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SZOFC v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCA 1269 (19 November 2010)
Last Updated: 19 November 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
SZOFC v Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship [2010] FCA 1269
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Citation:
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Appeal from:
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Parties:
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SZOFC v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP and REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL
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File number:
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NSD 778 of 2010
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Judge:
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COWDROY J
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Date of judgment:
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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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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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Ms E. Warner Knight of Australian Government Solicitor
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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 778 of 2010
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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BETWEEN:
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SZOFC 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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COWDROY J
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DATE:
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19 NOVEMBER 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 Driver delivered on
8 June 2010. Such decision dismissed an application
for judicial review of
a decision of the Refugee Review Tribunal (‘the Tribunal’) made on 9
February 2010. 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 (‘the protection visa’)
to the appellant.
BACKGROUND
- The
appellant is a citizen of the People’s Republic of China who arrived in
Australia on 16 March 2009. On 30 April 2009 the
appellant lodged an application
for the protection visa with the Department of Immigration and Citizenship
(‘the Department’).
A delegate of the Minister refused such
application on 15 July 2009. On 12 August 2009 the appellant filed an
Application for Review
with the Tribunal. The Tribunal conducted the
appellant’s hearing on 15 October 2009, 13 November 2009 and 17 December
2009.
On each occasion the appellant was assisted by a registered migration
agent and an interpreter.
- In
her visa application, the appellant claimed to fear persecution in China for
reason of her political opinion. She claimed to have
been involved in organising
a protest in October 2007 against the building of a chemical plant in Nanxiao
Village, Jiangjing Town,
Fuqing City, Fujian Province, China (‘the
appellant’s village’). She claimed the local residents strongly
objected
to the building of the factory because it would occupy a large portion
of farmland and would cause serious pollution in the locality.
The appellant
claimed that in helping to organise the protest, she was the assistant to three
organisers (‘the protest organisers’),
who included her mother and
two other persons. The appellant stated that from August to October 2007, she
and the protest organisers
approached local government officials at least 10
times asking that the plans to establish the factory be abandoned. However, such
requests were rejected and the appellant and the protest organisers were
threatened with punishment if they continued with their
activities. Despite
these threats from the government, the appellant claimed that the protest
organisers decided to organise an open
protest to be held on 16 October 2007.
- The
appellant claimed that approximately 500 people attended the protest in
Jiangjing Town. The appellant claimed that the protesters
were stopped outside
the police station in Jiangjing Town by the local police. The appellant claimed
that after the protesters were
beaten with sticks, more than 20 of the
protesters including the appellant and the protest organisers were arrested.
After a period
of detention and questioning, the appellant claimed that on 12
December 2007 she and the protest organisers were formally arrested
and subject
to persecution and torture. The appellant claimed that following such treatment,
the police coerced confessions from
those arrested.
- The
appellant claimed that on 21 January 2008, her mother was sentenced to three
years’ imprisonment, the other two protest
organisers were sentenced to
two years’ imprisonment, and that she was sentenced to one year’s
imprisonment. The appellant
claimed she was mistreated during her incarceration
at the Fujian Female Prison, and that the police continued to harass her when
she was released in October 2008.
- The
appellant also claimed that she was unable to obtain a passport in her own name,
but with the support of other villagers had
obtained both the funding to leave
China and a passport in another person’s name containing an Australian
visa. She claimed
the police would continue to harass her if she returned to
China, and that since her arrival in Australia the police had called on
her
family and her husband in China to ask where she was. She claimed she would be
arrested if she returned because the authorities
believed she was a threat to
national security.
