Docket: IMM-1508-17
Citation:
2018 FC 4
Ottawa, Ontario, January 4, 2018
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
|
ALEXANDER
CASTRILLON GUTIERREZ
|
Applicant
|
and
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THE MINISTER OF
IMMIGRATION, REFUGEES AND CITIZENSHIP
|
Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application under s 72(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [Act], for judicial review
of the decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and
Refugee Board of Canada [RPD or the Board], dated March 6, 2017 [Decision],
which refused the Applicant’s application to be deemed a Convention refugee or
a person in need of protection under ss 96 and 97 of the Act.
II.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The Applicant is a citizen of Colombia. He
arrived in Canada on December 4, 2016 and made a claim for refugee protection.
[3]
The basis of the Applicant’s claim dates back to
the 1990s when the AUC, a Colombian paramilitary group, targeted his parents
for extortion. After the family ceased being able to pay, the AUC threatened
the Applicant’s siblings. The threats caused the Applicant’s siblings to flee
Colombia between 1997 and 1999. One of his brothers settled in the United
States after studying there. His other brother and his sister fled to Canada
where they made successful claims for refugee protection. The Applicant and his
parents stayed in Colombia.
[4]
Continued persecution by the AUC led to the
Applicant’s parents leaving Colombia on December 24, 2006. After transiting
through the United States, they arrived in Canada on January 16, 2007. Like the
Applicant’s brother and sister, the Applicant’s parents made successful refugee
claims.
[5]
The Applicant attempted to immigrate to the
United States between 2012 and 2015. His applications for an American visa were
denied.
[6]
The Applicant alleges that his flight to Canada
was prompted by a series of threatening phone calls telling him that he had to
leave Colombia that began in August of 2015. The Applicant did not initially
report the threats to Colombian authorities but moved himself and his family
from Medellin to Itagui, Colombia. The Applicant says that he left Colombia
after receiving another call in Itagui in September of 2016. The Applicant
considered this call more threatening since the caller purportedly told the
Applicant that he knew that the Applicant’s brother, a Royal Canadian Mounted Police
[RCMP] officer in Canada, was a snitch for the police and had cost the caller a
lot of money. The Applicant believed that this level of detail indicated that
the caller knew a lot about his family. The Applicant says that he reported
this call to Colombian authorities before he departed Colombia but that he did
not hear more about their investigation.
[7]
The Applicant travelled to the United States
without his family. He first made an asylum claim in the United States. After
being released from detention, the Applicant journeyed to Canada and made his
refugee claim at the Canadian border.
III.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
[8]
The Board found that the claimant is neither a
Convention refugee nor a person in need of protection. The Board’s conclusion
is based on a negative credibility determination.
[9]
After stating that the Applicant’s identity was
established, the Board Member moves on to the Board’s credibility concerns.
Because they were numerous, the Decision purports to only describe some of the Board’s
specific concerns.
[10]
The Decision characterizes the Applicant’s delay
in leaving Colombia as so “egregious” that it
negatively affects his credibility. Even though the Applicant’s siblings left
in the late 1990s, and the Applicant’s parents left in 2006, the Applicant
remained in Colombia. Since the Applicant had allegedly stayed to take care of
his parents, his stated reason for staying disappeared after 2006. The Board
points out that the Applicant’s parents’ refugee narrative described three of
their children being threatened in the 1990s. Since three of the Applicant’s
siblings fled Colombia in the late 1990s, the Board questions whether the
Applicant was among those threatened. This leads the Board to question whether
the Applicant was threatened more recently as well.
[11]
The Board does not find the nature of the alleged
threats to the Applicant to be plausible. The Applicant indicated that he was
told to leave Colombia because his brother had cost the people threatening him
money. Yet there was no demand for money, as there had been in his parents’
case. The Board does not accept that forcing the Applicant to leave Colombia
and rejoin his family in Canada could constitute reprisal. This leads the Board
to believe that the threats were concocted after the Applicant failed to obtain
an American or Canadian visa.
[12]
The Applicant stated that, because of his
family’s history, his fear for his life never disappeared, but that he did not
experience threats in Colombia between 2006 and 2015. The Applicant also
acknowledged that economics contributed to his decision to seek a visa in 2012.
The Board finds the Applicant’s stated fear inconsistent with his failure to
report the 2015 threats to Colombian authorities. The Board concludes that the
Applicant has had economic reasons for attempting to leave Colombia since 2012.
[13]
The Board finds the Applicant’s failure to go to
the police after the first threatening phone call inconsistent with the
Applicant’s statement that his fear of persecution never disappeared between
2006 and 2015. The Board Member points out that the Applicant initially
testified that he considered the first call a bad joke. When the Board confronted
the Applicant with its concerns about this explanation, the Applicant added
that he had no confidence in the police and that he did not ignore the first
call. The Board finds that this subsequent explanation directly contradicts the
Applicant’s earlier explanation.
[14]
The Board also takes issues with the timing of
the Applicant’s decision to report the 2016 threat to Colombian authorities.
The Board notes that the Applicant’s written testimony states that he had
already bought a ticket to leave Colombia before going to the authorities.
During oral testimony, however, the Applicant claimed that he decided to leave
Colombia after being unsatisfied with official response to his report. The Board
finds the Applicant’s explanation for this contradiction “obtuse and indirect.” The Applicant also suggested that
a report from the authorities may have been lost. The Board does not believe
that this report ever existed or that the Applicant reported the threats to
Colombian authorities. Instead, the Board finds the Applicant untruthful based
on his inability to tell a consistent story.
[15]
The Board Member finds that the Applicant also contradicted
himself when he stated during oral testimony that the callers specifically
identified themselves as AUC. The Applicant’s written narrative described the
first threatening phone call as coming from an unknown individual. The
Applicant initially explained this inconsistency by asserting that he had only
suspected the first callers as being AUC because they mentioned his family, but
that they had not stated that they were AUC. Asked to explain the inconsistency
between this explanation and his earlier oral testimony, the Applicant blamed
this on an oversight in the written narrative caused by the stress that he was
under at the time. The Board notes that this does not explain inconsistencies
in the Applicant’s oral testimony regarding the call.
[16]
The Board further notes that the Applicant’s
story about his level of education changed between the Port of Entry form and
oral testimony. The level of education in the earlier form was corroborated by
the Applicant’s brother’s testimony. The Board finds that the Applicant was
deliberately misleading about his education level in an attempt to influence
the Board’s determination of whether he could successfully relocate to Bogota.
[17]
The Applicant’s parents’ narrative from their
2007 refugee claim states that the Applicant left home in 2001 and had not been
in contact with them since leaving home. The Board takes issue with the
Applicant’s claim during oral testimony that he lived in the same city as his
parents until they left Colombia, at which time he moved from Medellin to Bogota.
He claimed that he never lost contact with his parents until they left Colombia.
The Applicant was unsure why his parents indicated in 2007 that they had lost
contact with him. The Board notes that the Applicant’s oral testimony about not
losing contact with his parents contradicts not only his parents’ narrative but
also the Applicant’s own written narrative. The Applicant’s narrative states
that he lost contact when he moved to Bogota before his parents left. The Board
accepts that these contradictions are peripheral to the Applicant’s allegations,
but finds that they contribute to overall credibility concerns.
[18]
Regarding the testimony of the Applicant’s
brother, the Board finds him to be credible because his testimony was
straightforward, free of embellishment, and without inconsistency or
contradiction. But the Board finds that the brother’s testimony was based on
information provided by the Applicant rather than direct observation. Since the
Board had already decided that the Applicant lacked credibility, it places no
weight on evidence that relies on the Applicant’s truthfulness.
[19]
The Board finds that the Applicant’s brother’s
profession as an RCMP officer in Canada did not put the Applicant at risk of
harm in Colombia in the past and would not do so in the future. The Board notes
that the Applicant’s brother left Colombia nearly twenty years ago. He joined
the RCMP in 2010. And since the Board does not find the Applicant credible, no
credible evidence suggests that any armed group linked the Applicant to his
brother. The Board therefore finds that no threats were made to the Applicant
on account of his brother’s occupation.
