H71
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> A. W. v The Office of the Refugee Applications Commissioner & Ors [2013] IEHC 71 (19 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2013/H71.html Cite as: [2013] IEHC 71 |
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Judgment Title: A. W. v The Office of the Refugee Applications Commissioner & Ors Neutral Citation: [2013] IEHC 71 High Court Record Number: 2012 310 JR Date of Delivery: 19/02/2013 Court: High Court Composition of Court: Judgment by: Mac Eochaidh J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation [2013] IEHC 71 THE HIGH COURT JUDICIAL REVIEW [2012 No. 310 J.R.] BETWEEN A. W. APPLICANT AND
THE OFFICE OF THE REFUGEE APPLICATIONS COMMISSIONER, THE MINISTER FOR JUSTICE AND EQUALITY, IRELAND AND THE ATTORNEY GENERAL RESPONDENTS JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Colm Mac Eochaidh delivered on the 19th day of February 2013 1. This is an application for leave to seek judicial review where the central complaint advanced is that s. 13 of the Refugee Act 1996 (as amended) will unlawfully deprive the applicant of an oral hearing when he appeals to the Refugee Appeals Tribunal. 2. The applicant, a married man with children, is a national of Pakistan who claims persecution at the hands of the Taliban. He arrived in Ireland on 30th December 2009 and almost immediately claimed asylum. He was interviewed by the Office of the Refugee Applications Commissioner. It became apparent that the applicant possessed a visa for the United Kingdom. When a transfer order was made requiring him to pursue his asylum application in the United Kingdom, this was challenged unsuccessfully in the High Court. Thereafter, the applicant evaded transfer to the UK. On the expiry of the time limits to affect that transfer, the applicant again sought asylum in Ireland. 3. The essential elements of the applicant’s persecution/serious harm claim relate to an attempt by the Taliban to extract money from him accompanied by threats to his life if he did not comply. 4. Negative credibility findings were made against the applicant at first instance. 5. The Office of the Refugee Applications Commissioner (“ORAC”) noted that the applicant did not leave Pakistan until six to eight weeks after the Taliban came to his house and threatened him. The evidence had been that the Taliban gave him a few days to organise money. The Office of the Refugee Applications Commissioner decided that “it is not credible that he would remain living in his home safely with his family for a further six to eight weeks if his life had been threatened by the Taliban. Therefore, this assertion that that the Taliban were threatening to kill him is not considered credible”. 6. It was noted that the applicant’s passport indicated that he left Pakistan on 4th November 2008, remained in the UK for four months, and arrived back in Pakistan on 22nd April. His daughter was born in January 2009 and the applicant claimed that he was present at her birth. The ORAC concluded as follows:
10. Another aspect of the credibility findings in this case by ORAC relate to discrepancies between his first and his second s. 11 interview. The reason there were two interviews is because he re-entered the asylum system following the unsuccessful Dublin II transfer attempt. In his second interview he said that the Taliban wanted the applicant to join them and that he had no wish so to do. The applicant did not mention the extortion of money during this second interview. In the questionnaire of 11th January 2010, the applicant did not mention being asked to join the Taliban but did mention the extortion effort. 11. Apart from the credibility findings which are made against the applicant, ORAC decided that even if the core of the applicant’s case or account was correct, he had not established a Convention reason for the harm he suffered or for the harm he feared should he return to Pakistan, and therefore he was not a refugee. The matter is expressed thus by the ORAC:
According to the applicant’s statements, the alleged threatened actions by the Taliban were motivated by financial gain and were criminal in nature as opposed to persecutory. The applicant was not allegedly targeted because of his race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion. Therefore, there is no nexus to section 2 grounds in this case.”
