Tribunal's summary of claims
11 The Tribunal summarised the key claims in the appellant's statement lodged with his protection visa application at DR [10] (identifying descriptors omitted):
a. He has not seen his father since 2000. His father, who worked in a fish drying business went to get fish and never returned. No one knows what happened to him and they feared 'something bad occurred'.
b. Because of his Tamil ethnicity, he has been unable to pursue his dream of a cricketing career in spite of superior cricket skills; was denied entry into the [xx] Cricket Club, beaten and abused. He also attributes to his Tamil ethnicity the withdrawal of an offer to enter teacher training in [xx] in 2010 and his displacement by students with lower marks who paid bribes.
c. Around May 2012, while he was studying in [xx], police officers came to his home in [xx] and handed his mother a letter requesting that he, his cousin [xx] and another friend attend the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) office in [xx] on a date in May 2012. He then pulled out of his course and returned to [xx].
d. He did not attend the CID Office on the date required in the letter for fear he may be detained or face problems as he suspected that his cousin, who had been taken away for interrogation by the CID the previous month and had not been seen since, was in hiding from the CID.
e. Around the end of May 2012, CID officers came to his home in [xx] looking for him while he was at his auntie's house. His mother told them he was not there and called him to say he should not return home that day. After this he lived at different places, including his auntie's home and his uncle's prawn farm, only returning home in the morning for half an hour.
f. CID officers came to his home again at the beginning of June 2012. His mother told them he was not at home. While she could not understand everything the men said, she sensed that they were threatening towards her and that he was in trouble.
g. Around the end of June 2012 some Sinhalese men, who he assumed were from the CID, came to his home while he was there eating. They took him outside the house and beat, kicked and hit him. A neighbour who spoke Sinhalese told him the men were saying that he had failed to report to them and were asking for his cousin's whereabouts. They tried to put the applicant in the van but when the neighbours gathered around, got into their van and left, threatening that they would take him to the 'fourth floor' if he did not give them information as to his cousin's whereabouts.
h. After this incident the applicant became concerned for his safety and arranged to leave Sri Lanka on a boat around 26 July 2012.
i. After arriving in Australia he found out from his cousin [xx], who was then in Sydney, that the CID initially interrogated him about his travels overseas and accused him of going to India in an attempt to escape from them.
j. His mother has received two or three further visits from men asking for his whereabouts while he has been in Australia, the last time being in August 2012, and the neighbours have told her that they have seen strangers around their home.
k. He fears that if he returns to Sri Lanka he will face serious harm, including detention, interrogation, torture or possibly death from the Sri Lankan authorities, including the CID.
l. He believes the CID are interested in him because of his close relationship with his cousin, and his situation has become worse because he failed to attend the CID office. He believes the CID will harm him because he is a Tamil and has no one to speak on his behalf or to protect him.
m. He also fears that, because he is a Tamil, he will continue to face severe discrimination from members of the Sinhalese community around his area, and has been denied the opportunity to pursue a career as a cricketer, despite being a talented player, recognised on the TV news and through awards.
n. He fears harm from the Sri Lankan government and does not believe they will protect him from such harm, as agents of the Sri Lankan government, like the CID, are able to act without restrictions on their power, while Tamils, like the applicant, are particularly vulnerable and lack protection.
12 On 27 April 2015, the appellant's registered migration agent filed pre-hearing submissions. The Tribunal summarised those submissions at DR [11] as follows (identifying descriptors omitted):
a. On 15 September 2013 the applicant's brother and mother were taken blindfolded by the CID; held for two days and questioned as to his whereabouts, then released after paying 200,000 Sri Lankan Rupees.
b. His cousin [xx] returned to Sri Lanka about a year ago and was missing.
c. The CID visited his mother's home on 14 April 2015 looking for the applicant. His maternal uncle was at home and asked the CID why they were searching for him. When he told the CID the applicant was not there, they beat him severely.
d. One possible reason that the CID have been pursuing him is that his father's cousin carried weapons and fought with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). He had not mentioned this previously, as he thought he was being pursued because of his close relationship with his cousin. However, he now believes it is a combination of his connections with both his cousin and his father's cousin.
e. The applicant fears that, if forced to return to Sri Lanka, he will be arrested, questioned and seriously harmed by the security services on his return to his hometown and/or on arrival at the airport because:
• he is a Tamil and the authorities have already targeted him and his family for their imputed links to the LTTE; and
• he will be imputed of adverse political opinion to the current regime in Sri Lanka and suspected of being an LTTE sympathiser as a result of seeking asylum in Australia.