[20]
In conclusion, the Board states that it places
no weight on any of the Applicant’s oral testimony or written claims. The
Applicant’s inability to provide any reliable evidence prevents the Board from rendering
a favourable decision.
IV.
ISSUES
[21]
The Applicant raises the following issues in
this application:
- Is the Board’s
credibility finding unreasonable?
- Is the Decision’s
handling of the principle of comity unreasonable?
- Is the Decision’s
lack of a separate s 97 analysis unreasonable?
V.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[22]
The Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v New
Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir], held that a standard of review
analysis need not be conducted in every instance. Instead, where the standard
of review applicable to a particular question before the court is settled in a
satisfactory manner by past jurisprudence, the reviewing court may adopt that
standard of review. Only where this search proves fruitless, or where the
relevant precedents appear to be inconsistent with new developments in the
common law principles of judicial review, must the reviewing court undertake a
consideration of the four factors comprising the standard of review analysis: Agraira
v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36 at para
48.
[23]
The standard of review applicable to the RPD’s
credibility determinations is reasonableness. See Diaz v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2016 FC 1343 at para 10 [Diaz].
[24]
The RPD’s application of comity to the facts and
the decision not to conduct a separate s 97 analysis are questions of
mixed fact and law which are also reviewed under a standard of reasonableness.
See Dunsmuir, above, at para 53.
[25]
When reviewing a decision on the standard of
reasonableness, the analysis will be concerned with “the
existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within the
decision-making process [and also with] whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.” See Dunsmuir, above, at para 47, and Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at para 59. Put another
way, the Court should intervene only if the Decision was unreasonable in the
sense that it falls outside the “range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.”
VI.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[26]
The following provisions of the Act are relevant
in this application:
Convention
refugee
|
Définition
de réfugié
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96 A
Convention refugee is a person who, by reason of a well-founded fear of
persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership in a
particular social group or political opinion,
|
96 A qualité
de réfugié au sens de la Convention — le réfugié — la personne qui, craignant
avec raison d’être persécutée du fait de sa race, de sa religion, de sa
nationalité, de son appartenance à un groupe social ou de ses opinions
politiques :
|
(a) is
outside each of their countries of nationality and is unable or, by reason of
that fear, unwilling to avail themself of the protection of each of those
countries; or
|
a) soit se
trouve hors de tout pays dont elle a la nationalité et ne peut ou, du fait de
cette crainte, ne veut se réclamer de la protection de chacun de ces pays;
|
(b) not
having a country of nationality, is outside the country of their former
habitual residence and is unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling to
return to that country.
|
b) soit, si
elle n’a pas de nationalité et se trouve hors du pays dans lequel elle avait
sa résidence habituelle, ne peut ni, du fait de cette crainte, ne veut y
retourner.
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Person in
need of protection
|
Personne à
protéger
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97 (1) A
person in need of protection is a person in Canada whose removal to their
country or countries of nationality or, if they do not have a country of
nationality, their country of former habitual residence, would subject them
personally
|
97 (1) A qualité
de personne à protéger la personne qui se trouve au Canada et serait
personnellement, par son renvoi vers tout pays dont elle a la nationalité ou,
si elle n’a pas de nationalité, dans lequel elle avait sa résidence
habituelle, exposée :
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(a) to a danger,
believed on substantial grounds to exist, of torture within the meaning of
Article 1 of the Convention Against Torture; or
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a) soit au
risque, s’il y a des motifs sérieux de le croire, d’être soumise à la torture
au sens de l’article premier de la Convention contre la torture;
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(b) to a risk
to their life or to a risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment if
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b) soit à une
menace à sa vie ou au risque de traitements ou peines cruels et inusités dans
le cas suivant :
|
(i) the
person is unable or, because of that risk, unwilling to avail themself of the
protection of that country,
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(i) elle ne
peut ou, de ce fait, ne veut se réclamer de la protection de ce pays,
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(ii) the risk
would be faced by the person in every part of that country and is not faced
generally by other individuals in or from that country,
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(ii) elle y
est exposée en tout lieu de ce pays alors que d’autres personnes originaires
de ce pays ou qui s’y trouvent ne le sont généralement pas,
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(iii) the
risk is not inherent or incidental to lawful sanctions, unless imposed in
disregard of accepted international standards, and
|
(iii) la
menace ou le risque ne résulte pas de sanctions légitimes — sauf celles
infligées au mépris des normes internationales — et inhérents à celles-ci ou
occasionnés par elles,
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(iv) the risk
is not caused by the inability of that country to provide adequate health or
medical care.
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(iv) la
menace ou le risque ne résulte pas de l’incapacité du pays de fournir des
soins médicaux ou de santé adéquats.
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VII.
ARGUMENT
A.
Applicant
(1)
Credibility
[27]
The Applicant submits that the Decision is
unreasonable because it sets out some, but not all, of the Board’s credibility
concerns when making its overall credibility determination. The Federal Court
of Appeal has held that the reasons for rejecting a refugee claim on
credibility grounds must be given in “clear and
unmistakable terms”: Armson v Canada (Minister of Employment &
Immigration) (1989), 101 NR 372 (WL Can) at para 20 (FCA) [Armson]. The
reasons must allow a claimant to know why the claim has failed. See Mehterian
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1992] FCJ No 545 (QL)
(CA) [Mehterian]. This Court has stated that “if
the Board believes only a part of the applicant’s story it is obliged to say
how much was accepted and how much rejected”: Ramirez v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship & Immigration) (1999), 166 FTR 158 (WL Can) at
para 3 (TD). The Decision expressly states that it will only discuss a few of
the Board’s credibility concerns. The Applicant says that this does not allow
him to properly address all credibility issues in an appeal.
[28]
The Applicant also says that the Board’s
implausibility finding about the nature of the threats he faced relies on the
paramilitary group who threatened him acting rationally. The Applicant asserts
that the AUC is widely considered a terrorist group. This Court has accepted
that “terrorist groups often act irrationally”: Yoosuff
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1116 at para 8.
See also Selliah v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2006 FC 493 at para 6; Franco Taboada v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2008 FC 1122 at para 35; Londono Soto v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2008 FC 354 at para 26 [Londono Soto]; Builes v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2016 FC 215 at para 17. The Board did not find it
plausible that the group that threatened the Applicant would be satisfied with
him leaving Colombia because it neither benefited them nor amounted to a
reprisal. The Applicant says that to base an adverse credibility finding on the
plausibility of the actions of terrorists is unreasonable.
[29]
The Applicant submits that the Board erred
by basing a credibility finding on its perception of the reasonableness of the
Applicant’s response to being threatened. The Board found it implausible that
the Applicant did not take the first call seriously, given his stated fear for
his life and the caller’s mention of the Applicant’s family. Plausibility
findings should only be made in the clearest cases. The Board should consider
that “refugee claimants come from diverse cultures, and
actions which appear implausible when judged from [a Canadian perspective]
might be plausible when considered from within the claimant’s milieu”: Valtchev
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2001 FCT 776 at para 7
[Valtchev]. Because an implausibility finding depends on the Board’s
perception of rational behaviour, it is an error for the Board not to refer to
relevant evidence that could potentially refute an implausibility conclusion.
See Valtchev, above, at para 8, quoting Leung v Canada (Minister of
Employment & Immigration) (1994), 81 FTR 303 (WL Can) at para 15 (TD),
quoted in Santos v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2004 FC 937 at para 14. A plausibility finding that does not rely on a reliable
and verifiable evidentiary base is “unfounded
speculation”: Aguilar Zacarias v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2012 FC 1155 at para 11. The Applicant says that it is not outside the realm of
possibility that he could have an ongoing fear for his life, yet might not have
reported the first call to the police. The Applicant may have become more
afraid after the second call. Therefore, the Applicant submits that the Board’s
implausibility finding is unreasonable.
[30]
The Applicant also submits that the Board’s
concerns over discrepancies about whether the first caller identified himself
as AUC should not have been material to the Board’s credibility determination.
