Relocation: Did the Reviewer apply the wrong test?
22 The circumstance that persons claiming refugee status on the basis of a well-founded fear of being persecuted for a Convention reason may be able to avoid that fear by relocating to another area within their own country has been considered in a number of authorities. In SZATV v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2007] HCA 40 at [19]; (2007) 233 CLR 18 at 25-6, Gummow, Hayne and Crennan JJ quoted the following passage from the reasons of Lord Bingham of Cornhill in Januzi v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2006] 2 AC 426 at 440:
The [Convention] does not expressly address the situation at issue in these appeals where, within the country of his nationality, a person has a well-founded fear of persecution at place A, where he lived, but not at place B, where (it is said) he could reasonably be expected to relocate. But the situation may fairly be said to be covered by the causative condition to which reference has been made: for if a person is outside the country of his nationality because he has chosen to leave that country and seek asylum in a foreign country, rather than move to a place of relocation within his own country where he could have no well-founded fear of persecution, where the protection of his country would be available to him and where he could reasonably be expected to relocate, it can properly be said that he is not outside the country of his nationality owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for a Convention reason.
Gummow, Hayne and Crennan JJ also quoted with approval Lord Bingham's statement that "a person will be excluded from refugee status if under all the circumstances it would be reasonable to expect him to seek refuge in another part of the same country" (at [22], 26). Their Honours noted that what is "reasonable", in the sense of "practicable" must depend upon the particular circumstances of the applicant for refugee status and the impact upon that person of relocating their place of residence within the country of nationality. Those circumstances, in general, do not include matters such as differential living standards, whether attributable to climatic, economic or political conditions (at [25], [27]) and do not ordinarily involve a consideration of whether the quality of life in the place of relocation meets the basic norms of civil, political and socio-economic human rights (ibid.).
23 In his separate reasons in SZATV, Kirby J identified a number of considerations which may bear upon whether relocation within an applicant's country of origin would be reasonable and practical (at [80]-[81], 42-3). These included the existence of any logistical or safety impediments to gaining access to the separate part of the national territory which is suggested as a safe haven; the existence of other and different risks in the propounded place of internal relocation; whether safety could be procured only by going underground or into hiding; whether the place of relocation would not be accessible on the basis of the applicant's travel documents or the requirements imposed for internal relocation; any inability or unwillingness on the part of the national authorities to provide protection in the place of relocation; and whether, having regard to the age of the applicant, there is an absence of family networks or other local support.
24 Other authorities indicate that considerations personal to a particular applicant such as an applicant's marital status, medical needs, psychiatric health and need of care may be pertinent (NAIZ v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2005] FCAFC 37 at [22]; MZYQU v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2012] FCA 1032 at [70]-[79]; (2006) 206 FCR 191 at 203-4).
25 In Randhawa v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (1994) 52 FCR 437 at 442, Black CJ observed that the question of possible relocation in the country of origin is not to be approached in a narrow way. The inquiry is not only whether an applicant for refugee status could relocate to another area in the country of origin, but also whether the applicant could reasonably be expected to do so. Black CJ continued:
This further question is an important one because, notwithstanding that real protection from persecution may be available elsewhere within the country of nationality, a person's fear of persecution in relation to that country will remain well-founded with respect to the country as a whole if, as a practical matter, the part of the country in which protection is available is not reasonably accessible to that person. In the context of refugee law, the practical realities facing a person who claims to be a refugee must be carefully considered.
26 These authorities indicate that the inquiry is not confined to whether an applicant may face persecution for a Convention-based reason in the proposed area of relocation, or whether the applicant may suffer some detriment for a Convention reason. The question is, instead, whether it is reasonable or practical in the particular circumstances of the applicant for refugee status for that person to relocate to another area in the country of nationality.
27 The appellant's complaint was that the Reviewer had considered whether it was reasonable for him to relocate to Kabul by reference only to whether he "could re-enter and reside in Kabul without facing a real chance of Convention-related persecution". He contended that a finding that he would not face persecution for a Convention reason in Kabul was relevant to a finding that it was reasonable for him to relocate there, but that it was not conclusive of that position. All of the matters bearing on the reasonableness of relocation to Kabul should have been considered. The submission in short was that the Reviewer had erred in law in the test which he had applied on the issue of relocation.
28 The complaints about the manner in which the Reviewer had dealt with the issue of relocation were contained in Grounds 5 to 10 inclusive of the appellant's application for judicial review. Ground 7 raised squarely a complaint that the Reviewer had not applied the correct test:
7. The decision of the second respondent contained an error going to jurisdiction by determining the question of reasonableness of living in another part of the country by reference only to whether the applicant would have a well-founded Convention fear of persecution within that place.
