IAA's decision
12 By letter dated 10 March 2017, the appellant was informed that the IAA had affirmed the delegate's decision. In its written statement of reasons, under the heading 'Information before the IAA', the IAA stated (at [3]-[7]) that it had had regard to the material referred by the Secretary under s 473CB of the Migration Act, and considered the further information provided by the appellant as follows:
On 14 February 2017 the IAA received a submission from the applicant in the form of a statutory declaration. The submission reiterates claims made to the delegate and contains arguments in response to issues in the delegate's decision. To that extent I consider these elements do not constitute new information as defined in s.473DC(1) of the Act.
The submission also takes issue with the delegate's finding that the applicant's claim to have escaped from the Sri Lankan Army (SLA) on two occasions when they came to his sister's house to detain him, to be implausible. In response the applicant has put forward that his sister's house is located in a remote area and it is possible to hear trucks approaching from a distance. Furthermore there are no proper fences between the houses, which made it possible for the applicant to escape from the back of his sister's property before the SLA could detain him. This information was not before the Minister when the delegate made the decision, may be relevant to the applicant's claims for protection, and as such is new information. As the delegate did not put his concerns on the credibility of the applicant's claim to have escaped in this manner, I am satisfied the applicant's explanation was not, and could not have been, provided to the Minister[] before the delegate's decision. I am also satisfied exceptional circumstances exist to justify considering this new information, which I have done in full, below.
The IAA submission lists four pieces of country information, none of which were before the delegate and are 'new information'. The applicant states the first piece is a media release (undated) concerning the abductions of Tamil Rehabilitation Organisation (TRO) employees in 2006. The applicant states the second piece, dated 10 March 2006, is an Amnesty International Report regarding the same abductions. The third piece is a hyperlink to what appears to be a Youtube video and the fourth is a hyperlink to what appears to be a Freedom from Torture report; neither hyperlink was functional at the time of this decision.
I note the applicant was represented at his TPV interview, during which the delegate advised he would take into consideration any further information the applicant wished to provide, if received prior to making his decision. The same representative assisted the applicant with his IAA submission, which contains the new information. The applicant has claimed he could not provide this earlier because his TPV interview was held on 22 August 2016 and he only found the new information after the delegate's decision. I note the delegate made his decision on 19 January 2017, and I consider the five months which elapsed between the TPV interview and the delegate's decision to be an adequate period for the applicant to source supporting country information. I am not satisfied there are exceptional circumstances to justify considering the new information.
I have obtained new information, specifically information on the treatment of Sri Lankans of Tamil ethnicity and citizens who have departed Sri Lanka illegally and sought asylum aboard from the most recent Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) country report for Sri Lanka which was published on 24 January 2017. The delegate relied on the 18 December 2015 DFAT report for Sri Lanka which the 24 January 2017 report updates. I am satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances to justify considering this new information.
(Footnotes in original omitted)
13 After referring to the applicant's claims for protection, the IAA discussed the applicant's narrative of events under the heading 'Factual findings'. Under this heading, it said, at [10], that it "found elements of the applicant's claims to be credible, including details of his employment and travel history", but found his evidence at the TPV interview "regarding his claimed detention in 2011, his ability to evade the authorities subsequent to his detention and the circumstances under which he decided to depart Sri Lanka in 2012, to be farfetched and lacking credibility".
14 The IAA accepted (at [11]-[12] and [26]) that "the applicant worked as a labourer making and stacking bricks in the TRO factory for one year" between 2005 and 2006; that "the TRO factory was in LTTE-held territory"; and that "the applicant was from an SLA-controlled area". The IAA also stated (at [12]) it was "prepared to accept the SLA did know he worked at the TRO factory, and asked him routine questions about this" but that "based on the applicant's oral evidence at interview [it was] satisfied he was of no interest to the SLA at their checkpoints". The IAA added (at [12]-[14]) that:
I have based my finding on the applicant's recount of the routine questions he was asked, such as his name and address, or being asked to show his [National Identity Card] to them. I find the fact that the SLA often asked the applicant if he had any LTTE links, or made insinuations that he was with the LTTE because he was coming from the direction of [], or worked for the TRO, as not unusual in the context of the security situation in the Northern Province at that time. It is also consistent with country information … indicating the SLA regularly harassed Tamils at their checkpoints, particularly in the north.
Country information before the delegate also indicates that during the civil war the LTTE had a significant presence in the north of Sri Lanka, and many Tamil civilians residing there had some degree of contact with the LTTE in their daily lives. Furthermore Tamils travelling on public transport were often harassed at checkpoints while the SLA examined their documents. Accordingly I accept SLA soldiers questioned the applicant, and asked him if he supported the LTTE, as he has claimed. The applicant[] stated that the other passengers were also questioned, and that he was not harmed during such interactions.
