IMM-3326-98
Rohini Ranganathan (Applicant)
v.
The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration
(Respondent)
Indexed as: Ranganathanv.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
(T.D.)
Trial Division, Evans J."Toronto, April 29; Ottawa, May
21, 1999.
Citizenship and Immigration
"
Status in Canada
"
Convention refugees
" Application for judicial review of CRDD
decision applicant not Convention refugee "
Applicant, Tamil woman of Sri Lanka, seeking refugee
status on ground of well-founded fear of persecution by
reason of membership of particular social group "
Whether fact having relatives in Canada, none in safe
place relevant in determining whether unreasonable to expect
applicant to live in Colombo " Case law on
unreasonableness issue reviewed " Correctness
appropriate standard of review of determination by CRDD of
whether claimant has IFA " As CRDD erred in
failing to take into account applicant has family in Canada,
no relatives in Colombo but not in finding applicant having
no grounds to fear persecution in Colombo, case remitted to
different panel to decide whether, for second limb of
Rasaratnam test, unduly harsh to expect applicant live in
Colombo.
This was an application for judicial review of a decision
by the Convention Refugee Determination Division (CRDD)
dismissing the applicant's claim for refugee status. The
applicant is a Tamil woman from Sri Lanka who left the north
of the country, moved to Colombo where she spent some time
with her mother, and lived there for a total of four years.
After being involved in an incident in Colombo, she left for
Canada where she applied for refugee status on the ground
that she had a well-founded fear of persecution by reason of
her membership of a particular social group, Tamil women in
Sri Lanka. Her closest relatives now live in Canada. The sole
issue before the CRDD was whether there was an internal
flight alternative in Colombo that was reasonably available
to her. On the basis of the facts, which occurred at a police
station where the applicant was arrested and warned by the
police to leave Colombo immediately, the CRDD held that her
arrest and mistreatment at the police station did not support
a well-founded fear of future persecution in Colombo. The
Refugee Division also concluded that it would not be
unreasonable for the claimant to return to live in Colombo,
and that she was not a refugee since she had an internal
flight alternative there. Finally, the CRDD stated that it
was not legally empowered to consider humanitarian and
compassionate grounds for permitting the applicant to remain
in Canada. The issue herein was whether the CRDD erred in
failing to take into account the fact that a refugee claimant
has relatives in Canada but none in the safe area of the
country of nationality.
Held, the application should be allowed.
Applying the test established by the Federal Court of
Appeal in Rasaratnam v. Canada (Minister of Employment and
Immigration), the CRDD considered, first, whether the
applicant had good reason to fear persecution in Colombo and,
second, if she did not, whether it was nonetheless
unreasonable to require her to return to live there. It did
not commit an error of law in deciding that the applicant had
not established that she had good reason to fear persecution
in Colombo. According to the evidence before the CRDD, it has
been police practice since November 1996 not to permit Tamils
from the North to remain in Colombo for more than three days.
It was not clear from that evidence whether such prohibition
would apply to the applicant who had left the North in 1993
and had lived in Colombo for four years. If the CRDD had been
satisfied that the applicant would not be permitted to remain
in Colombo for more than three days, it would surely have
found that Colombo was not a reasonably available safe place
for her. The evidence was thus relevant to a material issue.
The documentary evidence of police practice, and of the
warning given by the police officers that the applicant must
leave, was sufficiently cogent to require the CRDD to have
considered it in its reasons. Its failure even to mention
this issue in its reasons rendered its dismissal of the
applicant's claim erroneous in law.
Despite its sympathy for the applicant, a person with a
physical disability, the CRDD said it did not have
jurisdiction to determine its claim based on humanitarian and
compassionate grounds. Moreover, it did not mention the fact
that the applicant has no relatives in Colombo when deciding
that it was not unreasonable to expect her to return to live
there. "Unreasonableness" is a flexible standard, and
includes not only the general conditions in the region or
city in question, but also the circumstances particular to
the claimant which might make it unreasonable to require that
person to live in that place. Whether the absence of
relatives in the place of refuge is a relevant consideration
in determining if a person is a refugee must be decided on a
standard of correctness. On the other hand, the CRDD's
determination of whether the relevant facts satisfy the
Rasaratnam test is a question of mixed fact and law,
and is reviewable only for unreasonableness. In determining
undue hardship or unreasonableness for the purpose of the
availability of an internal flight alternative, the CRDD must
take into account the fact that the claimant has no relatives
in Colombo when there are family members in Canada. The
absence of family members available to provide emotional and
material support might consign a claimant to a quality of
life that falls well below that standard of decency that is
widely recognized as a human entitlement. The matter having
been remitted to a differently constituted panel of the CRDD,
the latter will decide only whether, in all the circumstances
of this case, it would be unduly harsh or unreasonable to
expect the applicant to live in Colombo for the purpose of
the second limb of the Rasaratnam test in determining
whether an internal flight alternative was available.