The other grounds on this topic raised complaints that the Reviewer had failed to consider particular matters bearing upon a possible relocation within Afghanistan.
29 The appellant's complaint on appeal is that the FCC Judge did not address and determine Ground 7.
30 The FCC Judge dealt with Grounds 5 to 9 of the application in a compendious way (AZACC v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2013] FCCA 927 at [115]-[131]. He summarised those grounds in [115]:
These grounds relate to a contention that the reviewer has failed to consider each of the applicant's grounds for asylum in the context of his possible relocation within Afghanistan and has further applied an incorrect test to the question of such a relocation by failing to consider whether it was reasonable or practicable for him to live in Kabul, given his personal circumstances.
31 In my respectful opinion, the second half of this sentence was not an accurate summary of the appellant's complaint raised by Ground 7 and indicates a misunderstanding by the FCC Judge of the nature of that complaint. The appellant's complaint was not simply that the Reviewer had failed to consider whether it was reasonable or practical for him to live in Kabul, but that the Reviewer had determined that question by reference only to whether he could have a well-founded fear of persecution on Convention grounds in Kabul.
32 In the paragraphs which followed [115], the FCC Judge did not redress this mistake. Instead, after referring to Randhawa, SZATV and to SZMCD v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2009] FCAFC 46; (2009) 174 FCR 415, the Judge addressed the appellant's complaints that identified factual matters had not been considered by the Reviewer. I will refer to some aspects of his reasons concerning those matters in relation to the second and third issues raised on appeal. For present purposes, it is sufficient to note that the Judge rejected the appellant's complaints.
33 However, the FCC Judge did not address and determine the appellant's complaint that the Reviewer had determined the question of reasonableness by reference only to whether he would have a well-founded fear of persecution on Convention grounds if he did relocate to Kabul.
34 In relation to the Reviewer's reasons, the appellant acknowledged that the Reviewer had commenced his consideration of the relocation issue with an appropriate statement of the test to be applied:
Nevertheless, not least in view of the risks of travelling on Afghan roads, I must consider whether it would be reasonable for [the appellant] to reside in locations alternate to Jaghori and, in the course of this consideration, I must on the evidence consider Kabul.
The appellant contrasted that statement with the Reviewer's conclusion after addressing the submissions and materials that he could re-enter and reside in Kabul "without facing a real chance of Convention-related persecution" and that such limitation as there may be in Kabul on his activity would not "amount to persecution". In addition, the appellant pointed to four passages in the intervening reasons in which, in addressing submissions made on his behalf, the Reviewer made reference to consideration of "Convention-related reasons" or like expressions.
35 In order to assess the merit of the appellant's submission, it is necessary to review the Reviewer's reasons in some detail.
36 The Reviewer commenced his consideration of the relocation issue with a reference to the circumstances in which the appellant had, for a period of four years, already lived in Kabul:
I accept that [the appellant] moved to Kabul in or around 2005 to work in [FG's] bakery. I accept that the bakery is in … a district in Western Kabul, near the start of the Ghazni road. I note that Western Kabul is predominantly but not entirely Hazara. I accept that [the appellant] usually worked in the company of two other Hazara bakers and one Pashtun baker. … [The appellant's] evidence indicates to me that he lived and worked harmoniously with the small number of Pashtuns he knew in [the district]. His evidence leads me to the view that he has [a] viable, if small, overlapping Pashtun and Hazara support network in Kabul.
The Reviewer then referred to and accepted evidence indicating that the appellant knew that Western Kabul had a sizeable Hazara population and that Pashtuns were in the minority. He rejected some evidence of the appellant which he regarded as having minimised his knowledge of those matters.
37 The Reviewer then said that given the claims that Hazaras are a targeted minority in Afghanistan and that Western Kabul is a place with a high concentration of Hazaras, he would consider whether it is safe for Hazaras, like the applicant, to reside there. The balance of his reasons concerns the issue of safety. It is this section of the reasons which contains the references to "Convention-related reasons" or like expressions, on which the appellant relied. I have numbered these paragraphs for ease of later reference:
[1] Since Western Kabul is a place with a high concentration of Hazaras, and since [the appellant] claims that Hazaras are a targeted minority in Afghanistan, I must consider if it is safe for Hazaras like [the appellant] to reside there.
