The Reviewer's Reasons
6 The reasons contain a précis of the appellant's declarations and interviews as well as country information which included two DFAT advices (dated February and September 2010 respectively) to which it attached "particular weight".
7 The reviewer's findings are captured in the following extracts from the reasons:
The reviewer is not satisfied that the material consulted provides independent corroboration of claims that the Taliban now specifically targets Hazara Shias on a systematic and discriminatory basis, notwithstanding that individual Hazaras may have been targeted either individually for other reasons or as part of the general insurgency and of the Taliban's attacks on communications and facilities …
Nor was there evidence before the reviewer to support a conclusion that there is general societal discrimination against Hazaras so severe as to amount to persecution; indeed, other material cited discussing the general post-2001 situation of Hazaras indicates a significant lessening of such discrimination (see for example the DFAT advices of February 2010 and September 2010).
The reviewer attaches particular weight to the recent reports by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade which squarely address the issue of persecution of Hazaras, while not dismissing the historical background and concerns articulated by Professor Maley and his caution regarding future developments.
…
The reviewer does not accept that a person's identity as an Hazara Shia of itself causes him or her to fall within the Refugee Convention definition …
(Emphasis in original.)
8 In relation to the significance of the Taliban's killing of the appellant's father, it was commented:
The reviewer therefore accepts that there is a real chance (although by no means a likelihood, given the length of time which has elapsed and the claimant's age at the time) that on return to Kandahar the claimant might be imputed by the local Taliban with the hostile political opinion or position which they had attributed to his father and that this might place the claimant in danger of harm amounting to persecution by reason of this imputed political opinion.
Uncontentious country information indicates that there is little realistic prospect of effective State protection in these circumstances.
9 The all important issue of re-location was raised by the reviewer at the interview with the appellant in the following way:
The reviewer raised the question of return to somewhere else in Afghanistan, in particular Kabul, rather than to Kandahar (an option raised by the delegate and addressed in the submission from the adviser). The claimant replied that he did not know anyone in Kabul and that it was very difficult to survive in Kabul which still has the same life and the Taliban. It was put to the claimant that there is not the same situation regarding the Taliban in Kabul as in Kandahar and there are not the local people who might remember the suspicions about his father. The claimant replied that of course they would recognise him, or if not him, because he had been young, his mother. Asked who might recognise his mother in Kabul, the claimant did not answer directly but stated that the Pashtuns are all the same, there is is [sic] not anyone to support him in Kabul and that it would be very difficult to live there.
The reviewer put to the claimant that, having regard to the reports of specific security incidents provided by his adviser, violence in Kabul appeared to be basically directed against foreigners, public figures and institutions and at disrupting normal life and that none of those specific incidents appeared to have been targeted against Hazaras as such. In its September 2010 advice, DFAT had advised that there is a cohesive Hazara community in Kabul and that it would be relatively easy for new arrivals to integrate into the city, where they can move freely. The reviewer noted that the claimant had been living and working in a large city for a number of years so that he was not in the same position as an illiterate farmer with no other experience.
10 Re-location was returned to in the findings made:
Although, it is possible that any adverse attention or suspicions the claimant may attract because of his father if he now returns to Kandahar may be exacerbated by returning after a long absence overseas, the reviewer does not accept that the claimant would face a real chance of persecution for that reason elsewhere, including in Kabul (where the evidence does not suggest that the Taliban is specifically targeting Hazaras in a systematic and discriminatory manner). The reviewer is not satisfied that the claimant would be sought, located or individually targeted in Kabul because of events in Kandahar 14 years ago or any residual suspicions in relation to his father. That leaves the question of whether it is, in practical terms, reasonable for the claimant to relocate away from Kandahar.
In considering whether the claimant might relocate elsewhere within Afghanistan rather than return to Kandahar, the reviewer has fully considered the submissions in this regard by both the claimant and his adviser. An assessment of the reasonableness of re-location will depend upon the individual circumstances in each case.
The reviewer accepts that the nature of traditional rural life in Afghanistan makes it both impractical and unreasonable to expect someone to relocate to a rural area. The only realistic option to consider appears to be Kabul, with a very large population of which a significant proportion are Hazaras.
The issues involved were raised with the claimant at interview, as already detailed.
The reviewer attaches weight to the recent advice of the Australian Embassy in Kabul (DFAT, Afghanistan/Pakistan: The Hazara, AFG10736, 28 September, 2010), "Whether returnees would have a social network in Kabul if they moved there would depend on which province and district they came from, and the part of Kabul they were located in. But there is a cohesive Hazara community in Kabul, and a Hazara human rights contact assessed that it would be relatively easy for new arrivals to integrate into the city, where they can move freely."
The reviewer notes that the claimant's life and work experience has been in a large city (Quetta) rather than in a rural environment. Although the claimant states that he does not have any immediate or extended family in Kabul, he is an adult male 25 years of age with many years experience as a street vendor in Quetta. His situation is not the same as a person whose working life has been spent on a remote farm. It is undisputed that there is a very large Hazara community in Kabul, drawn from all parts of the country (Wikipedia estimates 25% of 2.8 million; the hazaranet website states that Hazaras make up 40% of Kabul's population: http://www.hazara.net/hazara/FAQ/faq.html.) The general insecurity arising from the Taliban insurgency is relevant, although not conclusive. The claimant and his adviser have cited continuing security incidents in Kabul but the reviewer notes that the evidence presented indicates that it is largely directed against foreigners and public figures and institutions. The reviewer is satisfied that the nature and incidence of such occurrences (and the extent to which ordinary citizens in Kabul may be directly affected) is such that in a city of several million people the risk of harm for an ordinary individual is, in the context of the total population, extremely small. The reviewer is satisfied that such incidents do not impact on the day-to-day security of an individual to such an extent as to make it unreasonable for a person to live there to avoid persecution elsewhere.
The reviewer is satisfied that the totality of the circumstances are not such that the claimant would be unable to live in Kabul and might therefore be constrained to return to Kandahar.
In all the circumstances, the reviewer concludes that it is reasonable for the claimant to relocate within Afghanistan, specifically in Kabul.
I find that the claimant … does not meet the criterion for a protection visa set out in s 36(2) of the Migration Act 1958.