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SZMVK v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCA 679 (1 July 2010)
Last Updated: 1 July 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
SZMVK v Minister
for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCA 679
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Citation:
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SZMVK v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCA 679
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Appeal from:
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Parties:
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SZMVK v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP and REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL
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File number:
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NSD 192 of 2010
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Judge:
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COWDROY J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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MIGRATION – Appeal from Federal
Magistrates Court of Australia – Review of a decision of the Refugee
Review Tribunal – Claim
of persecution through extortion – Whether
Federal Magistrate erred in finding that Tribunal had adequately considered s
91R
of Migration Act 1958 (Cth) – Whether Federal Magistrate erred
in finding that threats against appellant’s life were not genuine –
Whether
Federal Magistrate erred in finding that the Tribunal had considered
broader test of ‘serious harm’ – Whether Federal
Magistrate
erred in finding that Tribunal had adequately considered issues relating to
appellant’s Pahadi ethnicity –
Whether Federal Magistrate gave
‘proper, genuine and realistic consideration’ to appellant’s
claim – Held
– No error as alleged – Appeal dismissed.
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Place:
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Sydney
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the First Respondent:
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Mr T. Reilly
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Solicitor for the First Respondent:
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DLA Phillips Fox
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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ON APPEAL FROM THE
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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AND:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIPFirst Respondent
REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL Second Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
appeal be dismissed.
- The
Appellant pay the costs of the First Respondent.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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NSD 192 of 2010
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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AND:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP First
Respondent
REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL Second Respondent
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JUDGE:
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COWDROY J
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DATE:
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1 JULY 2010
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- The
appellant appeals from the decision of Federal Magistrate Raphael delivered on
10 February 2010 which dismissed an application
for judicial review of a
decision of the Refugee Review Tribunal (‘the Tribunal’) handed down
on 3 August 2009.
The Tribunal’s decision affirmed the decision of a
delegate of the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (‘the
Minister’)
to refuse to grant a Protection (Class XA) visa to the
appellant.
BACKGROUND
- The
appellant is a citizen of Nepal who arrived in Australia on 6 November
2007. On 19 December 2007 the appellant lodged
an application for a
protection visa with the Department of Immigration and Citizenship.
- A
delegate of the first respondent refused the application for a protection visa
on 27 February 2008. The appellant applied
to the Tribunal for a review of
that decision, and on 25 August 2008 the Tribunal affirmed the
delegate’s decision. The
appellant sought judicial review of this decision
and on 14 April 2009 the Federal Magistrates Court set aside the decision
and remitted the matter to the Tribunal to be determined according to law.
- Before
the second Tribunal hearing the appellant claimed that he operated a
construction company in Nepal and had been a supporter
of the Communist Party of
Nepal – Unified Marxist Leninist (CPN-UML) while he was a student. The
appellant claimed that he
belonged to a group called the Pahadi (also referred
to as ‘Hill People’); that Maoists started to treat CPN-UML together
with other leftist parties as their enemies and demanded money and financial aid
from them; and that contractors in Nepal were severely
affected by such
extortion demands.
- The
appellant claimed that he was targeted by Maoists insurgents, especially the
Maoist Young Communist League (‘the YCL’),
at a number of electrical
generating plant sites at which he was working; that insurgents sought financial
donations at each of these
locations; and that he had been kidnapped for four
hours and later released after giving his Maoist captors money. The appellant
claimed that Maoists continued to attempt to extort money thereafter; that his
home came under attack from various groups such as
the Janatantrik Terai Mukti
Morcha (‘the JTMM’) and the Madhesi Mukti Morcha (‘the
MMM’); and that he was
accused of being a police informant against the
Madhesi who were at war with the Pahadis. The appellant claimed the JTMM had
attacked
him in February-March 2007. The appellant also claimed his company was
no longer operating and that the JTMM had threatened his wife
in Bara before she
moved to Kathmandu. The appellant said that he was issued with a passport in
March 2007 and applied for a visa
to enable him to attend a building conference
in Australia.
