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SZORO v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2011] FMCA 84 (21 February 2011)

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SZORO v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2011] FMCA 84 (21 February 2011)

Last Updated: 22 February 2011

FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA

SZORO v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & ANOR

MIGRATION – Review of decision of RRT – where applicant claims Tribunal failed to deal with an integer of his claims and conducted itself in a manner consistent with apprehended bias – whether Tribunal misapplied dicta in Guitta Levy or MMM – whether remarks made about applicant’s credibility indicated apprehended bias.

Guitta Levy v Minister for Immigration & Anor [1998] FCA 1666
Applicant A v Minister for Immigration & Ethnic Affairs (1997) 142 ALR 331
Minister for Immigration and Ethic Affairs v Guo & Anor (1997) 191 CLR 559
SZHDL v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2008] FCA 356
Ling v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2004] FCA 1069
Re Refugee Review Tribunal; Ex parte H [2001] HCA 28; [2001] 75 ALJR 982
Minister for Immigration & Anor v SZJSS [2010] HCA 48
MMM v Minister for Immigration & Anor (1998) FCA 1664

Applicant:
SZORO

First Respondent:
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP

Second Respondent:
REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL

File Number:
SYG 2204 of 2010

Judgment of:
Raphael FM

Hearing date:
10 February 2011

Date of Last Submission:
10 February 2011

Delivered at:
Sydney

Delivered on:
21 February 2011

REPRESENTATION


Solicitors for the Applicant:
Turner Coulson

Counsel for the Respondents:
Mr T Reilly

Solicitors for the Respondents:
Sparke Helmore

ORDERS

(1) Application dismissed.
(2) Applicant to pay the First Respondent’s costs assessed in the sum of $5,850.00.
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES
COURT OF AUSTRALIA
AT SYDNEY

SYG 2204 of 2010

SZORO

Applicant


And


MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP

First Respondent

REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL

Second Respondent


REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

  1. The applicant is a citizen of Nepal who arrived in Australia in March 2007 as a student. He studied at a college in Sydney from May 2007 until February 2008. In May 2008 he was arrested, charged and convicted of a series of offences for which he was imprisoned for eighteen months. Upon his release from prison in November 2009 he was placed in immigration detention and he there applied for a protection visa. He is not currently in immigration detention.
  2. The grounds upon which the applicant claimed to be a person to whom Australia owed protection obligations was that he feared, should he return to Nepal, that he would be persecuted for his Christian beliefs and his activities as a proselytiser. He claimed that he had been adopted at birth into a prominent family of the Newari tribe that was active on the Newari committee for Guthi. The Newaris were sympathetic to those promoting Hinduism within Nepal including some Hindu extremists such as the Shiv Sena group. The applicant claimed that his father’s sister had introduced him to Christianity of which she was a follower and from about the age of fourteen he attended bible studies with his cousins at the Gyaneshwor Church in Kathmandu. He claimed that he had converted to Christianity although he had not been baptised. It would appear that he did not tell his father about his abandonment of Hinduism prior to his death. Whilst his father was alive his mother refused to talk to him about Christianity although it appears he has had more contact with her since that time. The applicant claimed that his aunt had been ostracised by his extended family and the Newari Tribe but notwithstanding this he had spent much time with her as she was very close to his father and his mother had been involved in other Newari activities.
  3. The applicant claimed that he carried out proselytising work for the Gyaneshwor Church including going to different parts of Nepal and talking to people about Christianity. He claimed that he would also talk to people who came to the church when church services were being held and in response to a suggestion from the Tribunal that his proselytising activity had been quite open the applicant indicated that his mother had not been keen to pursue the topic so long as he carried out his duties as a son which included attending certain Newari Hindu ceremonies. In response to a question from the Tribunal as to whether he had been detained, arrested or tortured by the Nepalese authorities the applicant responded that he along with other members of the church had been detained once at a checkpoint between Kathmandu and Pokhara by the army when a state of emergency had been enforced:
  4. The applicant had also told the department about an incident when he was detained by Maoists at a checkpoint in Thankot. The applicant indicated that being stopped at checkpoints was quite a common occurrence, people were generally harassed but provided you paid a small bribe and abided by the rules “it was not serious”.

