decision infringes his rights under sections 6, 7 and 8 of
the Charter. Given the constitutional aspects of his claim, he criticizes the
Federal Court for having failed to use the correct legal approach in its
analysis of the Minister’s decision. He is, therefore, asking this Court to refer
the matter back to the Federal Court for a new review of the 2010 Decision in
accordance with the applicable legal principles. He is also asking this Court, on
the basis of subsection 24(1) of the Charter, to order Passport Canada to
issue him a regular passport.
[4]
Although my
analytical approach differs from that of the Federal Court, I nevertheless
propose that the appeal be dismissed with costs. I find that the restriction of
Mr. Kamel’s rights is based on sufficiently important objectives and that
the refusal to issue him a regular passport is proportional to those objectives.
[5]
For a better
understanding of the context of the 2010 Decision, it is important to set out
the facts relevant to the dispute.
The relevant facts
[6]
Mr. Kamel, originally from
Algeria, has been a Canadian citizen since January 27, 1993. In Kamel-FCA
2009, we find the following facts (citations omitted):
[5] In May 1999, Mr. Kamel
was arrested in Jordan and then extradited to France. On April 6, 2001, after a
trial lasting several days, the Tribunal de Grande instance de Paris convicted
him of membership in a criminal organization for the purpose of preparing a
terrorist act and complicity in the forgery of three passports he had brought
from Canada. The act of terrorism in question was the attack in Roubaix,
France, in 1998. Mr. Kamel had legal representation. The Tribunal described Mr.
Kamel as the [translation] “…
principal organizer of international networks determined to prepare attacks and
procure weapons and passports for terrorists acting throughout the world”. Some
twenty accused were tried at the same time as Mr. Kamel. He received the
harshest sentence: imprisonment for eight years and permanent exclusion from
France.
[6] Mr. Kamel was imprisoned
in France. He was released after serving half of his sentence. He returned to
Montréal, his place of residence in Canada, on January 29, 2005, with a [translation] “temporary passport valid
for one trip only” issued as an exceptional case to allow him to return to
Canada.
[7] On June 13, 2005, Mr.
Kamel applied to the Canadian authorities for a new passport. He was planning a
business trip to Thailand. According to the evidence on record, “there is
intense passport trafficking activity in Thailand.”
[8] Eventually, after
numerous exchanges that are not relevant for the purposes of this appeal,
Passport Office Canada recommended that the Minister refuse Mr. Kamel’s
passport application. On December 1, 2005, the Minister refused to issue the
passport.
[7]
This was the background
to Mr. Kamel’s first application for judicial review before the Federal
Court, with the outcome described above.
[8]
A few weeks after Kamel-FCA 2009, on February 10, 2009,
Mr. Kamel completed a new passport application, which he submitted on
May 5 of that year to the Passport Canada office in Montréal (Appeal Book,
Volume 4, at pp. 682 et seq.). He was notified by a letter
from Passport Canada dated July 27, 2009, that its Investigation and
Entitlement Review Section was reviewing his entitlement to passport services
under section 10.1 of the Order (ibid. at p. 686). This
entitlement review resulted in Passport Canada’s recommendation to the Minister
to refuse Mr. Kamel’s passport application (Appeal Book, Volume 11, at
pp. 2394 et seq.). What followed was the 2010 Decision, of which
the appellant was notified by a letter dated July 15, 2010.
The 2010 Decision
[9]
The letter dated
July 15, 2010, is actually just a notice to the appellant that the Minister had
rendered his decision and approved the recommendation that had been made to
him, namely, [translation] “to
refuse to issue you a passport under section 10.1 of the Order for a
five-year period, until June 17, 2015”. It is added that, despite that
refusal, [translation] “Passport Canada may, at any time, consider an application for a limited validity passport with
geographical restrictions for urgent and compassionate reasons, such as the
critical health or death of a member of the immediate family”.
[10]
The recommendation
referred to in the letter is that of the Investigation Division of Passport
Canada’s Security Office that accompanies an [translation]
“action memorandum” addressed to the Minister by the Deputy Minister of Foreign
Affairs. It is at the bottom of that memorandum that the Minister indicates
whether or not he agrees with the proposed recommendation. In this case, it was
on June 17, 2010, that the Minister followed Passport Canada’s
recommendation.