Country information indicates the TRO was initially set up as a charitable organisation after the 2004 tsunami; however evidence that it was diverting relief funds to the LTTE led the US government to declare it a terrorist organisation in 2007. While there is no information before me which specifically states the LTTE owned the TRO, I find it plausible that it did. On this basis I also find it plausible the Sri Lankan authorities viewed the TRO as being against their interests, and that TRO employees could be imputed to hold an anti-Sri Lankan government, or pro-LTTE, political opinion. However, based on the applicant's oral evidence at his TPV interview I do not accept that this occurred in his case, or that his employment gave him a profile which was of interest to the authorities.
(Footnotes in original omitted)
15 The IAA accepted (at [15]) that in 2006 or 2007 two of the referred applicant's TRO colleagues were abducted and that he ceased working at the TRO shortly afterwards "because he was afraid", but it stated that "based on the limited information" provided by the applicant it was not satisfied that his TRO colleagues were abducted because they worked at the TRO.
16 The IAA expressed "concerns" (at [16]) with the appellant's evidence which commenced "with his return from Malaysia", particularly his evidence about his return to Sri Lanka. The IAA there stated:
The applicant confirmed to the delegate that the Sri Lankan authorities at Colombo international airport did not question him about his previous employment with the TRO or possible LTTE connections upon return. The delegate put to the applicant that this indicated he was not a person of interest to the Sri Lankan authorities. The applicant responded that upon arrival in Colombo, the airport authorities confiscated his UNHCR asylum seeker registration papers, issued to him in Malaysia, but that the papers still deterred them from arresting him. I do not accept this explanation as credible. Given the Sri Lankan authorities' focus on finding LTTE cadres and sympathisers in the aftermath of the civil war documented in the country information before the delegate, I am satisfied that if they wanted to question the applicant, the fact he had UNHCR registration papers in his possession would not have deterred them.
17 Further, the IAA assessed the applicant's evidence about various aspects of his claimed detention in 2011 as "vague and contradictory": see [17]. In this context, the IAA stated (at [17]) that:
The applicant was unable to provide an estimation of how long after his return from Malaysia this occurred. In the 'Employment History' section of his TPV application, his date of return from Malaysia is stated as 2010, in the 'Residential History' section the date is June 2011 and [in] his written statement it is 'sometime in 2011'. At the TPV interview the applicant stated he still suffers from headaches, caused by the beating he sustained during his detention, and he takes medication for this. I have had regard to the amount of time which has elapsed since the claimed events took place, as well as [the] possibility that the applicant has suffered physical and psychological trauma which has affected his ability to recall timeframes and other details. I also acknowledge that dates can be difficult to recall with precision, however the applicant's responses suggested he was not recalling evidence from his own personal experience. The delegate asked the applicant several times during the interview to provide more details regarding his detention - for example the physical environment where he was held, what was said to him, or any associated administrative processes, but the applicant did not elaborate. … Despite the delegate giving the applicant numerous opportunities, he did not provide any substantial oral evidence about what the SLA purportedly said to him in regards to his employment at the TRO.
18 The IAA also found (at [18]) "the applicant's recount of what occurred after he was released from detention to be farfetched and, when considered in conjunction with the applicant's vague evidence regarding the detention itself, raises further doubts it occurred". The IAA noted, in this context, that the applicant "could not give any indication of where the [] SLA camp was in relation to where he lived, although he claimed he was ordered to report there twice a day following his detention". The IAA found (at [18]) that the applicant's statement that he was able to evade the soldiers when they came to his sister's house by taking "the back exit of his sister's property" was implausible, "given the methods at the SLA's disposal, as a military force, to prevent the escape of an individual of interest". The IAA did not accept that "the SLA would make the effort to take a truck to a remote place [where] they believed the applicant to be hiding, and not take adequate measures to prevent the applicant being aware of their approach". It added (also at [18]) that:
I am satisfied that should the SLA have had an interest in locating the applicant then they would have had the capacity and resources to do so before he left for Colombo six months later.
19 The IAA concluded (at [20]-[21]) that:
In light of the significant inconsistencies, gaps and implausibilities … I am not satisfied the applicant was detained in 2011 or ordered to report twice a day to the SLA camp … as claimed. I do not accept the authorities would take five years to accuse the applicant of LTTE involvement from the end of his employment at the TRO in 2006 until June 2011. It follows I do not accept the Sri Lankan authorities have the applicant's photograph, fingerprints or TRO employee identity card on file or that they visited his family in 2012, or in 2016, searching for him.