Having regard to all of the above, section 13(6)(a) of the Refugee Act 1996 (as amended) applies to this application; ‘that the application showed either no basis or a minimal basis for the contention that the application is a refugee’.” 14. Before analysing the complaint made, I should remark on the ORAC findings. Significant credibility issues are identified. These credibility failings are not based upon the demeanour of the applicant. They are based on inconsistency (the difference between the 2010 and 2012 interview; claiming fear of persecution but evading transfer to the UK where he has family) and/or implausibility (staying in the family home notwithstanding extortion and death threats; not knowing what countries he traversed) and/or impossibility (being at his daughter’s birth in Pakistan when his passport indicated his presence in the UK). 15. In addition to the credibility findings, ORAC’s decision must be interpreted as saying that even if the applicant’s story is true and that the Taliban extorted money from him and threatened to kill him, that alone does not establish a basis under s. 2 of the Refugee Act 1996 for him to be declared a refugee. This finding is separate from the credibility findings and is not dependent on them. On this analysis, even if every element of the applicant’s story was believed, the applicant cannot, according to ORAC, be declared a refugee as he has not described a well founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion and has not established that he cannot avail of protection in Pakistan. 16. In support of the contention that there is an entitlement to an oral hearing at an appeal, the applicant refers to the decision of Cooke J. in Nkosi v. the Refugee Applications Commissioner (Unreported, High Court, 30th March 2012). The decision in Nkosi addressed the absence of an oral hearing upon an appeal to the Refugee Appeals Tribunal following a s. 13 report and recommendation of ORAC based upon s. 13(6)(e) of the 1996 Act. (A finding under s. 13(6)(e) is a so-called ‘safe country’ finding and deals with an ORAC decision that “the applicant is a national of or has a right of residence in a safe country of origin …….. Such a finding will deprive its addressee of an oral hearing on appeal.) 17. Cooke J. referred to the decision of the Supreme Court in V.Z. v. Minister for Justice [2002] 2 IR 135, where McGuinness J. said:
19. Cooke observed:
22. However, this decision does not aid the applicant. The applicant was disbelieved not because of prevarication, evasiveness, nervousness, shiftiness or any other aspect of demeanour or what Cooke J. refers to as “personal credibility”. 23. I enquired of counsel what advantage the applicant sought to gain by presenting the evidence orally, given that the credibility findings were based on analysis of the tale as recounted rather than demeanour-type observations of the manner in which the evidence was presented. Counsel could not identify any particular advantage in presenting the evidence orally. 24. It seems to me to be of particular importance that Cooke J. in Nkosi found illegality where a s. 13(6) finding was based on personal credibility. The learned judge referred to events and facts being rejected “purely because the applicant is disbelieved when recounting them” (see para. 40 of the judgment). 25. Reliance was also placed by the applicant on the decision of Hogan J. in Sen He v. The Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform (7th October 2011). In that case, a finding was made pursuant to s. 13(6)(c) that an applicant for asylum failed to make an application as soon as reasonably possible after arrival in the State. The applicant in that case had waited three and a half years. Examining the question of whether there was an entitlement to an oral hearing on an appeal, Hogan J. poses the question as to whether an appellant to the RAT would be unduly hindered on an appeal without an oral hearing. Hogan J. went on to say, “the key point is that the applicant must be given a fair opportunity to make his case on appeal.” The question posed by Hogan J. is most useful and fully reflects the decision of the Supreme Court in V.Z. v. Minister for Justice [2002] 2 IR 135, 26. The principle I discern from the authorities cited is that there is no right to an oral hearing at the RAT but where demeanour-type or personal credibility findings underpin the first instance decision, then the applicant may require the opportunity to give oral evidence again on appeal. For example, if ORAC refused protection because it disbelieved an applicant and did so exclusively on grounds of evasiveness, or memory failure or the manner in which evidence was uttered, then fairness would seem to require that such applicant be permitted to speak again. I have not been able to discern what possible advantage would accrue to the applicant by an oral hearing, assuming that he recounts the same evidence which was given to ORAC. I have read the judgment of Birmingham J. in S. v. RAC [2008] IEHC 399 where complaint was made about the absence of an oral appeal where credibility findings had been made. The learned trial judge examined each such finding and concluded that written submissions would suffice to express complaint about such findings. I have conducted a similar exercise in this case and reach the same conclusion. 27. An affidavit was sworn by Ms. Magellan Donoghue in July 2012 on behalf of the Office of the Refugee Applications Commissioner, and at para. 9, she says:
29. The written submissions are also silent on the point. The matter is addressed as follows in the written submissions:
33. The Applicant accepts at all times that an appeal, specifically an oral appeal, is the correct manner of addressing his concerns in relation to the substantive aspects of his claim. As can be seen from his recent affidavit, the Applicant has a considerable claim in respect of what happened to him in Pakistan and the manner in which it was brought out and assessed by the First Named Respondent does not do it justice. He does not seek that this Honourable Court adjudicate on the merits of such an appeal, but for the purposes of completeness it is proposed to go through a number of issues which he raises in respect of the First Named Respondent’s decision. 34. The First Named Respondent held that “the applicant has not supplied this office with any evidence that he had problems with the Taliban in Pakistan” and that he did not submit “any evidence to show that his father was kidnapped such as a police report or a newspaper article”. It is respectfully submitted that the First Named Respondent thus treated the concept of evidence as meaning supporting documents to the exclusion of the Applicant’s oral evidence in the interview and, in effect, disregarded the evidential value of the Applicant’s oral evidence in its entirety. It appears that the credibility issues were also decided on the basis of a lack of supporting documentation.”
31. The next passage from the written submissions says:
32. At paragraph 37, the submissions say:
33. The final passage advanced by the applicant in written submissions in support of an oral hearing is as follows:
34. It appears to me that the applicant’s insistence on an oral hearing in this case is misconceived. In an appropriate case an applicant might persuade the High Court that an oral hearing is necessary so that the Refugee Appeals Tribunal could be persuaded that a person is a refugee. This is not such a case. Substantial grounds not having been made out in favour of the complaint advanced and I refuse leave to seek judicial review.
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