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SZOMB v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2011] FCA 81 (10 February 2011)
Last Updated: 14 February 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
SZOMB v Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship [2011] FCA 81
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Citation:
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SZOMB v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2011] FCA 81
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Appeal from:
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Parties:
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SZOMB v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP and REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL
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File number:
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NSD 1445 of 2010
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Judge:
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REEVES J
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Date of judgment:
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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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No catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the Appellant:
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The Appellant appeared in person
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Solicitor for the First Respondent:
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A Totoeva of DLA Philips Fox
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Counsel for the Second Respondent:
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The Second Respondent did not appear
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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
notice of appeal filed on 26 October 2010 be dismissed.
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 1445 of 2010
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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BETWEEN:
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SZOMB Appellant
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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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REEVES J
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DATE:
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10 FEBRUARY 2011
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- This
is an appeal against a judgment of a Federal Magistrate delivered on 6 October
2010, dismissing an application for judicial
review of a decision of the Refugee
Review Tribunal (“the Tribunal”).
BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
- The
appellant is a citizen of Bangladesh who arrived in Australia on 10 March 2009.
On 21 October 2009 the appellant lodged an application
for a protection visa
with the Department of Immigration and Citizenship. A delegate of the Minister
for Immigration and Citizenship
refused the application on 30 January 2010. On
8 March 2010 the appellant applied to the Tribunal for a review of that
decision.
The Tribunal subsequently affirmed the delegate’s
decision.
CLAIMS OF POLITICAL AND OTHER PERSECUTION
- The
appellant claimed to fear persecution in Bangladesh by reason of his political
opinion and his religious beliefs. Essentially,
he claimed to be of the Hindu
faith, which is a religious minority in Bangladesh. He also claimed he was the
local leader of the
Bangladesh Jatiotabadi Chatradal and Jatiotabadi Jubodal,
the student and youth wings of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party
(“BNP”),
which is the current opposition party in Bangladesh. He
claimed that people with his religious background usually supported the
Awami
League, which is the ruling party in Bangladesh. He claimed that he was under
constant threat of being persecuted by Awami
League’s cadres and thugs
because they were upset that he supported the BNP.
- The
appellant also claimed that on 15 September 2008 he married a Muslim woman. His
wife came to Australia on a student visa in
September 2008. The appellant was
granted a student dependent visa in December 2008, however, due to employment
and political commitments,
he decided to stay in Bangladesh for another few
months. He did this because he claimed he was optimistic the BNP would win the
election that was being held at that time, so he decided to stay and campaign
for the local BNP candidate. However, when the Awami
League won the election,
he claimed he became the target of post-election attacks. In January 2009 he
was stopped by about ten people,
slapped and told to leave the area otherwise he
would be attacked. He claimed that his life was under constant threat, and he
also
feared his wife’s parents would find out about their marriage, so he
left for Australia in March 2009.
- The
appellant claimed that within months of living with his wife in Australia, she
told him that he had to convert to Islam or she
would leave him. As well, he
claimed that her parents started threatening his siblings in Bangladesh. He
claimed that if he returned
to Bangladesh, his political opponents, along with
his wife’s father, would harm, or kill him.
- The
appellant provided two statements to the delegate. The first was purportedly
issued by the Narail District Wing of the Bangladesh
Jatiotabadi Chatradal and
the second was purportedly issued by the Bangladesh Jatiotabadi Jubodal. Both
confirmed his involvement
in politics, and with the student and youth wings of
the BNP.
- In
respect of these statements, it is important to note that the delegate received
information from an informant who claimed that
the claims contained in the
appellant’s application were false. Moreover, this informant provided a
blank letterhead of one
of the political organisations referred to and claimed
similar blank letterheads could be collected from any of the offices of those
organisations and any information could then be
inserted.
THE TRIBUNAL AFFIRMED THE DELEGATE’S DECISION
- The
Tribunal found the appellant was not a credible witness, that his evidence was
vague and generalised, that he had difficulties
providing specific information
and that his evidence was inconsistent. Further, the Tribunal did not accept
the appellant’s
claims that the deficiencies in his evidence were due to
his poor health and memory. In this respect, the Tribunal had regard to
the
medical certificate put forward by the appellant, but concluded that the ear
infection described in that certificate was not
likely to affect his memory.
