Date: 20180118
Docket: IMM-2453-17
Citation: 2018 FC 48
Ottawa, Ontario, January 18, 2018
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Phelan
BETWEEN:
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OKUBAGER KUSUMU DAMIR
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
This is an application to judicially review the decision of an immigration officer [Officer] in Cairo to deny the Applicant and his family a permanent residence visa on the grounds that he was inadmissible pursuant to s 34(1)(f) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA], by virtue of reasonable grounds to believe that he was a member of an organization engaged in the subversion by force of a government and terrorism.
[2]
The Applicant’s position is that the Officer failed to consider the “residual discretion”
to issue the visa despite an inadmissibility finding, and that the Officer made unreasonable findings regarding duress and country conditions.
II.
Background
A.
Legislation
[3]
The critical provisions are as follows:
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27
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Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227
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[Emphasis added by Court]
B.
Facts
[4]
The Applicant is an Eritrean citizen. His application for permanent residence referred to his involvement from 1977 to 1985 in the Eritrean Liberation Front [ELF] and the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front [EPLF] – two competing “freedom fighter”
groups. There was no suggestion in his initial documents that his involvement was coerced or that he was unable to leave either organization.
[5]
The Officer found that the Applicant’s basis for involvement in these organizations was best laid out in his initial narrative. The most relevant portion is as follows:
I was struggling for Eritrean independence since 1977 being a member of Eritrean liberation front {ELF}.formerly I was a store keeper of armaments and food supplies of the front in forto sawa and later I was changed to the biggest hospital of the front which is found in hawashait as a food supplier for sick people. There was an ideological and political differences between Eritrean liberation front {ELF} and Eritrea people liberation front {EPLF} which were struggling for Eritrean independence. Both fronts could not come to agree which resulted in bloody war was done between them in 1982.then the ELF came to its last point of its existence in the field of struggle for Eritrean independence. Then I joined the EPLF armed forces to continue the struggle for independence. However my trial of continuing the struggle being collapsed due to the EPLF administration section was kidnapping and killing former ELF members through clandestine ways. A few months later, I realized that the EPLF entity planned to root out the ELF members from the struggle for independence. Therefore I decided to flee away from the field to Sudan.
[6]
In a later interview the Applicant described being forcibly conscripted into the ELF at 16. The Officer’s notes following the interview contain the conclusion that while the Applicant was conscripted into the ELF, he voluntarily joined the EPLF.
[7]
In his subsequent response to a “procedural fairness letter”
, the Applicant claimed that his association with the ELF and the EPLF was not voluntary and that he had looked to escape the ELF but was unable to do so.
[8]
The Officer, in notes which predate the formal decision, made the following critical observations:
open source materials did not establish that the ELF engaged in forced recruitment or severe punishment for defection;
the Applicant’s original testimony was that he had left the ELF when it no longer existed to join the EPLF to continue the struggle for independence, so his association ended because of
“political changes”
, and he left the EPLF because of“EPLF’s view on ex-ELF members”
;the Applicant’s reason for joining the ELF and the EPLF was the struggle for Eritrean independence; and
the Applicant’s testimony indicated that he did not join the EPLF under duress as he stayed for three years before leaving.
[9]
The Officer concluded that both organizations were engaged in terrorism and subversion. Further, even if the Applicant’s recruitment into the ELF had not initially been voluntary, his continued involvement in the ELF and the EPLF was not under duress. Therefore, he was a member of organizations that engaged in s 34(1)(b) and (c) activities and inadmissible pursuant to s 34(1)(f) of the IRPA.
[10]
That basic conclusion was repeated in the decision letter of May 10, 2017.
[11]
At no time did the Applicant request that the Officer exercise a “residual discretion”
to issue a visa despite the finding of inadmissibility.
III.
