Docket: IMM-4008-16
Citation:
2017 FC 445
Ottawa, Ontario, May 4, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Diner
BETWEEN:
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LEONARD MULLA
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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
I.
Background
[1]
The Applicant challenges the refusal of an
application for permanent residence based on humanitarian and compassionate
[H&C] grounds made under section 25 of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the Act or IRPA], by a Senior Immigration
Officer [the Officer]. For the reasons explained below, the matter will be
returned for redetermination.
[2]
The Applicant is an Albanian citizen, who
entered Canada in October 2010, and had his refugee claim rejected two years
later. He ultimately had his second H&C refusal on September 19, 2016
[Decision], after the first refusal had been sent back for redetermination on
consent.
[3]
In his H&C submissions, which included (i)
written representations and accompanying evidence filed by a consultant in the
first application, and then (ii) present counsel’s additional submissions and
evidence in the second, the Applicant raised various factors speaking to the
hardship of applying from abroad. The only point arguably raised about the risk
in Albania was included in the initial application, when the consultant stated “the circumstances surrounding his immigration history
warrant a positive recommendation for an exemption to be granted for his
application from within Canada without going back to his country to apply”.
[4]
Nothing with respect to his personal fear, or
risks raised in his refugee claim, was included by the Applicant’s present
counsel in the supplementary submissions and documentation filed for the
redetermination. Counsel only stated that he was enclosing “further documents and submissions pertaining to the
reconsideration”. In other words, no representations were made as to the
personal fear of returning to Albania, or risks therein (certainly, other
hardships in returning were raised including the issues that his daughter would
face given education, social and other realities in that country). The
arguments pertaining to risk, which in large part related to fear-based
concerns with respect to an alleged blood-feud declared upon the Applicant’s
family, were submitted before the RPD, but not before the Officer as part of
the H&C application. Notwithstanding this fact, a significant portion of
the resulting Decision addresses the Applicant’s fear. The Officer reviews his
refugee claim, quoting extensively from the RPD decision, and then concludes:
I do not find that the fears raised by
the applicant has [sic] been sufficiently substantiated or corroborated. I
have been provided insufficient objective evidence that the applicant would
be at risk upon his return to Albania because of the alleged blood feud. I
acknowledge that the applicant may have problems with another family however
the applicant does not explain how his life is in danger and does not
indicate what sort of problems, if any, he had when he was living in Albania. I
find there is insufficient objective evidence before me that due to a blood
feud between the applicant and the Seferi family that they are of
interest to the Seferi family or to the authorities in Albania. I
have insufficient objective evidence that he is a person who is actively being
sought after either by the Seferi family or the authorities. The
applicant has not provided evidence to support his allegations that he is at
risk from the Seferi family in Albania. I have insufficient documentary
evidence before me that the applicant would be targeted upon his return to
Albania. Furthermore, he has provided no explanation as to why he would be
compelled to return to the place of Albania where he states that he is at
risk. Moreover, I do not have any statement from the applicant that he
cannot seek police protection for any reason or was ever denied such. He
does not make any reference that he sought protection from any other
available avenues of recourse in Albania before his departure. After careful
examination of all the information before me, I am not satisfied that the
applicant is at risk in Albania [emphasis added].
II.
Issues and Analysis
[5]
The Applicant contends first, that the Officer
had no basis to conduct a risk analysis given (i) the legislation and (ii) the
submissions before her and second, that the Officer was biased given her
rationale. I agree with the first issue, but not the second.
[6]
The applicable standard of review with respect
to the Officer’s analysis on sufficiency of evidence as it relates to risk, as
accepted by both parties, is reasonableness (Semana v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2016 FC 1082 at paras 18-19). The bias argument will be
addressed on a correctness standard: A B, C D and E
F v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 1385 at para 39 [AB].
[7]
Regarding the Officer’s risk analysis, the
Applicant argues that he never raised any evidence of hardship relating to
risks in Albania, and therefore none should be raised against him. Rather, the
Applicant contends that he raised various other elements of hardship, some of
which were not adequately or reasonably addressed, including the hardship of
returning to Albania based on his Canadian children’s well-being and his wife’s
mental state. He notes that on the basis of the latter, this Court already
granted a stay of removal. Given the evidence he did submit, however, the
Applicant contends that the Officer had no right to supplement the record with
the Applicant’s negative RPD decision and country documentation on the subject
of risk (relating to blood feud).
[8]
The Applicant further argues that if this Court
finds that the Officer’s conduct was acceptable, others would be under an
obligation to do precisely what the case law resists for H&C decision –
namely adding a duty for officers to supplement the record by going beyond the
evidence submitted by applicants. This would impose a significant burden on
officers, who are only obligated to assess the sufficiency of evidence placed
before them: the evidentiary onus lies squarely with the Applicant.
[9]
The Respondent counters that the Applicant’s
original immigration consultant invoked his immigration history in the first
H&C application. Therefore, the Officer had every right to retrieve the RPD
decision, conduct her own research on related country documentation, and
consider those elements.
[10]
To analyse the issue raised, one must look at
the legislation. Subs. 25(1.3) of IRPA reads as follows:
25 (1.3) In examining the request of a
foreign national in Canada, the Minister may not consider the factors that
are taken into account in the determination of whether a person is a
Convention refugee under section 96 or a person in need of protection under
subsection 97(1) but must consider elements related to the hardships that affect
the foreign national.