Given the AUC’s past targeting of the Applicant’s family, the Applicant says it
was reasonable for him to presume that the AUC were the perpetrators and forget
whether the caller identified himself. The Applicant says that the Decision
focuses on minor, explicable inconsistencies in making its adverse credibility
finding. This violates the instruction that the Board is not to be zealous to
find a claimant not credible or engage in a microscopic examination of the
evidence. See Jamil v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2006 FC 792 at para 24. The Applicant says that his belief that the AUC had
targeted him is what is relevant to the Decision.
[31]
The Applicant submits that the Board’s adverse
credibility finding is partially based on technical, rather than substantive,
discrepancies which are immaterial to his claim. The Board finds that the
Applicant lied about the level of education he attained and that this was a
deliberate attempt to mislead the Board. The Applicant says that his education
level is immaterial and that the perceived discrepancy could simply be the
result of ambiguities in translation. This Court has held that it is
unreasonable to reject claims based on immaterial, secondary issues when the
Board ignores important parts of the claimant’s case. See Simba v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2000 CanLII 14777 (FCTD) [Simba],
quoting Mahathmasseelan v Canada (Minister of Employment & Immigration)
(1991), 15 Imm LR (2d) 29 (WL Can) at para 9 (FCA). See also
Owusu-Ansah v Canada (Minister of Employment & Immigration) (1989), 8
Imm LR (2d) 106 (FCA); Armson, above, at para 24. The Applicant says
that the Decision also focuses on a minor discrepancy between the Applicant’s
testimony and his parents’ written narrative, even though the Board
acknowledges that the discrepancy is immaterial to the Applicant’s claim.
[32]
The Applicant submits that the Board’s decision
to base its credibility finding on immaterial inconsistencies and unspoken
grounds results in the Board ignoring corroborating testimony, country
condition evidence, and the Applicant’s testimony that supports his claim. The
Applicant also says that the Board only considered past persecution and failed
to conduct a forward-looking assessment of the risk the Applicant faces if
returned to Colombia. Despite finding the Applicant’s brother credible, the Board
ignores the Applicant’s brother’s testimony about the fear the Applicant
communicated to him and his belief, based on his knowledge of the drug
trafficking trade, that the Applicant was at risk. Even where the Board does
not find a claimant credible, it should still expressly assess evidence which
could affect the claim. See SS v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) (1999), 167 FTR 130 at para 11 (TD) [Seevaratnam]. To
reach a conclusion based on certain evidence and then dismiss the remaining documentary
evidence as not genuine because it is inconsistent with that conclusion inverts
the reasoning process. See Chen v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2013 FC 311 at para 20 [Chen].
[33]
The Applicant says that the National
Documentation Package for Colombia provides extensive corroboration which
substantiates the Applicant’s testimony. The Applicant points to the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees’ “Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing
the International Protection Needs of Asylum-Seekers from Colombia” (September
2015) [Guidelines]. The Guidelines describe ongoing risks from paramilitary
groups in Colombia and how family members of targets are also at risk of
threats and extortion. This aligns with the Applicant’s testimony about being
targeted. This Court has held that “when the [Board]
refers in some detail to evidence supporting its finding, but is silent on
evidence pointing to the opposite conclusion, it may be easier to infer that
the agency overlooked the contradictory evidence when making its finding of
fact”: Cepeda-Gutierrez v Canada (Minister of Citizenship &
Immigration) (1998), 157 FTR 35 (WL Can) at para 17 (TD). See also Goman
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 643 at para 13; Hernandez
Montoya v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 808 at paras 36-37;
Gopalarasa v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 1138 at para
39. Furthermore, even where a claimant’s subjective fear of persecution is not
found credible, if the claimant’s identity is not in dispute the objective
evidence of country conditions may establish that the claimant’s particular
circumstances make him or her a person in need of protection. See Fixgera
Lappen v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 434 at para 27; Maimba
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 226 at para 22.
[34]
The Applicant also submits that any perceived
delay in his decision to leave Colombia should not have impacted the Decision. While
the Applicant’s siblings did leave between 1997 and 1999, and his parents left
in 2006, the Applicant alleges that he was only directly targeted in 2015. The
Decision characterizes this as a delay that was “egregious”
and finds that it discredits the Applicant’s allegations. The Applicant points
to Ibrahimov v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2003 FC
1185 at para 19, where Justice Heneghan held that “when
a claim is based on a number of discriminatory or harassing incidents which
culminate in an event which forces a person to leave his country, then the
issue of delay cannot be used as a significant factor to doubt that person's
subjective fear of persecution.” See also Londono Soto, above, at
para 31.
(2)
Comity
[35]
The Applicant notes that his siblings and
parents were all accepted as Convention refugees in Canada. The decisions in
both those claims and the Applicant’s parents’ written narrative were all
submitted to the RPD. In these circumstances, the Applicant says that the Board
had a duty to explain the reasons for departing from previous findings of the
RPD. In Mendoza v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 251 at
para 25 [Mendoza], Justice Zinn held that “it
is incumbent on the RPD Member when reaching a different result than was
previously reached by another Member regarding a claim by a family member under
similar circumstances, to explain why a contrary result was reached.”
See also Djouah v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 884 at
para 25 [Djouah].
(3)
Section 97
[36]
The Applicant submits that the Decision’s
analysis under s 97 of the Act errs because the Board stops its analysis at
credibility and does not consider whether the Applicant faces an objective
risk. The Applicant says that the test under s 97 of the Act is entirely
objective as it is based on the claimant’s profile and the documentary evidence
before the Board. Therefore, even if the claimant is primarily disbelieved, the
Board is obliged to consider whether the claimant is at risk based on its
finding regarding the claimant’s profile. The Applicant says that the Board’s
finding that “the claimant did not provide any reliable
evidence to support his allegations” blatantly ignores testimony from a
witness that the Board found credible, country condition evidence, and the
Applicant’s family members’ positive decisions.
[37]
In Odetoyinbo v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2009 FC 501 at para 7, Justice Martineau held that “[i]t is well settled that an adverse credibility finding,
though it may be conclusive of a refugee claim under section 96 of the [Act],
is not necessarily conclusive of a claim under subsection 97(1).” See
also Bouaouni v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2003
FC 1211 at para 41. The Applicant says that doubts about a claimant’s
credibility do not relieve the RPD of the responsibility of basing its
determination on all of the evidence. See Mensah v Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [1989] FCJ No 1038 (QL) (CA); Baranyi v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship & Immigration), 2001 FCT 664 at para
14; Voytik v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC
66 at para 20. Finding a claimant not credible means only that the claimant’s
testimony cannot be relied on; it does not mean that the facts attested to are
untrue. This is illustrated by Attakora v Canada (Minister of Employment
& Immigration) (1989), 99 NR 168 (WL Can) at para 13 (FCA), where the
Federal Court of Appeal held that “[w]hether or not the
applicant was a credible witness… that does not prevent him from being a
refugee if his political opinions and activities are likely to lead to his
arrest and punishment.”
[38]
The Applicant therefore submits that the Board’s
conclusion under s 97 of the Act is unreasonable because it fails to consider
whether his removal to Colombia would subject him to the risks stipulated in s
97. The error is exacerbated by the Board’s failure to discuss the documentary
evidence which detailed the risks the Applicant would be subject to upon
return. The Applicant says that the absence of a s 97 analysis alone requires
the matter to be returned to the RPD for reconsideration. See e.g. Ayilan v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 1328 [Ayilan].
B.
Respondent
(1)
Credibility
[39]
The Respondent submits that the Applicant’s
suggestion that the RPD must set out every credibility concern is not supported
by the jurisprudence. The Applicant relies on case law which says that the RPD
must set out in its reasons why it does not find a claim to be credible in
clear and unmistakable terms. See Armson, above, at para 20; Mehterian,
above, at para 2. The Respondent says that the Applicant is arguing about the
adequacy of reasons. Since the Decision allows the Applicant to know why his
claim failed, the reasons are adequate in this case. The Respondent notes that
the Applicant does not claim to not understand the Board’s credibility
concerns. Instead, the Applicant says that he cannot address other, unstated
credibility concerns.
