Docket: IMM-1224-17
Citation:
2017 FC 930
Toronto, Ontario, October 18, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Diner
BETWEEN:
|
MAJEEDA SAEED
ALRASHIDI
|
BAYLISAN SALEH
ALMENHALI
|
ORJUWAN SALEH
S. ALMANHALI
|
NOOR SALEH S.
ALMANHALI
|
RGAD SALEH S.
ALMENHALI
|
RAHAF SALEH S.
ALMENHALI
|
LYAN SALEH S.
ALMENHALI
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is a judicial review of a negative refugee
decision. The Applicants, citizens of Saudi Arabia, claim a fear of persecution
at the hands of the Saudi Arabian government due to their gender and tribal
affiliation. Both the Refugee Protection Division [RPD] and then the Refugee
Appeal Division [RAD] rejected the Applicants’ claim on the basis of
credibility. I conclude below that the RAD applied the correct standard of
review to the RPD decision and made reasonable findings based on the evidence
before it. Accordingly, this Application for judicial review is dismissed.
I.
Background
[2]
The Applicants, a mother and her six daughters,
are all citizens of Saudi Arabia. The mother was born in the Al Rashidi tribe,
but upon her marriage, became a member of the Al Menhali tribe. The Applicants
claim that the Saudi Arabian government has stopped issuing identification [ID]
cards to Al Menhali women, and that without ID cards, women cannot work, study,
marry or access basic services. The Applicants also fear forced marriage, among
other forms of gender persecution.
[3]
The RAD, applying Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration) v Huruglica, 2016 FCA 93 [Huruglica], reviewed the RPD
record and independently assessed the evidence. Quite apart from the
credibility issues, the RAD found that the objective evidence did not support
the Applicants’ assertions that the Saudi government had refused to issue ID
cards. The Applicants’ claims failed under both sections 96 and 97 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [Act] in the RAD’s decision,
dated February 27, 2017 [Decision].
II.
Analysis
[4]
The RAD is to review RPD decisions applying the
correctness standard (Huruglica at para 103). Factual RPD findings
regarding credibility, on the other hand, may be owed deference, such as when
the RPD has enjoyed a meaningful advantage regarding factual findings,
including on credibility issues (Huruglica at para 70).
[5]
As for this Court, because no procedural
fairness issues were raised, I am to review the RAD’s assessment of the evidence,
and findings of mixed fact and law, on a standard of reasonableness (Huruglica
at para 35; Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at paras 47, 51, 54,
and 57).
[6]
Although the Applicants’ counsel admirably
reviewed the evidence and did the utmost to assert that the RAD made reviewable
errors, I am not persuaded that the RAD (and previously, the RPD) failed to
properly assess the evidence, or otherwise erred in making credibility findings.
On the contrary, the findings were all open to the RAD, including in
particular, those findings relating to the Applicants’ long delay in claiming
status, and explanations given in that regard. That the mother was illiterate,
uneducated, and under the guardianship of her husband, does not obviate the
requirement to demonstrate subjective fear of persecution. It was open to the
RAD to find the 20-month delay in claiming status after her arrival in Canada was
an undue delay. This factor alone is a sufficient basis upon which to uphold
the decision (Haseeb v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2017 FC 711
at para 12).
[7]
The ID card finding, likewise, was open to the tribunals,
given the totality of the evidence: the RAD was not convinced that the
Applicants could not obtain ID cards, based both on the documentation the
Applicants presented (a 2015 petition and 2013 news article), along with the
lack of supporting country condition evidence.
[8]
Given my conclusions on the above two issues, I will
comment only briefly on the other issues raised, namely (i) the basis upon
which the RAD gave little weight to the written opinion of Ms. Nora Doaiji , a teaching
assistant and graduate student at George Washington University, who the
Applicants held out as an expert on Saudi Arabia’s country conditions,
including with respect to gender and ethnic issues, and (ii) the RAD’s finding that
those conditions amounted to discrimination, not persecution. These two findings
were reasonable, as well as squarely in the heartland of the RAD’s expertise.
[9]
First, regarding Ms. Doaiji’s opinion, given her
credentials, the RAD had the discretion to apply Fadiga v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 1157 and give her purported expert
opinion minimal weight.
[10]
Second, it was incumbent on the RAD to assess
whether the discrimination — which it noted — reached the level of persecution
(Frigyik v Canada (Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship), 2017 FC 649
at para 18). The RAD’s discrimination analysis included an appropriate
consideration of gender inequalities for women in Saudi Arabia, and the
guardianship issues raised by the Applicants.
[11]
Finally, the Applicants challenge the RAD’s findings
on gender- and marriage-related issues. While others may not necessarily agree
with the RAD’s assessment of the evidence, that does not render the RAD’s findings
unreasonable.
III.
Conclusion
[12]
Despite able efforts by counsel, there is no
basis for the Court to interfere with the RAD’s Decision. In my view, the
Applicants are essentially asking this Court to substitute an outcome
preferable to them through a reassessment and reweighing of the evidence. That
is not this Court’s role. I find that the RAD’s Decision falls within a range
of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts
and law.