statutes and regulations
judicially considered |
Immigration
Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. I-2, ss. 65(3) (as am. by
S.C. 1992, c. 49, s. 55), 83(1) (as am. idem, s.
73), 114(2) (as am. idem, s. 102). |
cases judicially
considered |
Rasaratnam
v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),
[1992] 1 F.C. 706; (1991), 140 N.R. 138 (C.A.);
Adjei v. Canada (Minister of Employment and
Immigration), [1989] 2 F.C. 680; (1989), 57 D.L.R.
(4th) 153 (C.A.); Kanagaratnam v. Minister of
Employment and Immigration (1994), 83 F.T.R. 131;
28 Imm. L.R. (2d) 44 (F.C.T.D.); Thirunavukkarasu
v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),
[1994] 1 F.C. 589; (1993), 109 D.L.R. (4th) 682; 22
Imm. L.R. (2d) 241; 163 N.R. 232 (C.A.); Sivasamboo v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[1995] 1 F.C. 741; (1994), 29 Admin. L.R. (2d) 211;
87 F.T.R. 46 (T.D.); Gregory v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] F.C.J. No. 606
(T.D.) (QL); Canada (Director of Investigation and
Research) v. Southam Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748;
(1997), 144 D.L.R. (4th) 1; 50 Admin. L.R. (2d) 199; 71
C.P.R. (3d) 417; 209 N.R. 20; Pushpanathan v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1
S.C.R. 982; (1998), 160 D.L.R. (4th) 193; 226 N.R.
201. |
Badurdeen
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1999] F.C.J. No. 371 (T.D.) (QL);
Ramanathan v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) (1998), 152 F.T.R. 305; 44 Imm. L.R.
(2d) 294 (F.C.T.D.); Elmi v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] F.C.J. No. 336
(T.D.) (QL); Sooriyakumaran v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] F.C.J. No.
1402 (T.D.) (QL). |
Singh
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
(1995), 97 F.T.R. 139 (F.C.T.D.); Jayabalasingham v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[1998] F.C.J. No. 1584 (T.D.) (QL). |
APPLICATION for judicial review of a decision by the
Convention Refugee Determination Division dismissing the
applicant's claim for refugee status on the ground that she
had an internal flight alternative in Colombo and that it was
not unreasonable for her to return to live there. Application
allowed.
Kumar S. Sriskanda
for applicant. |
Kevin Lunney for
respondent. |
Kumar S. Sriskanda,
Toronto, for applicant. |
Deputy Attorney General
of Canada for respondent. |
The following are the reasons for order rendered in
English by
Evans J.:
[1]The applicant in this case, Rohini Ranganathan, is a 42
year-old Tamil woman and a citizen of Sri Lanka. She
contracted polio as a child and walks with the assistance of
crutches. Her family is relatively wealthy; her closest
relatives now live in Canada.
[2]In 1993 Ms. Ranganathan and her mother left the north
of Sri Lanka and moved to Colombo, where they stayed in a
lodge for approximately one year before her mother emigrated
to Canada as a permanent resident, sponsored by a daughter
who is a Canadian citizen. Despite being refused a visa on
the ground that she did not qualify as a member of the family
class, the applicant continued to make inquiries about
admission to Canada.
[3]After her mother left for Canada, Ms. Ranganathan
remained in Colombo, where she rented accommodation in a
house until she was asked by the landlord to leave in
September 1997 after being involved in an incident which I
describe later in these reasons. The applicant then moved
back into a lodge for a short time before leaving for Canada,
where she applied for refugee status on the ground that she
had a well-founded fear of persecution by reason of her
membership of a particular social group, Tamil women in Sri
Lanka.
B. THE REFUGEE DIVISION'S
DECISION |
[4]The Convention Refugee Determination Division of the
Immigration and Refugee Board was prepared to accept that Ms.