[2] I have regard to [the appellant] having claimed no incidents having affected his security during his years of living and working in Kabul. However, I also note [the appellant's] claims about the self-restricting conditions under which he has lived, which he claims have greatly but unreasonably diminished his freedom of movement whilst preventing him to date from being exposed to serious harm in Kabul so far. …
[3] I do not accept that the occurrence of insurgent activity including suicide bombings in or around Kabul is indicative of a real chance of [the appellant] facing Convention-related persecution there. [The appellant's] evidence does not persuade me that such events have been other than isolated and infrequent, or that they are tacitly or actively condoned by the authorities in Kabul. I note that Afghans including Hazaras are returning to Afghanistan in large numbers from countries like the UK … every month and, as I put to [the appellant] it is not independently suggested that it is unsafe for Convention-related reasons for them to return to and reside in that city.
[4] I do not accept that [the appellant] restricted his movements in Kabul to the boundaries of the premises on which the bakery stands, let alone to 30 minutes or less on infrequent occasions in the company of others in the middle of the day or afternoon. … I find that [the appellant] revised the evidence he presented to me to reverse the impression he was conveying of a fairly safe and secure life in the neighbourhood in which he lived. I also find that the picture he tried to paint of a person who never went out of the bakery or its grounds inconsistent with the behaviour of a person who took the risks he claims to have taken on the road between Kabul and Jaghori.
[5] I do not accept that Kabul's security situation or infrastructural capacity makes it unreasonable, impractical or, from any Convention-related perspective, unsafe for [the appellant] to live there. Whilst I understand that individuals make their own potentially imperfect assessments of the dangers they might face, [the appellant's] evidence about his Hazara colleagues continuing to work in the bakery at the time he left Afghanistan adds to the impression that it would have been safe for him to remain there. No evidence suggests to me that [the appellant] could not again access the social and economic contacts in Kabul like the ones he maintained there over the four years before he left.
[6] I note Amnesty International's concerns about "sending other young men back to the country with no family or tribal connection will make them soft targets for the Taliban and other criminal gangs recruiting in Kabul and other urban centres". I gave [the appellant] an opportunity to argue whether or not he feared being recruited by criminal gangs in Kabul. He said he faced a risk of being recruited by the Taliban in Kabul and forced to act as a suicide bomber. He said the Taliban, who disguised themselves in Kabul, abduct Hazaras and make them "take orders or die". … I find that [the appellant] improvised when I questioned the reliability of what he was suggesting. Whereas it is well-reported that the Taliban recruit Pashtuns and other Sunnis into their ranks in various parts of Afghanistan, I find [the appellant's] claims that they do the same to Shi'ite Hazaras in Kabul unreliable and far fetched.
[7] I find … the chance of [the appellant] being kidnapped or killed by Taliban gangs in Kabul to be remote.
[8] [The appellant's] adviser provided additional evidence about the presence of criminal youth gangs in Kabul and the vulnerability of young people, particularly internally displaced youths, in Kabul to being recruited into criminal gangs. It is appropriate to consider the prospect of this happening to [the appellant]. On the evidence he has presented me, I do not regard him as being at all impressionable, and I do not accept that he would be in any way vulnerable to co-option by criminal gangs, even though, as I discussed with him and his adviser, I do accept that the co-option of youths into such gangs in Kabul does occur. On consideration of his evidence, I believe there is only a very remote chance of this happening to [the appellant], who, though still young, has lived and worked a stable life in Kabul and who, I believe, could easily reintegrate into such a life. In the remote event that it were to happen, I cannot see on the information before me that co-option into a criminal gang or the ensuing existence of a gang-member would amount as such to, or give rise to a real chance of, [the appellant] suffering serious harm amounting to persecution for a Convention-related reason.
[9] Overall, I find that [the appellant] could re-enter and reside in Kabul without facing a real chance of Convention-related persecution. I do not regard his potential limitation to living and working in Kabul in the foreseeable future so restricting as to amount to persecution. In coming to all my conclusions in this matter, I have weighed and considered [the appellant's] status as a young male yet to turn 18.
(Emphasis added.)
The words "Convention-related" in the last line of the paragraph numbered [8] are also italicised in the Reviewer's reasons. That italicisation appears to reflect an emphasis intended by the Reviewer.
38 These reasons of the Reviewer are to be construed beneficially and not minutely or with an eye keenly attuned to the perception of error. The reasons of an administrative decision-maker are meant to inform and not to be scrutinised upon over-zealous judicial review by seeking to discern whether some inadequacy may be gleaned from the way in which the reasons are expressed (Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang (1996) 185 CLR 259 at 271-2; MZYPW v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2012] FCAFC 99 at [13]-[14]; (2012) 289 ALR 541 at 546). The appellant's critique of the Reviewer's reasons is to be assessed with these principles in mind.
