Tribunal Proceedings
15 On 27 October 2014, the appellants applied to the then Refugee Review Tribunal for review of the delegate's decision.
16 On 8 October 2015, the appellants attended a hearing before the Migration and Refugee Division of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal to give evidence and to present arguments. They did so with the assistance of an interpreter.
17 On 6 January 2016, the Tribunal delivered its statement of decision and reasons, affirming the delegate's decision not to grant Protection visas.
18 The Tribunal was not satisfied as to the first appellant's credibility and found that his account of events (giving rise to the fear of persecution or suffering significant harm on return to India) had changed significantly over the course of the Protection visa application, the interview with the delegate and the Tribunal hearing respectively: Tribunal Reasons [44].
19 The Tribunal accepted that the first appellant's brother had been named in court proceedings in India as being in a fight with people from a neighbouring village, during which the uncle of the brother's girlfriend was seriously injured from a sword wound. However, the Tribunal found the first appellant's evidence about the incident to be extremely vague and that his knowledge about the incident was minimal: Tribunal Reasons [46] - [48]. The Tribunal observed that, in giving evidence, the first appellant:
(a) was uncertain about the date on which the incident occurred;
(b) referred to the uncle by a different name to the original application (the name of the uncle in the original application was consistent with police documentation concerning the altercation);
(c) stated that he did not know who the people involved in the dispute were; and
(d) stated that he did not know what the reason for the dispute was: Tribunal Reasons [48].
20 The Tribunal found the first appellant's evidence regarding the claimed attack on himself at his house in 2010 was vague and shifting, referring to the following matters:
(a) In his application, the first appellant stated that 15-20 people came to his house and held him while they searched for his brother. In his interview with the delegate, the first appellant stated that his mother hid him when people came to the house looking for him. In the Tribunal hearing, the first appellant gave evidence that 7 or 8 assailants came to the house and beat him with sticks.
(b) In the Tribunal hearing, the first appellant said that he did not know who the assailants were, only that they had fought with his brother. He also stated that the assailants were on drugs, which had not been previously claimed. Since the claimed attack on himself, the first appellant had not made any effort to identify the persons who were involved; he was not sure if the uncle was involved; and he had not made any enquiry about what the people involved may want now.
(c) In the Tribunal hearing, the first appellant's evidence as to the reason he was allegedly beaten was not consistent. Initially he stated that the assailants thought he was his brother and beat him by mistake. Later he stated that the assailants knew who he was but said to him that it didn't matter which brother it was.
(d) In his application, the first appellant had identified the uncle's village as Rahon and that the persons who had held and threatened him were from that village. In the Tribunal hearing, the first appellant stated that he did not know the village from which his assailants had come. Later, he stated it was Malpur. When asked how the village of Malpur related to the village of Rahon, the first appellant stated that he was not sure which village the uncle was from but that he often stayed in Rahon: Tribunal Reasons [49].
21 The Tribunal also found that the first appellant's responses to various questions asked by the Tribunal raised doubts about his credibility:
(a) The first appellant stated that he did not report the claimed attack on himself at his house in 2010 to the police because he feared the police would have prevented him from leaving the country: Tribunal Reasons [50].
(b) The first appellant stated that his father did not report the claimed attack on his son to the police, but spoke with the head of the village council (known as the Sarpanch) who mediated on behalf of the first appellant's parents. When asked why his parents did not also seek the assistance of the Sarpanch on behalf of himself, the first appellant had no answer but finally said that his parents did not want to get involved: Tribunal Reasons [52].
22 The Tribunal took into account independent country information and found that the judicial system in India would support the first appellant in relation to his brother's court proceedings and that there was a remote chance that he would be involved in court action brought against his brother in the future: Tribunal Reasons [55] - [56].
23 In assessing the first appellant's general credibility, the Tribunal also took into account the delay in lodging the applications for protection (while the claimed attack on the first appellant occurred in about November 2010, the application was not lodged until March 2014). While the first appellant claimed that, as time progressed, he became more aware of the gravity of the situation and so applied for the Protection visas, the Tribunal did not accept that there was any significant change in his situation over the relevant period. The Tribunal found that if the fear of harm was genuine, the first appellant would have been expected to make his claims for protection earlier than he had. Those matters caused the Tribunal to have further doubts as to the credibility of the first appellant's claims to need protection: Tribunal Reasons [57].
24 The Tribunal was not satisfied that the first appellant was a credible or reliable witness and rejected the first appellant's claims to face harm in India. The Tribunal did not accept that the uncle of the first appellant's brother's girlfriend, or persons associated with the uncle, wanted to exact revenge on the first appellant's brother or the first appellant. The Tribunal did not accept that the first appellant was attacked and injured in 2010 at his family home by people who either mistook him for his brother or wanted to take revenge against his brother. The Tribunal did not accept that those people intended to harm the first appellant in 2010 or intended to do so at the time of the Tribunal decision or in the future: Tribunal Reasons [58].
25 The Tribunal noted the first appellant's claims that the uncle belonged to a different political party, but the Tribunal did not accept that the first appellant would be harmed for that reason. This was because the Tribunal was not satisfied that the first appellant would be harmed for any reason, and also the first appellant had expressed no political allegiance himself and had made no claims that he would be targeted by anyone for this reason: Tribunal Reasons [59].
26 The Tribunal concluded that the first appellant did not have a well-founded fear of persecution on return to India or that the first appellant would suffer significant harm upon return to India: Tribunal Reasons [60] - [61]. For those reasons, the Tribunal was not satisfied that the first appellant was a person in respect of whom Australia had protection obligations within s 36(2)(a) or (aa) of the Act. It followed that the Tribunal was not satisfied that the second appellant met the criteria in s 36(2)(b) or (2)(c): Tribunal Reasons [62].