[40]
The Respondent says that there is no merit to
the Applicant’s argument because the Decision is based on a cumulative
credibility assessment and lists seven specific credibility concerns. In the
Decision, these concerns appear under the headings “Delay in Leaving,” “Nature
of Threats,” “Attempts to leave Colombia,” “Reporting to the Authorities,” “Agents
of Persecution,” and “Miscellaneous Discrepancies” regarding education and the Applicant’s
parents. The Respondent says that a review of the transcript demonstrates the
reasonableness of the Board’s concerns and that the Decision does include the
Board’s key credibility concerns. This is further demonstrated by the
Applicant’s former counsel’s post-hearing submissions which addressed some of
these issues.
[41]
The Respondent says the Board’s concern over the
Applicant’s delay in leaving Colombia is reasonable. The Applicant cites cases
that found concerns over delay unreasonable where the claimant alleged
cumulative incidents of persecution. The Applicant does not allege cumulative
incidents of persecution. When questioned about why he did not take steps to
leave Colombia until 2012 after his parents’ departure in 2006, the Applicant
explained that in 2012 his business had closed and his economic situation
declined. But he denied seeking to leave for economic reasons and maintained
that he had always remained afraid.
[42]
Further, the Respondent says that the Board’s
concerns extended to the Applicant’s explanation for the delay. The Applicant
said that he did not leave Colombia in the 1990s so that he could look after
his parents, yet his parents left in 2006. It was also unclear whether the
Applicant had been threatened along with his siblings in the 1990s.
[43]
The Respondent submits that the Board’s
implausibility finding about the nature of the threats allegedly faced by the
Applicant is not unreasonable. The AUC extorted money from the Applicant’s
parents. The Applicant alleged that a caller claimed that the Applicant’s
brother had caused them to lose money. The Board found it implausible that the AUC
would demand that the Applicant leave Colombia because his departure would not
benefit the AUC. Rather than speculation, the Respondent says that the Board
drew a common-sense inference about the motives of the agents of persecution.
See Sandirasekaram v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 1005
at paras 10-11.
[44]
Even if the Board’s finding is speculative, the
Respondent notes that in Varatharasa v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2017 FC 11, Justice Gleeson agreed that it was not a claimant’s responsibility
to explain the agent of persecution’s actions, but still held that the decision
was reasonable based on the officer’s other concerns.
[45]
The Respondent says that it was open to the Board
to find that the Applicant was not credible because of his failure to report
the first phone call to Colombian authorities. The Applicant says that this
finding was based on the Board’s own perception of what constitutes reasonable
behaviour, and that it was possible for the Applicant to have an ongoing fear
of persecution yet not report the call. The Respondent says that the question is
not the reasonableness of the Applicant’s response to the threats because the
test on review “is not a listing of the entirety of
reasonable possibilities, but rather, whether the RPD’s findings were
reasonably open to it.” The Respondent submits that this is similar to Diaz,
above, at paras 13-14, where the RPD based credibility concerns, in part, on
the claimant’s failure to disclose an alleged threat to his wife.
[46]
The Respondent submits that the Board’s concern
about inconsistency in the Applicant’s story as to whether the callers
identified themselves is reasonable. The Respondent suggests that the
Applicant’s characterization of these inconsistencies as microscopic
misapprehends the Board’s concern. The Applicant testified that the caller in
2016 identified himself as AUC, then added that the first caller also specifically
identified himself as AUC. This contradicted the Applicant’s written narrative
which stated that the first caller’s identity was unknown. When asked to
explain this inconsistency, the Applicant’s explanation was that he had
perceived the first caller to be AUC. The Respondent says that concern over
these inconsistencies was reasonably open to the Board.
[47]
The Respondent notes that the Board also
identified concerns over the Applicant’s testimony about when he decided to
leave Colombia. The Applicant’s written narrative stated that he had already
purchased a ticket to Mexico before reporting the 2016 call to Colombian
authorities. In oral testimony, he stated that he decided to leave when police
failed to provide protection after he made the report. When the Board asked the
Applicant to explain this contradiction, he stated that he decided to leave
after he received the 2016 call. Later, when questioned by his counsel, the
Applicant again stated that that he decided to leave after he went to the
authorities.
[48]
The Respondent submits that the Board did not
make credibility findings based on immaterial or technical discrepancies. The
Board signals that concerns over the Applicant’s level of education and
inconsistency with his parents’ claim are additional credibility concerns by
labelling them “Miscellaneous Discrepancies.”
The Respondent notes that the Applicant argues that he is prejudiced by the
Board’s failure to mention every credibility concern, yet also faults the
Board’s inclusion of concerns which the Applicant says are irrelevant. The
Board explains that its discussion of the education concern is relevant because
the issue arose in response to consideration of an internal flight alternative
[IFA] in Bogota. The Respondent says that it was reasonably open to the Board
to find that this was a deliberate attempt to mislead. The Board did not accept
the Applicant’s explanation that he had only completed three years of courses
over five years of attending school. The Respondent notes that the Applicant’s brother’s
testimony supported the finding that the Applicant had the higher level of
education. The Respondent submits that the cases relied on by the Applicant to
suggest that the Board erred by considering irrelevant concerns are instances
where the RPD failed to consider more important facts, which is distinguishable
from the present case.
[49]
Regarding inconsistency with the Applicant’s
parents’ claim, the Respondent notes that the Board acknowledges that the
inconsistency is not central to the Applicant’s claim. But the Respondent
submits that it remained open to the Board to make findings about the
Applicant’s overall credibility based on clearly inconsistent statements.
[50]
The Respondent submits that having found the
Applicant not credible, the Board was not obliged to consider the remaining
relevant evidence. The Respondent says that the Applicant’s reliance on Seevaratnam,
above, is misplaced. This Court considered similar arguments in Joseph v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 548 at para 12, and held that
where “the Board’s concerns about the credibility or
trustworthiness of the claimant’s evidence causes it to doubt the very essence
of the claim… the Board need not look to general country condition evidence to
determine whether the claim was well-founded.” Similarly, Chen,
above, is distinguishable as the Board in that case disbelieved the claimant’s
testimony because it was not supported by the country condition evidence. The
Respondent says that Chen has no application where the concern is the
Applicant’s inconsistent testimony.
[51]
The Respondent also points out that the Board
explains that, despite finding the Applicant’s brother to be credible, his
testimony was not based on first-hand knowledge. Therefore, the Board’s
conclusion that the testimony was not credible evidence in support of the
Applicant’s claim is reasonable.
[52]
The Respondent submits that documentary evidence
on its own cannot support a claim for protection where no credible evidence
links the claimant to the agents of persecution. Since the Board did not find
the Applicant’s evidence linking him to the threats credible there was no need
to consider whether the documentary evidence applied to the Applicant. See Rahaman
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 1008 at para 17 [Rahaman].
(2)
Comity
[53]
The Respondent submits that the Board did not
need to explain why it found the Applicant’s claim different from his family
members’ claims because the facts of the Applicant’s claim are clearly
different. Unlike the cases relied on by the Applicant, this was not an
instance of similar claims submitted at similar times. In Mendoza, the
claimant brothers’ refugee claims were based on largely similar facts. In Djouah,
the claimants were all members of the same dance troupe and made claims based
on the same facts and evidence. The Respondent also notes that comity applies
to points of law and does not apply between tribunal decisions and findings of
fact. See Nwabueze v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2017 FC 323
at para 9.
[54]
The Respondent says that there was no basis for
the Board to consider the Applicant’s claim as being similar to that of his
siblings and parents. The Applicant’s siblings’ and parents’ claims recount
them being threatened at gunpoint. The Applicant’s parents also faced demands
for money. Further, the Applicant submitted his claim nearly twenty years after
his siblings left Colombia and a decade after his parents left.
(3)
Section 97
[55]
The Respondent submits that the Board was not
required to conduct a separate analysis under s 97 of the Act. In Lopez v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 102 at para 41 [Lopez],
Justice Kane held that “a negative credibility finding
is sufficient to dispose a claim under both sections 96 and 97, unless there is
independent and credible documentary evidence in the record capable of
supporting a positive disposition of the claim.” See also Velez v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 923. The Respondent submits
that this case is analogous to Lopez. In Lopez, the claim of two
Salvadoran brothers failed because the documentary evidence only addressed
generalized risk faced by some young men in El Salvador, and the brothers did
not provide objective and credible evidence of the risk they faced. See Lopez,
above, at paras 41-46.
