The IAA
7 The IAA accepted that the husband had experienced harm because he is a Tamil, but was not satisfied, largely because of country information, that he was now or in the reasonably foreseeable future at risk of harm if returned to Sri Lanka. The learned primary judge referred to the following paragraphs of the IAA's decision as representative of its reasoning and conclusions concerning the application of s 36(2)(a) of the Act:
86. I accept that the applicant has experienced harm of various kinds throughout his life because he is a Tamil. I accept that he has witnessed harm done to members of his extended family and his community because of their ethnicity. Many of these events occurred before and during the civil war. I must look to the reasonably foreseeable future in assessing whether the applicant is owed protection.
87. I do not accept that the applicant is at risk of harm, now or in the reasonably foreseeable future, as a Tamil. I do not consider that there is a real chance that he would be affected by communal violence, or security measures of the kind that were in place during the civil war which resulted in serious human rights abuses against Tamils because they were collectively under suspicion of involvement with the LTTE. While the Sri Lankan authorities continue to monitor the Tamil populations of the Northern and Eastern Provinces that were previously under the control of the LTTE, the applicant's evidence does not suggest that he has been subjected to such monitoring, consistent with country information indicating that it is those Tamils with prior links to the LTTE or those who may be working to revive it, who may currently be at risk of harm. There is no suggestion that the applicant is such a person. He does not claim to have been involved with the LTTE in any way except that he paid obligatory taxes to the organisation during the war. Country information indicates that all Tamils living in LTTE controlled areas were required to do so, and do not now face serious harm because of this, as the authorities are not concerned about this level of support. I do not accept that the applicant has in the past, or would in the reasonably foreseeable future, face monitoring or other harm for this reason. I do not accept that he has, for this or any other reason, been imputed to be a supporter of the LTTE or to have any connection with the organisation that would be of concern to the authorities if he were to return to Sri Lanka. Even accepting that the person to whom he paid the money is now with a government aligned paramilitary group, and even if that person had informed the authorities that the applicant paid money to the LTTE, I do not accept that this would result in harm to the applicant because I find on the basis of the country information that the authorities are not concerned about involvement at this level. I do not accept that any difficulties the applicant faced post-war in the context of his business operations in Batticaloa or Vaalichchenai, were the result of any actual or imputed political opinion attributed to him either because he is Tamil or because he was known to have paid money to the LTTE during the war.
88. I am not satisfied that there is a real chance that the second or third named applicants face harm in Sri Lanka because they are imputed to be supporters of the LTTE on their own account or because of their connection with the applicant or any other person.
89. I accept that the applicant faced harassment and minor extortion from government security personnel and armed paramilitary groups when he operated his jewellery shop in Vaalichchenai and his restaurant in Batticaloa. The credible evidence does not suggest that this mistreatment reached the threshold for serious harm. I do not accept, on the evidence, that the applicant would be killed or otherwise harmed if he refused to accede to the demands for food, cash and cigarettes; the evidence does not support a finding that the financial consequences of having to provide food, cash and cigarettes would threaten the applicant's capacity to earn a livelihood or to subsist. I accept that he was robbed in December 2010 after a brief abduction but I am not satisfied, on the evidence, that this was anything other than a criminal matter, notwithstanding evidence that paramilitary groups operating in the political sphere and with government connections are also engaged in criminal activity in the eastern province. Even accepting that actual or implied threats were made to the safety of the second or third named applicants, there is no credible information to suggest that they were, or would in the reasonably foreseeable future be at real risk of harm from these groups.
90. I do not accept that the applicant (or the second or third named applicants) is at risk of future harm from grease men, given that there have been no reported attacks by grease men since September 2011.
91. I do not accept that the applicants face a real chance of persecution because they left Sri Lanka illegally. I find that they would not be subject to penalties on return that constitute persecution, both because they do not involve serious harm and because they would be imposed under laws of general application. Because I find that none of the applicants have a profile as a person with real or suspected links to the LTTE I find that there is no risk that they would be subjected to unusual detention or mistreatment amounting to serious harm on return.
92. I find that even if they were recognised as failed asylum seekers on return for any reason, including because of the DIBP data breach, they would not thereby be imputed to be LTTE supporters or opponents of the government or face a real chance of harm for any related reason.
93. I do not accept that the applicants have been subjected to discrimination amounting to persecution in relation to employment or education, or any other matter, because they are Tamils, or that there is a real chance that they would be subjected to such discrimination in the reasonably foreseeable future.
8 With respect to the application of s 36(2)(aa) of the Act, the following paragraphs of the IAA's decision were referred to by the learned primary judge:
95. A criterion for a protection visa is that the applicant is a non citizen in Australia (other than a person who is a refugee) in respect of whom the Minister (or Reviewer) is satisfied Australia has protection obligations because there are substantial grounds for believing that, as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of the person being removed from Australia to a receiving country, there is a real risk that the person will suffer significant harm.
Real risk of significant harm
96. Under s.36(2A), a person will suffer 'significant harm' if:
• the person will be arbitrarily deprived of his or her life
• the death penalty will be carried out on the person
• the person will be subjected to torture
• the person will be subjected to cruel or inhuman treatment or punishment, or
• the person will be subjected to degrading treatment or punishment.