[11]
I will consider this
in more detail below, but for now it would be useful to point out that this memorandum
advises the Minister that he is being [translation]
“asked to approve a recommendation to refuse the issuance of a passport to
Fat[e]h Kamel, on the basis that he was convicted of terrorist acts in France
in 2001”. This memorandum informs the Minister that Mr. Kamel had been
given the opportunity to provide new information and make submissions on the
information contained in his Passport Canada file. The Minister was also
informed that the recommendation took into account the arguments and
information submitted by Mr. Kamel on March 5 and 17, 2010, as well
as in April 2010.
[12]
As indicated above,
Passport Canada’s recommendation was made on the basis of section 10.1 of the Order, which
reads as follows:
10.1 Without limiting the
generality of subsections 4(3) and (4) and for greater certainty, the
Minister may refuse or revoke a passport if the Minister is of the opinion
that such action is necessary for the national security of Canada or another
country.
|
10.1 Sans que soit limitée la
généralité des paragraphes 4(3) et (4), il est entendu que le ministre peut
refuser de délivrer un passeport ou en révoquer un s’il est d’avis que cela
est nécessaire pour la sécurité nationale du Canada ou d’un autre pays.
|
[13]
After explaining its
assessment of the appellant’s case, Passport Canada makes its negative recommendation
based primarily on the following considerations:
[translation]
a.
The real risk
associated with Mr. Kamel’s possession of a travel document in the light
of his conviction in France;
b.
Canada’s
international obligations to counter terrorism;
c.
The integrity and
reputation of the Canadian passport, even though nine years have passed since Mr. Kamel’s conviction in France.
The Federal Court decision
[14]
At paragraph 33 of his reasons, the
Judge lists the issues that he must rule on the application for judicial review
before him, which cover the following topics:
a.
the standard of
review applicable to the 2010 Decision;
b.
the procedural
fairness of the Passport Canada investigation;
c.
the appellant’s
constitutional rights under sections 6, 7 and 8 of the
Charter;
d.
whether the violation
of the appellant’s rights was justified under section 1 of the Charter;
e.
whether the Court
should make a declaratory judgment stating that the appellant’s constitutional
rights were infringed; and
f.
remedies under
subsection 24(1) of the Charter.
[15]
According
to the appellant, the Judge’s analytical approach [translation] “gutted” the framework that Kamel-FCA 2009
had imposed on the Minister’s discretionary power. This leads me to a review of
the Federal Court’s judgment with respect to the issues that were before it and
that ground for complaint.
[16]
In Kamel-FCA
2009, this Court considered the phrase “if the Minister is of the opinion
that such action is necessary for the national security” found in
section 10.1 of the Order. After recognizing that section 10.1 vests
the Minister with discretion, Kamel-FCA 2009 stated “that the
decision-maker must exercise this discretion in a reasonable manner, taking
relevant factors into account”. As for the words “is necessary”, Kamel-FCA
2009 noted that they “afford a basis for ‘a legal debate’” and “provide a
framework for, and therefore limit, the discretion conferred upon the
decision-maker” (at paras. 28 and 29). It follows that the decision maker
cannot simply be satisfied that his or her decision would “merely be convenient
or advantageous” (ibid.). Those words impose an additional burden on the
State. What is this burden? Kamel-FCA 2009 says the following:
[30] The words “for the
national security of Canada or another country” must be interpreted in light of
the Supreme Court of Canada’s finding in Suresh [2002 SCC 1] concerning
the expression “danger to the security of Canada”. If the concept of “security
of Canada” was held to be sufficiently precise in Suresh, it must be all
the more so in this case, where (1) the adjective “necessary” clarifies the
provision in that it introduces the requirement of a causal connection between
national security and the refusal to issue a passport; and/or (2) the provision
at issue specifies that the threat to the security of another country is
envisaged, thus responding to the concerns expressed by the Supreme Court of
Canada at paragraphs 87 and 88 of its reasons in Suresh.
[17]
The
Judge begins his analysis by addressing the standard of review applicable to
each issue. Relying on Justice Noël’s reasons in Kamel-FC 2008, he
applies the standard of reasonableness to the questions of fact and the
standard of correctness to the issues involving procedural fairness and
violations of the Charter (Judge’s Reasons at paras. 37 and 38). When he
analyzes the parties’ submissions on section 1 of the Charter, the judge
adopts the test set out in R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103 [Oakes].
