Applicant S227/2003 v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs
[2006] FCA 983
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2006-08-02
Before
Cowdroy J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (14 paragraphs)
HISTORY OF PROCEEDINGS 1 These proceedings, which seek an order nisi, have been remitted to this Court by the High Court of Australia. They relate to a decision by the Refugee Review Tribunal on 26 June 2000 to refuse the applicant's application for a protection visa. No evidence has been adduced relating to the history of the current proceedings since the decision of the Tribunal. However, the submissions of the first respondent have provided an outline from which the following facts are drawn. 2 Subsequent to the decision of the Tribunal, the applicant joined representative proceedings in the High Court of Australia, known as the Lie class action (see Muin v Refugee Review Tribunal and Ors (S36 of 1999) (2002) 190 ALR 601). On 27 May 2003 the applicant commenced the current proceedings in the High Court of Australia, pursuant to orders made in the Lie class action, seeking orders of mandamus and certiorari and injunctive relief.
BACKGROUND 3 The applicant is a citizen of Bangladesh who arrived in Australia on 16 March 1996. He applied for and then withdrew an application for protection visa under the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) in 1996. On 16 February 1999 he lodged another application for a protection visa. On 15 March 1999 a delegate of the first respondent refused the application and on 8 April 1999 the applicant applied to the Tribunal for a review of that decision. 4 The applicant claimed that he became a member of the Sharbahara Party in 1988, which party, the applicant told this Court, had an ideology which was similar to communism in that it sought the equality of all people. Before the Tribunal, the applicant said that he worked for such a party because it helped the underprivileged. He claimed that as a result of his involvement in the party, he had been beaten up by members of the Awami League in 1989. He told the Tribunal that the police had been looking for him and to avoid capture he moved around frequently. He said his life had been under 'constant threat' since 1992-1993, when some Sharbahara party members defected to other parties, and in 1994 he fled Bangladesh to Saudi Arabia where he lived with relatives who supported him. He claimed that his enemies had tracked him down to Saudi Arabia so he came to Australia to seek permanent protection. He says that false charges of murder have been laid against him, and he will be arrested or killed if he returns to Bangladesh. 5 The Tribunal was not satisfied that the applicant's claims were credible on several grounds. Firstly the Tribunal considered that the applicant's unfamiliarity with the ideology, history and structure of the Sharbahara party was inconsistent with his claimed active involvement in the party for five years. Further, the Tribunal considered that his claims to have been in hiding were inconsistent with the description of his activities during the period preceding his departure from Bangladesh, which included regularly visiting large numbers of poor people, attending classes and working in a restaurant. The Tribunal also considered it implausible that he had been traced by his political enemies to Saudi Arabia, especially in view of the vague account given by the applicant in relation to this part of his claim. 6 The Tribunal concluded: 'For all of the above reasons I am not satisfied that the applicant's claims of being persecuted as a Sharbahara are credible. I am of the opinion that he left Bangladesh simply to take up a job in Saudi Arabia rather than fleeing his home for fear of persecution, and that when that job ended he came to Australia in search of more work. His decision - whether or not on advice from his then migration adviser - to withdraw an initial application for a protection visa in 1996 and pursue other kinds of work and residential visas does not make me satisfied that he has a well-founded fear of persecution in Bangladesh. In all, I am not satisfied that the applicant has a well-founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason in Bangladesh.'