[56]
The Respondent points to Dag v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2017 FC 375 [Dag], where Justice
Diner considered Ayilan, above. Justice Diner points out that in Ayilan,
“a s. 97 analysis was required, given (a) the Board’s
finding that the applicant was or may have been discriminated against, coupled
with (b) the documentary evidence provided by the applicant”: Dag,
above, at para 22. In Dag, the Board found that the applicant had never
been subject to discrimination. Justice Diner goes on to state that the RPD “simply lacked an evidentiary basis on which to conduct a s.
97 analysis based on personal risk to the Applicant”: Dag, above,
at para 23. The Respondent submits that having found the Applicant not
credible, there was no evidence of personalized risk upon which the Board could
conduct a s 97 analysis.
[57]
The Respondent therefore requests that the
application for judicial review be dismissed.
VIII.
ANALYSIS
[58]
In my view, there is no substance to the
Applicant’s arguments that the Board was obliged to decide his claim in
accordance with the positive decisions received by his parents and two
siblings. Each refugee claim is decided on its own facts and merits. See Gilles
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 159 at para 43. Cases do
arise – particularly in family situations – where the same facts are relied
upon, so that it makes sense to decide them in the same way or, at least, to
explain why they should not be decided in the same way. See Mengesha v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 431 at para 5. But this is
not one of those cases. The facts of the Applicant’s case were very different
from those of his parents and siblings, even though the same agent of
persecution is alleged.
[59]
Nor do I think there is any substance to the
Applicant’s argument that a separate s 97 analysis was required in this case.
Risk cannot be established on the basis of general country documentation alone.
The Applicant was required to establish either a personal risk or that he had a
profile or belonged to a class of persons who, under the country documentation,
would, on a balance of probabilities be at risk. See Lopez, above, at
paras 41-46. The Applicant failed to do this. Having found the Applicant not to
be credible, there was nothing upon which the Board could have based a s 97
analysis. See Dag, above, at para 23.
[60]
The Applicant argues that there was credible
evidence before the Board that was sufficient to warrant a separate s 97
analysis.
[61]
He points to the evidence provided by his
brother who the Board found to be credible. In the Decision, the Board points
out that the brother’s testimony “regarding the
problems [the Applicant] had in Colombia is based on the verbal assertions of
[the Applicant] and admittedly not based on first-hand knowledge.”
Because the Board had already found the Applicant’s assertions not to be
credible, the Board places “no weight on any evidence
that relies on the truthfulness of this claimant.” The Board then goes
on to deal with the possible connection between the brother’s status as an RCMP
officer and the risk that the Applicant claims to face in Colombia:
[24] With regard to the witness’
profession as a member of the RCMP, there is nothing before the panel to
suggest that the witness’ occupation as a member of the RCMP has placed or
would place this claimant at risk of harm in Colombia. This witness left
Colombia almost twenty years ago. He has been a member of the RCMP since 2010.
There is no credible evidence before this panel to suggest that any armed group
has linked or would link this particular claimant to his brother in Canada.
There is no credible evidence before this panel to suggest that any harm has
come or would come to the claimant as a result of his brother’s employment in
Canada.
[62]
The brother provided the following testimony on
point at the hearing:
WITNESS: Well,
basically, you know, I'm just going to go straight up to my point here is that,
I mean, I work for the drug enforcement in Canada. These people try to kill me,
my parents. That's why we left Colombia, apply for refugee in Canada. Somehow
these people could be connected to drug business.
My occupation here is to investigate and
dismantle criminal organizations in Canada, also internationally and somehow
these people could have found out what I do up here in Canada, put a dent in
their organization and somehow they found that my brother's still in Colombia
and starting to harass him and made threats against him and his family.
[Certified Tribunal Record, p 201]
…
COUNSEL: And
what did he tell you then in September 2015?
WITNESS: Okay.
Well, he mention me, that people have call him and mention my name and
basically I was a snitch to the police in Canada and that they made threats to
him and his family.
[Certified Tribunal Record, p 204]
…
COUNSEL: And
what did he say in this phone call of September 2016?
WITNESS: Basically
initially I said before that people call him, unknown people call him and they
knew, like, they were losing money and if he didn't leave Colombia there was
going to be repercussions to him and his family. They were going to kill him
basically, him and his family as well, that somehow they knew it was connected
to my parents' departure, my departure, all my family departure and he was the
only one left. So I guess he was going to pay the price.
COUNSEL: Okay,
just for clarifying this part, did he call you also in September 2015 or just
September 2016?
WITNESS: No,
he — well he communicated through my parents as well. Just to clarify, so the
last phone call where he mention that these people mention my name was in 2016,
2016 which is the year which is obviously when he left, because I remember he
left shortly after he receive the last phone call where they mention my name,
but I know he receive previous calls as well in the previous year which would
have been 2015. From that same people I don't know, but ---
COUNSEL: Let
me ask you, just if you know from your professional experience and your life
experience, too, of course, did you think that this modus operandi correspond
to any organization that you may know?
WITNESS: Yeah,
definitely. Most definitely. It's just drug cartels basically in Colombia. Drug
cartels operate in Colombia. They use people. They use innocent people to
export narcotics. They also use threats, intimidation, killing if they're
losing money because of the police and it doesn't just mean Colombian police,
but if they have the power to kill people overseas in another country they will
do it as well; right? It's basically the MO is fear. You know, there's
dangerous people.
COUNSEL: Yeah,
again this is — I'm asking — probably this is my last question further to your
instructions, but again this is an opinion what I'm asking.
WITNESS: Yeah.
COUNSEL: Do
you know why these individuals who were affected in their business didn't
proceed to kill your brother instead of giving him the opportunity to leave? Do
you have an opinion on that?
WITNESS: They
didn't do it right away, but at some point most likely they would have done it;
right? I know my brother moved a few times location, so it was hard to track,
probably tracking down, but I know — I have no doubt in my mind that these
people would have tracked him down, him and his family at some point and kill
him or kidnap him and torture and all kind of techniques.
COUNSEL: Okay.
And just finally this is probably the very last.
WITNESS: Yeah.
COUNSEL: Again
it's an opinion what I'm asking you, if you know from your experience how these
individuals could find Alexander if he moves to Bogota?
WITNESS: Well,
we're talking about criminal organizations. They infiltrate people even in the
government. Police is not an exception either. Money talks in Colombia and
unfortunately that's the way it is. They can infiltrate people and high-ranking
officers, police. They can find through criminal record checks and databanks
where people live, you know. They have identity. They can track down like we
will do it in Canada. You just give a name and an identity and you'll find out
where's the address and where people are living; right?
So in Colombia would have been the same.
They can track down people easily whenever they move regardless is in one city
or the other one. Well, they were able to track me down somehow and found me in
Canada. So you can imagine they could do, could do in Colombia as well; right?
[Certified Tribunal Record, pp 205-206]
…
PRESIDING MEMBER: And all of the information you have with regard to the phone
calls that your brother received and all of the threats that he received, is
that all second-hand knowledge? Is that all based on — merely on what your
brother has told you?
WITNESS: Yes.
PRESIDING MEMBER:
Do you have any other knowledge from any other source?
WITNESS: No,
no.
[Certified Tribunal Record, pp 206-207]
[63]
It seems to me that the brother is speculating
about a possible connection: “Somehow these people
could be connected to drug business” and “somehow
these people could have found out what I do up here in Canada” and “somehow they found that my brother’s still in Colombia and
starting to harass him and made threats against him and his family.”
[64]
Given the speculative testimony of this witness
and his agreement that his only source of information of threats to the
Applicant is the Applicant himself, who the Board finds not to be credible, I
don’t think that the brother’s evidence can be said to be the basis for a separate
s 97 analysis. This evidence would only come into play in assessing a future s
97 risk if the Applicant’s evidence is believable. The Applicant’s account of
the threats certainly accords with conditions in Colombia and the methods of
paramilitary groups who deal in drugs, but the Applicant would hardly be likely
to put forward a narrative that did not accord with those conditions. Given the
other credibility findings, the general conditions described by the brother
cannot redeem the Applicant’s false narrative, provided the Board’s negative
credibility findings are reasonable.