I should start by noting that when he signed his judgment, the Judge did not
have the advantage of the Supreme Court’s doctrine in Doré v. Barreau du
Québec, 2012 SCC 12, [2012] 1 S.C.R. 395 [Doré],
a case in which the Supreme Court propounds different analytical frameworks
depending on whether it is an impugned law or an impugned decision that allegedly
violates the Charter. This is not, in and of itself, fatal to the appeal.
[18]
It is true that Doré
proposes a more flexible model for analyzing administrative decisions, taking
into account that (a) these decisions are generally the result of the exercise
of a discretionary power and (b) “administrative decisions are always required
to consider fundamental values” (Doré at para. 35). However, the Oakes
test cited by the Judge at paragraph 96 of his reasons “works the same
justificatory muscles: balance and proportionality” (Doré at para. 5)
as those on the basis of which Doré was decided. Bearing this in mind,
my analytical approach will more closely reflect that of Doré and Lake
v. Canada (Minister of Justice), 2008 SCC 23, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 761 [Lake],
in which it was decided that the Minister of Justice, given his expertise in
matters of extradition and understanding of the relevant facts, was owed
deference with respect to his assessments of the opposing interests at stake.
There is no reason that these comments would not apply equally to the Minister
of Foreign Affairs making a decision under section 10.1 of the Order. Lake
also addressed subsection 6(1) of the Charter.
[19]
To
continue the analysis of the decision under appeal, I note that the Judge also
considers the appellant’s arguments on procedural fairness and rejects them
all. Applying Justice Noël’s statement in Kamel-FC 2008 regarding
the legal principles applicable to procedural fairness, he concludes that there
has been no breach in this case: Passport Canada took into account the Federal
Court’s conclusions in Kamel-FC 2008; the recommendation to the Minister
adequately integrates the appellant’s comments; the appellant had access to the
investigation report prepared by Passport Canada and was given several
opportunities to comment on it. Finally, the time it took to render the 2010
Decision does not constitute an undue or unreasonable delay in the light of the
legal proceedings between the parties and the specific nature of the case. I
agree. At paragraphs 87 et seq. of his memorandum, the
appellant also argues that Passport Canada and the Minister do not represent an
independent and impartial tribunal. In my view, that argument has no merit, and
I do not intend to address it.
[20]
At
paragraph 68 of his reasons, the Judge asks whether the appellant’s
constitutional rights under sections 6, 7 and 8 of the Charter were
violated by the investigation process, Passport Canada’s recommendation and the
Minister’s unfavourable decision.
[21]
With
respect to section 7 of the Charter, the Judge notes the appellant’s
argument that he has been unfairly deprived, since 2005, of his mobility rights
because has been prevented from travelling to develop the import business that
he plans to start with his brother, to visit his family in Algeria or to take
leisure vacations with his spouse and son (Judge’s reasons at para. 74).
Ultimately, the Judge accepts the respondents’ argument to the effect that the
rights claimed by the appellant are not “among the ‘basic choices going to the
core of what it means to enjoy individual dignity and independence’” (ibid.
at para. 79). In any case, he concludes, section 7 of the Charter
does not protect economic rights.
[22]
With
respect to section 8 of the Charter (protection against unreasonable
search and seizure), the Judge holds that the appellant presented no evidence
in support of his argument that Passport Canada’s investigation procedure
infringed his section 8 rights (ibid. at para. 90). Furthermore,
the Judge notes that the very process of issuing a passport automatically
involves a security check for all Canadians. Before this Court, the appellant
submits that the 2010 Decision violates his right to privacy by requiring him
to justify his travel needs, which also constitutes a violation of his
section 8 rights.
[23]
I
agree with the Judge’s treatment of the issues involving sections 7 and 8
of the Charter. First, the right to leave or enter Canada is protected by
subsection 6(1) of the Charter and is therefore not included in section 7 (Peter
Hogg, Constitutional Law of Canada, 5th ed., (Toronto: Carswell, 2007) at
p. 47-11). Moreover, “[t]he ability to generate business revenue by one’s
chosen means is not a right that is protected under s. 7 of the Charter”
(Siemens v. Manitoba (Attorney General), 2003 SCC 3, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 6 at para.
