Docket: IMM-3402-16
Citation:
2017 FC 157
Toronto, Ontario, February 9, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
BETWEEN:
|
JIE PING RAO
(A.K.A. JIEPING RAO)
JIA YI YANG
(A.K.A. JIAYI YANG)
WEINAN YANG
(A.K.A. WEI NAN
YANG)
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Proceeding
[1]
The Applicant has applied for judicial review of
a decision [the Decision] of the Refugee Appeal Division [RAD] of the
Immigration and Refugee Board dated July 20, 2016 concluding that
the Applicants were neither Convention refugees nor persons in need of
protection. This Application is brought pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the IRPA].
II.
Background
[2]
This matter concerns a 37 year old mother, [the
Applicant], her four year old son, and her sixteen year old daughter [the minor
Applicants]. All are citizens of China.
[3]
The Applicant alleges that she was forced to
wear an intra-uterine device [IUD] after her daughter was born in 2000.
This caused heavy menstruation, discomfort and pain. She alleges that
authorities found out she was pregnant during an IUD checkup on April 10, 2006
and forced her to have an abortion (the Abortion) that same day. She was
subsequently forced to wear a triangular IUD, which increased the pain. She
alleges that between 2007 and 2008 she asked the Family Planning Office [FPO]
to remove her IUD eight times. The requests were refused and she was told that
the only alternative was sterilization by injection. She consented to and had
this procedure, but tried to counteract its effectiveness by drinking a special
tea. The injection was given in mid-October 2008.
[4]
Notwithstanding the injection, the Applicant
again became pregnant in January 2012 and her son was born on September 18,
2012. She left him with her aunt when he was six months old.
[5]
On August 10, 2015, the FPO discovered the son.
The Applicant alleges that the FPO came to her home, but she and her husband
were not there. The FPO told the Applicant’s mother in law that the Applicant
or her husband must be sterilized within three days.
[6]
The couple learned of the FPO’s visit and hid at
the Applicant’s cousin’s home. They also learned that the Applicant’s aunt had
been fined 5000 RMB and detained for one day. When no one appeared for
sterilization, the FPO issued a ‘Notice for Sterilization’ [the Sterilization
Notice] on August 14, 2015. The Notice imposed a fine of 60,000 RMB and
required either the Applicant or her husband to present themselves for
sterilization within one week. The Applicant says that she and her husband
received a notice dismissing them from their employment and that her daughter
was given a notice suspending her from school.
[7]
The Applicant says that they found a smuggler
who gave them “altered Hong Kong passports,”
which she and the minor Applicants used to travel to Toronto on September 20,
2015. The Applicant says that the smuggler “took … all
traces of their travels from them upon arrival.”
[8]
The Applicant alleges that they later learned
that the FPO is still looking for them. Her husband remains in hiding with her
cousin in China.
III.
The Refugee Protection Division
[9]
The RPD based a global negative credibility
finding on a number of inconsistencies in the Applicant’s evidence about how she
travelled to Hong Kong (bus or car), how much she paid her agent ($45,000 or
$4,500) about which child (son or daughter) caused her to be fined and about
where her in-laws lived (collectively the Inconsistencies). The RPD was also
concerned about the Applicant’s inability to produce any travel documents. As a
result, the RPD did not assess the Applicant’s documentary evidence. It simply
concluded that it could not be credible.
IV.
The Refugee Appeal Division
[10]
The RAD agreed with Inconsistency findings
described above. However, it did not agree that the lack of travel
documents was problematic and concluded that the RPD should have considered the
documentary evidence.
[11]
The RAD undertook a review of the documents and
found as follows:
•
The IUD record between January 5, 2007 and July
8, 2008 did not assist in establishing that the Applicant’s pregnancy was
discovered on April 10, 2006. The complete IUD checkup booklet covering the
relevant date was not produced.
•
The Sterilization Certificate of October 16,
2008 was not on hospital letterhead. It did not describe the Applicant’s
particular circumstances and was not accompanied by the mandatory medical
booklet.