[65]
So, this application comes down to the Board’s
credibility analysis and findings. My conclusion is that there is nothing
unreasonable in the Board’s credibility assessment and the application must be
dismissed.
A.
Failure to Discuss All Concerns
[66]
The Applicant says that the Board “must set out and discuss all concerns relating to the
credibility of the Applicant if she is to rely on them in her negative
determination” [emphasis added].
[67]
The authorities cited by the Applicant do not
support this position. They make it clear that the Board must give reasons for
rejecting a claim “in clear and unmistakeable terms.”
See Armson, above, at para 20.
[68]
As Mehterian, above, makes clear the “reasons must be sufficiently clear, precise and intelligible
that the claimant may know why his claim has failed and decide whether to seek
leave to appeal, where necessary.”
[69]
The Board explains the reasons for rejecting the
claim as follows:
[6] This claim fails on the issue of
credibility. Credibility concerns arose very early on in the hearing and
continued throughout. There were serious enough omissions, contradictions,
discrepancies and implausibilities to give the panel reason to doubt that the
sworn testimony of this claimant was not truthful. Counsel himself requested
that he be permitted to provide written submissions due to the complex
credibility concerns that arose during the hearing or as counsel termed it
“confusing testimony”. The credibility concerns were numerous and therefore,
for brevity sake, only a few will be outlined in these reasons. However, let it
be clear that this decision was not based on any one credibility issue in
isolation but rather on the cumulative assessment of all areas of credibility
concerns even those not mentioned within these reasons.
[70]
The Board then goes on to cite and discuss
particular instances that demonstrate why credibility is a serious concern in
this case: delay in leaving; the nature of the threats; previous attempts to
leave Colombia; reporting to the authorities in Colombia; agents of
persecution; and miscellaneous discrepancies.
[71]
The Applicant cites no jurisprudence to suggest
that reasons for a decision cannot be understood unless all credibility
issues are set out. Clearly, the Applicant knew at the hearing that his
evidence raised credibility concerns, and those concerns were sufficiently
clear and acknowledged for Applicant’s counsel to request that he be allowed to
provide written submissions on what he conceded was “confusing
testimony.” On these facts, the Applicant was fully aware of a
significant range of concerns that required an explanation. He could have been
in no doubt as to why his claim was refused.
B.
Reasons for Leaving Colombia – Plausibility and
Speculation
[72]
The Applicant complains as follows:
14. The Panel states in the reasons
that she finds it implausible that the Applicant would have been told to leave
the country as she cannot see how this would have benefited the alleged callers
or be considered a reprisal. The Applicant testified that he believes the
threatening calls were made by the AUC or Bacrim, widely considered to be
paramilitary terrorist groups. The Panel bases her finding of implausibility on
what she finds to be an unreasonable course of action of said terrorist groups.
It is submitted that it is an error for the Panel to have placed herself in the
mind of terrorists, who do not necessarily act in a logical manner, and then
make an adverse credibility finding based on same.
[73]
This issue is dealt with in the Decision as
follows:
[9] The claimant indicated that the
threats made against him were for him to leave Colombia. There was no demand
for money as was the case with his parents neither was there a demand for his
brother to cease his law enforcement activities in Canada. The claimant
indicated that the caller stated that the claimant’s brother caused them to
lose a lot of money yet no demand for money was made of the claimant as a
reprisal. The only demand made was for the claimant to leave Colombia. The
panel questioned how the clamant [sic] leaving Colombia to join his
family for a better life in either the U.S.A or Canada would benefit these
alleged callers or be considered a reprisal. The panel does not find these
assertions to be plausible. The panel believes that the claimant had a desire
to leave Colombia for economic reasons and when attempts to obtain U.S.A and
Canadian visas failed, he concocted these threats.
[74]
The Board later explains the basis of its belief
that the Applicant desired to leave Colombia for economic reasons. So the
Board’s concern is that the Applicant did not provide a sufficient reason as to
why the threats would cause him to leave Colombia for reasons other than
economic. The Board does not speculate about what was in the minds of the alleged
agent of persecution. The real focus is on the threat itself – the Applicant was
told to leave and threatened with death if he didn’t leave. There was no demand
for money and no demand for the Applicant’s brother to cease law enforcement
activities in Canada. In the Board’s mind, the nature of the threats does not
offset the concern that the Applicant left Colombia for economic reasons. I do
not see the Board speculating about the motives of the AUC. The Board is
attempting to understand why the Applicant acted as he did, given the nature of
the threat itself, his delay in leaving, and his obvious desire to leave Colombia
for economic reasons.
[75]
The record reveals that the Applicant was
consistent in saying that he was threatened with death if he did not leave
Colombia:
•
Port of Entry notes: “In 2015 I received some death threats
calls from people and they said I had to leave the country, that if I didn’t
leave the country I had to face the consequences, that I was going to be
killed” (Certified Tribunal Record at p 48);
•
Basis of Claim narrative: “In August 2015 I received a telephone
call to my home number in Medellin from an unknown individual who told me that
I had to leave Colombia as my family did in the past, otherwise they would kill
me…. I was told again that I had to leave the country, followed by more dead [sic]
threats…. In Itagui I did not have any problems until the first week of
September 2016 when I received another telephone call at home telling me again
that I had to leave Colombia, to get lost or else they would kill me and my
family” (Certified Tribunal Record at pp 24-25);
•
Hearing testimony:
“during that first call they said that I have to leave
the country; otherwise, they would make an attempt against my life” (CTR at
181); “during the last call they referred to my brother as a snitch, that he
had been responsible for their losses of money and because of this they were
going to – made [sic] attempts against my life” (Certified
Tribunal Record at p 186).
Whether this overcomes the credibility
concerns caused by the Applicant’s economic motive to concoct the death
threats, or embellish them with an instruction to leave, I don’t think the death
threats are inherently implausible. Since paramilitaries finance themselves
through extortion, they have an incentive to maintain a “culture of fear” by
killing or forcing into exile family members of targets who do not pay, as this
encourages other targets to keep paying. However, the credibility concerns in
the Applicant’s case is more a function of his response to the alleged threats,
the long period since the original extortion, his delay in leaving, and the
conflicting evidence about the connection with his family’s claims.
C.
The First Phone Call – Reasonable Behaviour
[76]
The Applicant’s concern here is as follows:
15. The Panel also found implausible
that the Applicant would not have taken the first threatening phone call he
received seriously, considering that he testified that he had an ongoing fear
for his life and that the callers made specific mention of his family. It is
submitted that it is an error for the Panel to make a negative credibility
finding based on her own perception of what constitutes ‘reasonable’ behaviour.
…
The Applicant submits that it was not
outside of the realm of possibility for him to have had an ongoing fear for his
life and still not have reported the first call to the police. It is not
implausible for the Applicant to have become more seriously afraid for his life
after having received the second call. The Applicant thus submits that the
Panel’s implausibility finding is not reasonable in the light of the
jurisprudence.
[77]
The Applicant is here mischaracterizing the
Decision on this issue which reads as follows:
[11] The claimant testified that he did
not go to the police after he received the first threatening phone calls
despite the fear that he earlier testified was always with him. The claimant
testified that he thought that the first threatening phone call was a bad joke
and he did not place great importance on it. The panel does not find this to be
consistent with the claimant’s earlier statements. The panel does not find it
credible that the claimant who testified to having an ongoing internal fear for
his life such that he had attempted to leave Colombia in 2012, would not place
importance on a threatening phone call from those whom he perceived to be the
very persons who caused his parents to flee Colombia for their lives,
especially considering that the claimant indicated that the callers made
specific mention of his family and their situation.
[12] When confronted with the panel’s
concerns, the claimant then changed his testimony. He testified that he did not
go to the police after the first threatening calls because he had no confidence
in the police. He changed his testimony to indicate that he did not ignore the
first calls and that the first calls did in fact cause him fear. This testimony
directly contradicts his earlier testimony. The claimant’s inability to
maintain a consistent story gives the panel serious reasons to doubt the
truthfulness of his allegations.
