GROUND 1 - FAILURE TO CONsider the un guidelines
39 The primary judge did not err in dismissing the appellant's judicial review application. His Honour was right to reject the appellant's contention that the Authority erred in the requisite jurisdictional sense by failing to take into account, or apply, the particular part of the UNHCR 2012 Guidelines that was relied on by the appellant.
40 As noted by the primary judge, it is clear that the Authority had regard to the UNHCR 2012 Guidelines. It referred to that document in its reasons as providing support for the appellant's claims that he had been subjected to physical and sexual assaults by the Sri Lankan police after he surrendered to them in 1999: Reasons at [20]. While the Authority did not specifically refer to the particular passage of the UNHCR 2012 Guidelines that was relied on by the appellant in support of his argument in the Circuit Court, it does not follow that the Authority failed to consider, or ignored, that part of the document. The more likely inference is that the Authority considered that part of the document, but considered it to be of little, if any, relevance given the appellant's particular circumstances and the other more recent country information that the Authority had before it.
41 The particular passage in the UNHCR 2012 Guidelines that was relied on by the appellant related to the "risk profiles" of persons who were, or may be, suspected of having links with the LTTE. After noting that "[o]riginating from an area that was previously controlled by the LTTE does not itself result in a need for international refugee protection", the document continued:
However, previous (real or perceived) links that go beyond prior residency within an area controlled by the LTTE continue to expose individuals to treatment which may give rise to a need for international refugee protection, depending on the specifics of the individual case. The nature of these more elaborate links to the LTTE can vary, but may include people with the following profiles:
1) Persons who held senior positions with considerable authority in the LTTE civilian administration, when the LTTE was in control of large parts of what are now the northern and eastern provinces of Sri Lanka;
2) Former LTTE combatants or "cadres";
3) Former LTTE combatants or "cadres" who, due to injury or other reason, were employed by the LTTE in functions within the administration, intelligence, "computer branch" or media (newspaper and radio);
4) Former LTTE supporters who may never have undergone military training, but were involved in sheltering or transporting LTTE personnel, or the supply and transport of goods for the LTTE;
5) LTTE fundraisers and propaganda activists and those with, or perceived as having had, links to the Sri Lankan diaspora that provided funding and other support to the LTTE;
6) Persons with family links or who are dependent on or otherwise closely related to persons with the above profiles.
When assessing claims of persons with the profiles above, it may, depending on the individual circumstances of the claim, be important to examine the applicability of the exclusion clauses.
42 As the primary judge noted, that was far from a definitive or conclusive statement that former LTTE combatants or cadres would attract international refugee protection. It simply indicated that "depending on the specifics of the individual case", a person with the "profile" of a former LTTE combatant or cadre "may" need international refugee protection: J[28]. It follows that the appellant's implicit contention that this passage of the UNHCR 2012 Guidelines effectively compelled the Authority to find that he was a refugee for the purposes of the Act has no merit and must be rejected.
43 The position is even clearer when regard is had to the fact that the UNHCR 2012 Guidelines did no more than identify the circumstances or conditions in Sri Lanka as they existed as at December 2012. The Authority had the benefit of reports that were more up to date, including: the DFAT report, which was dated 23 May 2018; the Home Office report, which was dated 15 June 2017; and the Department of State report, which was dated 20 April 2018. As the Authority stated, those reports indicated that, since the appellant had departed Sri Lanka in November 2012, there had been a number of "significant improvements" in the way in which the Sri Lankan authorities dealt with persons who had past connections with the LTTE. It is readily apparent that the Authority gave more weight to the recent reports that were before it. That, in turn, provides a compelling explanation for why the Authority does not directly refer to the passage in the UNHCR 2012 Guidelines that was relied on by the appellant.
44 The Authority, which is an administrative decision-maker, not a court, was plainly not obliged to refer to every piece of evidence that was before it: Applicant WAEE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2003) 236 FCR 593; [2003] FCAFC 184 at [46]. More fundamentally, the weight that the Authority may choose to give to particular evidence, including so-called "country information", is entirely a matter for the Authority as part of its fact-finding function: NAHI v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCAFC 10 at [11]. Neither the Circuit Court, on review of the Authority's decision, nor this Court on appeal, can substitute in its own view as to the weight that should have been given to particular evidence, even if that view may differ from the Authority's view: NAHI at [13].
45 The appellant appeared to quibble with the Authority's reliance on the DFAT, Home Office and Department of State reports. He asserted that those reports did not indicate that the only people who are at risk of serious or significant harm on return to Sri Lanka are those who had participated in, or were participating in, post-conflict separatism or renewal of hostilities within Sri Lanka, or those who would be regarded as a threat to the state. The difficulty for the appellant, however, is that even if the reports were not particularly emphatic or definitive, they nonetheless provided support for the Authority's key finding. That finding was, in substance, that because the appellant's "profile" was, at most, that of a person who had been recruited as a child by the LTTE over two decades ago, his fear of persecution in Sri Lanka was not well founded. Nor was there any real chance that he would be harmed by the Sri Lankan authorities or anyone else in Sri Lanka in the foreseeable future. It is, in any event, at best doubtful that the Authority read or construed the reports in the definitive way that the appellant suggested.
46 The appellant's argument concerning the UNHCR 2012 Guidelines, and the Authority's findings based on, among other things, the DFAT, Home Office and Department of State reports was, as the primary judge found, in substance no more than an argument concerning the Authority's factual findings and the merits of its decision. The Authority's findings and conclusions which were the subject of the appellant's challenge were open to it on the material before it. The primary judge was correct to find that those findings did not involve or reveal any jurisdictional error on the part of the Authority.
47 The appellant's ground of appeal is accordingly unmeritorious and must be rejected