H487
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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> B -v- Refugee Appeals Tribunal & Ors [2012] IEHC 487 (26 June 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2012/H487.html Cite as: [2012] IEHC 487 |
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Judgment Title: B -v- Refugee Appeals Tribunal & Ors Neutral Citation: 2012 IEHC 487 High Court Record Number: 2009 788 JR Date of Delivery: 26/06/2012 Court: High Court Composition of Court: Judgment by: Clark J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation 2012 [IEHC] 487 THE HIGH COURT JUDICIAL REVIEW Record No. 2009 / 788 J.R. Between:/ C. B. (D.R. CONGO) APPLICANT -AND-
THE REFUGEE APPEALS TRIBUNAL AND THE MINISTER FOR JUSTICE, EQUALITY AND LAW REFORM RESPONDENTS JUDGMENT of Ms Justice M. Clark, delivered on the 26th day of June 2012 1. When she first applied for asylum in Ireland in 2003, the applicant did not disclose that she had applied for asylum in Belgium earlier that year and that she had spent time in Italy before going to Belgium from her native Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). This material non-disclosure was the primary reason why the Refugee Applications Commissioner and, in turn, the Refugee Appeals Tribunal (RAT) made negative credibility findings in relation to her narrative. She now seeks leave to apply for an order of certiorari quashing the RAT decision of dated 17th June 2009 on the basis that the Tribunal Member failed to apply a forward-looking assessment of risk and gave insufficient consideration to documentary evidence furnished. She also seeks declaratory and injunctive reliefs. The leave application was heard on 17th April 2012. Mr. Michael Lynn BL appeared for the applicant and Ms. Emily Farrell BL appeared for the respondents. The applicant requires a short extension of time which I am prepared to grant in light of the explanation given for the delay involved. Background to the negative credibility findings 3. The applicant expanded upon her account at her s. 11 interview and she again confirmed she had never claimed asylum before and had never been in the UK, France, Germany, Italy or Belgium. It was then put to her that the ORAC had information that she lived in Belgium and that she applied for asylum in Belgium on the 29th October 2002 having travelled there from Italy which she had entered on a visa. In Belgium she gave a very similar name spelled differently and said she was from the DRC but she gave a different year of birth. Pursuant to a “take back” request, Italy accepted responsibility for determining her asylum claim and on 2nd April 2003 she was directed to leave Belgium and apply for asylum in Italy but there is no record that she left Belgium or returned to Italy. When confronted with this information the applicant admitted that she had lived in Belgium from October 2002 to May 2003. She said she had transited through Italy and didn’t know how long she was there, maybe 2 ½ weeks. She said that she returned to the DRC in May 2003 but fled again in November 2003. When it was put to her that her claim that she had been arrested and raped in her village in March 2003 could not have happened as she had been in Belgium at the time she replied, “All those activities happened but they happened in 2002.” She clarified that she had been arrested and imprisoned in 2002 and not in 2003 as previously stated and that she left the DRC in October 2003. 4. The s. 13 report which issued in March 2005 rejected her credibility. A negative recommendation issued and she was confined to an appeal on the papers in accordance with s. 13(6) (d) of the Refugee Act 1996 which meant that no oral hearing would take place. The Appeal 6. In March 2009 the Tribunal wrote to the applicant’s solicitors seeking submissions on the alleged risk on the basis of the applicant’s sex simpliciter and asking them to pinpoint how the submitted COI reports support the assertion that the applicant faced persecution on the grounds of political opinion and on account of her gender or indeed any other grounds. No submissions were made in response to the Tribunal’s request. The Decision under Challenge
The Applicant’s Submissions 10. The applicant also contends that the Tribunal Member failed to have sufficient regard to the documentation submitted on her behalf and in particular, gave insufficient weight to a UNHCR tracing document and to three documents submitted from medical personnel. The Respondents’ Submissions 12. The respondents highlight numerous discrepancies in the documents submitted casting doubt as to their authenticity and they further contend that none of the documents answer any of the questions surrounding the applicant’s credibility. The psychiatric report which is the only medical document of any real relevance does not go any distance towards explaining the untruths told to the ORAC. The medical reports had no corroborative potential. The applicant’s depressive illness does not explain her inability to give a coherent and truthful account of her past. As this was an applicant entirely lacking in any credibility there was no point in going on to consider a forward looking test. The narrative of activism, detention, rape, beatings and escape were