46).
[24]
Nor did the Judge err
in finding that there was no evidence to support the appellant’s argument concerning
section 8 of the Charter. He was certainly entitled to expect the
appellant to provide a factual basis for his allegation (MacKay v. Manitoba, [1989] 2 S.C.R. 357 at p. 361;
British Columbia (Attorney General) v. Christie, 2007 SCC 21, [2007] 1 S.C.R.
873 at para. 28). The French judgment heavily emphasizes the appellant’s
acts and associations in conjunction with the terrorist activities of which he
was found guilty by the Tribunal de grande instance de Paris. Passport Canada’s knowledge of
these facts does not result from any unreasonable search and seizure on its
part that would engage section 8 of the Charter, nor is that section
engaged by the requirement that the appellant justify his travel needs to
obtain a temporary passport.
[25]
I
now turn to the part of the judgment under appeal that deals with section 6 of the Charter.
[26]
At
paragraph 72 of his reasons, the Judge relies on Kamel-FCA 2009 in ruling
that the decision to deny the appellant a passport violates his rights under
subsection 6(1) of the Charter. This ruling is not challenged.
[27]
The
Judge then considers whether this violation is justified within the meaning of
section 1 of the Charter, again applying the analytical framework of Kamel-FCA
2009. First, the Judge holds that the Minister’s decision at issue is
prescribed by law (Judge’s reasons at para. 95). Then, citing
paragraphs 32 and 33 of Kamel-FCA 2009, which cite Oakes and
Trociuk v. British Columbia (Attorney General), 2003 SCC 34,
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 835, he sets out the legal test for justifiability (Judge’s
reasons at para. 96):
i.
Is the restriction
designed to achieve a sufficiently important objective?
ii.
Are the means chosen
proportional to the objective?
[28]
In
response to the first question, the Judge simply points to paragraphs 50
and 51 of Kamel-FCA 2009:
(i) sufficiently important
objective
[50] I conclude from the
evidence that section 10.1 of the Order has both a broad objective—to
contribute to the international fight against terrorism and to comply with
Canada’s commitments in this area, and a particular objective—to maintain the
good reputation of the Canadian passport.
[51] These objectives are, on
their face, sufficiently important for a measure to be adopted that restricts
the right of a Canadian citizen to enter or leave the country. Moreover,
counsel for the respondent [here the appellant] acknowledged at the hearing that
if we conclude that section 10.1 of the Order is sufficiently precise to
constitute a law, the intended objective was sufficiently important.
[29]
With
respect to the second question, the Judge made the following finding at
paragraph 106:
The applicant’s conviction is for
crimes that are inextricably connected to travel and passport use. It seems to
me that the rational connection between the objective and the rights violation
is clearly established.
[30]
Finally,
the Judge summarizes the parties’ arguments under the headings “the means
chosen to reach the objective should impair as little as possible the right or
freedom in question” and “there must be a proportionality between the effects
of the measure and the objective sought”.
[31]
In
analyzing these arguments, the Judge commences by citing paragraph 67 of Kamel-FCA
2009:
[67] Once the Minister is of
the opinion, in the lawful exercise of his or her discretion, that it is
necessary to refuse to issue a passport to a Canadian citizen on the ground of
national or international security, the denial of a passport does not weigh
heavily in the balance when compared to the resultant strengthening of
security. It is not for the Court to speculate on the harm that this person
could cause to the security of Canadians, Canada and the international
community. The evidence is clear: the Minister would fail in his or her duty to
protect Canadians and Canada and to comply with Canada’s international
commitments if the Minister issued the requested passport. There is no reason
to wait for the risk to materialize. The Court must be satisfied, here, with
hypotheses and realistic speculations and must rely on, to quote Justice
Bastarache in Harper [Harper v. Canada (Attorney General),
2004 SCC 33, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 827], “a reasoned apprehension
of . . . harm”. Common sense dictates that the possible
collective harm outweighs the real individual harm.
and concludes that, in this case, the proportionality test “is satisfied,
since the [appellant’s] rights are infringed for a limited time of five years. In addition, the
infringement cannot be qualified as final and irrevocable, since it is possible
that a limited validity passport could be issued” (Judge’s reasons at
para. 125).