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25 (1.3) Le ministre, dans l’étude de la
demande faite au titre du paragraphe (1) d’un étranger se trouvant au Canada,
ne tient compte d’aucun des facteurs servant à établir la qualité de réfugié
— au sens de la Convention — aux termes de l’article 96 ou de personne à
protéger au titre du paragraphe 97(1); il tient compte, toutefois, des
difficultés auxquelles l’étranger fait face.
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[11]
This section was added to the Act in 2010 to
avoid duplication of the refugee determination (Kanthasamy v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 61 at para 24 [Kanthasamy]).
The underlined portions of the Decision above do precisely the opposite,
re-examining the risk raised at the refugee hearing, which is one of the
central factors of the Officer’s reasons, as is made evident by her conclusion:
Based on a cumulative assessment of the
evidence submitted, I have considered the applicants personal circumstances,
his establishment, risk, employment, hardship, best interest of the
child and after conducting a global assessment of all the relevant factors put
forth by the applicant, it is determined that his cited factors do not support
that relief from the requirement to apply for permanent residence from abroad
is justified in this case [emphasis added].
[12]
Relying on Kanthasamy at paras 24 and 51,
Justice Strickland in Liang v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2017
FC 287 at para 31 held that “pursuant to s 25(1.3) of
the IRPA when examining an H&C request, an officer may not consider the
factors that are taken into account in the determination of whether a person is
a Convention refugee under s 96 or a person in need of protection under s
97(1), but must consider elements related to the hardships that affect the
foreign national […]”.
[13]
Therefore, based on subs. 25(1.3) and the case
law cited above, relying on risk as one of the key factors in rejecting the
application was unreasonable. In addition, the unreasonable conclusion is
compounded by the fact that the Applicant put forward no documentary evidence
regarding risk in Albania, which is not surprising given subs. 25(1.3).
However, the Officer went to lengths to point out the insufficiency or lack of
documentary evidence on risk in Albania.
[14]
At paragraph 51 of Kanthasamy, Justice
Abella stated:
As the Federal Court of Appeal concluded in
this case, s. 25(1.3) does not prevent the admission into evidence of facts
adduced in proceedings under ss. 96 and 97. The role of the officer making a
determination under s. 25(1) is to ask whether this evidence, along with any
other evidence an applicant wishes to raise, though insufficient to support a
s. 96 or s. 97 claim, nonetheless suggests that “humanitarian and compassionate
considerations” warrant an exemption from the normal application of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act. In other words, the officer does not determine
whether a well-founded fear of persecution, risk to life, and risk of cruel and
unusual treatment or punishment has been established — those determinations are
made under ss. 96 and 97 — but he or she can take the underlying facts into
account in determining whether the applicant’s circumstances warrant
humanitarian and compassionate relief.
[15]
Clearly, to “warrant
humanitarian and compassionate relief” means establishing hardship. Hardship,
in the context of applying for the permanent residency from Canada as opposed
to abroad, is thus at the very heart of the H&C process. Indeed, it was at
the core of the Court’s analysis in Kanthasamy (see also paras 26-33).
[16]
Meeting the basic hardship requirement relief
requires providing the Officer with a factual basis so that the Minister, in
the words of the IRPA, can “examine the circumstances
concerning the foreign national and may grant the foreign national permanent
resident status or an exemption from any applicable criteria or obligations of
this Act if the Minister is of the opinion that it is justified” (subs.
25(1)). As the Supreme Court further explained in Kanthasamy at para 25:
What does warrant relief will clearly
vary depending on the facts and context of the case, but officers making
humanitarian and compassionate determinations must substantively consider and
weigh all the relevant facts and factors before them: Baker, at
paras 74-75.
[17]
There is nothing preventing an officer from
pulling those relevant facts and factors from documentary evidence on country
conditions submitted by a claimant. Indeed, this was position recently adopted
by Justice Strickland in Ordonez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2017 FC 135 at para 29, where she held that, to the extent
documentary evidence on country conditions is provided to an H&C Officer,
the relevant elements stemming from the evidence may be considered within the
context of a hardship analysis, but not for the purposes of reassessing risk or
otherwise making findings usually reserved for a s. 96 or subs. 97(1) analysis.
However, the risk analysis was clearly done in this case.
[18]
As for the second (bias) issue, while I need not
address it, I will reiterate my comments made at the hearing for the sake of
these written reasons and given the gravity of argument made. The Officer did
not display bias, per the high threshold required by the case law (see, for
instance, AB at para
141). As noted by Justice Strickland in AB, allegations of bias
are a serious matter, as they put into question the integrity of the
decision-maker, and must be clearly supported by the evidence. The Reasons and
the record in the present case do not come close to meeting this high
threshold.
III.
Conclusion
[19]
In short, the consideration of risk as a
stand-alone factor – outside of the context of hardship – within an H&C
analysis, is simply wrong on the law, given the 2010 amendment to IRPA, i.e.,
the addition of subs. 25(1.3) to the Act. With this addition, the law no longer
permits a risk analysis. That is the domain first of the refugee determination
process, and failing that, the pre-removal risk assessment process.
[20]
For the reasons explained above, this application
is granted and shall be sent back for redetermination by another officer. No
certified questions were raised and none arise.