•
The Birth Control Surgery Certificate of April
10, 2006 shows that the Applicant had an abortion in hospital on April 10,
2006. However, it was not on hospital letterhead and did not refer to the
patents’ circumstances. As well, such certificates were only issued on request
and there was no evidence that a request had been made.
•
The School Suspension Notice pre-dated the
Sterilization Notice by three days.
•
No evidence was provided to show that she asked
FPO officials to remove her IUD 8 times and was refused.
•
The Family Planning Notice of August 14, 2015
cites the FPO Policy of Guandong Province, yet that policy does not
require sterilization. The RPD found this notice to be fraudulent.
•
The portions of the Medical Booklet which were
produced do not cover the period of the alleged Abortion.
[12]
As a result of these findings and the
Inconsistencies, the RAD concluded that the Abortion had not been proven and
that the documents relating to sterilization and school and job loss were not
reliable.
[13]
The RAD also reviewed the country documents and
found that, while the Applicant might face a fine on return, forced
sterilization is not a serious possibility in Guandong Province. As well, she
would have a choice of contraceptives. Finally, the RPD concluded that the Applicant’s
son, who was born without permission, will be able to attend school and receive
social benefits. This conclusion was based on a recent article produced by the
RAD. Counsel for the Applicant was given an opportunity to make submissions on
the article but did not do so.
V.
The Issues
[14]
The Applicant takes issue with the entire
Decision saying that the credibility findings and the forward looking
conclusions are unreasonable.
VI.
Credibility
[15]
The record shows that the Applicant possessed
her medical booklet and her IUD checkup booklet because portions of each
booklet were produced. However, she did not produce the pages from either
booklet that covered April 10, 2006 which was the date her pregnancy was
discovered and the Abortion was performed.
[16]
The only evidence of the Abortion was the Birth
Control Surgery Certificate of April 10, 2006 and the RAD clearly did not
accept it as a valid document because the RAD concluded that there was
insufficient evidence to establish that the Abortion had occurred.
[17]
The Applicant correctly submits that the RAD did
not mention that a seal was on the Birth Control Surgery Certificate and says
that it would have supported a finding that the certificate was genuine.
However in my view, in the absence of a letterhead on the certificate and given
that neither the IUD record nor the medical booklet for April 10, 2006 were
produced, the RAD’s Decision on this issue was reasonable even though the seal
was not mentioned.
[18]
I have also reviewed the balance of the
credibility findings and have concluded that they are reasonable.
VII.
Future Persecution
[19]
The Applicant submitted that the RAD unreasonably
concluded that her only risk on her return to China was the payment of a fine.
[20]
The Applicant says that she has received a
Notice of Sterilization, that she has had a second child (the son) whose birth
was not approved and that she will therefore be sterilized on her return. She
adds that there is no evidence that the new two child policy is retroactive.
The Applicant provided the RAD with an article dated April 2016 from
www.lifenews.com. It states that the US State Department has reported that, through
2015 forced sterilization was still common in China and the number of abortions
increased dramatically. An unnamed source was quoted as saying that these
practices will continue under the new two child policy.
[21]
The RAD focussed on Guandong Province and found
that the documentary evidence showed that:
•
There have been no forced abortions or
sterilizations in Guandong Province since 2012.
•
The Guandong regulations only provide for fines
and, although unspecified remedial measures are mentioned, this predates the
2012 Directive which says the brutal enforcement of family planning is banned. Guandong
Province appears to be following the Directive.
•
Guandong has historically applied FPO policies
in a relaxed manner.
•
Forced sterilization is illegal in China.
VIII.
Conclusion
[22]
In my view, the RAD’s conclusion that there is
not a serious possibility that the Applicant is at risk of sterilization is
reasonable.
IX.
Decision
[23]
For these reasons the application will be
dismissed.
X.
Certification
[24]
No questions were posed for certification for
appeal.