THE TRIBUNAL’S DECISION
- The
Tribunal found that the appellant was not a witness of truth and had fabricated
her claims in respect of her role in any protest
in October 2007. On the basis
of independent country information the Tribunal accepted that there had been a
protest against the
confiscation of land for the construction of a chemical
factory in August 2007 in the appellant’s village (‘the August
2007
protest’), and found that a DVD submitted by the appellant related to this
protest. The Tribunal found that the appellant
did not appear in the DVD because
she had not been present at the August 2007 protest. The Tribunal did not accept
that the appellant
had helped to organise, or had participated in, any protest
in October 2007. The Tribunal noted that it was apparent that events
in her
village had been monitored and reported on since the August 2007 protest, and as
such, the Tribunal considered that it was
implausible that the alleged protest
in October 2007 would have occurred and been unreported. The Tribunal noted that
the appellant
made no mention of the August 2007 protest until it was raised
with her by the Tribunal. In this regard, the Tribunal made the following
comments at paragraph [110] of its Findings and Reasons:
The Tribunal is of the view that the appellant had deliberately failed to
mention that there had been a protest in August 2007 as
this would have cast
doubt on her claims that there had been a separate incident also because of land
confiscation for the construction
of a factory, within 2 months.
- The
Tribunal concluded that the appellant had fabricated her claims using the August
2007 protest as the basis for an alleged October
2007 protest which did not
occur. When confronted with such information the appellant claimed that there
were two sub-villages of
the same name and that the protest of August 2007
involved a different sub-village.
- The
Tribunal also found that the supporting documents put forward by the appellant
did not contain truthful information, noting independent
information which
indicated that many official documents purporting to be from China are forged.
In this regard, the Tribunal commented
that the fact that the appellant was able
to obtain a false passport exemplified her experience in obtaining false or
fraudulent
documents.
- The
Tribunal rejected all of the appellant’s claims of past protest activity
and associated harm. While accepting that the
appellant had used another
person’s passport to come to Australia, the Tribunal found that the
appellant had done so because
such passport contained an Australian visa and not
because she was on a blacklist as she claimed.
- Given
the above findings, the Tribunal was not satisfied there was a real chance that
the appellant would be harmed for reasons of
her political opinion, or for any
other reason under 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’) if
she
were to return to China. The Tribunal concluded that she was not a person to
whom Australia owed protection obligations under
the Refugees Convention.
APPLICATION TO FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT
- By
Application dated 9 March 2010 the appellant applied for judicial review of the
Tribunal’s decision. In such application
the appellant complained that the
decision of the Tribunal included a reasonable apprehension of bias. Driver FM
held that there
was nothing in the Tribunal decision or in the evidence before
the Court which supported an allegation of bias. Rather, Driver FM
held that the
Tribunal’s decision demonstrated that it had gone to considerable lengths
to thoroughly investigate the claims
made by the appellant and had made a
reasoned decision.
APPEAL TO THIS COURT
- On
29 June 2010 a Notice of Appeal from the decision of Driver FM was filed in this
Court. The appellant’s grounds of appeal
are set out verbatim:
- His
Honour at the Federal Magistrates Court erred in law in his finding (at [10] of
his Honour’s reasons for judgement). The
Refugee Review Tribunal
(“the Tribunal”) might have established that my claims concerning a
protest in October 2007 was
a fabrication but such a Tribunal’s
finding was established on her incorrect and unwarranted assumption – the
Tribunal thought only
one piece of the land in my home village had been
confiscated by the government and that there was only one protest.
However, Mr He’s evidence and the documents that he had brought to me from
China have significantly evidenced that
the Tribunal’s finding is
completely incorrect and that my evidence is definitely true and genuine,
because there are two piece of land in my home village had been
confiscated; and there were two protests. Therefore, there was definitely
a reason that the Tribunal must take a genuine attempt with independent mind to
consider
Mr He’s evidence and the document brought by him to me. As a
matter of fact, I have never attempted to place myself in a protect
which
actually occurred in August 2007; and that details in my claims concerning the
protest were absolutely accurate.
- His
Honour erred in law (at [11] of his Honour’s reasons for judgment),
because the Tribunal’s decision has included a
reasonable apprehension of
bias.
- His
Honour erred in law (at [12] of his Honour’s reasons for judgement),
because the Tribunal’s decision has included
jurisdictional error.
