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SZGZQ v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2007] FCA 62 (6 February 2007)
Last Updated: 15 September 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
SZGZQ v Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs [2007] FCA 62
MIGRATION – consideration of whether the Refugee Review Tribunal
applied the correct test in determining the state of satisfaction or
otherwise
to be reached in conducting the review function – consideration of whether
the Tribunal is required to seek further
information when unable to be satisfied
of the statutory criteria in the absence of further information from an
applicant.
Migration Act 1958 (Cth), ss 36(2), 65(1), 424
SZGZQ v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2006] FMCA 1203 -
cited
SJSB v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs
[2004] FCAFC 255 - cited
Minister for Immigration & Multicultural
Affairs v VSAF of 2003 [2005] FCAFC 73 - cited
Minister for
Immigration & Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang [1996] HCA 6; (1996) 185 CLR 259 -
cited
1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees
1967 Protocol
Relating to the Status of Refugees
SZGZQ v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
MULTICULTURAL AFFAIRS AND REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL
NSD 1691 OF 2006
GREENWOOD J
6 FEBRUARY
2007
BRISBANE (VIA VIDEO-LINK TO SYDNEY) HEARD IN SYDNEY
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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AND:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND MULTICULTURAL
AFFAIRSFirst Respondent
REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL Second Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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6 FEBRUARY 2007
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WHERE MADE:
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BRISBANE (VIA VIDEO-LINK TO SYDNEY) HEARD IN SYDNEY
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
appeal be dismissed.
- The
Appellant pay the First Respondent’s costs of the appeal.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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DATE:
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6 FEBRUARY 2007
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PLACE:
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BRISBANE (VIA VIDEO-LINK TO SYDNEY) HEARD IN SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- In
this appeal, the Appellant contends that Federal Magistrate Driver erred
(SZGZQ v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2006] FMCA 1203) in
dismissing on 17 August 2006 an Application for Review of a decision of the
Refugee Review Tribunal (‘the Tribunal’)
dated 16 January 2004 and
delivered on 10 February 2004 affirming a decision of the Minister’s
Delegate refusing the Appellant’s
application for protection visa pursuant
to the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (‘the Act’).
- The
Appellant’s grounds of appeal are these.
- First,
the Appellant contends that Federal Magistrate Driver erred by failing to find
that the Tribunal failed to apply the correct
test in determining the degree of
satisfaction required to be established in order to find a well-founded fear of
persecution for
a Convention reason (Article 1A(2) of the 1951 Convention
Relating to the Status of Refugees (‘the Convention’) as amended
by the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees (‘the
Refugees’ Protocol’)) as contended for by the Appellant. As a
subset of that notion, the Appellant contends
that since the Tribunal could not
be satisfied that the Appellant held a well-founded fear of persecution in the
absence of further
information from the Appellant, the Tribunal ought to have
called for further information from the Appellant.
- Secondly,
the Appellant contends that Federal Magistrate Driver erred by failing to find
that the Tribunal ought to have exercised
powers conferred upon the Tribunal by
s 424 of the Act in order to secure the provision of further information
from the Appellant which might have informed the question of whether
the
Tribunal could be objectively satisfied, on all material, that the
Appellant held a well-founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason.
- Thirdly,
the Appellant contends that Federal Magistrate Driver erred by failing to find
that the Tribunal acted in a ‘manifestly
unreasonable manner’ in
concluding, in reliance upon ‘one statement [of the Appellant] to the
Department [of] the exact
nature of his fear’, that the Tribunal was not
in a position to determine to its satisfaction whether the Appellant held a
well-founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason. The Appellant
contended that the Tribunal ought to have had the benefit
of evidence from
witnesses on behalf of the Appellant.
- Fourthly,
Federal Magistrate Driver is said to have erred by failing to find that the
errors reflected in grounds 1, 2 and 3 constitute
jurisdictional errors.
- The
background facts are these.
- The
Appellant is a citizen of India and arrived in Australia on 18 May 2003. On
18 June 2003, the Appellant lodged an application
with the First Respondent
for a protection visa (Class XA). On 1 August 2003, a Delegate of the First
Respondent refused that application.
On 18 August 2003, the Appellant applied
to the Tribunal for a review of that decision.
