FEDERAL CIRCUIT COURT
7 The appellant's grounds in its judicial review application to the Federal Circuit Court found their final form in an amended application filed 6 October 2016.
8 Ground one asserted that the Tribunal "mistook and misconstrued the facts" and failed to take into account relevant consideration and took into account irrelevant considerations and made a decision on "irrelevant facts and findings". Ground one was supported by a number of particulars, one of which raised a new matter: that, if he returned, the appellant intended to increase the Awami support base and expose activities of the BNP members and that the appellant would therefore speak to the media and public about his knowledge of BNP activities: at [22]. The Federal Circuit Court concluded that the remaining particulars repeated the appellant's claims before the Tribunal and that the appellant had not established that the Tribunal had not considered those claims: at [21]. It is evident from the Tribunal's reasons that it considered these matters. As to the new matter, the Federal Circuit Court noted that it was not a claim made to the Tribunal, but that the Tribunal had considered whether the appellant would engage in political activity and whether he might suffer harm as a result of his support of AL. The Tribunal was not persuaded there was a real chance of harm as a result of the informal activities in support of the AL which the appellant would engage in when he returned.
9 Ground two contended that the appellant had severe mental stress which prevented the appellant from presenting oral evidence and that he informed the Tribunal of this. The Federal Circuit Court concluded that the evidence did not support that contention: at [27]. The Court noted that the appellant's representative attended the hearing and that there was a reference to an adjournment during which the appellant spoke with his representative, after which the representative made oral submissions. The Court also noted that the representative provided further written submissions after the hearing addressing a variety of issues and including a reference to being "unable to properly instruct his representative during his hearing, owing to the lack of an interpreter during his natural justice break": AB286. Those submissions, the Court noted, did not say the adjournment was because of severe mental stress but in any event "addressed the asserted problem by setting out further information". The Court concluded there was no denial of procedural fairness.
10 Ground three, which overlapped with ground two, claimed a denial of procedural fairness "when he was forced to continue hearing": [30]. It was supported by particulars. Those particulars and the reasons why ground three was rejected were explained in his Honour's reasons at [31] to [34] (footnotes omitted):
31. The particulars to this ground claim the applicant's "weakness to present evidence in sequence became a serious concern about the applicant's credibility", and the Tribunal concluded the applicant "has not told the truth in relation to crucial aspects of his claim", and that the "whole hearing was conducted to destabilise the credibility of the evidence". The applicant also claims that whatever he submitted to the Tribunal was true and correct to the belief of the applicant, and that the Tribunal was unreasonable in concluding that the documents the applicant submitted were not authentic.
32. There is no evidence to suggest the applicant was unable to give his evidence in sequence, or that the Tribunal conducted the hearing with a view to destabilising the applicant's credibility. The Tribunal's reasons for decision set out in detail the questions the Tribunal asked of the applicant. They do not suggest any unfairness in the method of questioning. On the contrary, the questions manifest the Tribunal's examining in detail each of the applicant's claims, and putting to the applicant the matters that caused the Tribunal concern for the purpose of giving the applicant an opportunity to address those concerns.
33. It is true the Tribunal did not accept some parts of the applicant's evidence as credible. For example, although the Tribunal was prepared to accept the applicant's claims about the teashop events, the Tribunal did not find credible the applicant's claims that he and his family were threatened and subjected to extortion after the applicant left his village. It did not find the applicant's claim credible because the applicant's family remained in their local area, they provided financial support to the applicant when he was in Dhaka, the applicant's father retained possession of the title deeds to the land and the applicant had not plausibly explained why his father could not recover the land the applicant claimed had been illegally taken by BNP supporters, and the AL is now in power the applicant's family local area. These are matters on the basis of which it was reasonably open to the Tribunal not to accept as credible the applicant's claims his family were threatened and subjected to extortion after he left his village for Dhaka.
34. It is also true that the Tribunal found the documents the applicant provided did not assist the applicant's case, and that the Tribunal relied in part on country information that indicated that fraudulent documentation is readily available in Bangladesh. But that is not the only matter on which the Tribunal relied. One of the documents the applicant submitted purported to be his birth certificate that on its face was issued in 2011. The document the applicant submitted, however, contained the boat identity number of the boat on which the applicant travelled to Australia. The Tribunal noted "it was difficult to explain how a boat identity number appeared on a document that was issued in 2011". It was reasonably open to the Tribunal, for the reasons it gave, not to place weight on the documents the applicant submitted to the Tribunal and to the delegate.
11 Ground four contended, in substance, that the Tribunal applied the wrong tests with respect to persecution and complementary protection. The Federal Circuit Court rejected this ground concluding that the Tribunal's reasons showed that the Tribunal correctly identified and applied the relevant legal questions to the findings it had made. The Federal Circuit Court said at [38] (footnotes omitted):
I do not accept these claims or submissions. The Tribunal set out in its reasons the relevant provisions and principles it was required to apply when assessing the applicant's claims, and it referred to Ministerial Direction No.56 made under s.499 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth). The Tribunal considered the applicants evidence about what he claimed occurred to him and his family in Bangladesh before he left that country, made findings about those claims, referred to country information, and, on the basis of its findings and the country information it accepted, the Tribunal considered and answered the questions it was required to consider and answer, namely, whether there was a real chance the applicant would suffer serious harm if he were to return to Bangladesh now or in the reasonably foreseeable future, and whether the applicant had a well founded fear of persecution because of his political opinions or any other Convention reason; or whether there are substantial grounds for believing that, as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of the applicant's removal from Australia to Bangladesh, there is a real risk the applicant will suffer significant harm for any of the reasons the applicant claimed he would be subjected to harm.