Ground Three
11 Mr Wood of Counsel, who appeared for the applicant, commenced his submissions with ground three. This was seen to be the "easiest" point. I shall therefore address this first and then deal with grounds one and two in reverse order.
12 In essence, Mr Wood submitted that the Assistant Minister had misunderstood the law in a material way. Such a material misunderstanding can constitute jurisdictional error. Thus in Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323, Gaudron J said at 339-340 [41]:
... there is said to be a "constructive failure to exercise jurisdiction" when a tribunal misunderstands the nature of its jurisdiction and, in consequence, applies a wrong test, misconceives its duty, fails to apply itself to the real question to be decided or misunderstands the nature of the opinion it is to form. A constructive failure to exercise jurisdiction may be disclosed by the Tribunal taking an irrelevant consideration into account. Equally, it may be disclosed by the failure to take a relevant matter into account.
(Footnote omitted.)
See also, for example: NBMZ v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2014) 220 FCR 1.
13 The misunderstanding was said to appear at [35] of the Assistant Minister's reasons where he observed that if the applicant were to apply for a protection visa the existence or otherwise of "non-refoulement obligations would be fully considered in the course of processing the application". That was said to be a mistake. Those obligations would not be "fully considered" because the provisions in the Act relating to the issue of a protection visa are different from Australia's international obligations under the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, opened for signature 28 July 1951, 189 UNTS 150 (entered into force 22 April 1954) as amended by the Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees, signed 31 January 1967, 606 UNTS 267 (entered into force for Australia 13 December 1973) (the "Convention"). The provisions in the Act are different because they give potential refugees diminished protection.
14 To illustrate his point, Mr Wood referred to the "internal relocation principle" for the purpose of the definition of a refugee in Art 1A of the Convention. The principle has recently been described by Gordon and Edelman JJ in CRI028 v Republic of Nauru [2018] HCA 24; (2018) 356 ALR 50 at [23] as follows:
According to what is sometimes described as the internal relocation principle, a person is not a refugee if there is an area in the country of their nationality: (1) where the person would not have a well-founded fear of persecution; and (2) to which the person could, "in all the circumstances", reasonably be expected to relocate.
Mr Wood submitted that this test had been "radically altered, if not abolished" by ss 5H and 5J(1)(c) of the Act. As a result, a person cannot satisfy s 36(2)(a) of the Act unless there is a real chance of persecution "that relates to all areas of the receiving country". Contrastingly, the Convention recognises that persecution may occur in "only one part of a country, and that in such situations a person will not be excluded from refugee status merely because he could have sought refuge in another part of the country, if in all the circumstances it would not have been reasonable to expect him to do so": Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v SZSCA (2014) 254 CLR 317 at 327 [26] per French CJ, Hayne, Kiefel and Keane JJ. It followed that the Assistant Minister misunderstood the differences between the Convention and the domestic law.
15 Mr Wood contended that this submission was supported by the decision of the Full Court of this Court in Ibrahim v Minister for Home Affairs [2019] FCAFC 89. He respectfully submitted that I was bound by that decision. As I understood it, Mr Hill of Counsel, who appeared for the Minister, agreed that I was bound by the reasoning in Ibrahim, but submitted it did not determine the outcome here. Ibrahim concerned an exercise of the power conferred on the Minister by s 501BA(2) of the Act. A submission had been made that the appellant's circumstances in that case warranted an International Treaties Obligation Assessment. The Minister considered that it was unnecessary to determine whether non-refoulement obligations were owed to that appellant for reasons which are almost identical to those set out in the Assistant Minister's reasons in this case. White, Perry and Charlesworth JJ decided that the Minister had erred in conflating domestic law under the Act with the Convention. Their Honours said at [106]-[114]:
106. In our opinion, a number of matters support the conclusion that the Assistant Minister did conflate Australia's non-refoulement obligations under the Refugees Convention with the protection obligations to which the Act refers and which are considered on an application for a protection visa. First, there is the very use by the Assistant Minister of the term "non-refoulement obligations" which, as indicated, derives from the Refugees Convention. The Assistant Minister used that term and not the term "protection obligations" appearing in s 36(2)(a) of the Act. It is reasonable to infer that, in doing so, the Assistant Minister was intending to deal with the appellant's submission concerning Australia's obligations under international law in the terms in which it had been expressed.