- On
5 December 2003, the Tribunal wrote to the Appellant and advised him that it had
considered all the material before it relating
to the Appellant’s
application but was unable to make a decision in favour of the Appellant on that
information alone. In
that letter, the Tribunal invited the Appellant to attend
a hearing nominated for 27 January 2004 at 1.00pm and give oral evidence
and
articulate arguments in support of his claim for a protection visa. The
Tribunal’s letter noted, ‘If you do not attend the hearing and
the Tribunal does not postpone the hearing, it can make a decision on your case
without
further notice’ and ‘... complete the
“Witnesses” part of the form if you want the Tribunal to get oral
evidence from another person;
please note the Tribunal does not have to get
evidence from any person you name’. On 14 January 2003, the Appellant
by ‘Naosams Migration Services’, the agent for the Appellant, wrote
to the Tribunal
and advised that the Appellant had elected not to attend the
hearing. The letter notes, ‘kindly make a “decision on
papers” based on the information that is already held by the Tribunal.
Please feel
free to contact us if required’. The author of the letter
bears the name Bimal Bhattarai. The letter attached a completed ‘Response
to Hearing Invitation’
form signed by the Appellant confirming that the
Appellant did not want to attend a hearing. The Appellant ticked the box
confirming
that the Appellant consented to the Tribunal proceeding to make a
decision on the review without taking any further action to allow
or enable the
Appellant to appear before the Tribunal. As to question 2(c) on the form, in
these terms, ‘Do you want the Tribunal to take oral evidence from any
witnesses?, the Appellant simply put a line through that question and
related questions. The form is signed and dated 8 January 2004.
- On
20 January 2004, the Tribunal wrote to the Appellant advising that a decision in
relation to the review application would be published
on 10 February 2004.
- The
Tribunal in its Reasons for Decision made these observations on the
facts:
‘The applicant stated in his protection visa application that he was
born in Deli on 2 April 1968. He stated that he completed
10 years of eduction
in 1975 and he was self-employed as an air-conditioning and refrigeration
mechanic from 1992 until 2003. The
applicant stated that he lived at the same
address in New Deli from 1993 until the day he departed for Australia in 2003.
He stated
that he married on 7 January 1998 and had a daughter on 1 October
2002. He stated that his wife and child, as well as his parents,
lived in India
at the time the application was lodged. The applicant provided a partial copy
of his passport issued by the government
of India on 28 January 2003 and
valid until 27 January 2003. He entered Australia with a Temporary Business
visa issued in
Mumbai on 28 April 2003 and valid for a one month stay from the
date of arrival. He completed the application with the assistance
of a
Migration Agent, Bimal K Bhattarai.
In support of his claim to refugee status, the applicant stated that he left
India because he was discriminated against and harassed
by society and the
government for being homosexual. He stated that he did not reveal his sexuality
and when he was 30 years of age
he “had to concede defeat” and
“marry an unknown person of the society”. He stated that after five
years
of marriage and while his wife was pregnant he started a “secret
relationship” with another man and a few months after
the child was born
his wife found him in “a very indecent scene” with his lover.
The applicant stated that a few days after the incident this wife left him
and she returned to live with her parents. He stated that
members of his
wife’s family wanted to kill him but he avoided harm by hiding in a
neighbour’s house. The applicant
stated that it became common knowledge
in the community where he lived that he was homosexual. He stated that he tried
to relocate
in the country but before he got “there people already knew
about [his] situation and [he] had to return next day from there”.
The applicant claimed that persons in his neighbourhood attacked. He stated
that he would never be accepted by society in India so
he decided to come to
Australia because he anticipated a “more tolerant society towards race,
religion, sexuality etc”.’
- The
Tribunal identified its task as one of determining whether the circumstances put
before the Tribunal by the Appellant support
a claim to ‘refugee
status’. The Tribunal reached these
conclusions:
‘The Tribunal considered the applicant’s claims that he will be
at risk of suffering persecution in India for reasons
of membership of a
particular social group, that group being “homosexuals in India”.
However, the applicant’s
claims were lacking in detail and the Tribunal
has been unable to establish all the relevant
facts.
Many questions regarding his circumstances in India and the circumstances he
anticipates in the future, remain unanswered. The applicant
did not indicate
how or if he intends to express his sexuality in the reasonably foreseeable
future and he did not indicate who will
seek to harm him in India.
The applicant provided broad vague claims that he was harassed and
discriminated against by society and government but he did not
provide
meaningful details regarding these matters to satisfy the Tribunal that these
claims are credible. The applicant was forewarned
that the information he
provided in support of the protection visa application was not satisfactory and
the Tribunal could not make
a favourable decision on that information alone. He
did not however provide further information in support of his review application
despite ample opportunity to do so.
The Tribunal is not able to determine from the applicant’s one
statement to the Department the exact nature of his fear, if
it is well-founded,
and if it is Convention related.