The Tribunal concluded that the vagueness and inconsistencies in the
appellant’s evidence were
a reflection of his poor credibility and not on
his state of mind.
- The
Tribunal also found that the appellant’s limited knowledge of the BNP was
inconsistent with the level of knowledge one
would expect from a person who
claimed to have been actively involved with the party and its politics. This
caused the Tribunal
to question the appellant’s claims to have been
actively involved with the BNP.
- The
Tribunal also contrasted the appellant’s vagueness in the answers he
provided at the Tribunal hearing regarding the harassment
and threats he claimed
to experience in Bangladesh with the detailed claims he made in his original
application. On this basis,
the Tribunal formed the view that the appellant had
fabricated these claims.
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respect of the two statements provided by the appellant (described at [6]
above), the Tribunal noted the spelling and linguistic
errors contained therein,
eg “59 Word Committee” instead of “59 Ward Committee”,
and found that, while it
considered it was possible that the writer’s
English may not be perfect, it did not consider it plausible that a genuine
letterhead
and official stamps of those organisations would contain such errors.
The Tribunal therefore formed the view that the appellant had
fabricated those
documents. This caused the Tribunal to further doubt the appellant’s
credibility.
- Given
its adverse conclusions about the appellant’s credibility and his
willingness to fabricate documents, the Tribunal decided
to give no weight to
the letter in support that was provided by the appellant’s brother.
- The
Tribunal also found that, had the appellant genuinely feared persecution in
Bangladesh, he would have left that country as soon
as he obtained his
Australian student dependent visa and not remained there for a further three
months.
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short, the Tribunal concluded the appellant was not a truthful witness and it
rejected his claim to have had any political involvement
in Bangladesh.
- As
to the other aspects of his claims, the Tribunal accepted the appellant was a
Hindu and that he had married a Muslim woman in
secret. It also accepted that
his wife’s parents disapproved of the marriage. However, because of his
confused and inconsistent
evidence concerning this aspect of his claims, the
Tribunal did not accept that his wife’s family wished to harm him.
Further,
as the Tribunal rejected the appellant’s claimed political
involvement in the BNP, or any other political activities in Bangladesh,
it did
not accept the appellant’s politics would have any influence on the
actions of his wife’s father.
- Having
rejected the entirety of his claims, the Tribunal concluded there was no real
chance the appellant would face persecution
for reasons of his religion,
political opinion or for any other Convention reason, or any combination of
Convention reasons, if he
were to return to Bangladesh now, or in the reasonably
foreseeable future. Accordingly, the Tribunal affirmed the delegate’s
decision.
THE FEDERAL MAGISTRATE FINDS NO JURISDICTIONAL ERROR
- In
his amended application for judicial review in the Federal Magistrates Court,
the appellant raised the following grounds:
- The
Refugee Review Tribunal failed to maintain procedural fairness to exercise its
jurisdiction under the Act:
Particulars:
The Tribunal did not consider and put weight on my documents that I provided.
I provided documents relating to my involvement with
politics of the student and
youth wing of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP). Rather it affirmed the
DIAC’s decision and DIAC
assessed my documents receiving information from
an unknown source, that those documents were fabricated. Although no detailed
and
specific information and name of sources were provided as where they
received information that my documents were fraudulent. The
Tribunal did not
put weight on them and rather followed and supported the view of immigration
department while affirming my case.
- The
Refugee Review Tribunal misunderstood and over exercised it’s jurisdiction
in considering my information.
Particulars:
The Tribunal did not put weight to the letter from my brother. It presumed
the letter to be self serving. The Refugee Review Tribunal
over exercised
it’s jurisdiction by thinking my brother’s letter as self serving.
Its presumption led it not giving
any weight on the letter and thus made a
jurisdictional error.
- The
Refugee Review Tribunal made jurisdictional error in assessing my
circumstances.