THE TRIBUNAL’S DECISION
- The
Tribunal was not satisfied the appellant’s fear of Convention-related
persecution was well-founded. It found the appellant
to be vague and
inconsistent regarding his claims that he was extorted, beaten, that threats
were made against him by the YCL and
that the JTMM continued to pursue him
following an incident in February-March 2007. The Tribunal also found the
appellant’s
reasons for a six month delay in coming to Australia after
obtaining his passport cast doubt on the credibility of the appellant’s
claims that he was in fear of serious harm from Maoists and the JTMM.
Accordingly the Tribunal did not accept the appellant’s
claims relating to
the attacks on the appellant or his family. Nor did the Tribunal accept that
there had been threats of ongoing
harm.
- The
Tribunal accepted the appellant was the victim of extortion. However, based on
the evidence and guided by s 91R(2) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth)
(‘the Act’), it did not accept the appellant was denied the capacity
to earn a livelihood in Nepal where such hardship threatened his
capacity to
subsist. Accordingly it did not accept that the extortion was sufficiently
serious to amount to persecution. The Tribunal
also held that the alleged
kidnapping and threats were not genuine threats against his life and did not
amount to persecution within
the meaning of the 1951 Convention Relating to the
Status of Refugees as amended by the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of
Refugees
(together, the Refugees Convention, or ‘the
Convention’).
- The
Tribunal concluded that the appellant’s experience of extortion was
primarily a result of criminal activity designed to
raise funds for the Maoists,
rather than a persecutory activity within the meaning of the Convention. The
Tribunal was not satisfied
that the appellant’s membership of a particular
social group was the essential motivation behind the various attempts to extort
money from him. Rather, the Tribunal found that the construction industry had
been targeted with extortion demands because the money
involved within the
industry was substantial and because such companies were a comparatively easy
target.
- Although
the Tribunal accepted that the appellant was the victim of extortion by the
Maoists, the Tribunal did not accept the appellant’s
claims that he had
developed a high political profile with the Maoists such that he was
specifically targeted for extortion by them.
The Tribunal accepted country
information which indicated a continuing risk of violence by the YCL and Maoists
in Nepal. However,
it did not accept the appellant would be targeted by these
groups for a Convention reason and was not satisfied there was a real
chance he
would be subjected to persecution in the reasonably foreseeable future. The
Tribunal also found that if a real chance of
harm to the appellant by the JTMM
existed, they would have sought to harm him in the nine month period before his
departure to Australia.
- On
the basis of the above, the Tribunal was not satisfied that the appellant was a
person to whom Australia has protection obligations
under the Convention, and
affirmed the decision under review.
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT AND APPEAL TO THIS COURT
- By
Application filed in the Federal Magistrates Court of Australia on
3 September 2009 the appellant sought judicial review
of the
Tribunal’s decision. Each of the grounds relied upon were rejected by
Raphael FM. By Notice of Appeal dated 1 March
2010, the appellant appealed
to this Court from the Federal Magistrate’s decision.
- In
the appeal to this Court the appellant relies essentially upon the same grounds
as those considered by Raphael FM, except that
a further ground (Ground 4 in the
Notice of Appeal) has been added. The final ground of appeal in the Notice of
Appeal (Ground 5)
is in all relevant senses identical to the final ground of
appeal heard by the Federal Magistrate.
- The
appellant appeared before this Court on 12 May 2010 unrepresented but
assisted by an interpreter. The appellant informed
the Court of the occasions
when extortion demands were made of him by Maoists, and of his difficulties in
tendering for construction
contracts because of interference by Maoists who
demanded money from him. The appellant’s testimony related to factual
issues.
The appellant made no submissions in respect of the issues raised in his
Notice of Appeal. Accordingly, as the grounds of appeal
are relevantly identical
except for Ground 4, it is convenient to address the findings of Raphael FM and
to then state the Court’s
findings in respect of each
ground.
GROUNDS OF APPEAL
Ground 1: His Honour erred by not finding that the Second Respondent made
jurisdictional error in relation to the scope and effect
of s 91R(1)(b) and
s 91R(2) of the Migration Act.
- The
appellant submitted, both before the Federal Magistrate and before this Court,
that the Tribunal had erred by only considering
whether, when extorting money
from the appellant, the Maoists had denied him his capacity to subsist (see
s 91R(2)(f) of the Act) rather than considering whether he had suffered
serious harm within s 91R(1)(b) of the Act. The Federal Magistrate rejected
such submission. His Honour found that the Tribunal’s decision did not
indicate an exclusive
consideration of s 91R(2)(f) as claimed, but merely
indicated that the Tribunal’s assessment of the relevant conduct as
serious harm was to be guided by
s 91R(2).