The applicant did not provide information to indicate that in the reasonably
foreseeable future he intends to express sexual orientation
in a way which will
attract the adverse attention of the authorities or the community in India.
The Tribunal cannot be satisfied on the available information that the
applicant is at risk of persecution in India because of his sexual orientation.
Therefore, without further information from the applicant the Tribunal is not
satisfied that he has a well-founded fear of persecution
in India for reasons of
membership of a particular social group, that group being homosexuals in India,
or any other Convention reason.
[emphasis added]
- It
is clear from a consideration of the facts and the approach adopted by the
Tribunal in reaching its conclusions on those facts
that the Tribunal has
approached the exercise of the review on the footing that the legislation
(s 65(1)) requires the Tribunal to refuse the Appellant’s application
for a protection visa in circumstances where the Tribunal is not
affirmatively satisfied that the facts required to be established to
satisfy the criteria for the grant of the protection visa have been
established. The Tribunal has correctly approached its task by determining that
if
it is unable to be satisfied of those matters, the Tribunal must
‘refuse to grant the visa’ (s 65(1)(b)).
- The
approach adopted by the Tribunal is entirely consistent with the observations of
their Honours in SJSB v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs
[2004] FCAFC 255 at [15], per Ryan, Jacobson and Lander JJ; Minister for
Immigration & Multicultural Affairs v VSAF of 2003 [2005] FCAFC 73 at
[17], per Black CJ, Sundberg and Bennett JJ and Minister for Immigration
& Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang [1996] HCA 6; (1996) 185 CLR 259. The Appellant
contends that the Tribunal ought to have exercised a statutory power to seek
further information from the Appellant
before reaching a conclusion as to
whether it could be satisfied of the relevant matters. Section 424 of the Act
is an enabling provision. It does not create a mandatory obligation, in terms.
- Section
424(1) provides that in conducting the review the Tribunal ‘may get any
information that it considers relevant’. If the Tribunal obtains such
information, the Tribunal has a statutory obligation to have regard to the
information in making the
decision on the review. Without limiting the power to
seek information, the Tribunal may also ‘invite a person to give
additional information’ in a manner determined by the Tribunal. In
this case, the Tribunal advised the Appellant that it was unable to be satisfied
that
the Appellant held a well-founded fear of persecution for a Convention
reason and invited the Appellant to attend a hearing, give
oral evidence, make
submissions and nominate any additional witnesses from whom the Tribunal might
be invited to seek and obtain
additional evidence. The Appellant elected to not
attend that hearing and failed to nominate any additional witnesses.
Accordingly,
the Tribunal was entitled to conduct a dispositive assessment of
the evidence available to it in order to determine whether it could
be satisfied
that the Appellant was a person at risk of persecution in India due to his
sexual orientation and thus determine whether
the Appellant, objectively
assessed, held a well-founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason
namely, membership of a social
group described as ‘homosexuals in
India’. No obligation arose in the Tribunal to seek further information
from the
Appellant.
- Moreover,
no obligation arose in the Tribunal to seek further information from the
Appellant or any other person once the Tribunal
determined that it could not be
satisfied of the relevant matters on the evidence then before it.
Notwithstanding that the Tribunal concluded that ‘without further
information from the applicant’ the Tribunal could not be satisfied of
the relevant matters, that observation does not reflect any qualification or
limitation upon
the statutory obligation of the Tribunal, having considered the
material put before it, to determine, in the light of that assessment,
that it could not be satisfied as to the criteria set out in s 36(2) of the
Act and thus determine the Application for Review adversely to the
Appellant.
- Accordingly,
the Tribunal discharged the review function in a manner entirely consistent with
the appropriate standard and by application
of the appropriate tests. The
Tribunal was under no obligation to seek further information from the Appellant
in assessing whether
the Tribunal could reach the required state of
satisfaction. The Tribunal did not act, as contended, in a ‘manifestly
unreasonable
manner’ by acting in reliance upon the statement of the
Appellant in determining whether it could be satisfied of the relevant
matters.
- It
follows that Federal Magistrate Driver did not err in the manner contended by
the Appellant in the grounds of appeal.
- Accordingly,
the appeal must be dismissed with
costs.
I certify that the preceding nineteen (19)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Greenwood.
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Associate:
Dated: 6 February 2007
Counsel for the
Appellant:
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Appellant Self-Represented
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Solicitor for the Appellant:
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Appellant Self-Represented
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Counsel for the First Respondent:
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Australian Government Solicitor
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Solicitor for the First Respondent:
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Hervee Dejean, Australian Government Solicitor
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Date of Hearing:
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24 November 2006
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Date of Judgment:
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6 February 2007
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