The applicant claimed that his family was still very involved in the Guthi and Newari culture and his uncles were very much involved with Hindu extremists. He said that his uncles had threatened him and that people from Shiv Sena had monitored him and followed him where ever he was going. He said that he had been cornered by some Maoists who told him that he should not stop trying to defend the religion that ate cows as he was corrupting the younger generation. [78] at [CB 199]:

“[78] The applicant said that at certain times there had been people coming to his house saying that they had an official warrant for his arrest for being unpatriotic. He confirmed that these people had been Masoists. He confirmed that he claimed that he had been detained for nine or ten days by the Maoists in Lamjung somewhere around late 2005 or early 2006. He said that this had been the biggest mental and physical harm he had suffered up until that point. He said that before this they had had altercations on different occasions. He said that some of the villages to which they had gone had been ‘owned’ by the Maoists in the sense that everyone in the village had supported them. He said that if they told them not to preach the Gospel in such villages they had known to leave and on some occasions they had asked them to pay rebel taxes. He said that as long as they had done what they had been asked they had not suffered physical harm apart from punches and pushing but nothing serious.”
  1. The applicant told the Tribunal that he got in touch with the Australian Nepali Christian community when he had been in jail in Bathurst and made claims about attending the Nepalese Christian Church in Granville. The Tribunal noted that in his protection application earlier and evidence he said that he had attended this church once a week but that after he had been questioned about this by the first Tribunal [the applicant appeared before one Tribunal which was unable to complete its work before ceasing to be a member] it was revealed that this had not been the case. The applicant had sworn a statutory declaration annexed to representations from RACS dated 25 May 2010 to the Tribunal in which at [9] [CB 130] he states:
  2. The Tribunal questioned the applicant on a number of other inconsistencies in his evidence, one of which was that he had suggested that the Gyaneshwor Church in Nepal was part of the Church of England. The Tribunal had independent country information which made it clear that this was not the case. The applicant had also claimed that he had been sexually abused by a pastor at that church. He had taken this up with chaplains who he had met in prison. They had encouraged him to raise the issue with the Anglican Bishop in Singapore who appeared to have pastoral responsibility for Nepal. This he did. The applicant had also said that he was an Anglican. The applicant’s advisors explained these discrepancies by suggesting that as the only chaplains in the prison system were Anglican there had been an assumption that he was complaining about an Anglican pastor.
  3. The applicant claimed that he would be the subject of persecution should he return to Nepal because he would take up proselytising activities and that proselytising was explicitly prohibited by the Interim Constitution in Nepal.
  4. After the discussion concerning the activities of the Gyaneshwor Church and whether there was any evidence that people involved with it had been threatened the Tribunal turned to another claim by the applicant that he would be ostracised by his family should he return.
  5. In the Tribunal’s Findings and Reasons which commence at [119] [CB 208], the Tribunal first deals with the applicant’s credibility in relation to the attendance at the Nepalese Christian Church. The Tribunal concludes that the applicant fabricated that claim and did not consider that his confession ameliorated the effect of his actions [112] [CB 209]. At [139] [CB 214] the Tribunal says:
  6. The Tribunal did accept that the applicant’s aunt was a convert to Christianity and that the applicant attended bible studies and church services at the Gyaneshwor Church. It accepted that the applicant considered himself to be a Christian from around 1997 and that he went on missions with other members of the church including one of his cousins from around December 2001 which involved him in going to different parts of Nepal and talking to people about Christianity.
  7. The Tribunal considered the applicant’s claims about persecution whilst he was in Nepal and concluded:

The failing to deal with an integer claim

  1. On 15 September 2010 the Tribunal determined to affirm the decision under review and on 18 November 2010 the applicant sought review of that decision from this court. The applicant filed in court, through his counsel, an Amended Application in which there were two grounds of application specified. The first was:
  2. The applicant’s argument in this regard is concise.
  3. It is well that the whole of [138] insofar as it refers to ostracism is extracted:
  4. The applicant argues that as the applicant raised his ostracism the Tribunal was obliged to give it proper and realistic consideration by considering whether the particular circumstances raised by the applicant amounted to persecution. He argues that because the Tribunal misunderstood the effect of Guitta Levy it did not do this.
  5. Guitta Levy v Minister for Immigration & Anor [1998] FCA 1666 was a case decided by Tamberlin J on 21 December 1998. It deals with claims made by a Christian Arab of Lebanese origin who married an Israeli Jew. When knowledge of their intended marriage became public:

