Ground 3
13 Ground three alleges that the FCC erred:
(1) by failing "to hold that the Tribunal made inconsistent assertions on the credibility testimony"; and
(2) by failing to hold that the Appellant "was denied procedural fairness when the Appellant was denied extension of time to provide some credible evidence in support of his claim (which was pending for translation from Bengali to the English language)".
14 The first allegation raises another new ground that was not agitated before the FCC and therefore there was no error by the FCC in not making that finding that is now sought by the Appellant. The Appellant has also not identified the specific basis of the claim and the Appellant's written submissions do not deal with this ground at all. It is not apparent how this ground supports a claim of jurisdictional error and leave should not be granted to raise it.
15 The second allegation does raise a ground that was advanced below and dismissed by the FCC. The background to this ground is that there had been two hearings before the Tribunal, the first hearing on 18 November 2014 and a second hearing on 12 February 2015. On both occasions the Appellant was represented by his registered migration agent who filed written submissions and country information on his behalf. The Tribunal's reasons record that after the second hearing, the Appellant was given until 26 February 2015 to file further documents and post hearing submissions but no material was received by close of business on that date. Instead, on 27 February 2015 the representative made a request for additional time to provide further documents "but given that the deadline had passed the previous day and the matter had been outstanding since January 2013 the request was denied." The reasons also record that "despite this" the Appellant's representative sent the Tribunal additional documents including news articles at three minutes prior to the close of business "the day following the expiry of the deadline for submissions" and that "some five minutes later, further documents from UNHCR and other sources were provided and all these additional documents were considered by the Tribunal." The reasons also state that "ample opportunity" had been afforded to the Appellant to present his case and the Tribunal had been "extremely lenient in terms of considering evidence provided following the expiry of deadlines".
16 The Appellant contended that he was denied procedural fairness because in fact the Tribunal had given him until 27 February 2015 to file the further material and when he attended the Tribunal registry on 27 February, he was told that he was out of time to file any further material and the Tribunal did not accept his documents. The Appellant also contended that the Tribunal could not have considered all the additional documents which his representative sent on 27 February 2015 because the decision was made that same day. The Appellant was given leave to rely on two affidavits in support of his contentions. One of the affidavits annexed the transcript of the hearing before the Tribunal and the transcript confirms that the Appellant was in fact given until 27 February 2015 to file any further material. The FCC did not have the benefit of the transcript when it dealt with this ground below. I also accept that the Appellant did attend the Tribunal registry on 27 February 2015 at around 3.50 pm and was told that he was out of time to file any further material.
17 Nonetheless, I do not find that the Appellant has been denied procedural fairness despite the Tribunal's error about the due date for the filing of any further material. It is reasonable to accept that the Tribunal had regard to the additional documents as it stated it had. Those documents were received by it under cover of two emails from the Appellant's representative - the first email was sent at 5.02 pm on 27 February 2015 in which the Appellant's representative attached "further recent country information on persecution against BNP members and supporters". The second email was sent at 5.08 pm, in which the representative attached "further recent country information on persecution against opposition political members and supporters" under cover of a submission. Significantly, although the Tribunal made its decision on the same day, the cover sheet records that the Tribunal member certified the decision and reasons at 10.13 pm that night. In the circumstances, there is no reason to doubt the veracity of the Tribunal's statement that it did take into account the additional material sent by the representative on 27 February 2015.
18 As stated above, I accept that the Appellant did attend the Tribunal registry on 27 February 2015 at around 3.50 pm with the view to filing additional material but was not permitted to file that material. The Appellant told the Court that he had four additional newspaper articles which he had wanted to file and he identified two of those articles amongst the bundle of material that he had brought to Court. On inspection, both of those articles were amongst the country information which the representative had emailed to the Tribunal at 5.08 pm and accordingly that material was before the Tribunal in any event. Although the Appellant could not locate the other two articles, it seems that they also concerned incidents involving members of the BNP. It is possible that those other newspaper articles were not part of the material before the Tribunal but given the Tribunal's rejection of the Appellant's claimed affiliation, role and profile in the BNP, which the Tribunal did not find credible, it cannot be said that those articles would have materially borne upon the Tribunal's decision if they were available to be taken into account. In the circumstances, I reject the contention that the Appellant has been denied full and proper opportunity to put all relevant evidence before the Tribunal.
19 Furthermore, I do not accept that the Appellant was denied procedural fairness or that the Tribunal acted unreasonably in refusing to grant an extension of time to the Appellant to put further material before the Tribunal. The request was first made in an email sent by the Appellant's representative to the Tribunal at 2.50 pm on 27 February 2015. In that email, the representative advised that the Appellant had given documents to a NAATI translator to translate and the translation would be available by 6 March 2015. The representative requested an extension of time until 6 March to provide "further submission". At 4.13 pm, the representative was contacted by someone in the Tribunal registry who advised that the request was refused as the Tribunal had given until 26 February to provide the post hearing additional information and "as the request for additional time was not received until today 27/2/15, [the Tribunal member] did not agreed (sic) to provide additional time to provide further submissions". Despite this, the representative sent through the additional country information and submissions in the two later emails and the additional material and submissions were put before the Tribunal in any event. Tellingly, it appears from the email sent at 5.02 pm that there was only one newspaper article that the Appellant was waiting for a translation, which was not put before the Tribunal. Given that the Appellant had already been given until 27 February 2015 to put in further material, the Tribunal was entitled to refuse to grant the Appellant any more time.
20 Accordingly this ground also fails.