Finding
- Unlike
the situation in VTAO and Others v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural
and Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCA 927; (2004) 81 ALD 332 (see [56]-[66]), there was no
reason to infer that the Tribunal had only given consideration to the
requirements of s 91R(2)(f). An argument raised to similar effect in
NBFP v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous
Affairs [2005] FCAFC 95 had been rejected (see [63]-[64]) for the same
reason as determined by his Honour in this application.
- A
fair reading of the Tribunal’s finding shows that the Tribunal did
consider whether the appellant had in fact suffered ‘serious
harm’ and concluded that he had not done so. At [63] of the
Tribunal’s decision dated 3 August 2009, the Tribunal
said:
The Tribunal accepts that the applicant was the victim of extortion by the
Maoists in Nepal. He was an employee and later the owner
of construction
companies, and his description of the methods of the Maoists in relation to
building contracts indicate that there
was a general expectation in the building
industry that moneys would be demanded of contractors by the Maoists both at the
time of
tendering for business and at the time of the awarding of contracts. The
applicant was inconsistent in his claims about the number
and extent of the
extortion demands he received from the Maoists. However, he stated that his
company continued to operate in Nepal
up to the time of his departure for
Australia, despite the demands for money. On the basis of this evidence, and
guided by s91R(2) of the Act, the Tribunal does not accept that the applicant
was denied the capacity to earn a livelihood in Nepal, where such hardship or
denial
threatens the applicant’s capacity to subsist. It does not accept
that the extortion was sufficiently serious at [sic] to amount
to persecution in
a Convention sense.
- The
Tribunal’s finding is not to be read ‘minutely and finely with a
eye keenly attuned to the perception of error’: see Politis v
Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1998) 16 ALD 707 at 708; see also
Collector of Customs v Pozzolanic Enterprises Pty Ltd (1993) 43 FCR 280
at 287; see also Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang
and Others [1996] HCA 6; (1996) 185 CLR 259 at 272. The Court finds that there is no error
in his Honour’s finding.
Ground 2: His Honour erred in not finding that the Second Respondent made
jurisdictional error by determining that, notwithstanding
threats had been made
against the life of the applicant, the threats could be discounted because of
the findings that the threat5s
[sic] to his life would not have been carried
out.
- The
Federal Magistrate concluded that the appellant had incorrectly described the
findings of the Tribunal. Raphael FM found that
the Tribunal had carefully
considered the events relied upon by the appellant before it reached its
conclusion that the threats made
against the appellant were not
genuine.
Finding
- By
concluding that the threats that were made did not constitute serious harm, the
Tribunal adopted the correct approach: see VBAO v Minister for Immigration
and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs and Another [2006] HCA 60; (2006) 233 CLR 1 per
Gummow J at [18]. In such decision his Honour concluded that threats to life or
liberty in the form of declarations of intent
do not, without more, constitute
the serious harm which persecution must involve; that the term
‘threat’ connotes ‘risk’
in the sense of a danger or
hazard; and that the threat to life or liberty must manifest itself as an
incidence of serious harm as
distinct from the possibility of danger.
- A
reading of the Tribunal’s reasons reveals that the Tribunal did not ignore
the threats made against the appellant. However,
it found that the threats and
the kidnapping were not sufficiently serious to amount to persecution in a
Convention sense. The Tribunal
specifically referred to the fact that the
kidnapping was only for a brief period of time (four hours) and that the
appellant provided
information to the effect that nothing had happened to him
during the six months before he left Nepal for Australia.
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concept of threat or risk was considered in BRGAA of 2007 v Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship and Another [2007] FCA 1950; (2007) 164 FCR 381 in which Collier
J at [24]-[26] referred to the requirement that to constitute a well-founded
fear of persecution, any threat or
relevant risk must be current or prospective
rather than merely historical. Further, her Honour held that it was reasonable
that
a Tribunal have regard to events that had occurred in order to assist its
decision as to whether the claimant would be likely, in
the future, to suffer
persecution.
- This
Court has reviewed the Federal Magistrate’s findings. Those finding were
made after his Honour had considered the issues
referred to by Collier J. The
Court finds no error as alleged.