Particulars:
The Tribunal referred to various information regarding inter religious
marriage in Bangladesh. These are the information that the
Tribunal relied on
while assessing my circumstances. In para 81 of its decision the Tribunal
referred to inter religious marriage
between high profile celebrities in
Bangladesh and relying on those it believes that, inter religious marriage is
not a big problem
in Bangladesh. The Tribunal is not aware that, inter
religious marriage between celebrities and between I and my ex-wife is not
same.
No one will dare to tell them anything since they are very prominent and
powerful in the country. But people like me have
always been sufferer, always
been subject to attack, persecution, threat who went through inter religious
marriage especially when
some one being a Hindu marries a Muslim girl.
The Tribunal took wrong test in assessing my situation of inter religious
marriage not thinking practical aspect in Bangladesh, thus
made jurisdictional
error.
- As
to the first part of ground 1, the Federal Magistrate noted that the
Tribunal’s decision record disclosed that the documents
the appellant had
provided to the Tribunal were discussed at some length with the appellant at the
hearing and were expressly considered
by the Tribunal in its decision. As a
consequence, his Honour found this part of ground 1 failed on the facts. As to
the allegation
in this ground that the Tribunal had simply adopted the
delegate’s view that the documents were fabricated based on the
information
provided by the informant (see [7] above), the Federal Magistrate
observed that the Tribunal’s decision record clearly demonstrated
that it
had applied an independent mind to the authenticity of those documents and
arrived at its own independent conclusion in relation
to them.
- Before
the Federal Magistrate the appellant also claimed the Tribunal had breached
s 424A of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (“the Act”) by
not informing him of the information the delegate had received from the
informant. On this aspect,
the Federal Magistrate observed that s 424A
only obliged the Tribunal to notify an applicant of information that it
considered would be the reason, or part of the reason, for
affirming the
decision under review. Thus, since the Tribunal’s reasons did not suggest
that it had formed any opinion about
the informant information, much less
indicate that it considered it was the reason or part of the reason for
affirming the decision
under review, his Honour held that the Tribunal was not
required to give particulars of that information to the appellant: citing
Minister for Immigration & Citizenship v SZLFX [2009] HCA 31; (2009) 238 CLR 507 at
514[24]. Finally on this aspect, the Federal Magistrate held that in any event,
in its s 424A letter dated 17 March 2010, the Tribunal had expressly
referred to the informant information, it had identified its potential
significance to the appellant’s application and it had invited the
appellant to comment on it. For these reasons, the Federal
Magistrate dismissed
the first ground of review.
- In
respect of ground 2, the appellant submitted that the Tribunal had breached
s 424A of the Act by not inviting him to comment on his brother’s
letter. Not surprisingly, the Federal Magistrate held that, since
that letter
was provided to the Tribunal by the appellant for the purpose of its review, it
fell within the exception to the operation
of s 424A(1) contained in
s 424A(3)(b) and thus did not need to be notified to him.
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to ground 3, the Federal Magistrate held that although the Tribunal had regard
to the Department of Foreign Affairs & Trade
(“DFAT”) report
about inter-religion marriages, it did not rely upon that report in reaching its
decision. Rather, the
Tribunal rejected this aspect of the appellant’s
claims because it found that his evidence regarding it was confused and devoid
of detail.
- Under
the headings of grounds 4 and 5, the Federal Magistrate also had regard to
certain complaints made by the appellant in his
written submissions. First,
(ground 4) the appellant claimed the Tribunal erred in assessing his
credibility. The Federal Magistrate
held this complaint could not be made out
since it challenged the Tribunal’s credibility findings and they were
matters par excellence for the Tribunal.
- The
appellant also argued in his written submissions (ground 5) that the Tribunal
did not take into account his claims that he was
mentally stressed and was not
able to answer its questions properly. Noting that no medical evidence had been
provided by the appellant
to support these claims, the Federal Magistrate held
this complaint was not made out. Finally, based on a fair reading of the
Tribunal’s
decision record, the Federal Magistrate rejected the
appellant’s claims that the Tribunal had inaccurately stated that the
threats he had received from his ex-wife’s family had started after the
break-up of their relationship.