Ranganathan had a well-founded fear of persecution in the
north of Sri Lanka. It cast no doubt on the credibility of
any of her evidence. The sole issue before the Refugee
Division was whether there was an internal flight alternative
in Colombo that was reasonably available to her.
[5]Applying the test established in Rasaratnam v.
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1992] 1
F.C. 706 (C.A.), the Refugee Division considered, first,
whether the applicant had good reason to fear persecution in
Colombo and, second, if she did not, whether it was
nonetheless unreasonable to require her to return to live
there.
(i) well-founded fear of persecution
[6]The applicant had stated in her personal information
form that, while she and her mother were living together in
Colombo in the latter part of 1993 and the first half of
1994, their lodge was raided on several occasions by the
police who harassed them and extorted money and jewellery.
The applicant did not give oral evidence of these incidents
at the hearing before the Refugee Division.
[7]At that hearing Ms. Ranganathan relied principally on
an incident that occurred in September 1997, when the police
came to arrest a young Tamil couple who were renting a room
in the same house as the applicant. Ms. Ranganathan was also
arrested, and told the police officer who was questioning her
that she was afraid to go to the north because the Sri Lankan
army was raping Tamil women there. The officer became angry
at these comments, and the verbal abuse that he directed at
her included a threat to kill her.
[8]The applicant also testified that another officer put
his arm around her shoulder and pulled her close to him. She
asked him to desist, fearing that he intended to rape her. He
took his arm off her when another woman entered the room. Ms.
Ranganathan was detained overnight at the police station and
released the next morning on the payment of a bribe. She was
warned by the police officers to leave Colombo immediately;
this precipitated her eviction from the house where she had
rented accommodation, and her return to a lodge. She departed
for Canada shortly afterwards, even though she had received
no positive response from the High Commissioner to her
continuing inquiries about her immigration application.
[9]The Refugee Division concluded that her arrest and
mistreatment at the police station did not support a
well-founded fear of future persecution in Colombo. First,
the incident was isolated: the applicant had lived in Colombo
on her own since 1994 without any kind of harassment. She
seems, as the Refugee Division put it, simply to have had the
misfortune to be in the wrong place at the wrong time when
the police came to arrest the young Tamil couple. Second,
disturbing as the incident no doubt was to the applicant, it
did not amount to persecution when all the circumstances were
considered.
(ii) reasonable availability
[10]When the Refugee Division came to the second limb of
the Rasaratnam test, it noted that the applicant was
obviously a resourceful, intelligent and articulate woman who
had lived on her own in Colombo for three years, despite her
disability, and was adequately supported financially by her
family. Moreover, there is a large Tamil community in
Colombo, where she had lived for a total of four years.
[11]On the basis of these facts the Refugee Division
concluded that it was not unreasonable for the claimant to
return to live in Colombo, and that since she had an internal
flight alternative there she was not a refugee. The panel
concluded by noting the applicant's desire to stay in Canada
with close members of her family, and stating that it was not
legally empowered to consider humanitarian and compassionate
grounds for permitting Ms. Ranganathan to remain.
(i) well-founded fear of persecution
[12]In my opinion the Refugee Division did not commit an
error of law when it decided that the applicant had not
established that she had good reason to fear persecution in
Colombo, as required by Adjei v. Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [1989] 2 F.C. 680 (C.A.), at
page 683.
[13]Counsel for the applicant submitted that the Refugee
Division was legally obliged in its reasons to consider the
harassment and extortion to which the applicant said that she
had been subjected by the police in Colombo prior to her
mother's departure for Canada. I do not agree. The fact that
these incidents occurred five years ago, and were not even
mentioned by the applicant in her oral testimony, despite the
panel's invitation to her to recount her experiences in
Colombo, suggests that they were not of such importance to
the claim as to require the Refugee Division to refer to them
expressly in its reasons.
(ii) reasonable availability
[14]Counsel for the applicant challenged on three grounds
the panel's conclusion that it was not unreasonable to expect
the applicant to return to live in Colombo. First, in its
reasons the Refugee Division did not consider the evidence
before it as to whether the applicant would be permitted to
remain in Colombo for any length of time. Second, the panel's
reasons did not address the impact on her psychological
well-being of the distressing incident at the police station
in Colombo in 1997. Third, the Refugee Division appears to
have regarded the fact that all Ms. Ranganathan's family
members are in Canada as a "humanitarian consideration"
beyond its jurisdiction to consider in determining whether
Ms. Ranganathan had an internal flight alternative in
Colombo.