Ground 3: His Honour erred by failing to find that the Second Respondent made
jurisdictional error in its finds [sic] about the nature
and Convention
relationship concerning the extent to which the Second Respondent found the
applicant had been subjected to extortion
by Maoists in Nepal.
- Before
the Federal Magistrate the appellant submitted that his claim of fear of
persecution on the grounds of his membership of the
Pahadi people was a separate
claim which had not been properly considered by the Tribunal. However the
Federal Magistrate noted that
there was no indication that the appellant, as a
member of the Pahadi, raised his fear of the Madhesi (of which the JTMM is an
associated
group) other than in the general context of that which he had claimed
at the Tribunal hearing. His Honour found that the Tribunal
referred to the fact
that the appellant had made this claim as a separate claim, but also observed
that he did not make any further
submissions in relation to it. In the absence
of those submissions his Honour found that the Tribunal appeared to have
considered
that it was sufficient to conclude that the appellant did not have a
well founded fear of persecution from the JTMM or ‘associated Madhesi
groups in Nepal’. His Honour considered that there was no error in the
Tribunal adopting this approach.
Finding
- The
Court notes the finding of the Tribunal at
[71]:
However, the Tribunal does not accept on the evidence before it that the
applicant has made out a claim of being subjected to extortion
for reasons of
his political opinion, real or imputed.
- The
Court also notes that the Tribunal found at
[71]:
The applicant has not claimed that he was targeted by the YCL for reasons of his
race, religion or nationality and there is nothing
in his evidence which would
found a reasonable claim of such motivation. In making this finding, the
Tribunal accepts that the applicant
claimed to be the target of the JTMM for
reason of his ethnicity, as well as his political opinion, but has rejected
these claims,
as detailed above. The Tribunal does not accept that the essential
and significant motivation for the Maoists in subjecting the applicant
to
extortion was any of the five convention reasons.
- Lastly
the Court refers to the following finding of the Tribunal at
[73]:
The Tribunal has formed the view that if in fact there was a real chance of harm
being done to the applicant by the JTMM, for whatever
reason, they would have
sought to harm him in the period of nearly nine months in Nepal before his
departure for Australia when he
was living and travelling according to his usual
routine. The Tribunal is not satisfied that the applicant as a well-founded fear
of persecution within the meaning of the Convention by the JTMM, or associated
Madhesi groups in Nepal.
- Taking
into account the reasoning set out above, the Court agrees with the Federal
Magistrate’s conclusion and considers that
the findings of his Honour
disclose no error as alleged.
Ground 4: His Honour erred as to the applicability of a failure by the Second
Respondent to give proper, genuine and realistic consideration
to the
appellant’s claims and/or evidence and to the availability of
jurisdictional error as a result of such failure.
- Without
particularisation or submissions it is difficult to establish the precise scope
of the fourth ground of appeal. Upon review
of the reasons of the Federal
Magistrate, the Court cannot discern any general error as alleged. However, as
the final ground of
appeal in effect particularises the penultimate ground, it
is appropriate to assess the Federal Magistrate’s ‘proper,
genuine
and realistic consideration’ of the appellant’s claim under the
fifth ground of appeal set out below.
Ground 5: His Honour erred by failing to find that the Second Respondent made
jurisdiction error [sic] by failing to give proper,
genuine, realistic
consideration to the applicant’s claim to fear harm from JTMM and instead
applied a capricious and inflexible
rule that if there was any chance that the
appellant would be harmed by JTMM, the JTMM would have done so before the
appellant left
Nepal.
- The
Tribunal found at [65]:
Further, the Tribunal does not accept that the Maoists were seeking the
applicant to do him serious harm either before or after his
departure for
Australia, following the brief kidnapping incident. The applicant has given
evidence at both Tribunal hearings that
he continued to work with his company up
to the time of his departure. He continued to live at his usual addresses either
in his
village in Terai or in his rented house in Kathmandu, or travelled in
relation to his work projects. He has repeatedly claimed that
the Maoists had
very good intelligence about what was going on in his industry, and the Tribunal
does not accept that if the Maoists
had wished to pursue the applicant they
would not have been able to discover his whereabouts, since, according to the
applicant,
they were well informed about him and the projects on which he was
engaged. In particular, the applicant has given evidence that
nothing happened
to him for at least a number of months before he left for Australia. The
Tribunal does not accept the claim that
the applicant was sought by the Maoists
either prior to or after his departure for Australia following his brief
kidnapping, nor
that any threats made by the Maoists to kill the applicant were
genuine threats against his life.
