THE TRIBUNAL'S DECISION
7 In support of his application for merits review, the appellant's agent provided the Refugee Review Tribunal (as the Tribunal then was) with a set of written submissions which raised the following additional new claims: that the Sri Lankan authorities had visited the appellant's family home a number of times, including after he had left Sri Lanka, and had informed a family member that he must report to the authorities upon his return to Sri Lanka; that he was forced to dig bunkers for the LTTE; and that he was injured in a bomb shell blast, leaving a scar on his leg, that, if discovered by the authorities, would expose him to harm, as they would assume he was a member of the LTTE.
8 On 15 April 2015, the appellant attended an interview with the Tribunal member.
9 On 23 April 2016, the Tribunal affirmed the delegate's decision not to grant the visa. The Tribunal accepted that the appellant was questioned, hit in the stomach with a rifle and threatened that he would be taken to army headquarters and that he may be shot. However, the Tribunal observed that country information indicated that people suspected of LTTE involvement were held in rehabilitation camps but that the appellant was released. It found that there were inconsistencies in the appellant's evidence, specifically with respect to the period during which he reported to the army camp and the frequency at which he did so. The Tribunal did not accept the appellant's explanation that his written statement provided a full description of his reporting to the army camp whereas his oral evidence was simply a summary.
10 The Tribunal also did not accept that the appellant was of any interest to the authorities; or that the authorities went to his house every night after he was released from the army camp to interrogate him; or that they continued to ask his wife about his absence. The Tribunal described his claim "of ongoing interest by the authorities" as "an embellishment to strengthen a claim for protection".
11 Having considered the country information available to it, the Tribunal found that the appellant did not fall within any of the categories of persons identified by the UNHCR as those who would be at a real risk of persecution or serious harm upon return to Sri Lanka.
12 The Tribunal did not accept any of the appellant's new claims outlined at [7] above and found the appellant's reasons for not raising these claims sooner to be implausible.
13 The Tribunal was not satisfied that the appellant would be of interest to the authorities due to "his Tamil ethnicity or an imputed political opinion connecting him to the LTTE".
14 As for the appellant's claim that he feared harm as a failed asylum seeker, the Tribunal accepted that the appellant will likely face questioning at the airport upon his return to Sri Lanka and that he may be charged and convicted under Sri Lankan departure laws. Nonetheless, the Tribunal did not accept that the appellant would face serious harm as a result of his being a failed asylum seeker.
15 Finally, while the appellant did not raise any specific claims regarding his religious beliefs, the Tribunal considered this matter and found that, while the appellant "may suffer low level discrimination on the basis of his Catholic faith", having regard to country information, it did not accept that this would rise "to the level of serious or significant harm".