39 The Reviewer's repeated references to "Convention-related reasons" and like expressions and, in particular, the terms of his conclusion in the paragraph numbered [9] do, prima facie, suggest that he considered whether it would be reasonable for the appellant to relocate to Kabul by considering whether the difficulties he might face in so doing would amount to Convention-related persecution. The impression that this is so is confirmed by the fact that the quoted paragraphs commenced with the Reviewer's statement that he should consider whether "it is safe for Hazaras like [the appellant] to reside [in Western Kabul]". That indicates that the focus of the Reviewer's inquiry was directed to whether it was safe for people of Hazaran ethnicity, and perhaps Shia religion, to reside in Western Kabul as opposed to the practical considerations more generally for this particular applicant.
40 The Reviewer's approach may also have reflected the implicit basis on which the appellant's submissions were made, that is, that it was mainly his Hazara ethnicity which was relied upon for the contention that he could not reasonably be expected to reside in Western Kabul.
41 Despite these matters, there are some indications in the Reviewer's reasons that he did consider the issue more broadly. I refer again to the fact that the Reviewer commenced his consideration of the topic of relocation with a correct statement of the principle to be applied.
42 The context in which the Reviewer was considering the question of relocation is also pertinent. An important part of that context was that the appellant had already lived in Western Kabul for a period of four years without, on his own acknowledgement, having experienced any incidents in Kabul itself affecting his security. The appellant's explanation that that circumstance could be attributed to self-imposed restrictions on his movements and activities outside the bakery was considered and rejected by the Reviewer. Prima facie therefore, the appellant's own experience suggested that he could reasonably be expected to live in Western Kabul. That being so, it is natural that the Reviewer focussed on those matters said to distinguish the appellant from others, namely his Hazara ethnicity and his youth.
43 The opening sentence of the paragraph numbered [5] is another possible indication. In that sentence, the Reviewer concluded that "Kabul's security situation or infrastructural capacity" did not make it "unreasonable, impractical or, from any Convention-related perspective, unsafe for [the appellant] to live there". The word "or", which I have emphasised, indicates that the "Convention-related perspective" was only one of three matters which the Reviewer considered in this context. This suggests that his inquiry may not have had a single focus.
44 It can also be said that some of the intermediate findings of the Reviewer in the quoted paragraphs are expressed generally and are capable of bearing on the reasonableness of an expectation that the appellant could relocate to Kabul. For example, the Reviewer found (in [3]) that insurgent activity, including suicide bombing, in or around Kabul was infrequent; that the appellant could again gain access to the social and economic contacts in Kabul which he had had previously (in [5]); and that the chances of him being coerced into a criminal gang were remote (in [8]). However, each of these findings is closely linked to a statement concerning the prospects that the appellant would face Convention-related persecution. In that context, I doubt that they can be regarded as an indication that the Reviewer did address the correct question.
45 The matters to which I have just referred indicate that the appellant's claim that the Reviewer determined the question of reasonableness of relocation by reference only to whether he had a well-founded fear of persecution on Convention grounds is not clear cut. However, three considerations incline me to the view that the appellant made out this claim.
46 The first is the manner in which the Reviewer expressed his conclusion in the paragraph numbered [9] quoted above. To my mind, it is reasonable to conclude that the Reviewer's manner of expression in that paragraph reflects the manner in which he considered the issue. That is particularly so given the Reviewer's repeated reference to "Convention-related reasons", or like expressions, in the preceding paragraphs.
47 The second matter is the italicisation which the Reviewer himself gave to the expression "Convention-related" in the final sentence of the paragraph numbered [8]. As I indicated previously, this appears to be a deliberate statement of emphasis by the Reviewer and to indicate that he was referring only in that context to Convention-related reasons. This impression is strengthened by the Reviewer's use of the expression "serious harm", that being the expression used in s 91R of the Migration Act to indicate the nature of the persecution necessary for the application of the Refugee Convention.
48 The third matter is the evident care which the Reviewer has taken in the statement of his reasons. The reasons bespeak a thorough and careful identification of relevant issues and analysis of the material. In that context, the Reviewer's repeated reference to "Convention-related reasons" and like expressions tells against a conclusion that they be regarded as a mere looseness of language or terminology. These expressions serve to indicate, in my mind, the approach which the Reviewer actually adopted. That approach was too narrow.
49 For these reasons, and with some reservations, I uphold the appellant's complaint that the Reviewer did not apply the correct test.