- The
Tribunal further found at [73]:
The Tribunal has formed the view that if in fact there was a real chance of harm
being done to the applicant by the JTMM, for whatever
reason, they would have
sought to harm him in the period of nearly nine months in Nepal before his
departure for Australia when he
was living and travelling according to his usual
routine. The Tribunal is not satisfied that the applicant has a well-founded
fear
of persecution within the meaning of the Convention by the JTMM, or
associated Madhesi groups in Nepal.
- The
Federal Magistrate found that there was nothing capricious or inflexible in the
approach taken by the Tribunal. His Honour noted
that the decision of the
Tribunal made it clear that it had not accepted the appellant’s claims
that he had almost been attacked
by the JTMM or that threats were made against
him. Whilst the Tribunal took into account the fact that the appellant had not
been
attacked in the nine months prior to his departure, this finding did not,
as the appellant suggested, provide the sole basis for
the finding on future
persecution.
Finding
- Such
finding is not ‘capricious’. The claims that there was no
‘proper, genuine and realistic consideration’ to the
appellant’s claims and that there was a failure to engage in ‘an
active intellectual process’ are not grounds for review unless a
jurisdictional error can be identified: see Craig v The State of South
Australia [1995] HCA 58; (1995) 184 CLR 163 at 179; Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf [2001] HCA 30; (2001) 206 CLR 323 at [82].
- In
NAIS and Others v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous
Affairs and Another [2005] HCA 77; (2005) 228 CLR 470 at [37] the phrase ‘proper,
genuine and realistic consideration’ was used in respect of the
jurisdictional error disclosed. Such jurisdictional error related to excessive
delays by the Tribunal
which had compromised its ability to consider fairly the
case before it and thereby to fulfil its obligations pursuant to s 425 of
the Act. Such decision was referred to by Raphael FM in his decision. Further,
his Honour referred to the decision in SZIIF v Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship and Another (2008) 102 ALD 366 in which Weinberg J said at
[98]:
However, when one adds to the mix the fact that none of the inconsistencies
identified were properly analysed, several seemed to
have misstated the
appellant’s earlier position, and some involved summaries taken out of
context, the entire process appears
to have gone badly wrong. To use the
language of Gummow J in NAIS, the Tribunal did not give
“proper, genuine and realistic” consideration to the
appellant’s case. He was not afforded
the hearing to which the law
entitled him.
- The
facts in the present case bear no resemblance to those discussed in NAIS
nor in SZIIF. There is no significant delay which impacted upon the
ability of the Tribunal to properly consider the application before it. The
Federal Magistrate noted at [23]:
It is well established that past events are a useful guide to future events:
Minister for Immigration v Guo (1997) 191 CLR 559. At [68] of its
decision the Tribunal makes it clear that it did not accept the
applicant’s claims that he had almost been attacked
by the JTMM or that
threats were made against him. This is the real reason why the Tribunal rejected
the possibility of any future
harm. The fact that the applicant had not been
attacked in the nine months prior to his departure went towards that finding, it
did
not, as the applicant suggests, provide the basis for the finding on future
persecution.
- The
claim by the appellant that the Tribunal ‘applied a capricious and
inflexible rule that if there was any chance that the appellant would be harmed
by JTMM, the JTMM would have
done so before the appellant left Nepal’
is no more than an attempt to challenge a factual finding of the Tribunal. This
Court cannot review the factual findings of
the Tribunal’s decision:
see Chan Yee Kin v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs [1989] HCA 62; (1989) 169
CLR 379 at 391-392; Minister for Aboriginal Affairs and Another v
Peko-Wallsend Limited and Others [1986] HCA 40; (1986) 162 CLR 24 at 40-42; NAHI v
Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2004]
FCAFC 10 at [10].
- The
Court concludes that there is no error of law identified in the Federal
Magistrate’s decision.
- For
the above reasons, the appeal is
dismissed.
I certify that the preceding thirty-seven (37)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Cowdroy.
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Associate:
Dated: 1 July 2010
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