Analysis
[32]
In my view, by following
so closely to this Court’s reasoning in Kamel-FCA 2009, the Judge set out the
general principles without a more thorough consideration of the 2010 Decision
and the issue of whether the Minister had infringed Mr. Kamel’s Charter rights
in a disproportionate and therefore unreasonable manner. This is where I
diverge from his analytical approach. It should be recalled that Kamel-FCA
2009 was considering the constitutional validity of section 10.1 of
the Order and not of the Minister’s decision authorized by that legislative provision,
which calls for a very different type of analysis. In Kamel-FCA 2009, this
Court even specified that the controversy was limited to section 10.1 of
the Order and that it would therefore refrain from making any comments that
might influence the Minister’s new decision (Kamel-FCA 2009 at
paras. 12 and 11). In this case, the Charter values at issue apply to the
appellant’s circumstances. It was against this particular factual backdrop that
the Minister, and then the Judge, were supposed to balance Mr. Kamel’s
interests and the objectives of the Order.
[33]
It
is not enough, in my view, to cite paragraph 67 of Kamel-FCA 2009 in
support of a finding that the 2010 Decision satisfied the necessity test and
that “there is proportionality between the harm to the [appellant] and the
benefit for the community as a whole” (Judge’s reasons at para. 122). Nor
is it sufficient, in my view, to find that the 2010 Decision is reasonable
because the “unique paradigm of national security and the rules which
apply . . . [require that there] be room for the exercise
of informed discretion” (ibid. at para. 124). One must consider how
the discretion was exercised before determining whether it was exercised
appropriately.
[34]
Of
course, the definition of “national security” cannot be summed up in a few
words. We must accord the term a fair, large and liberal interpretation in
accordance with Canada’s international obligations (Suresh v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 SCC 1, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 3 at para. 85)
[Suresh].
[35]
I acknowledge
that the Minister’s decision made under section 10.1 of the Order “is
highly fact-based and political in a general sense” (Suresh at
para. 85). These considerations call for deference in reviewing the
Minister’s decision. However, I would not give any deference to a ministerial
decision that does not take Charter rights into account or that restricts them
disproportionately. That would be an unreasonable decision.
[36]
I must therefore
determine whether the 2010 Decision is a reasonable decision that satisfies the
necessity test. By this I mean a ministerial decision that shows a balancing of
the relevant Charter values and the objectives of the Order, not one that is
merely “convenient or advantageous” (Kamel-FCA 2009 at para. 29). Obviously,
the Minister had to carry out this balancing exercise, in accordance with
section 10.1 of the Order, before deciding to reject Mr. Kamel’s
passport application. Passport Canada’s recommendation and the accompanying action
memorandum bearing the Minister’s signature constitute the 2010 Decision. I
will therefore analyze these two documents more closely.
- The action memorandum and
recommendation from Passport Canada
[37]
In the action memorandum, Passport Canada starts
by describing the context on which its recommendation is based, informing the
Minister of, among other things, Mr. Kamel’s arguments, including his
argument that [translation] “the
application of section 10.1 of the Order would infringe [Mr. Kamel’s]
Charter rights” (Appeal Book, Volume 11, at p. 2399).
[38]
The following was
recommended to the Minister:
[translation]
1) that you exercise your
powers under section 10.1 of the Canadian Passport Order and that you
refuse to issue a passport to Mr. Kamel;
2) should you accept the
above recommendation, that your decision be valid for a five-year period from
the date it is made.
Deputy
Minister of Foreign Affairs
______________________________
I agree.
_(Minister’s original signature)_
The Minister
(Ibid.
at p. 2394)
[39]
This
memorandum is followed by Passport Canada’s recommendation, which
explains, among other things, the investigation process used to assess:
[translation]
. . . the risk
associated with the possession of a travel document by the individual in
question, the impact of this decision on the integrity and reputation of the
Canadian passport and Passport Canada’s international obligations to counter
terrorism. The Section also considers the individual’s actions, beliefs and
associations, as well as the risk that the passport may be used in Canada or
abroad for reasons that would threaten the national security of Canada or
another country. The investigative process has been specifically designed to
ensure procedural fairness and compliance with the rules of natural justice.
