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SZMZY v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2009] FMCA 126 (23 February 2009)
Last Updated: 26 February 2009
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
SZMZY v MINISTER FOR
IMMIGRATION & ANOR
|
|
MIGRATION – Review of Refugee Review
Tribunal decision – refusal of a protection visa – interlocutory
dismissal
of show cause application – no arguable case.
|
|
First Respondent:
|
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP
|
REPRESENTATION
The Applicant appeared in person
Solicitors for the Respondents:
|
Ms A Crittenden Clayton Utz
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INTERLOCUTORY ORDERS
(1) The application is dismissed, pursuant to rule
44.12(1)(a) of the Federal Magistrates Court Rules 2001 (Cth).
(2) The applicant is to pay the first respondent’s costs and disbursements
of and incidental to the application in the sum
of $2,500 in accordance with
rule 44.15(1) and item 1(b) of part 2 of schedule 1 to the Federal
Magistrates Court Rules 2001
(Cth).
FEDERAL MAGISTRATESCOURT OF AUSTRALIA
ATSYDNEY
|
SYG 3167 of 2008
Applicant
And
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION &
CITIZENSHIP
|
First Respondent
Second Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
(revised from transcript)
- This
is an application to review a decision of the Refugee Review Tribunal
(“the Tribunal”). The Tribunal affirmed a
decision of a delegate of
the Minister not to grant the applicant a protection visa. The Tribunal
decision was made on 6 November
2008.
- The
applicant is from China and had made claims of persecution based upon his
practice of Falun Gong. The applicant arrived in Australia
on 17 April 2008.
He applied to the Minister's Department for a protection visa on 1 May 2008.
The Minister's delegate refused
that application on 15 July 2008. The applicant
sought review by the Tribunal on 12 August 2008. The Tribunal was unable
to make
a favourable decision on the papers and invited the applicant to a
hearing. He accepted that invitation and attended on 5 November
2008. He was
assisted by a migration agent who did not attend the hearing.
- The
Tribunal decision records that the applicant was questioned at length about his
claims. The applicant was not believed. In particular,
the Tribunal did not
accept the applicant's claims in relation to why he was attracted to the
practice of Falun Gong for health reasons
as opposed to alternative treatments.
The Tribunal found that the applicant changed his evidence as he believed it was
convenient
to his case. The Tribunal was also not satisfied that the applicant
was detained in China as he had claimed. It found his explanation
for an
incident of asserted harm to be not plausible. The Tribunal did not even accept
that the applicant was a Falun Gong practitioner
in China or that he had been
imputed with such practice in China in the past or that he would be imputed as a
Falun Gong practitioner
should he return to China.
- The
Tribunal considered the applicant's claims to have practised Falun Gong in
Australia. The Tribunal was not satisfied that the
applicant's conduct in
Australia, the fact of which the Tribunal appeared to have accepted, was engaged
in for a reason other than
to enhance his protection visa claims. The Tribunal
accordingly disregarded that conduct as required by s.91R(3) of the Migration
Act 1958 (Cth) (“the Migration Act”).
- These
proceedings began with a show cause application filed on 1 December 2008.
I incorporate in this judgment two grounds set out
in that
application:
- 1. I was
not considered fairly by RRT. They did not weigh my evidence both here and in
China. RRT did not give me a letter to
explain the doubts.
- 2.
Procedural Fairness has been denied. RRT did not use favourable cases to my
application. RRT has no evidence to prove that
I practised Falun Gong for the
purpose of strengthening my claims.
- The
applicant was given the opportunity to file and serve an amended application,
but he has not done so. He relies on a short affidavit
filed with his
application which I accepted as a submission. I received as evidence the court
book filed on 9 January 2009 and the
affidavit of Audrey Lizanne Echevarria
which annexes an Australia Post registered post document verifying that the
Tribunal's notification
letter was despatched to the applicant the day after
which it was dated (court book, page 95).
- There
is no substance to either of the grounds in the show cause application. The
applicant asserts procedural unfairness, but his
only complaint pursued in his
oral submissions was that the Tribunal did not accept him as a genuine Falun
Gong practitioner. He
appears to be of the view that anyone claiming to be a
Falun Gong practitioner should be accepted as such. The Tribunal decision
discloses that the Tribunal engaged in an active intellectual process in
considering the applicant's claims. The Tribunal was not
required to explain in
writing its doubts about the applicant's claims in advance of its decision.
- Reference
to the Tribunal not using favourable cases is mysterious. To the extent that it
refers to any reliance by the Tribunal
on country information, the Tribunal was
entitled to have regard to country information relating to the situation of
Falun Gong practitioners
in China and Australia. It is not apparent to me
whether the Tribunal did have regard to such information. The Tribunal may not
have felt the need to do so, given that the Tribunal did not accept the
applicant as a genuine practitioner.
- The
Tribunal's references in its decision to the case law was appropriate to the
matter that it had to resolve. The applicant's assertion
that the Tribunal had
no evidence to prove that he practised Falun Gong for the purpose of
strengthening his claims misunderstands
the Tribunal's task pursuant to s.91R(3)
of the Migration Act. Once the Tribunal has determined that an applicant has
engaged in relevant conduct in Australia, which this Tribunal must be assumed
to
have done, the Tribunal's task is then to consider the motivation for that
conduct. The Tribunal is required to disregard that
conduct unless satisfied by
an applicant that it was engaged in for a purpose other than to enhance his
protection visa claims.
The Tribunal was not so satisfied and no arguable case
of jurisdictional error is disclosed.
- I
conclude that the applicant has failed to demonstrate an arguable case of
jurisdictional error by the Tribunal. Neither is any
arguable case of error
apparent to me from my own examination of the material. Accordingly, I order
that the application be dismissed
pursuant to rule 44.12(1)(a) of the Federal
Magistrates Court Rules 2001 (Cth) (“the Federal Magistrates Court
Rules”).
- Costs
should follow the event in this case. The Minister seeks an order for costs
fixed in the scale amount of $2,500. The applicant
maintains that the Tribunal
decision is unfair and does not consider he should be liable to a costs order.
Nevertheless, in consequence
of my dismissal order, the Minister should receive
a costs order. I see no reason to depart from the Court scale. I will order
that the applicant pay the first respondent's costs and disbursements of and
incidental to the application in the sum of $2,500 in
accordance with rule
44.15(1) and item 1B of part 2 of schedule 1 to the Federal Magistrates Court
Rules.
I certify that the preceding
11Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!Error! Style not defined.Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!eleveneleven (11) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment of
Driver FM
Associate:
Date: 25 February 2009
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