97. The applicants have not made specific claims to complementary protection separate from those put forward in relation to the refugees criteria. Based on the information they have provided, and the country information referred to above, I am also satisfied that there is not a real risk that they would face significant harm.
98. There is no suggestion that the applicants face the death penalty for any reason.
99. I do not accept that there is a real risk that the applicants would face being arbitrarily deprived of life or tortured for any reason connected with their ethnicity, their political opinion or a political opinion imputed to them, or their religion. Nor do I accept that there is a real risk that they would be subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, intentionally inflicted for any of those reasons; or as a result of any discrimination they might suffer as Tamils. I do not accept that the second named applicant faces significant harm related to her gender.
100. I have accepted that the applicant faced harassment and minor extortion from government security personnel and armed paramilitary groups when he operated his jewellery shop in Vaalichchenai and his restaurant in Batticaloa. I accept that he was robbed in December 2010 after a brief abduction and that he was threatened in 2012. I do not accept, on the evidence, that there is a real risk that the applicant would be killed, tortured or subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, as defined, should such demands continue and if he refused to accede to the demands for food, cash and cigarettes. Even accepting that actual or implied threats were made to the safety of the second or third named applicants, there is no credible information to suggest that they were, or would in the reasonably foreseeable future be at real risk of significant harm from these groups.
101. I do not accept that there is a real risk that the applicants face harm of any kind from grease men.
102. As to their treatment under the criminal justice system, including as people who departed illegally and/or failed asylum seekers, I accept that they will be detained briefly at the airport for questioning, and security and character checks. They may be charged with an offence under the [Immigrants and Emigrants Act 1949 (Sri Lanka)] because they departed Sri Lanka illegally. They may be remanded in custody for a short period either at the airport or at a prison, while waiting to be brought before a magistrate who will most likely quickly grant bail. For reasons discussed above, I do not accept that there are any particular aspects of the applicants' profiles that would result in their being detained for a longer period or subjected to interrogation that might give rise to significant harm. I do not accept that the process outlined above amounts to significant harm, or that the applicants would be exposed to significant harm during this process. Nor does the penalty likely to be imposed on the applicants, or the questioning or remand conditions they would most likely face, amount to any form of significant harm. I find that, to date, a custodial sentence has never been imposed on illegal returnees such as the applicants. I am not satisfied that there is a real risk that the applicants face a custodial sentence. I am not satisfied that there is a real risk that the applicants will face torture, cruel or inhuman treatment or punishment, or degrading treatment or punishment, including as a result of conditions they may face during a short period in custody. I accept that conditions in prison or detention may be poor, but the evidence does not suggest that the applicants face the death penalty or arbitrary deprivation of life. The definition of "cruel or inhuman treatment or punishment" in s.5(1) of the Act requires that any pain or suffering be intentionally inflicted on a person. Similarly, "degrading treatment or punishment" is defined to mean an act or omission that causes and is intended to cause extreme humiliation. I am not satisfied that any pain or suffering caused to the applicants by overcrowding and poor and insanitary conditions in prison or on remand would be intentionally inflicted, as required. Nor do I accept that overcrowding and poor conditions are intended to cause extreme humiliation.
Complementary protection: conclusion
103. There are not substantial grounds for believing that, as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of being returned from Australia to a receiving country, there is a real risk that the applicants will suffer significant harm. The applicants do not meet s.36(2)(aa).
9 The following two paragraphs in the reasoning of the IAA were said by the appellants to disclose jurisdictional error, and should be set out in full. The first is at [56] which concerned the husband's treatment in Sri Lanka during the civil war and is in the following terms:
Based on the applicant's evidence, I accept that the SLA may have had a threatening presence outside his shop and may have referred to Tamils' support for the LTTE during the war, and I accept that they may at times have demanded that the applicant pay them cash or give them things. On the applicant's evidence, I am not satisfied that he was thereby subjected to extortion or harassment to a degree that amounts to persecution. The evidence does not suggest that he was subjected to an actual threat to life or liberty, or to significant harassment or physical ill treatment, or that his capacity to earn a livelihood was affected threatening his capacity to subsist or that he was subjected to economic hardship threatening his capacity to subsist.
10 The second paragraph in the IAA's decision concerned the alleged incident when the husband fled the hotel that he operated. It is at [60] and is in the following terms:
The applicant claims that the incident which made him decide to leave occurred when because of the pressure he was under he went into hiding for three days (at the TPV interview he stated that he was in hiding for up to a week), returning when armed men went to the hotel and threatened his wife. He claims to have been beaten either before he went into hiding or when he returned to the hotel. He claims that soldiers beat him; the second named applicant said that it was CID and soldiers. The applicant's evidence about this incident was vague and lacking in detail including as to who was responsible for the threats, or their motivation. Further, it seems implausible that if armed groups were harassing the applicant for money from the hotel business, and had he been beaten or felt under such pressure that he needed to go into hiding, he would leave his wife alone to operate the business.