- Accordingly,
the Federal Magistrate dismissed the appellant’s judicial review
application for want of jurisdictional error.
THE CONDUCT OF THE PRESENT APPEAL
- On
26 October 2010 the appellant filed a notice of appeal in this Court which
alleged that (without alteration):
- The
Federal Magistrate erred in not finding that the second respondent had failed to
complete its judicial tasks not putting weight
on my documents and my
involvement in politics.
Particulars:
The Tribunal did not consider and put weight on my documents that I provided.
I provided documents relating to my involvement with
politics of the student and
youth wing of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP). Rather it affirmed the
DIAC’s decision and DIAC
assessed my documents receiving information from
an unknown source, that those documents were fabricated. Although no detailed
and
specific information and name of sources were provided as where they
received information that my documents were fraudulent. The
Tribunal did not
put weight on them and rather followed and supported the view of immigration
department while affirming my case,
the Federal Magistrate court supported
Tribunal’s view and made error of law being jurisdictional error.
- The
Refugee Review Tribunal misunderstood and over exercised it’s jurisdiction
in considering my information. The Federal Magistrate
erred in not finding this
error by the Tribunal.
Particulars:
The Tribunal did not put weight to the letter from my brother. It presumed
the letter to be self serving. The Refugee Review Tribunal
over exercised
it’s jurisdiction by thinking my brother’s letter as self serving.
Its presumption led it not giving
any weight on the letter and thus made a
jurisdictional error.
The honourable Federal Magistrate viewed that, the Tribunal’s
conclusions regarding the letter from my brother were logically
open to it.
That being so, the Tribunal’s decision to give it no weight does not
disclose error on its part. Thus the honourable
Federal magistrate overlooked
the error of law made by the Tribunal.
- The
Refugee Review Tribunal made jurisdictional error in assessing my
circumstances.
Particulars:
The Tribunal referred to various information regarding inter religious
marriage in Bangladesh. These are the information that the
Tribunal relied on
while assessing my circumstances. In para 81 of its decision the Tribunal
referred to inter religious marriage
between high profile celebrities in
Bangladesh and relying on those it believes that, inter religious marriage is
not a big problem
in Bangladesh. The Tribunal is not aware that, inter
religious marriage between celebrities and between I and my ex-wife is not
same.
No one will dare to tell them anything since they are very prominent and
powerful in the country. But people like me have
always been sufferer, always
been subject to attack, persecution, threat who went through inter religious
marriage especially when
some one being a Hindu marries a Muslim girl.
The Tribunal took wrong test in assessing my situation of inter religious
marriage not thinking practical aspect in Bangladesh, thus
made jurisdictional
error. The Federal magistrate did not consider that a jurisdictional error made
by the Refugee Review Tribunal.
The Honourable Federal Magistrate did not consider any of the above errors
made by the Refugee Review Tribunals (RRT) regarding my
claims.
- At
the hearing before me on 7 February 2011, the appellant appeared in person,
unrepresented, but assisted by an interpreter. Mr
Johnson appeared as counsel
for the first respondent. In his brief oral submissions the appellant claimed,
in essence, that he would
be killed if he were forced to return to Bangladesh.
Mr Johnson was content to rely upon the outline of written submissions
that
had been filed on behalf of the first respondent.
CONSIDERATION
- At
the outset it should be noted that, while they have been restructured somewhat
to allege error on the part of the Federal Magistrate,
the three grounds of
appeal before this Court raise substantially the same issues as the three
grounds of judicial review before
the Federal Magistrates Court.
- Ground
1 seeks to challenge the Federal Magistrate’s treatment of the
Tribunal’s alleged failure to “consider and
put weight on” the
documents the appellant had provided to it in support of his application.
- On
this allegation I consider the Federal Magistrate was plainly correct in
concluding that the Tribunal’s decision record
shows that it did duly
consider those documents. It follows that no error has been demonstrated on the
part of the Federal Magistrate
and this allegation must be rejected.