(a) length of
permitted stay |
[15]Counsel for the applicant submitted that the Refugee
Division erred in law when it found that it was not
unreasonable for Ms. Ranganathan to return to Colombo without
referring in its reasons to the evidence before it regarding
the brief length of time that she might well be permitted to
stay there.
[16]There was documentary evidence before the Refugee
Division that it has been police practice since November 1996
not to permit Tamils from the North to remain in Colombo for
more than three days. In addition, Ms. Ranganathan had stated
in her personal information form that, on her release from
detention in September 1997, she was told by the police that
she had to leave Colombo immediately.
[17]Whether the Refugee Division is required as a matter
of law to deal in its reasons with particular items of
evidence before it depends, among other things, on the
cogency of the evidence in question and on the importance to
the disposition of the issues in dispute of the facts to
which the evidence relates
[18]Three considerations are relevant here in considering
the probative value of the evidence. First, it is not clear
from the evidence before the Refugee Division whether the
prohibition on Tamils from the North residing in Colombo for
more than three days would apply to a person such as Ms.
Ranganathan who had left the North in 1993 and had lived in
Colombo for four years. In Badurdeen v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] F.C.J. No. 371
(T.D.) (QL), the Court held that the Refugee Division's
reasons were defective in law because they did not consider
the impact of the three-day residence rule, even though the
person concerned had lived in Colombo for a total of 16
months spread over three years.
[19]Second, the applicant continued to live in Colombo
after November 1996 for another ten months before she was
told by the police to leave the city, following the incident
at the police station in September. If the three-day
residence rule applied to Tamils from the North who had lived
in Colombo for several years, then it is difficult to
understand why the applicant had not been told much earlier
to move on.
[20]One possible explanation is that the short temporary
residence rule is applied more systematically to Tamils in
lodges than to those who are living in private houses in
Colombo, who may only be required to leave when, as in the
case of Ms. Ranganathan, they come to the attention of the
police as a result of a particular incident. However, there
was no evidence to this effect before the panel.
[21]Third, the fact that counsel for the applicant did not
raise at the hearing before the panel the likelihood that she
would not be permitted to remain in Colombo for more than a
few days may suggest that counsel did not regard the evidence
as having the significance that is now ascribed to it.
Nonetheless, as counsel for the applicant pointed out, the
existence of the three-day rule, and the officer's warning to
the applicant that she was to leave Colombo immediately, were
in evidence before the Refugee Division in documentary form:
evidence is evidence, whether oral or written.
[22]If the Refugee Division had been satisfied that Ms.
Ranganathan would not be permitted to remain in Colombo for
more than three days, it would surely have found that Colombo
was not a reasonably available safe place for her. The
evidence was thus relevant to a material issue. In addition,
the documentary evidence of police practice, and of the
warning given by the police officers that the applicant must
leave, is sufficiently cogent to require the Refugee Division
to have considered it in its reasons. Accordingly, the
Refugee Division's failure even to mention this issue in its
reasons rendered its dismissal of the applicant's claim
erroneous in law.
(b) psychological
impact of the detention |
[23]In the paragraph of its reasons listing the facts
relevant to the issue of whether it was unreasonable to
expect the applicant to live in Colombo, the Refugee Division
did not mention the impact that the incidents at the police
station were likely to have upon her psychological well-being
there. However, since there was no evidence before the
Refugee Division on this issue from a psychologist or
psychiatrist I do not think that its omission from the
panel's reasons can be regarded as rendering the decision
erroneous in law.
(c) refusal
to consider "humanitarian and
compassionate grounds" |
[24]Counsel submitted that the Refugee Division erred in
law when it stated that the requirement of the
Rasaratnam test that the safe place be reasonably
available to a claimant does not permit it to decide claims
on humanitarian and compassionate considerations. Thus, after
summarizing the factors that it had considered, and
concluding that they did not satisfy the Rasaratnam
test, the Refugee Division said:
While the panel has sympathy for the claimant, a person
with a physical disability, who obviously wishes to reside in
Canada with her mother, brother and sister, the panel does
not have the jurisdiction to determine refugee claims based
on humanitarian and compassionate grounds.
[25]Counsel for the Minister submitted that this passage
should not be understood as a statement by the panel that a
factor was irrelevant to the determination of whether it
would be unreasonable to expect a claimant to avail herself
of an internal flight alternative simply because the same
factor might also be relevant to, for example, an application
for landing from within Canada on humanitarian and
compassionate grounds pursuant to subsection 114(2) of the
Immigration Act [R.S.C., 1985, c. I-2 (as am. by S.C.