Analysis
[12]
The Applicant has raised three legal issues more fully advanced in oral argument:
a) that as a matter of law, the Officer had a discretion to grant a visa even though the Applicant was inadmissible under s 34 of the IRPA;
b) that the Officer erred in treating the considerations of membership per se in an organization separately from the issue of whether that membership was created through duress; and
c) that the decision was made without regard to country conditions.
A.
Standard of Review
[13]
On the issue of whether inadmissibility precludes the issuance of a visa, or more specifically whether there is a residual discretion to issue a visa despite inadmissibility, the “home statute”
must be interpreted, including both the statute and its regulations.
[14]
Examining the standard of review in light of Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 SCR 190, I note that there is a privative clause, that visa officers exercise an element of expertise as per Alfaha Alharazim v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 1044, 378 FTR 45, and that the specific issue is not of central importance to the legal system.
[15]
As a consequence, I conclude that based on Supreme Court guidance, the standard of review is reasonableness. I add that even if the standard were correctness, the result would be the same.
[16]
For much the same reasons and because there is already a body of law on the standard of review for the remaining issues (Jalloh v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2012 FC 317, 2012 CarswellNat 1890 (WL Can) [Jalloh]; Arkeso v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 1138, 2016 CarswellNat 10630 (WL Can)), the standard of review is likewise reasonableness.
B.
Inadmissibility/Discretion
[17]
With respect, the Applicant does not have a factual foundation for this argument. There was nothing before the Officer which would suggest that this “discretion”
was in play and no submission by the Applicant that despite the finding of inadmissibility, the Officer should otherwise issue a visa.
[18]
The Applicant seeks to attack the decision not to exercise this residual discretion, but this decision was not in fact made. Without having some reasons which the Court can review, this issue is theoretical and academic, and on that ground alone ought to be dismissed.
[19]
However, in the event that I am in error on this first point, I have canvassed Mr. Matas’ heartfelt submissions.
[20]
The Applicant’s position is that a visa officer’s decision pursuant to s 139(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 [IRPR] that an applicant is inadmissible is not determinative of whether a visa can be issued. He places great reliance on the use of the word “may”
in ss 144 and 146(2) of the IRPR as granting a residual discretion for an officer to nevertheless issue a visa:
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[Emphasis added by the Court]
[21]
In my view, this position cannot be sustained. The scheme of the IRPA and the specific wording and legislative intent point away from such a conclusion.
[22]
The starting point is s 11(1) of the IRPA that a visa can only be issued if the foreign national is “not inadmissible”
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[23]
Section 34(1) of the IRPA sets out the grounds of inadmissibility. It is noteworthy that there is no substantial challenge to the inadmissibility finding, and inadmissibility is presumed for the purpose of analysis of this issue.
[24]
Relief from the consequences of inadmissibility is found in s 42.1(1) and (3) of the IRPA where the Minister has a discretion to grant such relief:
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No such application was made to the Minister in this case.
[25]
The Applicant’s position would allow further relief from an inadmissibility finding by virtue of an unstated discretion in the IRPR for a visa officer to grant a visa.
Respectfully, this position is inconsistent with a statutory scheme which provides the Minister with the power of relief. It would be redundant for the exemption power to be available at both the Ministerial level in the IRPA and at the visa officer level in the IRPR.
[26]
Section 139(1) of the IRPR must be read and applied in a manner consistent with the IRPA. In my view, once a finding of inadmissibility on the grounds in s 34(1) of the IRPA is made, a visa officer has no remaining authority to issue a visa.
[27]
Sections 144 and 146(2) of the IRPR are of no assistance to the Applicant. These provisions must be read in context with s 139 of the IRPR. A visa can only be issued if an applicant, being a member of the two classes mentioned, is “not inadmissible”
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[28]
Therefore, it is both reasonable and correct to conclude that a visa officer had no discretion to issue a visa once there was a finding of inadmissibility.
C.