The applicant believed that an uncle of hers had intervened and caused her to lose her job in Israel. She believed that her uncle denounced her to the police as being an illegal resident and an associate of terrorists. This caused her to be taken in for questioning although she was later released. After their marriage was registered the couple moved from Tel Aviv to a village near Haifa but within six months the neighbours found out about her antecedents and the couple became the subject of minor harassment. They were talked about in the street and there were arguments with neighbours and some abuse. They were made to feel alienated. The applicant gave evidence about other difficulties she had as a Lebanese Christian living in Israel married to an Israeli Jew. These include problems with obtaining medical treatment, obtaining child minding services for her child and telephone calls threatening her and advising her to return to Lebanon with her son otherwise she would be harmed. The applicant believed these calls came from radical Jewish elements:

“The RRT accepted that the independent evidence supported the applicant's assertion that hostile attitudes towards mixed marriages were common in Israel. The RRT considered that mixed marriages, such as the applicants, contained an element of "association with the enemy" and might well attract even more unpleasant attention than other mixed marriages. It accepted that the treatment described by the applicant was discriminatory and systematic. It accepted that the applicant was justified in anticipating that it would occur again if she returned to Israel. It also accepted that the discriminatory harassment occurred by reason of the applicant's race and probably also arose because of her religion, and that the police were unable to prevent it. While the RRT had sympathy for the applicant and her family, it did not consider that the treatment was sufficient in its nature and extent to amount to persecution within the meaning of the Convention. It pointed out that the applicant and her husband acknowledged that they anticipated some hostile treatment, although not of the intensity they claimed to have experienced. It was noted that the applicant and her husband had lived with it for two years prior to their departure from Israel.”
  1. Tamberlin J’s Judgment turned upon two matters, firstly whether or not the Tribunal was indicating that an applicant had to suffer actual physical harm in order to come within the convention. His Honour concluded that this was not the case and he did not believe that the Tribunal had so thought. He then considered arguments about the Tribunal’s findings that the telephone calls could be considered a form of persecution and noted:

His Honour then went on to say:

“There is a further, important consideration in relation to the harassment experienced by the applicant in the present case and that is the fact that the hostility and telephone calls were at the instance of private individuals or groups. There is no suggestion that the government or official agencies were involved in the harassment. To a considerable extent, the hostility experienced by the applicant, apart from the telephone calls, resulted from the disapproval by both her own family in Lebanon, her husband's family in Israel and the social group within which she lived and moved. It is by no means a unique experience that where persons from different cultures, religions, races or traditions intermarry, there is a degree of social hostility manifested towards one or even both of the parties to the marriage for stepping outside traditional social, racial or religious norms. Generally speaking, such hostility would not properly be described as persecution in the context of a Convention concerning refugees, which is focussed, to a large extent, on the protection of core human rights. It is also important to bear in mind that when parties from different cultures, religions or traditions intermarry there can frequently be anticipated, as was the fact in the present case, that there will be social disapproval and hostilities shown to the parties.”

And then referred to the views expressed by McHugh J in Applicant A v Minister for Immigration & Ethnic Affairs (1997) 142 ALR 331 at [354]:

“The Convention is primarily concerned to protect those racial, religious, national, political and social groups who are singled out and persecuted by or with the tacit acceptance of the government of the country from which they have fled or to which they are unwilling to return. Persecution by private individuals or groups does not by itself fall within the definition of refugee unless the State either encourages or is or appears to be powerless to prevent that private persecution. The object of the Convention is to provide refuge for those groups who, having lost the de jure or de facto protection of their governments, are unwilling to return to the counties of their nationality.”
  1. It is true, as the applicant asserts, that the word “ostracism” is not mentioned anywhere in the Guitta Levy judgment. It is, however, my view that the Tribunal was thinking of the extracted paragraph from his Honour’s judgment that there would be social disapproval and hostility shown to persons who intermarry and interpreted those statements as applying equally to ostracism. My reading of the judgment is that Tamberlin J and the Tribunal were both equally clear that the important task was for the Tribunal to adequately assess whether or not the complaints being made amounted to persecution. If it could be said that in the instant case the Tribunal did not even consider the claims made by the applicant of his fear of ostracism because it believed that Guitta Levy in some way exempted ostracism from falling within the definition of persecution under any circumstances then I believe that the Tribunal would have made an error of law in the manner in which it considered the applicant’s claims which would constitute the jurisdictional error of not giving consideration to an element of his claim.
  2. The evidence which the applicant puts forward about his concerns that he would be ostracised appears at [27] of his statement dated 9 December 2009 [CB 44]:

