Docket: IMM-1282-17
Citation:
2017 FC 887
Ottawa, Ontario, October 6, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Locke
BETWEEN:
|
DAWIT SOLOMON WORKU
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is an application for judicial review of a
decision of the Refugee Appeal Division (RAD) of the Immigration and Refugee
Board of Canada (IRB). The RAD’s decision dismissed the applicant’s appeal from
a decision by the IRB’s Refugee Protection Division (RPD) denying his claim for
asylum.
I.
FACTS
[2]
The applicant is an Ethiopian citizen who claims
to have been a member of the opposition Blue Party in that country. He fled
Ethiopia for Canada after allegedly learning that the government planned to
arrest him in connection with his political activities. He claims that, on two
occasions, his mother received notices from the police (summonses) asking him
to appear for questioning.
[3]
The RPD concluded that the applicant was not
credible after drawing a number of negative inferences from the evidence.
[4]
The RAD agreed with some of the RPD’s negative
credibility conclusions, but disagreed with others.
II.
ISSUES
[5]
The applicant argues that the RAD erred in the
following key respects:
1.
It was unreasonable for the RAD to conclude that
the police summonses were not authentic.
2.
It was unreasonable for the RAD to draw a
negative inference from the fact that family members of the applicant were not
detained after the applicant failed to appear for questioning.
3. The applicant’s sur place claim should not have been dismissed for
the reasons cited by the RAD.
III.
ANALYSIS
[6]
With regard to the authenticity of the police
summonses, the applicant argues that it is incorrect to refer to the notices
from the police as summonses (he argues that they are actually informal
notices), and therefore it was unreasonable for the RAD to compare them to
documentary evidence concerning the form of summonses. But the applicant
himself referred initially to these documents as summonses. Also, the documents
themselves indicate that they “summon” the
applicant. I do not agree that the RAD erred in treating these documents as
alleged summonses. Moreover, I see no error in the RAD’s analysis comparing
these documents to sample summonses in the documentary evidence. In my view, it
was not unreasonable for the RAD to conclude that the police summonses were not
authentic.
[7]
With regard to the second of the above-listed
arguments by the applicant, the RAD stated that “[t]he
treatment of [the applicant’s] family is not consistent with the documentary
evidence which indicates that family members of persons wanted for questioning
are typically detained.” In support of his statement, the RAD cites two
documents: a US Department of State document and a Response to Information
Request. However, from my reading of these documents, they do not support the
RAD’s statement. Though arrests of family members have occurred, I am not
convinced that this is typical. I conclude that the RAD’s statement was
unsupported, and its inference therefrom concerning the applicant’s credibility
was unreasonable.
[8]
I turn now to the issue of the applicant’s sur
place claim. This claim is based on photographs of the applicant with the
leader of the Blue Party at a meeting in Canada, as well as a news article
about the meeting that is available on the internet. The applicant’s argument
on this issue is that the RAD’s analysis is inconsistent with its discussion of
the RPD’s analysis. Specifically, the RAD concluded that the RPD had erred by “diminishing the importance of the evidence because it was
not addressed in the [applicant’s] BoC [Basis of Claim].” But in
considering the significance of the evidence in the very next paragraph of its
decision, the RAD concluded that “[i]f the [applicant]
and his counsel had felt that the posting of the article on the internet would
have posed a significant risk to the [applicant], it would be reasonable to
expect that they would have amended the BoC narrative to include the
information.” By my reading, this conclusion appears to diminish the
importance of the applicant’s evidence because it was not addressed in the BoC.
Despite the respondent’s arguments, I am unable to reconcile the RAD’s own
analysis of the evidence concerning the applicant’s sur place claim, with its
treatment of the RPD’s analysis. I conclude that the RAD’s analysis in this
respect is unreasonable.
IV.
CONCLUSIONS
[9]
Having concluded that the RAD erred in at least
two respects discussed above, I must consider whether the surviving negative
credibility findings by the RAD are sufficient to overcome its errors. In my
view, they are not. Firstly, I must recognize that the accumulation of errors
must be considered just as the accumulation of negative credibility findings
must be considered. Moreover, at least with respect to the sur place issue,
this claim is sufficiently distinct from the rest of the applicant’s claim to
justify proper consideration despite the credibility issues.
[10]
For the foregoing reasons, I conclude that the
present application should be granted. The parties are agreed that there is no
serious question of general importance to certify.