107. Secondly, the Assistant Minister gave as his reason for holding that it was unnecessary for him to consider whether non-refoulement obligations were owed the fact that the appellant was able to apply for a Protection visa. That is strongly suggestive of a belief on the Assistant Minister's part that non-refoulement obligations under the Refugees Convention are the same as protection obligations under s 36(2)(a).
108. Thirdly, the Assistant Minister's reference in [98] to the manner in which protection applications are assessed confirms his conflation of the two obligations. This is apparent in the Assistant Minister's expression of confidence in the last sentence of [98] that the appellant would have the opportunity to have his protection claims fully assessed in the course of an application for a Protection visa.
109. Fourthly, the Assistant Minister's reference in [99] to his consideration of the appellant's position "outside of the concept of non-refoulement and the international obligations framework" indicates a belief by the Assistant Minister that he had addressed the issues of non-refoulement and the international obligations framework in the preceding two paragraphs.
110. Finally, it is pertinent that, despite the difference between non-refoulement obligations under the Refugees Convention, on the one hand, and protection obligations under s 36(2)(a), on the other, the Assistant Minister did not advert to those differences.
111. In our view, when the Assistant Minister's reasons are read fairly and with regard to the surrounding context, it is apparent that he used the term "non-refoulement obligations" in [97] of his reasons as a form of shorthand reference to both non-refoulement obligations arising under international law and to protection obligations arising under s 36 of the Act. His statement that "the existence or otherwise of non-refoulement obligations would be considered in the course of processing the [Protection visa] application" is a strong indication of this.
112. For these reasons, we consider that the Assistant Minister did proceed on the misapprehension for which the appellant contends, namely, that both non-refoulement obligations under the Refugees Convention as well as protection obligations under s 36(2)(a) would necessarily be considered in the context of an application by the appellant for a Protection visa.
113. The Assistant Minister's belief involved misapprehension of the effect of the Act because, on an application for a Protection visa, it is only the criteria in s 36 which are to be considered. Section 65 has the effect that a Protection visa is to be granted if the Minister is satisfied of those criteria and refused if they are not. The internal relocation principle in relation to the existence or otherwise of non-refoulement obligations cannot form part of that consideration, at least in the application of s 36(2)(a).
114. For the reasons given earlier, it was necessary for the Assistant Minister to have a correct understanding of the Act when forming the state of satisfaction required by s 501BA(2). That is so, even if the existence or otherwise of non-refoulement obligations in respect of the appellant was not a mandatory relevant consideration under s 501BA(2) (MIBP v Le at [41]). It is understandable, given that it is a matter concerning Australia's international obligations and the terms of s 197C of the Act, that the Assistant Minister did consider it appropriate that account be taken of Australia's obligations with respect to non-refoulement. As already noted, his reasons indicate that he intended to do so. However, the Assistant Minister misapprehended the way in which that could occur under the Act.
16 Whilst, in my view, not strictly binding upon me (because the decision turned on the characterisation of reasons given in respect of an exercise of power under s 501BA), I was urged by the applicant to apply Ibrahim given the very great similarity in the reasons given by the Assistant Minister in that case with those given here. In both cases, the same mistake, it was said, had been made.
17 Mr Hill submitted that Ibrahim was distinguishable. He submitted that any conflation of domestic law with the Convention here was an immaterial error. In Ibrahim, the applicant had raised objections about internal relocation thus sparking real differences between the Convention and domestic law that might have affected the exercise of power pursuant to s 501BA. In contrast, here, no such claim had been made. It had not been suggested, it was submitted, that the applicant, who is of Oromo ethnicity, would face harm in one part of Ethiopia and not another. In other words, the claim was not premised on the differential safety of areas within Ethiopia. Rather, the claim was put at a high level of generality: that the applicant would face hardship if returned to that country. The Assistant Minister expressly accepted that submission as well as other factors that supported the revocation of the cancellation decision. But, in the Assistant Minister's view, those factors were outweighed by the judgment he reached that the applicant represented an unacceptable risk of harm to the Australian community. That judgment was based upon the quality of the applicant's offending.
