consideration
18 The grounds of appeal raised by the appellant in his notice of appeal seek to cavil with the findings of the Tribunal and, as such, seek impermissible merits review. On that basis, the appeal cannot succeed.
19 The role of this Court on appeal is to consider whether there is any appealable error in the decision of the primary judge. No such error is identified in the notice of appeal nor is any such error discernible from the judgment of the primary judge who considered the appellant's grounds and found that they did not reveal any jurisdictional error in the decision of the Tribunal.
20 The primary judge found that the Tribunal had considered all of the matters raised before it and rejected some of those matters as fabrications and found that the others rose no higher than receipt by the appellant of an idle threat. As a Full Court of this Court stated in AZAEY v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCAFC 193 at [38]:
The claims as made by the Applicant were considered but largely rejected by the Tribunal. The claims were variously rejected by the Tribunal upon the basis that they were (for example) implausible or inconsistent with other information available to the Tribunal….
Each of the findings as made by the Tribunal was a finding open to it upon the materials then available. And, to the extent that those findings were based upon an assessment of the credit of the Applicant, those findings were findings "par excellence" within the domain of the Tribunal alone: Re Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs; Ex parte Durairajasingham [2000] HCA 1 at [67], (2000) 168 ALR 407 at 423 per McHugh J. Neither the Federal Circuit Court (nor this Court on appeal) has any general role to review the findings of fact made by the Tribunal.
21 That is what occurred here. There is no error in the approach of the primary judge.
22 Although not raised in the notice of appeal, the Minister made submissions in relation to the Tribunal's findings concerning the appellant's claims arising from his membership of a particular social group: failed asylum seekers who had departed Sri Lanka illegally. Firstly, the Minister submitted that, as required by Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v WZAPN (2015) 254 CLR 610 (WZAPN), the Tribunal did undertake the requisite qualitative assessment in determing whether a risk of loss of liberty constitutes serious harm. Having considered the Tribunal's decision, I accept that is so: see [202] to [209] of the Tribunal decision.
23 Secondly, the Minister submits that, regardless of the High Court's decision in WZAPN, the appellant in this case failed on this ground because the Tribunal found that the laws in Sri Lanka in relation to illegal departures are laws of general application. Thus the feared harm is not visited on the appellant for reason of any Convention based ground. I accept that submission. The facts in this case are different to those which were considered in WZAPN: see AZAEK v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 1415 at [26]-[27]. There is no error in the Tribunal's approach to its consideration of the complementary protection provisions in s 36(2)(aa) of the Act.