The contention the Tribunal wrongly found the applicant had abandoned a claim
55 On the second contention, I do not accept the applicant's submissions that there was any legal error in the approach taken by the Tribunal, stemming from either a misunderstanding of the basis on which the applicant was initially granted a protection visa, or from a misunderstanding, or mischaracterisation, of what occurred during the review hearing. Nor do I accept that the Tribunal's approach led to any denial of procedural fairness to the applicant in the conduct of the review.
56 It was contended on behalf of the applicant that he had been granted protection on the basis of a well-founded fear of persecution by reason of an imputed political opinion. The imputation had been found to arise from his failure to honour military service obligations and being a failed asylum seeker. It was submitted the applicant maintained these claims before the Tribunal and did not "abandon" them; yet the Tribunal failed to deal with these matters in the context of its decision on revocation of the visa cancellation. It was submitted the Tribunal also wrongly identified the applicant's witnessing of a massacre in Algeria as the basis on which he was granted protection. Therefore, it was contended:
The Tribunal's approach to understanding the Applicant's claims were marred with misunderstandings and confusion which ultimately denied the Applicant procedural fairness.
57 It is correct that, relying on the ITOA and on the applicant's oral evidence, the Tribunal referred to the applicant witnessing a massacre, his fear that Algerian authorities will persecute him because he "revealed his knowledge of extrajudicial killings by the government authorities" and that the applicant was granted a protection visa "on the basis of his account of this incident": see [121]-[122] of the Tribunal's reasons. At [127], the Tribunal referred to a statement in the applicant's revocation request where he also referred to this incident and his fears arising from it. At [128]-[129], the Tribunal noted other statements by the applicant which focussed on other reasons why he could not return to Algeria, and not on any safety or persecution-related reasons.
58 The Tribunal then made the findings at [130]-[131], which I have extracted above and upon which this aspect of the contentions on behalf of the applicant is based. As the Minister submits, the language used by the Tribunal was not "abandon", but rather that the applicant "ultimately resiled from" a position that he feared for his safety on return to Algeria.
59 Both parties took the Court to the transcript of the review hearing. In his evidence to the Tribunal, the applicant described how he evaded the last part of his military service, because he had witnessed a massacre and was afraid to go back into the army. He described to the Tribunal what he had witnessed. He was asked about some differences in his account to the Tribunal and earlier accounts, but the Tribunal ultimately did not consider the differences material (see [122]). The applicant was asked, and agreed, that what he had seen at the massacre was a principal basis for his protection visa claim. He then gave the following evidence. It is a long extract, but necessary to set out:
[MR BROWN (the representative of the Minister):] Right and when you came to Australia and made your protection visa application?---Yes.
One of the reasons that you gave for why you were applying for protection, was that you were afraid if you were required to go back to Algeria, then those men that had been involved in those murders, would cause you harm? - M'mm.
MEMBER: Can you just say yes or no, just so that we can - - -?---Yes. Yes, sorry.
MR BROWN: Yes.
MEMBER: Thank you?---Yes.
MR BROWN: So, why do you say- why did you say then, why do you say now - that if you return to Algeria, you will be caused harm by reason of what you saw back in the 1990's?---I said to the immigration at that time, if I go back, I'll get hung by these men, which these men is the government.
Yes?---Plus, I rejected to go back to the Army, I told them.
I understand that. I will come to that in a minute, but focusing on these men?---Yes.
Who told you not to tell anybody about what had happened, why do you say, if you go back to Algeria, you will be harmed by those men?---I don't say by these men, I say by the government.
Okay. All right, fair enough. So, why do you say you would be harmed by government?---Because I reject to go back to the Army.
Right. So, it is not your argument - correct me if I'm wrong - it is not your argument that you are afraid of going back to Algeria because of what you saw in the 1990's?---No.
It is your argument that you are afraid to go back to Algeria, because the government will take measures against you, because you didn't complete your final three months?---Maybe.
Is that your argument?---Yes, not just that. My argument, I have family here.
Yes, I understand that, but in terms of being afraid?---Yes.
And I am sorry to labour this, but it's actually quite important?---Yes.
In terms of your being afraid as to going back - suffering serious harm if you go back to Algeria?---Yes.
You are saying that's because the government will hold you accountable for not having completed that three months military service that was left, in the two years that you were originally required to do?---I don't think they're going to do that now.
Okay. Why not?---Because I'm old.
Because, you're old?---Yes.
All right. So, they may not - again, I am trying to understand what your position is - you are saying, "Well look, they're not going to require me to go and do military service, because I'm 50"?---Yes.
Yes?---Yes.
So what are you saying about the harm you fear from the government were you to go back to Algeria tomorrow?---I don't trust my government.
Beg your pardon?---I don't trust my government.