18 Mr Wood forcefully contended that the Ibrahim error was sufficiently material for the following reasons.
19 First, whilst fairly acknowledging that the applicant had never invoked the "internal relocation principle", Mr Wood submitted that the materials presented to the Department suggested that the applicant's exposure to risk in Ethiopia was not uniform. He contended that if the Assistant Minister had not conflated the law, there was material before him that might have led the Assistant Minister to reach a different conclusion in exercising his power under s 501CA(4). The possibility of such an outcome was "realistic". I was referred, for example, to the following submission which had been made on behalf of the applicant in support of revocation:
The applicant belongs to the Oromo ethnic group in Ethiopia. The Oromo people though being a majority of the population, have historically been oppressed and denied their basic rights by various regimes in the country. They still suffer persecution from the [Ethiopian] government. The government does not single out whom to persecute through arbitrary arrest, torture, imprisonment or summary execution. It does not matter whether one has a high or low profile in the community.
Neither are women and children spared in this ongoing human rights abuse against the Oromo people. It is submitted that the applicant would be no exception to the persecution [were] he to be deported to Ethiopia. The regime is even more paranoid and highly suspicious of anyone who [is] deported back to the country from the west.
There is hence no doubt that, they would label him a terrorist and kill him without taking him to trial. For regimes such as Ethiopia, it is inconceivable for them to believe that one could be deported from a country after serving time in prison for a crime other than opposition against the government. Whereas, the applicant is not apologetic for what he did, it is submitted that sending him back to his home country under visa cancellation powers, would be extreme. Accordingly, the decision maker should exercise their discretionary powers and recommend revocation.
20 I was also referred to the following submission, which refers to an area where the applicant had been accused of helping Oromo rebels:
[The applicant] was born in Ethiopia and is of Oromo ethnicity. Due to this, [the applicant] and his family were subjected to suspicion, ill treatment and persecution in Ethiopia and regarded as enemies of the state due, [the applicant] believes, to the Oromo people's desire for independence. [The applicant] was raised in the context of this persecution against people of his ethnicity and the broader conflict in Ethiopia. In his childhood, [the applicant's] father was beaten so badly by Ethiopian officials that he was left paralysed. His father was tortured by governmental officials on a number of occasions, as was his eldest sister. [The applicant] fled to Kenya at the tender age of 15 and lived in a refugee camp with two of his sisters for three years following accusations that he and his family had been helping Oromo rebels in the area. It was only when [the applicant's] mother developed breast cancer some years later that [the applicant] returned to Ethiopia to care for her. This ongoing conflict and persecution has resulted in the displacement of [the applicant's] extended family, some members of whom - including some of [the applicant's] siblings - are still unable to be located.
That submission also noted the following:
Oromos make up around one-third of the population of Ethiopia. A February 2016 International Business Times article explained that "The Oromo are divided in two main sub-groups. People belonging to the Borana Oromo group mainly inhabit southern Ethiopia and parts of Kenya. The Barentu Oromo can be found in Oromia as well as other areas of Ethiopia and Somalia."
Despite the size of the Oromo population, Oromos do not have proportionate representation in political life and face restrictions on the use of their language, literature and media, forced displacement and evictions, which has resulted in discrimination as well as political and socio-economic marginalisation.
(Footnotes omitted.)
21 Yet another submission made on behalf of the applicant stated:
While more comprehensive and recent country information has subsequently been provided in this respect in our submissions of 27 July 2017, it is submitted that the USDOS report supports the well-founded nature of [the applicant's] fears of persecution in Ethiopia based on his Oromo ethnicity, as well as [the applicant's] family's concerns for their well-being should they be forced to choose to travel to Ethiopia to avoid the permanent separation of their family unit.