1992, c. 49, s. 102)].
[26]Rather, he argued, having taken into account the
situation in Colombo for Tamils and the personal
circumstances of the applicant, and having concluded that
they did not meet the unreasonableness requirement, the
Refugee Division was simply acknowledging that it could not
take into consideration other factors that might be relevant
to a humanitarian and compassionate claim to be landed from
within Canada, but were irrelevant to the definition of a
Convention refugee.
[27]In effect, counsel's argument was that this is a case
like Kanagaratnam v. Minister of Employment and
Immigration (1994), 83 F.T.R. 131 (F.C.T.D.), where, in
response to a submission similar to that made on behalf of
Ms. Ranganathan, Rothstein J. (as he then was) said (at page
133):
While in the broadest sense, Canada's refugee policy may
be founded on humanitarian and compassionate considerations,
that terminology in the Immigration Act and the
procedures followed by officials under it, has taken on a
particular connotation. Humanitarian and compassionate
considerations normally arise after an applicant has been
found not to be a Convention refugee. The panel's failure to
consider humanitarian and compassionate factors in its
Convention refugee determination in this case was not in
error.
[28]While I do not take issue with this statement of the
law, I do not think that it is dispositive of the case before
me. First, it does not address the question of whether the
presence in Canada of a claimant's closest family members is
relevant to the determination of the claimant's refugee
status, when the issue in dispute is the reasonableness or
otherwise of expecting the claimant to go to live in a place
where there is no well-founded fear of persecution of the
claimant. Moreover, as I note in paragraph 54, infra,
Rothstein J. did not regard the absence of family members
from the place of refuge as totally irrelevant to the
reasonableness requirement.
[29]Second, in its summary of the facts relevant to its
refugee determination the Refugee Division did not mention
the fact that the applicant has no relatives in Colombo, a
consideration that might seem particularly relevant to the
reasonableness inquiry in the case of a person with a
physical disability, especially as she grows older. I infer
from the panel's silence that it did not take into account
the absence of relatives when considering the reasonableness
issue.
[30]The question that I must decide, therefore, is whether
the presence of relatives in Canada, and their absence from
the safe place"factors that are regularly considered in the
context of subsection 114(2) applications"are also relevant
to determining whether it was unreasonable to expect Ms.
Ranganathan to live in Colombo.
[31]In the leading case of Thirunavukkarasu v.
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1994] 1
F.C. 589 (C.A.) it was said that the relevant question is
whether it is "objectively unreasonable" to expect a claimant
who has a well-founded fear of persecution in one part of her
country of nationality to move to live elsewhere in that
country where she has no such fear. Linden J.A. (at page 598)
amplified the standard somewhat by saying that a claimant
"cannot be required to encounter great physical danger
or to undergo undue hardship in travelling to or in
staying there." (Emphasis added.)
[32]This basic test has been further elaborated. Thus, it
has been said that "unreasonableness" is a flexible standard,
and includes not only the general conditions in the region or
city in question, but also the circumstances particular to
the claimant which might make it unreasonable to require that
person to live in that place (for example, Jayabalasingham
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) ,
[1998] F.C.J. No. 1584 (T.D.) (QL), including the claimant's
psychological well-being there (Singh v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration) (1995), 97 F.T.R. 139
(F.C.T.D.)).
[33]However, of more immediate relevance to this case is
Linden J.A.'s statement in Thirunavukkarasu,
supra, (at page 598) that it was not enough to bring
claimants within the definition of a refugee
. . . that they do not like the weather in a
safe area, or that they have no friends or relatives
there, or that they may not be able to find suitable work
there. [Emphasis added.]
[34]The relevance of the absence of relatives in a safe
place has been considered in at least three recent cases in
this Court. First, in Ramanathan v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) (1998), 152 F.T.R. 305
(F.C.T.D.), where the claimant was 75 years old and, while in
Canada had become very dependent, both emotionally and for
his daily needs, on his family members here, Hugessen J. said
[at page 308]:
. . . the factor of requiring an elderly,
dependant and unwell person to live alone in a governmental
or publicly supported home with governmental or publicly
supported health and other social services provided to him
when there is an alternative where he is presently living
where he has the emotional and family support gained from
close members of his family is something which should be
considered when inquiring as to whether it would be unduly
harsh to send that person from the latter situation to the
former.