- However,
the particulars of this ground also repeat a claim made before the Federal
Magistrate that the Tribunal had relied upon
certain information provided to the
delegate by an unnamed informant without first providing particulars of that
information to the
appellant for comment.
- Despite
the fact that this ground made no mention of s 424A, the Federal Magistrate
was (somewhat generously, if I may say so) willing to treat it as an allegation
of a breach of that section.
On that basis, his Honour rejected the
appellant’s claim because there was nothing in the Tribunal’s
decision record
to suggest that it had formed an opinion about this informant
information, much less relied upon it as a reason, or part of the reasons
for
its decision.
- From
a fair reading of the Tribunal’s decision record, I consider that the
Federal Magistrate was plainly correct in reaching
this conclusion. That being
so, s 424A had no role to play in this matter: see Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship v SZLFX [2009] HCA 31; (2009) 238 CLR 507 at [24]. It follows
that no error has been demonstrated on the part of the Federal Magistrate in
rejecting this claim.
- For
these reasons, I consider ground 1 of the appellant’s notice of appeal
must be rejected.
- The
Federal Magistrate also assumed that the appellant was complaining about a
breach of s 424A in ground 2 of his application for judicial review. His
Honour did that because the appellant raised that complaint in his written
submissions. However, in this Court, the appellant has made no mention of
s 424A in his ground in his notice of appeal and he has not filed any
written submissions. Against this background, I consider I can only
assume that
the appellant has deliberately chosen not to pursue an allegation of a breach of
s 424A under ground 2 of his notice of appeal.
- On
the question of the weight that was given to the brother’s letter, the
Federal Magistrate set out that part of the Tribunal’s
decision record
that dealt with this issue, as follows (at
[27]):
The Tribunal also gives no weight to the letter from the applicant’s
brother as the Tribunal finds this document to be self-serving
and given the
applicant’s willingness to fabricate documents, as well as the
Tribunal’s concerns about the applicant’s
credibility, the Tribunal
is concerned about the probative value of his brother’s statement.
- The
Federal Magistrate then concluded (at [28])
that:
The Tribunal’s conclusions regarding the letter from the applicant’s
brother were logically open to it. That being so,
the Tribunal’s decision
to give it no weight does not disclose error on its
part.
- It
hardly needs to be said that the weighing of evidence is a matter that falls
squarely within the fact-finding role of the Tribunal:
see Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship v SZJSS [2010] HCA 48 at [33] and [36].
Further, it is not the role of this Court, nor is it the role of the Federal
Magistrates Court, to conduct a review of
the fact-finding role of the Tribunal,
or a merits review: see Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZNPG
[2010] FCAFC 51 at [20].
- Moreover,
the Tribunal’s reasons for rejecting the corroborative value of the
brother’s letter in this case clearly stemmed
from the Tribunal’s
conclusion that the appellant was not a witness of truth and had fabricated
other documents. Thus, this
is clearly a situation where the proffered
corroborative evidence has been given no weight because “the well has been
poisoned
beyond redemption”: see Re Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs; Ex parte Applicant S20/2002 (2003) 198 ALR 59; [2003]
HCA 30 at [49] per McHugh and Gummow JJ.
- For
these reasons, I consider no error has been demonstrated on the part of the
Federal Magistrate in relation to ground 2, and it
must also be rejected.
- As
to ground 3, the Federal Magistrate found that, while the Tribunal had regard to
the DFAT report on inter-religious marriages,
it did not rely on the contents of
that report in reaching its decision. Instead, the Federal Magistrate observed
that the Tribunal
had rejected the appellant’s claims on this aspect
because they were confused and devoid of detail in relation to specific
threats.
- I
am unable to detect any error on the part of the Federal Magistrate in these
conclusions and, for this reason, ground 3 of the
notice of appeal must also be
rejected.
CONCLUSION
- For
these reasons, the appellant’s appeal must be dismissed. I will hear the
parties on the question of costs.
I certify that the preceding forty-two (42)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Reeves.
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Associate:
Dated: 10 February 2011
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