[78]
The problem for the Board here is the
inconsistency of the Applicant’s explanation for his failure to go to the
police despite his stated fear. The Applicant changed his story from hoping
that the first call was a bad joke to not being confident in the police. The
Board does not speculate about what constitutes reasonable behaviour. The
problem was, as the Decision makes clear, the “claimant’s
inability to maintain a consistent story….”
D.
Focus on Minor Inconsistencies
[79]
On this point, the Applicant complains as
follows:
16. The Panel makes a negative
credibility finding with respect to the Applicant’s testimony regarding the
identity of the perpetrators of the threatening phone calls. The Panel states
that there was a discrepancy in the Applicant’s testimony as to whether the AUC
or Bacrim identified themselves in the August 2015 phone call. It is submitted
that this alleged discrepancy is not one that should have been material to the
Panel’s determination on credibility. Considering the Applicant’s family had
previously been targeted by AUC, it is not unreasonable for the Applicant to
have presumed or considered the possibility that they were the perpetrators in
this instance as well, causing him to easily misremember whether they
identified themselves or not during the first phone call. What should have been
salient to the Panel was that the Applicant believed AUC was targeting him
again. The Panel’s focus on minor, explicable inconsistencies in making an
adverse credibility finding is an error as per the jurisprudence: …
[80]
The Applicant is, once again, mischaracterizing the
Board’s approach to these discrepancies. The Board dealt with this matter as follows:
[15] The claimant was asked who he
feared in Colombia. He responded that when he received threats over the
telephone, “they identified themselves as AUC.” The panel asked the claimant to
clarify whether during the first calls he received in August 2015, the callers
identified themselves specifically as belonging to the AUC. The claimant
responded that they did. This information contradicts what is written in the
claimant’s BOC narrative. The claimant writes that he received a telephone call
in August 2015 from an unknown individual. He writes that he thought that the
call could be from someone associated with the paramilitaries but he does not
write that the caller specifically identified themselves as belonging to the
AUC as he stated in his oral testimony. The claimant did not testify that he
perceived the caller to be AUC or that he concluded that the caller was from
AUC. He stated that they specifically identified themselves as such. The panel
finds this to be a contradiction.
[16] When the claimant was presented
with the contradiction between his written story and his oral testimony, the
claimant changed his testimony. The claimant testified that the callers did not
identify themselves as AUC but rather he perceived them to be AUC because they
made mention of forcing his family out of the country which was done by AUC.
The panel asked the claimant to explain the inconsistency in his oral
testimony, as well as the differences between his oral testimony and his written
story regarding whether the alleged callers ever identified themselves as AUC,
paramilitary, BACRIM or otherwise. The claimant’s explanation was that it was
an “oversight” in his written story. He stated that when he wrote his story he
was under a lot of pressure, fear and stress. Even if the panel were to accept
this explanation as truthful regarding the contradictions between the claimant’s
written story and oral testimony, it does not account for the inconsistencies
that were inherent in his oral testimony at the hearing.
[81]
The Applicant concedes the discrepancies but says
they were minor and explicable and should not have mattered. The concern for
the Board was that the Applicant testified that the caller had specifically
identified himself as AUC while, in his narrative, the Applicant wrote that the
identity of the caller was unknown. So the discrepancy was not “whether the AUC or BACRIM identified themselves in the
August 2015 phone call,” as the Applicant now alleges. And again, the
problem is compounded by a change of testimony which the Applicant
characterizes as minor, but the Board makes it clear that the basis of the
Decision is cumulative credibility findings and this is yet another inconsistency
that was not explained to the Board’s satisfaction.
E.
Technical Rather Than Substantive Discrepancies
[82]
The Applicant once again takes matters out of
context in raising the following:
17. The Panel erred in making an
adverse credibility finding based in part on technical, rather than
substantive, discrepancies which are not material to the foundation of the
Applicant’s claims. In the reasons, the Panel writes that “the claimant was
untruthful about his highest level of education” and that it “finds that the
claimant deliberately attempted to mislead the panel in this regard.” The
highest level of education obtained by the Applicant is not material to his
claim and the perceived inconsistency also could very easily be the result of
meaning and equivalencies being lost in translation. The Panel errs in imputing
to the Applicant an intention of deliberately deceiving her. This Court has
held that rejecting claims based on non-material, secondary issues without
evaluating the substance of the claim is a reviewable error: …
[83]
The concern about the Applicant’s educational
level is clearly raised by the Board in the context of a possible IFA:
[17] When discussing a possible
internal flight alternative in Bogota, the claimant indicated that he did not
have a university degree. He stated that he does not have a five year B.A
degree as was written in his Port of Entry forms. He testified that he had a
three year technical diploma or certificate but not a bachelor diploma or
degree. He testified that a B.A is a five year university program but that he
only completed a three year program.
[18] The panel asked the claimant to
explain the discrepancy between his oral testimony and his port of entry
documents. The claimant indicated that it took him five years to complete a
three year technical program because the university was continually being shut
down due to protests which would delay the academic term making the period in
which one would finish one’s degree longer. However, when the claimant’s
brother was called to testify, he testified that the claimant attended university
in Colombia where he obtained a Bachelor of Arts or B.A. He testified that this
was a five-year degree. The panel accepts the witness’ testimony as truthful
for the reasons that will be outline [sic] below. The panel finds that
the claimant was untruthful about his highest level of education as it was
quite apparent that the panel was trying to ascertain whether, based on his
level of education, the claimant could easily relocate and re-establish himself
in another part of Colombia. The panel finds that the claimant deliberately
attempted to mislead the panel in this regard.
[Footnotes omitted.]
[84]
Clearly, the Applicant’s education level was
material to his claim because it could have been relevant to a possible IFA in
Bogota. The Applicant’s suggestion that “the perceived
inconsistency also could very easily be the result of meaning and equivalencies
being lost in translation” is pure speculation, and I don’t see that
this was offered as an explanation by the Applicant. Given the stark contrast
between the Applicant’s testimony on this point and clear contrary testimony by
his brother, in the context of an IFA discussion, it is hardly surprising that
the Board concluded that the Applicant had “deliberately
attempted to mislead the panel in this regard.” The Applicant does not
say that he didn’t attempt to mislead the Board on this point; he simply
invites the Court to speculate that the inconsistency “could
very easily be the result of meaning and equivalencies being lost in
translation.”
[85]
Given the nature of the Applicant’s claim, it
was necessary to explore the availability of an IFA in Bogota. In answering the
Board’s questions on this issue, the Applicant revealed an approach to giving
evidence that was relevant to his general credibility and, in any event, this
was only one of the discrepancies relied upon by the Board. The Board, in this
claim, did not ignore important parts of the Applicant’s case. This is not a
case where the Board relied upon peripheral inconsistencies alone. The Board is
entitled to refer to other areas of evidence that illustrate whether the
Applicant can be trusted to tell the truth provided there is also a basis for
disbelieving the central aspects of the claim. See Qasem v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 FCT 1182 at paras 47-48 [Qasem].
F.
Parents’ Claim
[86]
For similar reasons, the Applicant also
complains about the Board’s reliance upon differences in evidence between his
claim and his parents’ claim:
The Applicant submits that the Panel also
erred in microscopically focusing on a minor discrepancy in how Applicant’s
testimony differed from his parents and from his written narrative. The Panel
even concedes at paragraph 22 that this discrepancy does not go “to the heart
of the claimant’s allegations.” As such, this should not have been a determinative
aspect of the Panel’s impugning of the Applicant’s credibility.
[87]
The Board’s treatment of this issue is as
follows:
[19] The
claimant’s parents made successful refugee claims in Canada in 2007. The
claimant submitted the narrative used in those claims. His parents’ narrative
states, “At the end of December 2001, my son Alexander [the claimant] decided
to marry and leave our home. Unfortunately Alexander left in anger over our
lack of support for his wedding plans. He has not contact[ed] us since he left.”
…
[22] The claimant’s written testimony
contradicts his oral testimony and parts of the claimant’s oral testimony
contradicts itself. The panel agrees with counsel’s submissions in that these
particular areas do not go to the heart of the claimant’s allegations but the
panel finds that it does speak to the claimant’s overall credibility. The panel
finds overall that the claimant had difficulty maintaining a consistent story
as he attempted to juggle what was true and what was not.
