AEL15 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection
[2017] FCA 1295
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2017-11-07
Before
Derrington J
Catchwords
- MIGRATION - Application to extend time in which to appeal
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (5 paragraphs)
Background 13 In order to understand the nature of any possible issues which arise in this matter, it is necessary to consider, in a general way, its background and the decisions of the Tribunal and of the Federal Circuit Court. 14 The applicant, along with his dependent son, are both Sri Lankan citizens. They arrived in Australia as Irregular Maritime Arrivals on 25 July 2012. The following year, on 28 January 2013, the then Minister exercised his power under s 46A(2) of the Migration Act 1958 to permit both the applicant and his son to lodge protection visa applications. Subsequently, on 5 February 2013, the applicant lodged an application for a Protection (Class XA) visa. His son applied for a visa as a member of the applicant's family unit. At that time the son made no application for a protection visa in his own right. Despite that before the Tribunal the son made claims of his own which suggested that he was entitled to a protection visa in his own right. 15 A delegate of the Minister refused to grant the applicant a visa by a decision made on 30 August 2013. By an application to the Refugee Review Tribunal (the Tribunal) on 6 September 2013 the applicant sought review of the delegate's decision. The Tribunal held a hearing on 30 January 2015 at which both the applicant and his son were present and each gave evidence with the assistance of a Singhalese interpreter. The applicant's registered migration agent also appeared at that hearing although the extent of the involvement of that person is unclear. 16 The decision of the Tribunal is both detailed and comprehensive. It was delivered on 10 February 2015. In it the Tribunal affirmed the delegate's decision not to grant the protection visa to the first applicant or his son. 17 Before the Tribunal the applicant had claimed that he was an active member of the UNP movement in Sri Lanka, that he was involved in the party's political activities, that he was President of the local branch of the UNP and that he had been attacked and assaulted by members of a rival party or group whom the authorities would not prosecute. The Tribunal, ultimately, did not believe much of what was asserted by the applicant and the applicant's son. The Tribunal engaged in a thorough analysis of the evidence before it and reached the conclusion that due to the wide variety of inconsistencies and improbabilities the claims which were made were fabricated and/or embellished. The Tribunal found that the applicant was not an active member of the UNP in his village and that he was not the Branch President of that party as he claimed. In the result, the Tribunal found that neither the applicant nor his son were persons in respect of whom Australia had protection obligations under the Refugee Convention or other complementary protection grounds, nor were they members of the same family unit as a person who had those qualifications. 18 The reasons of the Tribunal are, as mentioned, comprehensive and detailed. Some important matters determined by the Tribunal were: (a) That the applicant's evidence as to his involvement in the UNP was not credible. His evidence was inconsistent in important respects and, indeed, was lacking in any credible detail in respect of matters of which the applicant, on his version of events, should have been aware. (b) The Tribunal did not accept that the applicant had been engaged, as he asserted, in election campaigns or that he was a UNP member or its President in his local area. The Tribunal reached the conclusion that the applicant was "making up his evidence as he went along". (c) Equally, the Tribunal determined that the evidence of the applicant's son was inconsistent and lacking in important detail in a number of respects. (d) The Tribunal disbelieved the applicant and his son in relation to their assertions about an alleged assault by members of a rival political party and the refusal of the authorities to respond to it. The Tribunal accepted that the applicant had suffered an assault, however, it did not consider that the assault was connected to any political affiliations held by the applicant. (e) The Tribunal also rejected the allegation that the applicant had to go into hiding after the assault. (f) The Tribunal further found that, having regard to country information, asylum seekers from a western country were not at risk of harm upon return to their country of origin. It held that such risks are limited to those who are perceived to have a significant role in relation to post-conflict separatism. It concluded that neither the applicant nor his son could be so characterised. (g) The Tribunal also accepted that any data breach from the Commonwealth Department of Migration did not raise the "political profile" of the applicant or his son and it did not expose them to any greater risk of harm. (h) It was accepted that the applicant and his son departed Sri Lanka illegally and that they would be treated accordingly on their return. However, that treatment is non-discriminatory and would be likely to involve a fine and possibly being held on remand for a short period of time. (i) The Tribunal held that neither the applicant nor his son satisfied either s 36(2)(a) or s 36(2)(aa) of the Act. As a consequence of these findings the decision under review was affirmed.