The proceedings in the Tribunal
13 The appellant applied to the Tribunal for a review of the delegate's decision. He had been assisted earlier in his review by a migration agent, but when he had relocated from Perth to Melbourne in April 2014, the previous migration agent ceased to be funded and was unable to represent him.
14 His new solicitor migration agent wrote to the Tribunal on 11 May 2015 in anticipation of a hearing to take place two days later. The appellant provided new information and claims in the letter. The letter again referred to his Roman Catholicism, without elaboration, and to the substantive main claims that the delegate had rejected. The solicitor migration agent wrote that since being appointed to act, the appellant had provided her with further important details of his claims, and had updated matters since the delegate's decision. She said that she had asked the appellant why some of the information that he disclosed to her had not been disclosed earlier and that he had explained that his "preference on arrival" had been to avoid mentioning the LTTE and that he had been a person of interest to the Sri Lankan authorities because people on his boat had discussed whether they should say anything about those matters when they came to Australia. She stated that he told her that he thought he would have a better chance of staying in Australia if he did not mention his problems with the Sri Lankan government. She added new claims by the appellant that:
he had been arrested and detained on two more occasions in 2007 with other persons, leading to his fleeing to Qatar at the end of 2007;
following his return his family had paid a bond of 50,000 rupees and that he had been ordered to report to authorities on the first Sunday of every month;
since he had fled to Australia, his father and brother had been targeted by the authorities and questioned as to his whereabouts and that men had visited his house in a white van looking for him;
in 2013, his father had been ordered to attend court because the appellant had failed to appear as required and he provided, in support, what purported to be court documents and translations;
in 2014, the 50,000 rupee bond paid in 2009 was forfeited;
in about February 2015, his father and paternal aunt had been arrested while they were at church and held for 24 hours before being released, during which detention his father had been questioned about his son's whereabouts; and
a warrant had been issued for the appellant's arrest on 23 March 2015, a copy of which and a translation he also provided.
15 The solicitor migration agent asserted that the cumulative effect of the factors and claims that she outlined would result in the appellant being detained, questioned and imprisoned upon his return to Sri Lanka.
16 The letter noted that it was already known that all returnees to Sri Lanka from Australia were detained and brought to court for questioning and that many were bailed and released. The solicitor migration agent said that the factors to which she had referred resulted in a higher risk that the appellant would not be granted bail and would be detained for a longer period, and that, as a young Tamil man with known family links to the LTTE and a police record, there was a high risk that he would be detained for a longer period and subjected to torture or cruel, degrading or inhuman treatment or punishment in prison. The letter went on to assert Refugees Convention claims based on the appellant's fear of persecution for reasons of his Tamil race, his membership of the particular social group comprising Sri Lankan Tamils with known family links to the LTTE, his imputed political opinion as being supportive of the LTTE, and his membership of the particular social group of Tamils who had fled Sri Lanka illegally and unsuccessfully claimed asylum in Australia.
17 On 9 June 2015, the appellant and his solicitor migration agent attended a hearing. The Tribunal summarised the appellant's claims in its decision record. It noted that, during the hearing, it had asked him about whether he had any other fears of harm were he to return to Sri Lanka, apart from his claimed links to the LTTE, and that he had responded that he could not stay in his village because the Sinhalese people would beat him. He claimed that, in his village, his family were the only Tamils and the Sinhalese would make problems for them, even on the way to church. He claimed that he had to leave school after completing his O levels at the age of 16, had started working on a prawn farm and then did electrical work in Qatar. He said that he was working with an engineering firm in Sydney before his employer opened a branch in Melbourne where he had moved.
18 The Tribunal asked the appellant whether he wanted to comment on anything in the delegate's decision. The appellant identified the delegate's findings that he had not mentioned his problems in Sri Lanka initially on his arrival here and had come to Australia to work. The appellant repeated his explanation that, initially, he had been scared to tell authorities or the delegate about his claims to protection, but claimed that he told this to his case worker in the Perth immigration detention centre.
19 The Tribunal questioned the appellant over a broad range of matters including his illegal departure from Sri Lanka that appeared to breach Sri Lanka's Immigrants and Emigrants Act. The Tribunal referred to country information that, upon return to Sri Lanka, he would be questioned about his departure, detained, presented before a magistrate, granted bail, ultimately released and fined about 50,000 rupees. The appellant responded that he was not sure how long he would be detained.
20 His solicitor migration agent submitted that he should be given the benefit of the doubt for his failure to raise his fears of harm earlier. Among other matters, she submitted that the fine of up to 50,000 rupees applied where a person had no previous dealings with the authorities or was of no interest to them, but that the appellant was a person who was of interest to the authorities and, therefore, he would be put under greater scrutiny and be likely to be held in prison for longer.
21 On 12 and 29 June 2015, following the conclusion of the hearing, the solicitor migration agent made further submissions to the Tribunal. The 12 June 2015 submission again summarised accurately his main claims.