SUBMISSIONS
- The
appellant provided written submissions and made oral submissions at the hearing
with the assistance of an interpreter. The written
submissions of the appellant
raise one further ground of appeal in addition to those contained in the Notice
of Appeal and are largely
not directed to the content of the Notice of Appeal.
For the purposes of this judgment, the Court will deal with each of the grounds
raised in the Notice of Appeal, before addressing the contents of the
appellant’s submissions.
Ground 1 of Notice of Appeal
- As
stated above, the first ground of appeal in the Notice of Appeal seeks to
question the Tribunal’s factual findings that
while a protest had occurred
in August 2007, no protest occurred in October 2007 and that the documentation
provided by a Mr He should
be rejected as untruthful.
Finding
- The
above ground seeks to dispute the factual findings of the Tribunal. The decision
to reject both the evidence of Mr He and the
claims of the appellant was made in
consequence of the Tribunal’s finding that the appellant was not a witness
of truth. The
Tribunal further found that the documents provided by Mr He did
not contain truthful information.
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A finding on credibility is a finding of fact and a function of the primary
decision-maker ‘par excellence’: see Re Minister for
Immigration and Multicultural Affairs and Others; Ex parte Durairajasingham
[2000] HCA 1; (2000) 58 ALD 609 at [67]. Such finding was a proper exercise of the
Tribunal’s function and the Tribunal provided extensive reasons for the
making of
its factual findings. The Tribunal’s finding on the veracity of
the documents supplied by Mr He is likewise a finding of fact.
The Federal
Magistrate was correct in holding that such findings were open to the Tribunal
and no error of law is disclosed by such
ground.
Ground 2 of the Notice of Appeal
- The
second ground of the Notice of Appeal alleges that his Honour erred in law
because ‘the Tribunal’s decision has included a reasonable
apprehension of bias’.
- Driver
FM had concluded in his decision there was no substance whatsoever to an
allegation of bias. No written submissions or particulars
were made in support
of such allegation.
Finding
- Having
considered the decision of the Tribunal, this Court can find no possible basis
for the allegation of bias. The mere fact that
the Tribunal found adversely to
the appellant does not lead to any inference that bias or an apprehension of
bias existed. The Court
can discern no error by the Federal Magistrate in
rejecting this ground and accordingly rejects Ground 2 of the Notice of
Appeal.
Ground 3 of the Notice of Appeal
- The
third ground of the Notice of Appeal alleges that ‘the Tribunal’s
decision has included jurisdictional error’.
- Such
ground is inadequately particularised in the Notice of Appeal however the
written submissions provided by the appellant relevantly
contain the
following:
On one hand, “...the Tribunal accepts that many protests I China are
not reported...” but, on the other hand, the Tribunal thought that my
protest must be reported. The Tribunal’s finding was significantly
relied
on that “one protest against the land confiscation in Hua Tang Village
held in August 2007 was report...”, then the protest in which I had
been involved must also be reported.
If it were the case, then all protests in China would be reported while one or
some of protests had been reported. Obviously, it
is the case in China. In other
words, it is definitely possible that many protests in China are not reported
even if one or some
of protests has been reported.
Therefore, the Tribunal’s decision is completely
incorrect.
- The
Tribunal accepted that many protests in China were not reported. At [106] of its
decision it held:
The Tribunal accepts that many protests in China are not reported. However, in
this instance, a protest against land confiscation
in Hua Tang village held in
August 2007 was reported, as was the arrest and sentencing of the 3
organisers.
- The
appellant submits that it was possible, based upon the Tribunal’s
findings, that the protest in which she was involved
was not
reported.
Finding
- Such
ground is again merely a challenge to the factual findings of the Tribunal. The
Tribunal found on the basis of independent evidence
in the form of media reports
that a protest had occurred in the appellant’s village in August 2007
which had lead to the arrest
of three protesters. Such protesters were sentenced
in January 2008, an event which was also reported. Although the Tribunal
acknowledged
that many protests in China are not reported, it concluded that
given the reporting of the August 2007 protests in the appellant’s
village, any protest in the same village in October 2007 would have also been
reported. As the Tribunal was satisfied that such protest
was not reported and
following the Tribunal’s adverse finding on the appellant’s credit,
the Tribunal found that no protest
had occurred in the appellant’s village
in October 2007.