The reference to being cut to pieces is found at [43] [CB 47] of the same statement

“[43] My mother found out about my conversion to Christianity after my encounters with the Maoists. I would receive threatening telephone calls at home and they would tell my mother that they would cut me into pieces if I did not stop preaching Christianity. They told my mother to stop me from preaching Christianity. Members of the Communist Party in Nepal (Maoists) also came to my house and advised that they had a decree for my arrest. They told my mother that I was breaking the CPN’s laws and being unpatriotic due to my conversion to Christianity and preaching.”

But this appears not to involve ostracism rather a separate claim of fear of the Maoists. The Tribunal appears to have confused the two at [138] when it makes reference:

“As I put to the applicant, his extended family might not like his conversion but I do not accept that there is a real chance that they will chop him into little pieces as he claimed.”

On the other hand it may have been the applicant who confused the two claims because in a further statement sent to the Tribunal on 25 May 2010 he says at [42]:

“Whenever I talk about the word of God or Jesus Christ with my mother she either hangs up the telephone or threatens me if my uncle finds out about my conversion and proselytising they will cut me to pieces. If the rest of my family discovers that I have converted to Christianity I fear that the will seriously harm or kill me. I believe that my family will also inform the authorities about my conversion and proselytising when they find out and I will be arrested and detained as a result of practising my faith.”
  1. I have not been provided with the transcript of the hearing before the Tribunal and therefore am unable to say whether the Tribunal stopped the applicant from talking about ostracism (because of its understanding of the Guitta Levy decision) or whether the applicant simply did not expand. The Tribunal had before it the applicant’s statements annexed to his PVA, it had listened to the applicant’s evidence of the departmental interview and his evidence before the first Tribunal, it had before it his further statement after the first Tribunal hearing and it is fair to say that in none of those documents was the question of ostracism taken up in any detail. It is of course for the applicant to make out his own case; Minister for Immigration and Ethic Affairs v Guo & Anor (1997) 191 CLR 559 at 596 per Kirby J. I am not prepared to find without evidence that the Tribunal cut the applicant off in any discussion about ostracism, it seems more likely that when it was mentioned the Tribunal responded that the Guitta Levy case made such a claim difficult. The Tribunal reports that it explained to the applicant that:

It did not say that ostracism never amounted to persecution. That would have been cutting the applicant off. I have no reason to believe that the applicant could not have expanded upon his claim about ostracism had he wished to. The Tribunal deals separately with the claim of being “cut to pieces”. That is not ostracism, that is direct persecution, albeit by non state actors. The Tribunal comes to the conclusion that it cannot accept the applicant’s evidence upon this.

  1. Having considered the Tribunal decision so far as it refers to ostracism as a whole I am not satisfied that the Tribunal failed to consider an integer of the applicant’s claim.

The apprehended bias claim

  1. The second ground upon which the applicant seeks review is that:
  2. The applicant accepts that it would only be a very rare and extreme circumstance whereby bias on the part of the Tribunal could be established simply by reference to the reasons produced by the Tribunal; SZHDL v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2008] FCA 356, however he advances that claim in this case. The test for apprehended bias in the case of an administrative proceeding was articulated by Branson J in Ling v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2004] FCA 1069 echoing the decision of the High Court in Re Refugee Review Tribunal; Ex parte H [2001] HCA 28; [2001] 75 ALJR 982 at [28]. Her Honour said:

The High Court itself affirmed the test in Minister for Immigration & Anor v SZJSS [2010] HCA 48 at [42].