[Footnotes omitted.]
[88]
It is one of the grounds for judicial review in
this application that the Board was bound to render a positive decision because
the RPD had already granted refugee status to his parents and siblings on
similar facts.
[89]
The Board here provides an explanation as to why
this cannot be done. It is clear that these discrepancies are not “minor” as now alleged by the Applicant. And, here
again, the Board does not rely upon these discrepancies while ignoring
important parts of the Applicant’s case, as happened in Simba, above,
relied upon by the Applicant. This was a miscellaneous issue that, if it does
not go to the heart of the Applicant’s case, does go to the Applicant’s overall
approach to giving evidence and his general credibility. See Qasem,
above, at para 48.
G.
Failure to Duly Consider Other Evidence in
Support
[90]
The Applicant complains that, having focussed on
“minor details” to find he was not credible, the
Board then failed to duly consider:
… the Applicant’s brother’s oral testimony,
country conditions evidence, and the Applicant’s own testimony in support of
his claim for refugee protection. The Panel relied only on the Applicant’s
allegations of past persecution and failed to conduct a forward-looking
assessment as to the risk the Applicant will face should he be returned to
Colombia. It was incumbent on the Panel, even after having made a negative
credibility finding, to still conduct an analysis on the well-foundedness of
the Applicant’s fear of future persecution.
[91]
As pointed out earlier, it is my view that the
Board gives full consideration to the brother’s testimony and explains why it
does not alleviate the credibility concerns or establish any future risk.
[92]
The Board also explains that, having rejected
the Applicant’s own evidence of past persecution as non-credible, “the panel is left with no credible or trustworthy evidence
upon which a favourable decision could be made in this claim.”
[93]
The Applicant has failed to explain to the Court
how, given that his account of AUC threats was not believed, anything in the
country documentation places the Applicant at risk if he is returned to
Colombia. That being the case, no further analysis of future risk was possible
by the Board. The Applicant did not allege before the Board that, apart from
the targeting that was rejected by the Board, he also faced other risks if
returned to Colombia, and there is nothing in the general evidence to suggest
that the Applicant did face any risk other than the AUC’s targeting that was
the basis of his claim.
[94]
Also, general country documentation that speaks
of targeting by terrorist groups in Colombia cannot be used to cure the
specific discrepancies in the Applicant’s own evidence that were the basis of
the negative credibility findings. As the Court pointed out in Rahaman,
above:
[17] I do not agree. If the
credibility of the applicant is so severely eroded that the Board does not
believe that the applicant has a well founded fear of persecution, there is no
need to look at whether the country conditions can support his claim.
H.
Delay
[95]
Finally, the Applicant says that it was
unreasonable for the Board to rely upon his delay in leaving Colombia. The
Board addresses this issue as follows:
[7] The panel finds the claimant’s
delay in leaving Colombia to be egregious and speaks negatively to the
credibility of his allegations. The claimant’s parents fled Colombia in fear of
their lives in 2007. The claimant’s siblings left Colombia between 1997 and
1999. The claimant was asked why he did not leave Colombia at the time that his
siblings left. The claimant stated that he remained in Colombia to care for
parents, however, the panel notes that even after the claimant’s parents left
Colombia ten years ago, the claimant remained.
[8] The claimant’s parents’ narrative
specifies that three of their children were threatened in 1997 with machine
guns. Three of their children fled Colombia between 1997 and 1999. The claimant
did not. This leads the panel to question whether the claimant was threaten [sic]
at all either in the 1990s or now.
[Footnotes omitted.]
[96]
The Applicant argues as follows:
20. In
the reasons, the Panel states that the Applicant’s delay in leaving is “egregious”
and “speaks negatively to the credibility of his allegations” considering that
his parents and siblings left years earlier than him. This is an error. The
Applicant’s parents and siblings had been directly targeted by the paramilitary
terrorist group between 1997-1999, whereas the Applicant himself had not. The
Applicant’s parents were targeted again in 2006-2007, which is when they
decided to leave Colombia to seek asylum. The Applicant was only directly
targeted beginning with the first phone call in 2015.
[97]
Here again, we see the Applicant emphasizing
differences between his situation and that of his parents in a judicial review
application where he also alleges the Board should have decided the two
applications in the same way.
[98]
That being said, the Applicant relies upon cases
such as Londono Soto, above, as authority for the position that, “[a]s culminating incidents necessarily take time to
culminate, the issue of delay cannot work to prevent a successful claim for
protection” (at para 31).
[99]
The Applicant says that the “egregious delay” finding is unreasonable because he
took evasive action by moving within Colombia and had no reason to leave until
the September 2016 threatening phone call.
[100] At the hearing before the Board, the Applicant said that he didn’t
leave Medellin until “more or less March 2007,”
after his parents left Colombia. He explains that before then he was living in
a different part of Medellin from his parents (Certified Tribunal Record at p 183).
He says that in 2007 he moved to Bogota. However, the Port of Entry form lists
his city of residence as Medellin, at different addresses, until 2013 and does
not show him ever living in Bogota (Certified Tribunal Record at p 40). His Personal
Information Form [PIF] narrative states that his parents “moved to a different area of Medellin and I moved to Bogota”
but there are no dates mentioned. The PIF goes on to state “[t]hat move made me very depressed and for some years I lost
contact with Medellin and my family, I was merely surviving in Bogota…. I later
learned that sometime in 2006 or 2007 my parents were threatened by the
paramilitary and they also had left Colombia in 2007.” The Board
interprets the PIF as saying that the Applicant moved to Bogota and lost
contact with his family before his parents left Colombia. When asked to explain
this, the Applicant continues to insist that he worked with his parents in
Medellin until they left for Canada and did not lose contact with them until
that point. His move to Itagui did not occur until after he started receiving
threatening calls in 2015.
[101] The delay in leaving is only one amongst many issues and by “egregious” the Board obviously means the long gap
between when his siblings and parents left and when the Applicant left. The
Applicant was a member of a family that was targeted and he worked in the
family business to pay the AUC demands. Yet he did not leave when his family
did and waited until the September 2016 threat. The Applicant may have moved
around, and he may have taken evasive action, but this means that despite what
had happened to his siblings and parents, he was able to function and did not
feel he had to leave for a very long time after his family left. This delay
suggests to the Board that he was not threatened in the same way that they were
– otherwise he would have left with them – so the delay casts doubt on whether
he was ever threatened. The delay in itself is not a deciding factor and is
only one issue of concern that had to be looked at in conjunction with other
factors, particularly the Applicant’s attempt to leave Colombia for economic
reasons after his family had left for other reasons. The Applicant provided
reasons for remaining but the length of the delay suggests he did not feel, for
a long time, in serious danger from the people who had threatened his family.
[102] For the Applicant, everything comes down to the September 2016 phone
call, but I don’t think it is unreasonable for the Board to look back to the
whole family history of threat and find that the Applicant’s remaining in Colombia
for such a long period of time does cast at least some doubt on whether he was
ever threatened by the same group who had threatened his other family members.
And given the Board’s findings on the September 2016 phone call, the long delay
then becomes very telling. The Applicant tries to have it both ways. He wants
the Board to believe that he always feared the AUC because of his family
situation, yet he did not leave until September 2016, long after his family
left. He also wants the Board to accept that there was no reason for him to
leave until the September 2016 phone call. Yet he provided inconsistent
evidence about the phone calls that led up to and precipitated his decision to
leave. The hearing transcript reveals that the Applicant explained the delay
was the result of his moving to Bogota shortly after his parents left Colombia.
This is the story he continually repeats at the hearing. The problem is the
confusion the Applicant’s answers create when compared to his and his parents’
PIF narratives. The Applicant never explains the difference between his hearing
testimony and his PIF narrative. As with the concern about not going to the
police after the first call, the delay itself may not give rise to a
credibility concern, but the inconsistencies in the evidence and the
Applicant’s inability to explain those inconsistencies are a sufficient basis
for the Board to question whether “the claimant was
threaten [sic] at all either in the 1990s or now.” This concern also
has to be viewed in the context of the other credibility concerns.
[103] The parties agree there is no question for certification and the Court
concurs.