[35]Second, in Elmi v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), [1999] F.C.J. No. 336 (T.D.) (QL),
McKeown J. held that the absence of family in Somalia was
relevant to determining the unreasonableness of requiring a
child to live there. He reasoned that, while, as
Linden J.A. had indicated in Thirunavukkarasu,
supra, it may normally be no more than inconvenient
for a person to live without his or her relatives, in the
case of a child the absence of relatives could amount to
undue hardship, and thus make it objectively unreasonable to
expect the claimant to live in the safe place.
[36]Ramanathan had earlier been followed in
Sooriyakumaran v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1998] F.C.J. No. 1402 (T.D.) (QL), where
Lutfy J. held that it was a relevant consideration under the
second limb of the Rasaratnam test that the claimant's
only surviving relatives, her minor children, were in Canada
after being recognized as refugees.
[37]Indeed, by indicating that the presence of the
applicant's children in Canada was in itself a
relevant consideration, regardless of whether there were
relatives in Colombo, which, on the facts there were not,
Lutfy J. may have gone further than the Court in either
Ramanathan or, subsequently, Elmi. Thus, he
said [at paragraph 7]:
The presence in Canada of her two children, both minors
and Convention refugees, is the kind of particular
circumstance that the tribunal ought to have considered in
assessing whether Colombo was an unduly harsh refuge for
her.
And later he stated [at paragraph 9]:
It was an error in law for the tribunal to close its mind
to the natural bond between a parent and her minor
children . . . .
[38]Before proceeding further with my analysis of the
question of relevance, I should address the standard of
review applicable to a determination by the Refugee Division
of whether a claimant has an internal flight alternative.
[39]In Sivasamboo v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1995] 1 F.C.
741 (T.D.) it was held that significant deference should
be extended by a reviewing court to determinations by the
Refugee Division of whether a reasonable internal flight
alternative was available to an applicant. Richard J. (as he
then was) applied a deferential standard to both the findings
of primary fact made by the Refugee Division, and the
application to those facts of the legal standard of
unreasonableness or undue hardship.
[40]Similarly, in Gregory v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] F.C.J. No. 606
(T.D.) (QL), the Court upheld a finding by the Refugee
Division that it was not unreasonable to expect the applicant
to avail himself of an internal flight alternative in Colombo
on the ground that [at paragraph 7] "this conclusion was
reasonably open to the Board on this record".
(Emphasis added.)
[41]However, whether the absence of family members from
the safe area is relevant to determining whether it would be
"objectively unreasonable" or impose an "undue hardship" to
require a refugee claimant to avail herself of an internal
flight alternative is an issue that clearly transcends the
particular facts of this case. In Canada (Director of
Investigation and Research) v. Southam Inc. , [1997] 1
S.C.R. 748, at pages 767-768, and Pushpanathan v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1
S.C.R. 982, at pages 1015-1018, the Supreme Court of Canada
stated that the generality of the issue in dispute is one of
the factors that indicates that correctness is the
appropriate standard of review.
[42]Whether the absence of relatives in the place of
refuge is relevant for the purpose of determining if the
internal flight alternative is reasonably available to a
refugee claimant involves setting boundaries to the
definition of a refugee. As the post-Thirunavukkarasu
case law to which I have referred indicates, this is a
question that has already arisen in several recent cases, and
is likely to recur.
[43]Accordingly, on the basis of the reasoning in
Pushpanathan I conclude that whether the absence of
relatives in the place of refuge is a relevant consideration
in determining if a person is a refugee is to be decided by
this Court on a standard of correctness.
[44]The application of the correctness standard to this
question will help to reduce inconsistency among the multiple
panels in which the Refugee Division sits across the country.
It would be highly detrimental to the legitimacy of the
Refugee Division if different panels were permitted to take
different views of whether it was relevant to consider the
fact that a person had no family members in the place of
refuge. And, since the Chairperson of the Immigration and
Refugee Board has issued no interpretative guidelines on this
question pursuant to subsection 65(3) [as am. by S.C. 1992,
c. 49, s. 55] of the Immigration Act, which might
assist in enhancing consistency among panels, it is
appropriate for the Court to decide the question for
itself.
