THE COURT BELOW
7 By an amended application filed on 23 August 2008, the appellant claimed that:
1. The Refugee Review Tribunal failed to exercise its jurisdiction under the Act:
Particulars:
A. The Tribunal did not put any weight to the document which I submitted before the Tribunal that:
(i) An Ejahar filed to the Mohammadpur Police Station (Copy of Bangla and its translated English copy);
(ii) A letter from Mr. Ejaz Ahmed Siddiqi, Founder & Leader of Stranded Pakistanis General Repatriation Committee, Geneva Camp, Mohammadpur Dhaka;
(iii) The First Information Report (Copy of Bangla and its translated English copy);
(iv) The doctor's certificate issued on 1 May 1997;
(v) The warrant arrest order to me to attend before the Court and provide witness (Copy of Bangla and its translated English copy);
2. The Refugee Review Tribunal failed to consider my persecution on the basis of my race and discrimination that:
Particulars:
A. The Tribunal failed to consider my persecution on the basis of my race and discrimination that:
(i) The Tribunal failed to consider my persecution on the perspective of my race and discrimination where the country information indicates that Biharis in Bangladesh receive discrimination and sometimes ill treatment.
3. The Refugee Review Tribunal did not follow the proper procedure to determine my case:
Particulars:
A. The Tribunal did not follow the proper procedure to determine my review application that:
(i) The Tribunal said its decision that I was not a witness of truth. However the Tribunal did not disclose me where and why I was not a witness of truth. Accordingly did not get the opportunity to provide my argument.
4. The Refugee Review Tribunal acted in bad faith:
Particulars:
A. The Tribunal acted in bad faith and made following comment without put any effort to find its truth that:
(i) the events described did not occur but were invented by the applicant to assist his application for protection in Australia.
8 The Federal Magistrate, in considering the Tribunal's decision in light of the claims made by the appellant, dismissed the application. In relation to the appellant's claim that the Tribunal had committed jurisdictional error by failing to give weight to the above documents, his Honour found that (at [52]-[54]):
52. The weight to be accorded to documentary evidence provided by an applicant is a matter for the Tribunal. Further, in this case, the Tribunal reasoned that as the applicant was not considered to be a witness of truth (for cogent reasons, which the Tribunal gave and which were open to it on what was before it) it did not accept that the various documents produced by him assisted in supporting his claims. This was a view plainly open to the Tribunal, given its very clear finding as to the applicant's lack of credibility.
53. Nor can any failure at the hearing (pursuant to s.425) to put to the applicant that the evidence was to be so regarded in itself constitute (that is, the Tribunal's adverse view of the evidence as corroboration) a breach of procedural fairness (under the statutory code) to the extent that it may be so implied, particularly from the applicant's submissions.
54. But whatever the situation, in any event, the transcript of the hearing reveals that the Tribunal did put the applicant on notice that it had doubts as to the reliability of the documents.
9 In relation to ground two of the amended application, his Honour found that any plain reading of the Tribunal's decision record made it clear that such a complaint could not succeed. His Honour noted that the Tribunal understood the question that it was jurisdictionally charged to answer (whether the appellant had a well-founded fear founded upon a real chance of persecution for a Convention reason). The Tribunal found that although the appellant would suffer discrimination in his country because of his race, there was no plausible evidence before it to indicate that the appellant would suffer harm amounting to persecution for a Convention reason.
10 In relation to ground three, his Honour noted that this was not a case to which s 422B of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) ('the Act') applied, such as to make the matters set out in Div 4 of Pt 7 of the Act the exhaustive statement of the natural justice hearing rule applicable to this matter; s 422B only became operational on 24 July 2002, while the application for review was made prior to that date, on 28 April 1998.
11 His Honour found that due to the 'transitional' provisions in Pt 2 of Sch 3 of the Migration Legislation Amendment Act (No 1) 1998 (Cth), it was the current version of s 425 of the Act which obliged the Tribunal to invite the applicant to appear before it 'to give evidence and present arguments relating to the issues arising in relation to the decision under review' (on the basis that even though the application was made before the commencement of Sch 3, the review was not completed by a date before the commencement of Sch 3). In this regard, therefore, what was said by the High Court in SZBEL v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2006) 228 CLR 152 in relation to procedural fairness and s 425 was relevant to the consideration of the appellant's complaint before the court. His Honour noted that both parties were given the opportunity to make submissions in relation to this issue following the hearing before the court, and both did so.
12 In his Honour's opinion, the issues in relation to the review, and which were determinative in the Tribunal affirming the decision under review, were:
1) The circumstances which gave rise to the murder of the applicant's friend in March 1997, which led to him being compelled to give evidence, as a witness, at the trial of those accused of his murder.
2) The applicant was threatened and subjected to harm in Bangladesh and, in particular, that he was injured in an attack in May 1997 (the stabbing incident), in relation to which he had provided a medical certificate which was said to prove his injuries.
3) The various documents provided by the applicant did not support his claims.
4) Whether the applicant would suffer harm as a Bihari if he were to return to Bangladesh.
13 His Honour noted that, as the High Court said in SZBEL 228 CLR 152 at [47], the Tribunal was not required to put to the appellant that he 'may not be accepted as a witness of truth', contrary to what the appellant asserted in his submissions. In any event, his Honour found that, based on the transcript of the Tribunal hearing, the appellant was clearly put on notice as to the importance of telling the truth to the Tribunal, and that if the Tribunal were to form the view that he was not telling the truth (even about some parts of his claims), it might then lead to a rejection of all of the appellant's claims (at [95]). Further, the appellant was plainly (on any reading of the transcript of the hearing) given an opportunity of putting the factual basis of his claims to the Tribunal and discussing these with the Tribunal. His Honour concluded that (at [110]):
I am satisfied, on the material before the Court, that the Tribunal did give the applicant a sufficient opportunity to give evidence and make submissions about what were the determinative issues arising in relation to the decision under review. Further, that it is quite clear that (with reference to [47] of SZBEL) the Tribunal more than sufficiently indicated to the applicant the concerns that it had with the evidence that the applicant relevantly gave at the hearing and with the documents that he had provided in support of his claims. This complaint, therefore, it is not made out.
14 In relation to the allegation of bad faith, his Honour found at [114]-[115]:
114. Importantly, there is nothing in the material before the Court to show that there was any absence of honesty on the part of the Tribunal member such as to give rise to an allegation of bad faith (see, in particular, SBBS v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs(2002) 194 ALR 749; [2002] FCAFC 361, Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v SBAN [2002] FCAFC 431, Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs v NAOS of 2002 [2003] FCAFC 142 and SCAS v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs[2002] FCAFC 397 per Heerey, Moore and Kiefel JJ at [19]).
115. In all the circumstances of what is before the Court, I cannot see that this complaint rises above an attempt to challenge the Tribunal's adverse credibility finding. The Tribunal's adverse finding as to the applicant's credit was plainly open to it on the material before it, particularly given the inconsistencies in the applicant's evidence and the deficiencies found by the Tribunal. The Tribunal's findings in this regard were findings of fact, including a finding on credibility, which were plainly open to it, and are not susceptible to being challenged upon judicial review (ReMinister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs; Ex parte Durairajasingham [2000] HCA 1; (2000) 168 ALR 407 at [67] per McHugh J).