(Ibid. at
p. 2406)
[40]
Then,
turning to the facts specific to Mr. Kamel’s case, Passport Canada
addresses his conviction in France and matches the provisions of the French Code pénal under which Mr. Kamel
was found guilty with the corresponding provisions of the Criminal Code,
R.S.C. (1985), c. C‑46. Reiterating that Mr. Kamel is now
inadmissible to France, Passport Canada notes that issuing Mr. Kamel a Canadian passport [translation]
“could facilitate his travel to other European Union countries from which entry
into France does not require a passport, thereby frustrating France’s efforts
to protect its national security” (ibid. at p. 2409).
[41]
Finally,
Passport Canada presents its evaluation of the case and its recommendation:
[translation]
EVALUATION
The Section is of the view that the
risk associated with Mr. Kamel’s possession of a travel document is real
because he was convicted in a court of law for procuring passports for
terrorists. The Section maintains this view despite the fact that, as indicated
above, Mr. Kamel denies the facts underlying his conviction.
As for Passport Canada’s
international obligations, it is important to consider Canada’s active role in
international counter-terrorism efforts and therefore to monitor the issuance
of travel documents to prevent terrorism.
Were Mr. Kamel to obtain a
Canadian passport, the impact on the integrity and reputation of the Canadian
passport would certainly be negative. It is important not to give the
impression that Canadian passports are easy for anybody to obtain, and they
must not be granted to those who represent a risk. The reputation of the
Canadian passport is at stake. This is in Canada’s interests. Otherwise, the
international community will not have the necessary confidence in Canadian
passports, and Canadian citizens will suffer the consequences when they travel
outside the country. Canadians might be subject to questioning or preventive
detention in other countries, or even to arrest until the authorities of the
country where they are recognize that their travel documents are genuine.
Passport Canada has taken into
consideration the fact that Mr. Kamel was convicted in 2001; however, this
fact diminishes neither Passport Canada’s obligations, nor the negative impact
on the integrity and reputation of the Canadian passport if a passport were to
be issued to him.
RECOMMENDATIONS
The Minister is responsible for
protecting the reputation and value of the Canadian passport, world security
and the security of Canadians. You must therefore consider this information
before evaluating whether there is a risk or a possibility of harm to Canada or
another country making it necessary to refuse passport services in the interest
of national security.
In short, issuing a passport is an
administrative decision. It is a determination neither of guilt nor of
innocence of a criminal offence. It is a decision regarding whether or not to
facilitate Mr. Kamel’s
foreign travel by issuing an identity document authorized by the Government of
Canada.
The Passport Canada Security Bureau
recommends that you exercise your authority under the royal prerogative, as
described in section 10.1 of the Order, and refuse passport services to Fateh
Kamel. In the event that you decide to refuse passport services, we recommend
that your decision be made effective for a period of five years from the date
the decision is rendered and that no passport services be provided to Fateh
Kamel during that five-year period.
(Ibid. at
pp. 2411-2412)
[42]
As
indicated above, the Minister declared his agreement on the basis of the action
memorandum, Passport Canada’s recommendation and the accompanying file.
[43]
At the hearing before
this Court, Mr. Kamel’s principal complaint was that the Judge did not
correctly analyze the evidence justifying the recommendation made to the
Minister. The appellant submits that the Minister failed to assess [translation] “the appellant’s rights
according to the applicable law and standard of proof . . .,
including respect for the presumption of innocence and good faith” (Appellant’s
Amended Memorandum of Fact and Law at paras. 38 and 48). Moreover, he
adds, he has already served his sentence in France: [translation] “[D]ouble jeopardy has no place in our society,
nor does discrimination based on one’s criminal record” (Appellant’s Amended Memorandum of
Fact and Law at para. 44). One may not rely on his past to determine that
he will break the law or threaten the security of Canada or other countries if
a passport is delivered to him.
[44]
In
his Amended Memorandum of Fact and Law, he makes the following argument:
[translation]
39. . . . [E]ven if maintaining
“the integrity and reputation of the Canadian passport” can be considered a
valid objective of the Order, this does not relieve the respondents of their
obligation to present valid and relevant evidence that establishes, on a
balance of probabilities, that the violation is necessary for national security
and that justifies the infringement of Mr. Kamel’s constitutional rights
protected by the Charter.