  1. In the instant case the applicant points to a number of matters found in the Tribunal’s decision. The first is found at [94 CB 202]. The Tribunal states:
  2. The applicant reminded the court that the applicant had provided a very detailed response to the Tribunal on 25 May 2010 [CB 121 – 143]. The respondent submits, and I accept, that the sentence indicating that the applicant had not submitted further evidence must be read in the context of the previous paragraph which related solely to the question of persons being arrested in Nepal for proselytising. It is clear that the Tribunal was aware of and considered the evidence submitted on 25 May when it discussed the possible persecution of proselytisers or converts at [103] and [104]. In the latter paragraph the Tribunal commenced:
  3. At [128] the Tribunal said:
  4. MMM v Minister for Immigration & Anor (1998) FCA 1664 was a decision of Madgwick J concerning an applicant who alleged that he would be persecuted because of the existence of a Bangladeshi law which would penalise certain homosexual acts. His Honour considered whether such a law could create circumstances in which a person prosecuted thereunder might claim to have been persecuted by reason of his membership of a particular social group and concluded his findings on that aspect of the matter by saying:
  5. I think that the Tribunal did not misunderstand the law when it made reference to MMM. When looked at as a whole it will be seen that the Tribunal’s decision insofar as it related to the alleged danger from proselytisation was one that came as a result of a thorough consideration of the evidence including independent country information and was available to it from that evidence. I do not accept that the Tribunal incorrectly assumed that the applicant had not provided further evidence. The Tribunal was entitled to take into account the proselytising activities of the Gyaneshwor Church to which the applicant had belonged and the lack of government interference therein. I am unable to see how it can be argued that the hypothetical fair minded lay person properly informed as to the nature of the proceedings might reasonably apprehend that the Tribunal might not bring an impartial mind to the resolution of the question to be decided on this basis.
  6. The second basis for the apprehended bias claim is some remarks made by the Tribunal about the applicant’s credibility. At [122] [CB 209] the Tribunal said:

And at [139] [CB 214] the Tribunal opined:

“As referred to in paragraphs 122 and 123 above, I consider that it is clear that the applicant has been prepared to lie and fabricate evidence if he believes that this will be to his advantage.”
  1. The applicant says that the Tribunal was only aware of the fact that the applicant did not attend the Nepalese Christian Church in Granville once a week because he had told it so in a statement made to the Tribunal on 25 May 2010 [CB 129]. In fact the situation is not quite as simple as that. The applicant had made the claims about attending the Nepalese Church in his original statement of 9 December 2009 [47] [CB 48]. He had an interview with the delegate but he did not resile from that statement at that time and he repeated it for the first Tribunal. The voluntary correction of the error came in very late in the day and while some may consider that perhaps the Tribunal expressed itself in strong language, the view it took of the applicant’s credibility was one that was available to it. The applicant says that there is a difference between lying and fabricating claims and that all he did was to make an error which he voluntarily corrected. The Tribunal clearly came to a different view. It saw that the applicant had made a claim which was untrue and which he had repeated until a late stage in the proceeding. This does not to my mind indicate the type of bias that would be found by the hypothetical lay observer.
  2. The next complaint by the applicant he says contributes to the apprehended bias finding is the Tribunal declining to accept that the law against proselytising would be enforced against the applicant. The applicant’s own submissions on 25 August 2010 [CB 171] refers to a fear of persecution from non state actors such as Maoists, Hindu extremists, the applicant’s family and caste and provides details of alleged incidents of persons being harmed because of proselytising activity, however, there were two incidents in 2004 and an incident in 2007 that was not specifically referable to proselytising. Other information cited by the Tribunal indicated that there was no evidence of recent persecution and as the applicant attempted to associate the alleged persecution with the Gyaneshwor Church and his work there the Tribunal was entitled to obtain independent country information about what was actually going on with that church. It did this and came to the conclusion that he did not suffer as a result of its proselytising activities. Again I am of the view that all the Tribunal had done in this case was to disagree with the applicant. That is not an indicia of apprehended bias.
  3. Finally, the applicant complains that the Tribunal’s reliance on the Guitta Levy and MMM cases, which he believes was incorrect, indicates a propensity to prejudgment. I have already discussed both of these cases. To my mind the Tribunal was entitled to take them into consideration. It is not prejudgment to listen to an applicant and conclude that his submissions fall within the purview of an existing case. It might be incorrect law but it is not apprehended bias.
  4. Even if one was to look at all the allegations cumulatively there is no justification for an allegation of apprehended bias.
  5. For the reasons expressed above I am unable to find that the Tribunal fell into jurisdictional error in the manner in which it reached its decision. The application is dismissed. The Applicant shall pay the First Respondent’s costs assessed in the sum of $5,850.00.

I certify that the preceding thirty-four (34) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment of Raphael FM


Associate:


Date: 21 February 2011


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