Membership/Duress
[29]
The Applicant complains that the Officer did not take a holistic approach to the issue of membership. The objection stems from the Officer’s conclusion that even if the Applicant’s initial recruitment into the ELF was not voluntary, his continued membership was not under duress nor was his tenure and membership in the EPLF.
[30]
Both parties rely, as does the Court, on Justice O’Reilly’s conclusion at para 38 of Jalloh that evidence must be considered as a whole to determine whether membership was voluntary or coerced.
The Applicant argues that the Officer failed to consider membership contextually with duress, and instead improperly found that the Applicant was a member before considering whether membership was excused due to duress.
[31]
This would appear to be an argument that there is a fixed process to be followed, with one step rather than two steps. I cannot find any support for such an immutable process. The requirement is to consider the evidence of membership as a whole. How that analysis should occur will be driven by the facts of each case.
[32]
What is important here is that the Officer looked at all the evidence, and particularly considered the variances in the Applicant’s story between his initial claim, his interview, and his response statement. The Applicant’s initial position did not indicate any duress, but his story developed to include it. In fact, the emphasis on duress increased as time progressed.
[33]
The Officer sorted through the shifting perspectives being advanced and came to his conclusion. I can find no fault in the process or analysis, and I dismiss this issue. It was reasonable for the Officer to put greater emphasis on the Applicant’s early statement as to his reasons for joining and staying with the organizations than on his later versions of his story.
D.
Country Conditions
[34]
The Applicant complains that the Officer failed to find direct evidence that the ELF engaged in forced recruitment or severely punished defecting members. No similar statement was made in respect of the EPLF, and there was evidence that a person could not just walk away from the EPLF with impunity. The Applicant argues that since the s 34(1) finding was in respect of both the ELF and the EPLF, the failure to acknowledge this evidence was significant.
[35]
The Applicant’s position is linked to the membership/duress issue. However, the real issue here is the weight of the evidence, and not whether country condition evidence was ignored.
[36]
The Officer found that open source material did not lead to a conclusion that the ELF engaged in forced recruitment or severely punished defectors, which was what the Applicant later alleged.
[37]
The Officer noted particularly that the Applicant originally stated that he left the ELF and joined the EPLF “to continue the struggle”,
and then fled the EPLF because of the adverse treatment he received as a former ELF member. The Officer found that this was consistent with country condition evidence regarding defections from the ELF to the EPLF at this time, which contributed to the Officer’s conclusion that the Applicant’s continued involvement with the ELF and the EPLF was not under duress.
[38]
Although not argued orally by either party, I have concluded that the whole matter of membership/duress and the related country conditions was a matter of credibility. The Officer accepted the Applicant’s first statement of membership untainted by the suggestion of duress in the ELF as accurate, and treated the later developing thesis of duress with suspicion.
There was nothing unreasonable in the Officer’s approach. Evidence of forced recruitment and retention by the EPLF which post-dated the Applicant’s involvement is not directly relevant.
IV.
Conclusion
[39]
Therefore, this judicial review will be dismissed.
[40]
As to certification of a question, while a legal issue of interpretation was raised, at no time was there a request to the Visa Officer to exercise the so-called residual discretion which the Applicant says exists. There is not a proper factual foundation for the question to be certified and therefore it should not be.
JUDGMENT in IMM-2453-17
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that the application for judicial review is dismissed.
"Michael L. Phelan"
Judge
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET:
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IMM-2453-17
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STYLE OF CAUSE:
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OKUBAGER KUSUMU DAMIR v THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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PLACE OF HEARING:
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Winnipeg, Manitoba
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DATE OF HEARING:
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January 15, 2018
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS:
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PHELAN J.
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DATED:
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january 18, 2018
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APPEARANCES:
David Matas
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For The Applicant
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Brendan Friesen
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For The Respondent
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SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
David Matas
Barrister and Solicitor
Winnipeg, Manitoba
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For The Applicant
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Attorney General of Canada
Winnipeg, Manitoba
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For The Respondent
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