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AZABC v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2011] FMCA 34 (28 January 2011)
Federal Magistrates Court of Australia
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AZABC v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2011] FMCA 34 (28 January 2011)
Last Updated: 2 February 2011
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
AZABC v MINISTER FOR
IMMIGRATION & ANOR
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MIGRATION – RRT decision – Albanian
applicant claiming persecution by reason of conversion from Islamic faith to
Orthodox
Christian – no jurisdictional error identified –
application dismissed.
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First Respondent:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP
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Hearing date:
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13 December 2010
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Delivered on:
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28 January 2011
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REPRESENTATION
Counsel for the
Applicant:
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Mr P C Charman
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Solicitors for the Applicant:
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FNE Lawyers
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Counsel for the Respondents:
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Dr C D Bleby
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Solicitors for the Respondents:
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Australian Government Solicitors
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ORDERS
(1) The application is dismissed.
(2) The applicant shall pay the first respondent’s costs of $5,865.00
(five thousand, eight hundred and sixty five dollars).
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FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA AT
ADELAIDE
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ADG 231 of
2010
Applicant
And
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION &
CITIZENSHIP
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First Respondent
Second Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- The
applicant, a male citizen of Albania, claims to have a well-founded fear of
persecution in Albania by reason of his conversion
from the Islamic faith to an
Orthodox Christian religion. He says that he fears harm from his and his
wife’s families should
he return to Albania. He says that some members of
these families hold high positions and that, in a corrupt country like Albania,
he and his wife would be found and they could not expect the support and
protection of Albanian authorities.
- The
applicant arrived in Australia on 8 December 2009 at which time he was the
holder of a Subclass 676 Tourist visa. He obtained
that visa to attend and
speak at the 2009 International Workshop hosted by Griffith School of
Engineering. After the workshop he
sought a Protection (Class XA) Visa. That
application was refused by the delegate of the Minister on 22 March 2010. On 14
April
2010, the applicant applied to the Refugee Review Tribunal (“the
Tribunal”) for review of the delegate’s decision.
On 13 August
2010, the Tribunal affirmed the decision not to grant the applicant a Visa. The
applicant now seeks review of the
Tribunal’s decision.
- The
applicant says that he converted to the Orthodox Christian faith in 2003 whilst
in Greece. The applicant says that he was beaten
by family members when he
indicated that he wanted his wedding to take place at an Orthodox Christian
church. The applicant says
that he left Albania after the beating and returned
for one month in late 2005. He married on 3 October 2005. He again returned
from Greece to Albania in September 2007 as a result of being deported. The
applicant says further that, from September 2007 to
December 2009, he lived with
his wife in secret in Albania during which time he and his wife had no contact
with their families.
- It
was submitted by counsel for the applicant that the Tribunal had accepted that
the applicant was beaten by family members for what
can only be characterised as
religious reasons. Counsel for the applicant pointed to para.40 of the reasons
and submitted that the
Tribunal had there indicated that they gave the applicant
the benefit of the doubt and accepted that the applicant was beaten by
his
family members for converting to an Orthodox Christian religion. For reasons
that will follow, I do not accept this submission.
- Counsel
for the applicant put forward only one ground upon which the application should
be allowed. He submitted that, having given
the applicant the benefit of the
doubt, the Tribunal had failed to exercise its jurisdiction in that it failed to
ask the correct
question as to whether there was a real chance that the
applicant would suffer serious harm from his and his wife’s families
without protection from the Albanian authorities if he returned to Albania to
live a ‘normal existence’.
- I
do not agree with this characterisation of the Tribunal’s reasons. Whilst
there is some ambiguity about the Tribunal’s
findings and reasons found in
paras.35-43, I am satisfied that, on balance, the Tribunal was there indicating
that it did not accept
the applicant’s version of events concerning his
conversion to an Orthodox Christian religion, his expressed fear of harm from
his and his wife’s family members or his alleged assault by his and his
wife’s family members. It is helpful to look
carefully at what the
Tribunal said in its reasons.