found to be fanciful. Analysis 14. The Tribunal Member expressly referred to many of these documents including her daughter’s birth cert, her father’s death cert, her own baptismal cert, her certificate of lost national ID, the letter from the organisation in her village and the Fr Bujuriri letter, and the tracing email from UNCHR. The Court has no difficulty with the finding that the statements were self-serving and incapable of verification. Even on a quick glance, there are difficulties with the content of the documents: the village organisation which could not be found among the various NGOs operating in the area and which was described as one which did not hold public meetings and had just one officeholder now used headed paper. Several of the documents inexplicably emanate from Kinshasa, some 1000 miles from South Kivu. Further, the UNHCR tracing email of August 2004 refers to the applicant’s children being with Fr Bujiriri’s older brother in Bukavu while the undated handwritten letter from Fr Bujiriri says that the children are with his sister in Ibanda. The Tribunal decision indicates that the documents were considered and little weight attributed to them. The internal contradictions and inconsistencies in the various versions of the applicant’s claim confirm the reasonableness of that assessment. 15. Similarly no flaw is identified in the Tribunal’s assessment of the medical reports which were written by a clinical psychologist and a consultant psychiatrist. The documents put forward a diagnosis of PTSD, depression of significant severity and psychological trauma partly attributable to her separation from her family and friends in the DRC. A later report from 2007 furnishes a history obtained from the applicant which includes involvement with a militant organisation as a secretary, which does not accord with the details of her claim. While it would have been preferable for the Tribunal Member to refer to the medical documents giving reasons for the rejection of their evidential value, as they neither add nor subtract from her narrative and may in fact contradict the accounts which she gave to the asylum authorities, the Court is not prepared to consider that this omission constitutes a substantial ground in this case. Forward looking test
18. It must be borne in mind that in making an asylum claim there is a basic onus of establishing the fundamental elements of a claim which rests with the applicant even if the examination of the claim is strongly investigative in character on the part of the asylum authority and is to be carried out in cooperation with the applicant. Furthermore, one of the crucial elements in the definition of "refugee" as stated in s. 2 of the Act of 1996 based upon Article 1A of the Geneva Convention, is that the asylum seeker "is outside the country of his or her nationality" owing to a well founded fear of persecution for one of the Convention reasons. The assessment of the fear claimed thus involves identifying a country of origin. Accordingly, if the finding on credibility goes so far as to reject a claim that the asylum seeker has a particular nationality or ethnicity or that he or she comes from a particular region or place in which the source of the claimed persecution is said to exist, there may be no obligation upon the decision-maker to engage in "reasonable speculation" as to the risk of repatriation in the case. On the other hand, if the decision-maker concludes that the asylum seeker is opportunistically seeking to place himself in the context of verifiable events in a particular place but decides that while such events did occur, the asylum seeker was not involved in them, the risk of future persecution may still require to be examined if there are elements (the language spoken or obvious familiarity with the locality for example,) which establish a connection with that place. Thus, opportunistic lying about participation in events involving previous persecution will not necessarily foreclose or obviate the need to consider the risk of future persecution provided there are some elements which furnish a basis for making that assessment.” 18. Further it is at least arguable on the basis of the COI before the Tribunal Member that in the case of eastern DRC, gender is a relevant contributory reason for the rape and sexual violence suffered and that female victims of sexual violence suffer doubly as they are rejected by their husbands, family and community if it is known that they have been raped. As a very large amount of COI was furnished to the Tribunal to support the claim that violence in the DRC has a differential impact on women, the Court is prepared to grant leave to argue that the assessment of this part of the applicant’s claim was conducted in error as the Tribunal Member failed to investigate or assess the possible risk to the applicant as a member of a particular social group. Instead she dismissed this aspect of her claim as a “bare assertion”. Decision
b. Given that her gender and nationality were not specifically rejected, the Tribunal Member erred in law in failing to carry out any forward-looking assessment of the risk faced by the applicant on return to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, including whether she was at risk as a woman. |