Accordingly I do not accept the SLA have ever had an interest in the applicant, or were searching for the applicant at any time, including since his arrival in Australia.
20 Under the heading 'Refugee assessment', the IAA considered the applicant's claims under two subheadings 'Young Tamil Male from the North - Employment with the TRO' and 'Returning Asylum Seeker from Australia - Illegal Departure'.
21 Under the first subheading, the IAA cited (at [24]) the "DFAT Country Information Report - Sri Lanka" dated 24 January 2017, referenced at the outset of its statement of reasons. The IAA recorded that:
DFAT states that many Tamils, particularly in the north and east of Sri Lanka reported being monitored, harassed, arrested and detained by security forces under the former Rajapaksa government. However, the country information indicates the situation for Tamils has improved markedly since the war ended, as evidenced by the cessation of forced registration of Tamils in the Northern Province.
22 The IAA also referred (at [25]) to the then current 2012 United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) Guidelines, which recorded that it was the opinion of the UNHCR that "individuals originating from an area formerly under LTTE control, such as the applicant, do not require protection solely on that basis unless there are additional relevant factors which may give rise to a profile of risk". The IAA stated (at [25] and [27]-[28]):
I accept that during the civil war the authorities would have regarded young Tamil males, such as the applicant, with suspicion given their potential to have LTTE involvement. However overall the country information now indicates there have been positive political developments for all Tamils on both the provincial and national level.
…
While I accept the TRO was considered as pro-LTTE by the Sri Lankan government, and officially declared a terrorist organisation by the US government, there is no credible evidence before me that the applicant was of interest to the authorities during this time or suffered any negative consequences as a result of his employment with the TRO [between 2005 and 2006]. Following his resignation the applicant was able to [continue] residing in Sri Lanka, left sometime in 2007, returned sometime in 2011, and spent at least another year there before departing for Australia by boat. I am satisfied that the applicant does not have any sort of imputed pro-LTTE political opinion as a result of his employment with the TRO. Accordingly I am also satisfied that should he return to Sri Lanka, there is no reason his previous employment with the TRO would lead the authorities to now view him with suspicion. On the evidence before me I am satisfied the applicant does not face a real chance of serious harm on account of his previous employment with the TRO should he return to Sri Lanka now, or in the reasonably foreseeable future.
I have considered all the evidence before me in the context of the improved situation in Sri Lanka, particularly the 2015 change in government. I am not satisfied the applicant has a well-founded fear of persecution due to any real or imputed pro-LTTE/anti-Sri Lankan government political opinion arising from his profile as a young Tamil male, his origins in the north, or his employment with the TRO.
23 Under the second subheading, the IAA rejected (at [30]) the applicant's claim that he faced a real chance of harm on account of the time he had spent in Australia seeking protection, referencing DFAT's assessment that the risk of mistreatment for asylum seekers returning to Sri Lanka was low. Although the IAA accepted (at [34]) that there was a real chance that the applicant would be questioned on his return to Sri Lanka, fined, and detained briefly as part of the re-entry process, it was not satisfied that "questioning and the fine in question amounts to serious harm". On the evidence before it, it was not satisfied that the applicant's loss of liberty, "such as that that the applicant may face under the [Sri Lankan Immigrants and Emigrants Act 1949] processing, would constitute serious harm". It added (also at [34]):
Nor am I satisfied that the payment of a fine, or being held in detention for a period of up to 24 hours at the airport, or possibly a nearby prison, cumulatively amounts to serious harm. In the instance the applicant pleads not guilty, he will be released on his own personal surety. I note that in some cases a family member is required to collect illegal departees who are released, or to act as a guarantor if personal surety is not granted.
24 The IAA concluded (at [36]) that the applicant "is not currently of any interest to the Sri Lankan authorities because of his profile as a young Tamil male, his origins in the north or his previous employment with the TRO", adding that:
Taking this into account, and the improved country information, I am not satisfied there is a real chance that the applicant would face harm as a returning Tamil asylum seeker from Australia, who departed Sri Lankan illegally, now or in the reasonably foreseeable future.
25 The IAA held that the applicant did not satisfy the definition of refugee in s 5H(1) and meet the criteria in s 36(2)(a) of the Migration Act: see [38]. The same considerations led it to hold that it did not meet the complementary protection criteria in s 36(2)(aa): see [39]-[46]. The IAA affirmed the delegate's decision in consequence.