It is again submitted that should the cancellation of [the applicant's] Australian visa be upheld, he would be forced to return to Ethiopia where he would face serious harm amounting to persecution on the basis of his Oromo ethnicity. The country information outlined in the USDOS report and in our previous submissions indicates that being of Oromo ethnicity in Ethiopia means that an individual is subjected to various forms of harm and discrimination in many aspects of their lives. [The applicant] fears that the ongoing targeting of Oromo people, and his community membership and involvement in Oromo organisations in Australia, mean that he will likewise be targeted and subjected to persecution, serious harm, and discrimination in Ethiopia if he is forced to return. It is submitted that this humanitarian aspect of [the applicant's] claims should be given strong weight in favour of the revocation of the cancellation of his Australian visa.
22 However, there was evidence in the material before me and before the Assistant Minister, that what unified the Oromo was not their location in a particular area of Ethiopia, but the existence of a common language and culture. In a report entitled "Human Rights in Ethiopia: Through the Eyes of the Oromo Diaspora" by "The Advocates for Human Rights", dated December 2009, being part of the country information considered, the following observations were made:
The Oromo, found predominantly in what today is the country of Ethiopia, is Ethiopia's largest ethnic group. The U.S. Department of State estimates that the Oromo constitute 40 percent of the Ethiopian population, or approximately 31 million people. Although many social, economic, and religious differences exist among the Oromo people, the Oromo are united by a common linguistic tradition. Also, the Oromo share a strong sense of ethnic and national identity. In the Oromo culture, family and kinship play a central role. A patriarchal society, men are considered the head of the household, though the family's daily life depends upon the women.
The common language of the Oromo binds the Oromo as a people. A Cushitic language, a subgroup of the Afro-Asiatic languages, Oromo is spoken in Ethiopia, northern Kenya, and parts of Somalia, and is spoken as a first language by approximately 20 million people in the region. During much of the 20th Century the Oromo language was banned from use in education, the media, and public life Although Ethiopian law today permits the use of the Oromo language, Amharic is still listed as the country's official language.
(Footnotes omitted.)
23 That report also noted the movement within Ethiopia of different ethnic groups. It stated as follows:
In addition to moving Oromos off their land in Oromia, many individuals reported that other ethnic groups are being moved into the Oromo region. One interviewee told The Advocates that the Tigray from the north are being encouraged to move into the more fertile southern Oromo area. Several interviewees indicated that Tigrayans and Amharas have moved into the southern lowlands where the Oromo have traditionally farmed. Others indicated that the Ethiopian government is giving Oromo land to Somalis. An Oromo man reported that more Oromos are moving from Eastern Ethiopia to the western part of Oromia. One woman stated that the government has been moving the Wolita, Kambata, Amhara, and Arcopa into Eastern Oromia, and has moved Eastern Oromos into the western part of Oromia. The relocation of Oromos from fertile to infertile areas creates instability. The relocation of Oromos disrupts their traditional land base, creates real and perceived resource scarcity, and exacerbates environmental problems like drought. As one Oromo educator stated, "Oromia has famine, which it never had before. It ha[d] always been the 'breadbasket' of Ethiopia."
(Interviewee identifiers omitted.)