You don't trust your government. And can you expand upon that a bit. How does not trusting your government mean that you fear harm from them?---Well, maybe I get there and they say, "Come here. You be witness against us."
Okay. And why would they say that?---Because I've been witness against them.
And how would they know that?---Of course they know, it's a government.
This was - this is an event that took place more than 20 years ago?---Yes.
I think you will be more aware than I am of the amount of change that has gone on - - -?---Yes.
- - - over the last 20 years in Algeria. So why do you say that you fear harm from the government if you were to return to Algeria?---I told you, it's because I've been a witness against government. I've been - I refuse to go back to the - I run from Algeria.
Sorry, I - - -?---I never - sorry. I never went back since I come to Australia.
Yes. I understand that?---I never want to go back to Algeria. I've lost my parents, I never get to see them.
Yes. All right. So you're afraid that because you witnessed the massacre, because you didn't complete your final three months of military service - - -
SENIOR MEMBER: I don't think that's - I think what - what I understand you've said, the three months' military service, is that relevant or not relevant?---That's not relevant now.
Okay. So - sorry.
MR BROWN: All right. Okay. No, I'm just trying to repeat what he said, that's all. So because you witnessed the massacre, you fear that if you return to Algeria they will - the authorities will take some action against you?---Yes.
Okay.
SENIOR MEMBER: And who do you think is going to take that action? The people who - - -?---The army.
But is it the people who you witnessed committing those crimes, or other people in the army?---The people - I don't know who they are. I don't know who they are. I mean they're not army, the police, I don't know who they are. They was just in dark and balaclavas and I know the government comes, but I don't know who they are.
MR BROWN: All right. So is there anything else, NVDC, that you would like to tell the tribunal about why you are afraid - so nothing to do with your family and so forth at the moment, but why you are afraid as to what might happen to you, were you to return to Algeria. Is there anything else?---No.
60 It might be said the applicant's evidence was somewhat contradictory, in terms of whether he still held fears for his safety on return to Algeria, and why. However the Minister's lawyer in the Tribunal very fairly returned to the topic towards the end of his questions to the applicant, when he asked him about the conclusions expressed in the ITOA. It is not necessary to set out the whole extract, but suffice to say that the Minister's lawyer fairly described what the ITOA was and what its conclusions were. He invited the applicant to tell the Tribunal whether the applicant agreed, or not, with the conclusion of the ITOA. This was the applicant's response, and the Minister's lawyer's observation afterwards:
Okay. Sorry, it was a very long question?---I think I agree what you say. I think I agree what you say. Because I think there is change in Algeria now. But my problem is not Algeria.
I understand that, and I think that's clear from what has been said in the course of the last four or five hours. Senior Member, that's probably all I've got unless you'd like to direct me down some other road.
61 Having considered the transcript of the review hearing, in my opinion there was ample basis for that observation by the Minister's lawyer, which was substantially reflected in the Tribunal's findings. In the review hearing, the applicant's emphasis in his evidence had very much been on the effects on his family if he had to leave Australia, as well as on himself because of his physical and mental health issues, and his age.
62 In that context, while it might have been something of an overreach in language for the Tribunal to describe, at [130], the applicant as resiling (implicitly, entirely) from any claims about fears for his safety in Algeria, it was nevertheless open to the Tribunal to see those issues as very much secondary in the applicant's own perspective to the issues about his family, and his own health. In this context, and given the express questioning of the applicant about the ITOA, I see no error in the Tribunal placing some weight on the opinions expressed in the ITOA as part of reaching its own conclusions.
63 The applicant's submissions have not persuaded me there was any legal error in the Tribunal's findings about the position taken by the applicant during its review about his fears concerning return to Algeria. It was open to the Tribunal to make the findings it did, especially given it had the chance of seeing and listening to the applicant over an extended hearing, with full and fair questioning from the Minister's lawyer.
64 As to the submissions that the Tribunal mischaracterised, or misunderstood, the basis on which the applicant had been granted a protection visa, I reject that submission. It is clear from the applicant's own evidence to the Tribunal that he saw a connection between his witnessing of the massacre and his desire to avoid any further military service, because of what might be imputed to him through having been a witness to such an atrocity.
65 There is no evidence before the Court about the original protection visa decision. There are a range of secondary accounts of the basis for it, including what was in the ITOA under the heading "Protection claims/information to be assessed on this ITOA". Further, in the submissions filed on behalf of the applicant on the first judicial review, it is stated:
He sought protection and was recognized as a refugee in Australia, on the basis of his claim to have witnessed the murders of a number of people by the authorities of Algeria.
66 In light of what was recorded in the ITOA, the judicial review submission, and the applicant's own evidence to the Tribunal, I do not consider there was any misunderstanding or mischaracterisation by the Tribunal of the basis for the original protection visa decision. Nor was this of any central relevance to its task on review, as I explain below.