The grounds of appeal
11 In this appeal the appellant relies on the following grounds:
1. The Judge of the Federal Circuit Court in his honourable judgement delivered on the 15 August 2017 failed error of law and relief under the judiciary Act. The Judge failed to find that the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) has not found any evidence in relation to my claims and thus its decision influenced by sufficient doubt.
2. Honourable Judge failed to hold that the Tribunal made an error of law when it did not take up and separately deal with the factual issues. The Tribunal failed to find low profile political activities are mostly persecuted because of their role for the party like Jamaat-e-Islami. The Tribunal failed to understand the persecution until political killing in Bangladesh under present dictatorial role in Bangladesh. The Tribunal member concluded that I will not suffer from any harm if I go to Bangladesh, which is not feasible.
3. I was denied procedural fairness, when the Tribunal member made opinion based on assumption and possibilities without any proper investigation. The Tribunal failed to assess the current situation in Bangladesh where thousands of my party leader all the level Jamaat-e-Islami workers are arrested and killed by so called crossfire and harassed by the autocratic present Awami League Government and the Authority. My party most leaders are Hang by so called trial. It well established independent report like Amnesty International Country Reports. Present circumstance very danger to me, the Tribunal undermined the danger, I will face if I am compelled to return Bangladesh as returned asylum seeker. And also, I came by boat in Australia only protect my life.
4. Besides, the Administrative Appeals Tribunal did not follow the proper procedure as required by the Act in arriving its decision dated 6 May 2016 in deciding my protection visa merit review application. Thus, the procedures that were required by the act or regulations to be observed, in connection with the making of the decision were not observed.
(Errors in original.)
12 The Minister opposes leave being granted for the appellant to rely on these grounds of appeal, submitting that they have no prospects of success for the following reasons:
The grounds raise issues which were not before the primary Judge.
Grounds 1, 2 and 3 do no more than express the appellant's emphatic disagreement with the Tribunal's conclusions and are therefore an attempt to engage the Court in merits review.
Further in respect of ground 3, to the extent that ground 3 can be understood as challenging the Tribunal's reliance on the DFAT country information, the ground also fails because:
○ the Tribunal is legally required to take it into account to the extent that it is relevant;
○ the Tribunal is permitted to determine the weight to give to that information as part of its fact-finding function; and
○ there was no evidence that more recent information was available to the Tribunal.
In respect of ground 4, the decision record (which is the only evidence of what occurred during the Tribunal hearing) demonstrates that the Tribunal had complied with the natural justice requirements of the statutory code in Pt 7 Div 4 of the Act.
13 The appellant's submissions do not address the grounds of appeal but consider whether the Tribunal's decision was irrational and whether a sliding scale of review should be applied to humanitarian cases.