24 In my view, I respectfully disagree with the proposition that, if the Assistant Minister had not adopted a mistaken view of the law as alleged, he might have revoked the cancellation decision here because the material supported an application of the internal relocation principle. First, I do not think that the material that was before the Assistant Minister disclosed: (i) that the applicant's fear of persecution was localised to a specific area in Ethiopia; and (ii) that it was unreasonable "in all the circumstances" for the applicant to relocate to another area in Ethiopia where the applicant might reasonably be sheltered from the risk of harm that had been alleged. In the absence of such a twofold claim being made by the applicant, the issue of internal relocation did not sufficiently arise from the materials and was not otherwise sufficiently raised: cf Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZIAI (2009) 111 ALD 15. As Hill J said in SZBZJ v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2005] FCA 771 at [21] after his Honour's consideration of NABE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (No 2) (2004) 144 FCR 1:
NABE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCAFC 263 was a decision of the Full Court decided after Applicants S134/2002 [(2003) 211 CLR 441]. There is a discussion in the judgment of Black CJ, French and Selway JJ of the question whether there will be a constructive failure to exercise jurisdiction if the Tribunal does not address a claim not in fact advanced: see paras [58]-[63]. While the Full Court accepted that there is no obligation on the Tribunal to deal with a claim not advanced, the view is taken that there will be a review obligation on the part of the Tribunal when it is apparent on the face of the material before the Tribunal that an applicant to it has sufficiently raised the relevant issue. No doubt, in reaching this conclusion the Full Court was conscious of the fact that many applicants before the Tribunal are unrepresented and indeed that lawyers, not being also migration agents, have no right, without leave, to make submissions to the Tribunal. There is no system of pleadings in the Tribunal which define the issues which the Tribunal - an inquisitorial Tribunal - must decide. The conclusion reached by their Honours that there will be a constructive failure on the part of the Tribunal to exercise jurisdiction, in a case where an applicant's claim is apparent on the face of the material before the Tribunal, even if the claim is not expressly or distinctly raised by the applicant for decision would seem consistent with the requirement that the Tribunal give justice to those who apply to it. It is not necessarily inconsistent with Applicants S134/2002.
25 Secondly and moreover, in my view, the critical factor in the present case is the Minister's finding that the applicant would face hardship arising from his Oromo ethnicity were he to return to Ethiopia (at [37], [53] and [55]). That finding is not confined to a part or parts of Ethiopia, but, I infer, applies to the entire country. In other words, that finding contemplates a degree of hardship that is graver than a case where the internal relocation principle might have been engaged. It was nonetheless open to the Minister to go on and determine that the risk of harm to the Australian community and the protection of the Australian community "outweighed the best interests of [the applicant's] children and other minor family members … [and] his claims that he will suffer hardship and harm if returned to Ethiopia" (at [94]). It follows that I respectfully agree with the Minister's submission that the suggested error could not have made any difference to the outcome here because no claim had been made based upon the internal relocation principle and because any such claim had been subsumed by the broader finding about hardship reached by the Assistant Minister. In other words, in my view, there is not a "realistic possibility", to use the language adopted in Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v SZMTA [2019] HCA 3; (2019) 363 ALR 599 at [48], that the Minister might have made a different decision if he had not misunderstood the law as alleged: cf FQM18 v Minister for Home Affairs [2019] FCA 1263 at [14] per Davies J.
26 Secondly, in his written submissions, the applicant also noted that the complementary protection criteria in s 36(2)(aa) of the Act requires existence of a person who has a specific "intention" to cause the applicant harm. However, there is no need for such an intention to be present for the purposes of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, opened for signature 16 December 1966, 999 UNTS 171 (entered into force 23 March 1976): SZTAL v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2017) 262 CLR 362 at 366 [4]-[5] per Kiefel CJ, Nettle and Gordon JJ. That such differences exist is not doubted. However, it was not demonstrated on the material before me that this further alleged legal misunderstanding was a material error. It was not shown that the issue of "intention" and been raised as part of the applicant's claims.
27 Thirdly, I note the submission that it would be entirely speculative for the Court to determine that the Assistant Minister's suggested mistakes made no difference to the outcome. It was said, for example, that it was not incumbent on the applicant "proleptically to deal with the possibility of relocation". I disagree. It was for the applicant to show on the evidence that the likelihood that the Minister might have made a different decision rose to the level of realistic possibility. Here, with respect, that contention rose no higher than speculation.
28 Ultimately this is a case where the severity of the applicant's offending outweighed all that could be said in favour of revocation. It is analogous to the recent decision of O'Callaghan J in VPKY v Minister for Home Affairs [2019] FCA 1767 where his Honour said at [31]:
The Tribunal found that the protection of the Australian community (a primary consideration) should weigh "very heavily" in favour of not revoking the cancellation decision … That finding, in itself, would be sufficient to base a conclusion that the cancellation decision should not be revoked."
29 For these reasons ground three is rejected.