40. Moreover, with respect to the “reputation”
of the Canadian passport, the Judge should not have passed over the fact that
Passport Canada provided no evidence for its claim that “the international
community will not have the necessary confidence in Canadian passports” if Mr. Kamel
is issued a passport and that “Canadian citizens will suffer the consequences
when they travel outside the country”, since they “might be subject to
questioning or preventive detention in other countries, or even to arrest . . .”.
[45]
In
my view, these arguments and others along the same lines ignore the fact that
the nature of the reasonableness analysis of the Minister’s decision, which in
this case is discretionary, is contingent on its context (Doré at
para. 7, citing Catalyst Paper Corp. v. North Cowichan (District),
2012 SCC 2, [2012] 1 S.C.R. 5). This is not a penal or criminal matter. The
refusal to issue the appellant a passport is not supposed to be an additional
punishment for the acts that led to his conviction. However, once he has served
his sentence, the appellant cannot claim that the Minister may not take into
account the past conviction in forming his opinion and making a decision in his
application (Kamel-FC 2011 at para. 124; Al Yamani v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2003 FCA 482, application for
leave to appeal to the S.C.C. refused, 30184 (August 26, 2004) at
para. 38). This is a relevant factor.
[46]
In
this case, the Minister’s decision was made under section 10.1 of the
Order, because he is “of the opinion that such action is necessary for the
national security of Canada or another country”. As stated in Kamel-FCA 2009,
the Court must be satisfied, here, with hypotheses and realistic speculations and
must rely on a reasoned apprehension of harm (para. 67). There is no
reason to wait for the risk to materialize. Again, the concept of national
security must be accorded a fair, large and liberal interpretation (Suresh;
Harkat (Re), 2012 FCA 122; Zündel (Re), 2005 FC 295) and requires
that the Minister have some discretion in balancing Mr. Kamel’s protected
rights against the obligations of the Order. Moreover, the Minister’s refusal
to issue a passport to the appellant is limited to a five-year period. As noted
by the Federal Court, “[t]his refusal is further mitigated in that the
[appellant] may, at any time, apply for a limited validity passport for urgent
or compassionate reasons” (Judge’s reasons at para. 113). This leads me to
find that the Minister was mindful of the proportionality test required for the
second prong of the section 1 analysis under the Charter.
[47]
The
appellant would have liked the 2010 Decision to revisit all of his arguments
and to include an exhaustive review of the evidence. In Newfoundland and
Labrador Nurses’ Union v. Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC
62, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 708, the Supreme Court rejected a similar argument,
preferring a more global exercise: “[T]he reasons must be read together with
the outcome, and serve the purpose of showing whether the result falls within a
range of possible outcomes”. In this case, the reasonable possible outcomes are
few: a regular passport is either issued or denied, or another type of passport
is issued, such as a temporary passport issued for travel of an urgent,
compassionate nature. In this case, the Minister was considering a regular
passport application. He had been informed that Mr. Kamel’s Charter rights
were at stake and that the infringement of his rights under subsection 6(1)
of the Charter had been recognized by Kamel-FCA 2009. The Minister was
also aware of Mr. Kamel’s particular circumstances and the history of his
case. The assessment of the infringement of Mr. Kamel’s rights implied a
balancing that was essentially dependent on the assessment of the facts of the
case.
[48]
A
careful review of the file reveals a causal link between national security and
the Minister’s refusal to issue a passport to Mr. Kamel, who was sentenced
in France for crimes directly related to terrorism, including the
counterfeiting of passports. I am also satisfied with the Minister’s weighing
of Mr. Kamel’s rights against the objective of the Order. I am mindful of
the fact that, as it was put in Kamel-FCA 2009, the “refusal to issue a
general passport does not necessarily result in completely depriving a Canadian
citizen of his or her right to leave the country” (at para. 62).
[49]
Therefore,
I cannot accept the appellant’s arguments and find, as he invites us to do,
that the Minister’s decision fails to meet the necessity test.
[50]
Accordingly,
I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
“Johanne Trudel”
“I concur.
Pierre Blais C.J.”
“I concur.
J.D. Denis Pelletier J.A.”
Certified true translation
François Brunet, Revisor