Docket: IMM-4266-16
Citation:
2017 FC 474
Ottawa, Ontario, May 9, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Elliott
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BETWEEN:
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MOHAMED ABDI
ADEN
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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.
Overview
[1]
Mohamed Abdi Aden [the Applicant] seeks judicial
review of a decision made by the Refugee Appeal Division [RAD] of the
Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, which dismissed the Applicant’s appeal
of a decision of the Refugee Protection Division [RPD], finding that the
Applicant was neither a Convention refugee nor a person in need of protection
under sections 96 and 97 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act
SC 2001 c 27 [IRPA].
[2]
The Applicant argues that the RAD erred by
failing to admit new evidence, by inappropriately misapprehending evidence in
the National Documentation Package [NDP] as being new evidence and
inappropriately rejecting it, and by failing to evaluate the objective risk of
persecution in Somalia. The Applicant asks that the decision be set aside and
the Applicant’s appeal be re-determined by a different member of the RAD.
[3]
I find the determinative issue in this matter is
the handling of the Applicant’s sur place claim, which was identified by
the RAD as being that “as a returning citizen who is
visited the United States and Canada he cannot return to Somalia because
Al-Shabaab would perceive him as having fraternized with Westerners”. While
not described as such by the RAD, in essence this is a sur place claim.
[4]
For the reasons that follow, this application is
allowed as I agree that the RAD did not appropriately analyse the sur place
claim of the Applicant. In the interest of brevity, these reasons will only
address the facts that are relevant to this determinative issue.
II.
Relevant Background Facts
[5]
The RPD and the RAD both accepted that the
Applicant was a citizen of Somalia. After his father and brother were killed in
1991 in a clan conflict, the Applicant and his sister were brought by their
mother to Kenya. The Applicant lived in a refugee camp in Dadab, Kenya from the
age of four until he fled Kenya in December 2014.
[6]
In 2011, the Applicant and four friends formed a
youth group, with the Applicant as its leader. The group carried out volunteer
work for development programs inside and outside the camp. They also put on
information sessions about HIV/AIDS, female genital mutilation and the
importance of peace.
[7]
The Applicant was married in June 2014. In
October 2014, he received a call from someone who identified themselves as belonging
to Al-Shabaab, an Islamist terror group in control of parts of Somalia. The
caller told the Applicant to stop all the group’s programs, and accused him of
being a spy against Al-Shabaab in the refugee camp.
[8]
On October 25, 2014, two men from Al-Shabaab
visited the Applicant’s home and asked his wife about his whereabouts. They
accused him of spying and said they would kill him. The Applicant and his wife
went into hiding. The Applicant’s uncle in Kismayo, Somalia sold the
Applicant’s familial home and sent the Applicant the proceeds. The Applicant
travelled to Nairobi, and then used smugglers to travel through South America
and Mexico to the United States, where he sought asylum in February 2015.
[9]
The Applicant’s asylum claim in the United
States was rejected, and he was released from detention on September 28, 2015,
while awaiting removal to Somalia. The Applicant travelled to Minneapolis, and
then made an irregular crossing of the Canadian border, where he was
apprehended and his claim referred to the RPD.
III.
The Relevant Parts of the RPD Decision
[10]
The RPD heard the Applicant’s claim on December
18, 2015, and denied the claim by oral decision at the end of the hearing. The
RPD accepted the Applicant’s identity as a national of Somalia and a resident
of the refugee camp in Kenya, but found a lack of credible evidence to prove
the existence of his youth group or his volunteer activities. The RPD found
that there were significant inconsistencies between his Basis of Claim [BOC]
and oral testimony and between his testimony and that of his witness, Ms.
Osman. There is a dispute between the parties as to whether the RPD performed a
microscopic analysis and failed to take into account the significant points of
agreement between the Applicant and his witness. As reconciling that dispute is
not necessary given my finding with respect to the sur place claim, I
will only say that these reasons are not to be taken as supporting or rejecting
the position of either party with respect to that dispute.
[11]
The sur place claim was put forward by
the Applicant when, on re-examination by his counsel, he put forward
information that if he was returned from North America, he would face a risk in
Somalia from Al-Shabaab simply by virtue of being someone who had lived in
Canada and the United States. This de-facto sur place claim was not
addressed in the RPD decision.
IV.
The Relevant Parts of the RAD Decision
[12]
One of the submissions made to the RAD by the
Applicant was that the RPD had not made any finding regarding the
Applicant’s risk from Al-Shabaab as a returnee from a western country. In
response to that submission, on May 11, 2016, the RAD pointed the Applicant’s
counsel to an EASO Country of Origin Information Report on Somalia [EASO
Report] and gave the Applicant the opportunity to make additional written
submissions. This report had information indicating that Al-Shabaab did not
control the Applicant’s home city of Kismayo.