- The
Tribunal said:
- 38. The
Tribunal has some doubts about the applicant’s conversion to Orthodox
given he has not yet been baptised in the church,
despite his claim to have
decided that in 2003 to become Orthodox. The Tribunal accepts the letters from
the priests in Albania
and in South Australia as evidence the applicant has some
interest in the Orthodox Church. The applicant claimed at hearing to be
attending the St George Church in Adelaide but has provided a letter from a
priest at a different church where the priest says the
applicant has been
attending for a few months.
- 39. The
Tribunal has difficulty accepting the applicant’s story as plausible. He
claims to have been beaten by his family
when he expressed a wish to have his
marriage blessed in the Orthodox Church. He claims he was beaten so badly, he
required hospitalisation.
He has provided no medical records to support this.
However, when he legally married his wife 8 months later, he did not in fact
get
his marriage blessed. The Tribunal gives little weight to the evidence of the
applicant’s witness that he remembers hearing
the applicant’s story
on television in Albania. The Tribunal finds it difficult to accept the witness
would recall a person’s
name from something they heard on television five
years ago. The applicant has not raised before to the Department or the
Tribunal
that his story was reported in Albania, nor has he provided any other
evidence of this. The Tribunal has considered the report from
Mr Thompson which
states the applicant has a number of physical and psychological symptoms of
anxiety and depression, but finds these
symptoms could have any number of causes
and do not necessarily support his claims.
- The
Tribunal did not accept that the applicant was beaten at his wedding. It
expressed doubt about the applicant’s conversion
to Orthodox Christianity
given that he had not yet been baptised despite the fact that the applicant had
claimed to have decided
to convert as early as 2003. The Tribunal accepted that
the applicant had some interest in the Orthodox Church as was indicated
by
certain letters from priests that the applicant relied upon. The Tribunal noted
that the applicant had claimed to attend the
“St George” Church
although he provided a letter from a priest from a different church that said
that the applicant had
been attending that other church for a few months. The
Tribunal said that it had “difficulty accepting the applicant’s
story as plausible”. The Tribunal found that there were no medical
records provided to support the applicant’s case
that he was beaten. The
Tribunal found that notwithstanding the applicant’s claimed reason for the
beating, he did not in
fact have his marriage blessed. The Tribunal gave little
weight to the evidence of Mr Myftari, the person that the applicant says
that he
met at a hospital in 2010. Mr Myftari claimed that he recalled a television
report that he had seen five years earlier concerning
a man of the
applicant’s name having been beaten from family members for converting
from Islam to Orthodox Christianity. When
the applicant was asked why he had
not raised this with the Department, the applicant replied that he thought that
would be of no
interest to the Department. The Tribunal further found that the
symptoms that were noted in the report of the Councillor, Mr Thompson,
could have any number of causes and did not necessarily support the
applicant’s claims.
- In
my view, contrary to the submission put by counsel for the applicant, the
following paragraphs (paras.40-42) confirm that the Tribunal
continues to be
against the applicant in relation to these issues. The Tribunal’s reasons
continue:
- 40. Even if
the Tribunal gives the applicant the benefit of the doubt and accepts he was
beaten by his family for converting to Orthodox,
the Tribunal is not satisfied
the applicant faces a real chance of persecution from his family or his
wife’s family if he returns
to Albania.
- The
use of the expression “Even if the Tribunal gives the applicant the
benefit of the doubt”, impliedly suggests that the Tribunal has
decided the crucial issues against the applicant but are speculating what the
result might
have been if it had not done so. They come to the conclusion that
even if they did give the applicant the benefit of the doubt (which
they do
not), they would still find against the applicant on the crucial issues. Had
the Tribunal intended to give the applicant
the benefit of the doubt, the
Tribunal would not have used the words “even if”.
- Finding,
as I do, that the Tribunal’s reasons for rejecting the applicant’s
application are that to be found in paras.38
and 39 and not paras.40 to 42, this
application is disposed. I do not propose to address the question of whether
the application
would be disposed of on the alternate basis.
- The
application is dismissed. I make the orders to be found at the beginning of
these reasons.
I certify that the preceding
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!twelvetwelve (12) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment of
Simpson FM
Associate:
Date: 28 January 2011
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