[45]On the other hand, the Refugee Division's
determination of whether the relevant facts satisfy the
Rasaratnam test, properly understood, is a question of
mixed fact and law, and is reviewable only for
unreasonableness. Sivasamboo, supra, and
Gregory, supra, remain good law after
Pushpanatham, supra, to the extent that they
establish that rationality is the standard of review for the
Refugee Division's application of the Rasaratnam test
to the facts of a particular case.
[46]Thus, it will be for the Refugee Division to weigh
such matters as the seriousness of the claimant's disability,
its likely progress as she gets older, the existence in
Colombo of any other social network of support available to
her, and the fact that she lived in Colombo in the years
1994-1997 without relatives to assist her.
[47]Moreover, even if I am wrong to conclude that
correctness is the applicable standard of review on the
question of relevance raised by this case, I would not be
prepared to extend judicial deference to the panel that
dismissed Ms. Ranganathan's claim because it is not clear
from its reasons whether it considered the question of
relevance at all. Thus, it simply omitted the fact that she
had no relatives in Colombo from the facts that it stated
that it had taken into consideration in determining whether
it would be unreasonable to expect the applicant to reside
there.
[48]To turn to the substantive issue, on the basis of the
recent decisions to which I have referred (Ramanathan,
Elmi and Sooriyakumaran) it would now seem
settled law in this Court that in determining undue hardship
or unreasonableness for the purpose of the availability of an
internal flight alternative, the Refugee Division must take
into account the fact that the claimant has no relatives in
Colombo when there are family members in Canada.
[49]I see no reason to take a view that is different from
my colleagues on this issue. Depending on the circumstances
of the particular case, it would seem clear to me that the
absence of family members available to provide emotional and
material support might well consign a claimant to a quality
of life that falls well below that standard of decency that
is widely recognized as a human entitlement.
[50]I think that Rothstein J. got it right when he said in
Kanagaratnam, supra (at page 132):
I interpret Linden, J.A.'s, comments [in
Thirunavukkarasu, supra] not to exclude the
absence of friends or relatives or inability to find work as
factors in the reasonableness consideration, but only that
these factors alone would not make an IFA unreasonable.
[51]It cannot be that there are two mutually exclusive
lists of factors to be considered in the two contexts of
refugee determination and subsection 114(2) applications.
Indeed, as Hugessen J. pointed out in Ramanathan,
supra, (at page 308) if factors relevant to a
humanitarian and compassionate application were for that
reason excluded from the reasonableness consideration, there
would be virtually nothing to consider under the second limb
of the Rasaratnam test.
[52]For these reasons the application for judicial review
is granted and the decision of the Refugee Division finding
Ms. Ranganathan not to be a Convention refugee is set
aside.
[53]However, since I have found that the Refugee Division
committed no reviewable error in concluding that the
applicant did not have good grounds to fear persecution in
Colombo, the matter is remitted to a differently constituted
panel of the Refugee Division to decide. I am remitting with
the direction that the panel decide only whether in all the
circumstances of this case it would be unduly harsh or
unreasonable to expect the applicant to live in Colombo for
the purpose of the second limb of the Rasaratnam test
for determining whether an internal flight alternative was
available.
[54]And, in conducting this inquiry, the Refugee Division
must consider whether Ms. Ranganathan has relatives in
Colombo and, in accordance with the reasons that I have
given, take its finding on this question into account when
determining whether in all the circumstances the
Rasaratnam test is satisfied.
[55]I invited submissions from counsel on the
certification of a question or questions. Counsel for the
Minister requested that, since I have found that the Refugee
Division erred in law by failing to consider evidence, even
though that evidence did not contradict a finding of fact
that it had made, I should certify a question on this point.
I have decided not to do so because I found that the
"three-day residence rule" was highly material to the Refugee
Division's conclusion that it was not unreasonable for the
applicant to live in Colombo.
[56]Counsel for the applicant opposed the certification of
a question on the standard of review applicable to the
Refugee Division's determination of the relevance of facts to
be considered in deciding the question of unreasonableness.
He submitted that the standard of review is not relevant to
the disposition of this case because I had stated that even
if unreasonableness were the standard applicable I would not
have deferred to the panel in this case since it is not clear
that it considered the fact at all. I agree.
[57]I certify under subsection 83(1) [as am. by S.C. 1992,
c. 49, s. 73] of the Immigration Act the following
question:
Is it an error of law for
the Refugee Division to fail to take into account for
the purpose of the unreasonableness inquiry under the
second branch of the Rasaratnam test the fact
that a refugee claimant who has relatives in Canada has
no relatives in the safe area of the country of
nationality? |