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The interpretation and weight to be provided to independent country information
is a matter entirely for the Tribunal: see NAHI v Minister for Immigration
and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCAFC 10 at [11]- [13];
Applicant NABD of 2002 v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and
Indigenous Affairs and Another (2005) 84 ALD 545 at [8]; NBKT v Minister
for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs and Another [2006] FCAFC 195; (2006) 156 FCR 419 at
[81], [84].
- The
Tribunal’s finding was a finding of fact, open to the Tribunal on the
evidence before it. There is no inconsistency in
the Tribunal’s findings
and accordingly no error in the Federal Magistrate’s decision to reject
such ground.
Ground raised by the Submissions
- The
appellant’s written submissions provide one further ground of appeal. The
respondent submits that leave is required before
reliance can be placed on such
ground.
- Under
such ground the appellant submits that Driver FM erred because his Honour failed
to find that the Tribunal did not consider
the appellant’s evidence
fairly, logically, reasonably and properly. The appellant alleges that the
Tribunal refused to consider
documentary evidence provided to it because of the
Tribunal’s finding that fraudulent documents were readily available from
China.
- The
appellant’s submissions provide a list of the documentary evidence that
she alleges the Tribunal failed to consider including
a ‘Letter of
Petition’; a ‘Notification to the Family/Relative Work Place of the
Arrested’; a ‘Notification
on Permission to Appointing
Defender’; a ‘Certificate of Release’; a letter sent by the
appellant’s husband
to her, and an official letter from Fuqing
Municipality Jiangjing Town People’s Government. The appellant claims that
the Tribunal
failed to make any genuine attempts to consider her documentary
evidence and failed to provide such evidence to the Department’s
Document
Examination Unit. The appellant noted in her submissions that the Tribunal had
accepted that the appellant was able to provide
detailed information concerning
her imprisonment despite rejecting her claim that she had been imprisoned
following a protest in
October 2007.
Finding
- As
stated above, the Tribunal’s findings in relation to the appellant’s
credibility and to the veracity of the supporting
documents provided to it are
findings of fact: see NAHI at [10].
- The
Court is satisfied that the Tribunal had regard to the above documents but
rejected them on the basis that the information they
contained was not true. As
stated above, the Tribunal noted that independent country information indicated
that many official documents
emanating from China were forgeries. Furthermore
the Tribunal was satisfied that no protest had been staged in the
appellant’s
home village in October 2007 and did not accept the
appellant’s claims in relation to such protest. Accordingly the Tribunal
rejected supporting documentation which attested to the truth of such claims.
Further, the Tribunal had no duty to make further inquiries
in respect of such
documentation: see generally Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZIAI
and Another [2009] HCA 39; (2009) 111 ALD 15; SZNBX and Another v Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship and Another [2009] FCA 1403; (2009) 112 ALD 475.
- The
Tribunal acknowledged that the appellant was able to provide detailed
information concerning a detention centre and of an inmate’s
day. However,
the Tribunal concluded that the ability to describe such a place and an
inmate’s experiences did not satisfy
it that the appellant herself had
been placed in detention for the reasons she claimed.
- The
Tribunal provided extensive reasons for the making of its factual findings.
There is no basis upon which it could be said that
Driver FM erred in failing to
find that the Tribunal considered the appellant’s evidence unfairly,
illogically, unreasonably
or not properly. This ground of appeal is solely a
challenge to the fact-finding made by the Tribunal. No error of law is disclosed
by such ground.
Conclusion
- The
Court is unable to find any jurisdictional error on the part of Driver FM as
claimed in the Notice of Appeal or the submissions.
- It
follows that the appeal is
dismissed.
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I certify that the preceding thirty-six (36) numbered paragraphs are a true
copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable
Justice Cowdroy.
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Associate:
Dated: 19 November 2010
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