13 At DR [13], the Tribunal noted information provided by the appellant at the Tribunal hearing, including (identifying descriptors omitted):
a. On 14 April 2015 the CID came to his family's house to enquire about him. When his uncle asked them why they were looking for him, the CID beat him but did not tell him why they were looking for the applicant.
b. He left Sri Lanka in July 2012 in fear of harm from the CID who were looking for him.
c. His father was taken away by the CID in May 2000 when he went to buy fish in [xx] and disappeared. Asked how he knew his father had been taken by the CID, the applicant said his father had been taken for interrogation by the CID several times and tortured very badly, losing nails and having a hot iron box put on his back; but was released by paying money. This happened because his father's cousin, who lived in [xx] was an LTTE soldier.
d. The applicant's mother told him that his father's cousin was in the LTTE after his father disappeared when he was 10 years old.
e. His family only had problems with the authorities because of his father, and after he disappeared they did not have any problems.
f. When he last spoke to his family in [xx] a few days before, they told him the CID was still looking for him and what happened to his uncle. He did not know what the CID wanted. However, in September 2013 they abducted his mother and younger brother in a van, kept them for two days, questioned them about where the applicant was, and beat them.
g. Asked why the CID wanted to find him, he said he thought they suspected that he had helped his cousin, whom they suspected of involvement with the LTTE. They may also have come to know about his disclosure about his father's disappearance and his appeal for Tamils to be given opportunities in cricket during his interview on [xx] TV and [xx] in 2010.
h. Neither he nor his family were ever involved in politics or the LTTE, with the exception of his father's cousin (see paragraph 11.c).
i. The applicant was never involved in anti-government activities or questioned, arrested or detained by police or security authorities and had no outstanding criminal matters.
j. He believes the CID came looking for him because his cousin was missing and they thought the applicant was hiding him. The first time they came was in May 2012 when he happened to be at his aunt's house. They asked his mother where he was then sent a letter saying he had to go to their office on 14 May 2012 (see further detail at 13.w). However, he was scared and did not go.
k. The CID came again at the start of June 2012, while he was hiding in his uncle's prawn farm; and again at the end June 2012. On this occasion, the applicant was at home having a meal, so they caught him and pulled him outside towards their van, where they beat him and his mother. However, the CID left when a crowd gathered. He was later told that the CID said that the applicant was hiding something and next time they would take him to the 4th floor and punish him. He knew from his father, who was taken to the 4th floor in 2000, that it was a place of illegal torture.
l. After this incident, the applicant did not stay at home and his mother encouraged him to leave Sri Lanka, as she was worried the same thing would happen to him as happened to his father.
m. Since he left Sri Lanka the CID initially came to look for him three times and they were still looking for him as late as last week, when they came asking his whereabouts, and beat his uncle when he asked why they were looking for him.
n. In September 2013 they came saying they knew the applicant was at home. This was probably because they had been tipped off by informers that his next-door neighbour, whose name was [xx], had returned from [xx]. However, his mother told them the applicant was not there. This was why his mother and brother were detained for two days until they paid money to be released. His mother did not tell the CID the applicant was in Australia.
o. The CID told the applicant's mother that the reason they were looking for him was because they were looking for his cousin and thought the applicant had helped him, and also because of his TV interview, of which they had a CD, in which he said his father had disappeared and no one took any action.
p. His cousin, who had come to Australia by boat, had returned to Sri Lanka in 2014 though he did not know where he was.
q. The CID were looking for his cousin, who was in a 'big problem', though he did not know what he may have done wrong - been involved in 'the movement' (LTTE), drug trafficking or weapons smuggling, for example. Since he had a connection with his cousin, he fears that, if he returns to Sri Lanka, the CID might think he may have been involved in all those activities too.
r. As they had been looking for him for so long, he fears the authorities will arrest him at the airport and take him to the courts. Even if they release him from the courts they will take him when he returns to his home.
s. He knew his cousin was not involved with the LTTE, but was not sure if he might have been involved in other problematic activities, though he did not know what they were. The applicant had previously been questioned about his cousin's visits to the UK and India. As his cousin was wealthy, he escaped 'from all those things by giving money' while the applicant was the one who 'got caught in all those things'.
t. He said the main reason they were looking for him was his TV interview, then shifted to say that initially they were looking for him because of his cousin and later they came to know about his TV interview, so added this issue. He also feared that the CID would make an issue of his father's cousin being in the LTTE. As a result, what happened to his father, would happen to him.
u. Asked if the authorities had made a connection between him and his father's cousin, the applicant said that during the CID's last visit to his house in […], when his uncle asked why they were looking for him, the CID told him it was because the applicant might have links with the LTTE.
v. His mother told him this was what happened when they spoke on 15 May 2015. He asked her who in the family was involved with the LTTE, as he only knew of his father's cousin. His mother said this could be the reason they [sic] CID were accusing him, and that if he returned to Sri Lanka, he would have a problem.
w. The letter from the CID, given to his mother, which was incorrectly translated, was dated 10.5.2012 and said that the applicant did not report to them on 4.5.2012, so was asked to report to the CID on 13.5.2012 at 10am.
x. His problem is that his cousin, who went back to Sri Lanka is very wealthy, and in Sri Lanka, 'with money you can get anything' so he is safe. However, his cousin might have transferred all his cases onto the applicant and it will be a problem for him if he returns. The applicant does not know this, but suspects it, and will only know when he goes back. His cousin will not care about the applicant, as he only cares about his own safety. Asked how he knew that his cousin was safe, the applicant said he did not know if he was safe or not, but knew he was in Sri Lanka.
y. The 'minus point' for the applicant was that the CID had evidence of his TV interview, when he mentioned about his father's disappearance and that Tamils were denied opportunities.