[13]
In reply, the Applicant’s counsel submitted a
letter with additional documentary evidence to the RAD noting that the security
situation in Kismayo remained volatile, that Al-Shabaab still engaged in
sporadic attacks in the city, controlled many of the surrounding villages, and
manned checkpoints on all roads into and out of Kismayo. The letter also
pointed to portions of the EASO report that indicated that Al-Shabaab carried
out attacks in towns it did not control against those perceived to represent
the government or the international community.
[14]
In a relatively short decision the RAD noted it
would apply the guidance of the Federal Court of Appeal in Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v Huruglica, 2016 FCA 93 [Huruglica]
with respect to its review of the RPD decision. It addressed issues
dealing with new evidence submitted by the Applicant and then examined
the merits of the claim. The sur place claim was dealt with at
paragraphs 27 to 30, after which the RAD confirmed the decision of the RPD that
the Applicant was neither a convention refugee nor a person in need of
protection.
V.
Positions of the Parties on the Sur Place
Issue
[15]
The Applicant noted that it was the RAD that
disclosed the risk associated with returning to Kismayo but that it relied only
on the portion of the EASO Report indicating that the government had
re-captured the city. From this, the RAD then concluded that the Applicant was
not at risk because “there is nothing to indicate that
Al-Shabaab is in full control of the territory”.
[16]
The Applicant says the RAD conflated the state
protection test by saying the terror group did not have full control rather than
looking at whether state protection was available to the Applicant.
[17]
The Respondent submits that the Applicant is not
at risk because of his personal profile, since the RAD agreed with the RPD that
he had failed to demonstrate he was a member of the Youth Group in the refugee
camp in Kenya. As result, the Respondent says he would not be subject to risk
from Al-Shabaab because he would only be perceived as Somalian, which was a
general risk.
[18]
The Applicant replies that he had lived in the
refugee camp in Kenya since the age of 4, as result of which he has really
never lived in Somalia and would not blend in particularly well as the
Somalians suspect everybody they do not know.
VI.
Standard of Review
[19]
The standard of review for assessing a decision
by the RAD is reasonableness: Huruglica at para 35.
[20]
A decision is reasonable if the decision-making
process is justified, transparent and intelligible resulting in a determination
that falls within the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are
defensible on the facts and law: Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at
para 47 [Dunsmuir].
VII.
Analysis
[21]
In support of the RAD, the Respondent submits
that the evidence suggests Kismayo is not under the direct control of Al-Shabaab.
There is no real dispute of that fact. However, it misses the point. Given that
documentary evidence which was submitted to the RAD shows that Al-Shabaab
controlled most of the roads leading to Kismayo, there was reason to believe the
Applicant could not get into or out of Kismayo without encountering Al-Shabaab.
[22]
With respect to the Respondent’s comment that
the Applicant failed to demonstrate he was a member of the Youth Group that is
not the risk which the Applicant put forward as part of the sur place
claim. The risk was as stated in the report from the UK Border Agency,
published in March 2015 citing Amnesty International with respect to risk for
returnees to Somalia:
People returning to Somalia from overseas
are extremely vulnerable unless they have strong clan and family connections,
as well as the economic means to establish a life. Somalis that have left,
particularly those that have been in western countries, tend to be viewed as
foreigners, and may be perceived to have western agendas. This in itself puts
them at an increased risk of persecution.
UK Border Agency, Item 1.18, section 2.2.5,
July 17, 2015
[23]
The sur place risk was not about whether
the Applicant’s testimony was truthful, but about whether he would be perceived
to be a member of a group—returnees
from western countries—that faced a risk of persecution by Al-Shabaab. To
dispose of this element of the Applicant’s refugee claim, the RAD either had to
determine that Al-Shabaab would not perceive the Applicant as a returnee from
the west or that he would not face a risk of persecution in spite of Al-Shabaab
perceiving him as a returnee from the west.
[24]
In reviewing the EASO Report it had pointed out
to the Applicant, the RAD acknowledged that it indicated the situation in South
Somalia remained volatile but then found “there is
nothing to indicate that Al-Shabaab is in full control of the territory”.
Somehow, from that statement, the RAD then said in the next sentence “[t]he RAD therefore cannot agree with the submission of the
Appellant that, if he returned to his hometown of Kismao, [sic] he would be in
danger because Al-Shabaab would perceive him as having fraternized with
Westerners”.
[25]
I must confess, I do not see the connection
between whether or not Al-Shabaab has full control of the territory and whether
it would perceive the Applicant as a Westerner. It may simply be, as the
Applicant suggested, that the RAD is conflating state protection with control
by a terror group. Alternatively, it is making an entirely separate conclusion
without having established the necessary factual basis. In either case, the
reasoning is neither intelligible nor is it justified on the facts that were
before the RAD.
[26]
The RPD and RAD failed to analyse or assess the
risk to the Applicant as a failed refugee claimant returning from the United
States and Canada. That is not an assessment that the court can make by looking
at the record to discern the underlying reasons. The failure to provide the
analysis coupled with the very confusing concluding wording makes the decision
unreasonable on the Dunsmuir criteria.
[27]
The application is allowed. The matter but will
be returned to a different panel for redetermination.
[28]
Neither party posed a question for certification
and none arises on these facts.