22 It is apparent from my recitation above of his claims, that the appellant raised not a word about fearing persecution or serious or significant harm on account of his Catholic faith or of any inability to pay a fine of about 50,000 rupees.
23 The Tribunal concluded, after reviewing all of the evidence before it, that the appellant was an unreliable and untruthful witness. It gave detailed reasons for that finding, including that he had concocted his claims over a period of time since arriving in Australia. It reasoned that it defied credibility that he would not have mentioned his claimed fear of harm for reasons of perceived links to the LTTE in at least one of the three interviews he had given until after his third interview on 15 January 2013.
24 It found that his evidence at the hearing had been confused and at times incoherent. The Tribunal said that it had considered his evidence very carefully before concluding that "the inconsistencies and vagueness reflect the fact that significant parts of his claims are fabricated". The Tribunal made allowances for the likelihood that, at least in his initial interview, the appellant may have been scared but, ultimately, formed the significant adverse view to which I have referred.
25 The Tribunal adopted the solicitor migration agent's summary and classification of the appellant's claims for protection, and, accordingly, made no reference to a claim based on the ground of the appellant's religion. It found that there was not more than a remote chance, then or in the reasonably foreseeable future, that, were he to return to Sri Lanka, based on country information before it, he would suffer serious harm for reasons of his Tamil ethnicity or his being a Tamil from the north of Sri Lanka. The Tribunal gave the appellant the benefit of the doubt and accepted that his uncle was involved in some way with the LTTE, had stayed at the family's home for three days in 2005, had fled Sri Lanka for Italy in 2005, and that the appellant had been questioned about his uncle by the authorities.
26 The Tribunal rejected the appellant's claim that he had been targeted for harm while in Sri Lanka for reasons of his uncle's association with the LTTE or that he would be targeted or harmed for reasons of that association, should the appellant return to Sri Lanka. It relied on country information from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees 2012 guidelines that indicated that a person with family links with former LTTE combatants or cadres could give rise to a need for international refugee protection depending on the specifics of the individual case.
27 The Tribunal had considered the appellant's gender, age, place of origin, coupled with his Tamil ethnicity, in light of the country information, and did not accept that he would be imputed with an anti-government, pro-LTTE or pro-Tamil separatist political opinion were he to return to Sri Lanka then or in the foreseeable future. It accepted that the appellant and his family may have been under some suspicion immediately at the conclusion of the civil war in 2009 in relation to an association with the LTTE, but it found that the appellant was not and would not become a person of interest to the Sri Lankan authorities for reasons of his actual or perceived political opinion then or in the reasonably foreseeable future.
28 It did not accept that he had been prosecuted on his return from Qatar. That was because of its negative assessment of his credibility and the facts that he had re-entered Sri Lanka freely, having left it lawfully, had been questioned, found not to be a person of interest and subsequently been released. It did not accept his subsequent claims of other incidents following his return to Sri Lanka in 2009, or that the documents that the solicitor migration agent had provided in support of court processes allegedly being taken against him were genuine. It placed little weight on those documents, having regard to the prevalence of fraudulent documents from Sri Lanka and its negative assessment of the appellant's credibility. Moreover, the Tribunal found that the appellant was able to obtain a passport, leave for the Maldives in May 2013 and return to Sri Lanka because he was not a person of interest to the authorities.
29 The Tribunal also considered his claim that because the area in which he lived was surrounded by Sinhalese, he was or felt vulnerable there. It noted his claims that he could not stay in his village because Sinhalese people would beat him, that his family were the only Tamils in the village, and that the Sinhalese would make problems, even when they were on the way to church. It accepted that if he, in fact, lived in such an area, he might feel vulnerable, especially during the civil war, and that during that time, he may have been accused of being an LTTE member and in such a circumstance would be physically harassed. However, it found that:
with the cessation of the war, the Tribunal does not accept that the past burning down of his house, of itself or coupled with all the evidence, elevates the [appellant's] chance of serious harm to a 'real chance'.
30 The Tribunal rejected all of the appellant's claims of subsequent difficulties following the end of the civil war. Accordingly, it found that there was no real chance that the appellant would suffer serious harm by reason of his ethnicity or his membership of any of the particular social groups which he claimed.
31 The Tribunal found that the appellant had departed Sri Lanka illegally and would be subjected to a fine of about 50,000 rupees after being detained on his return to Sri Lanka, presented before a magistrate, granted bail, and ultimately released. It found that, having regard to all of the evidence before it and its earlier findings, the appellant would not be a person of interest to the Sri Lankan authorities for reasons of his Tamil ethnicity, for any actual or imputed anti-government or pro-LTTE political opinion, or for any other reason.
32 It rejected his claim that he would be placed under greater scrutiny upon his return to Sri Lanka, or that he would be detained for longer or treated in any way different to other persons who had departed Sri Lanka in contravention of the Immigrants and Emigrants Act. It found that, having regard to country information, that Act was a law of general application in Sri Lanka and that the processes that the appellant would face on return involved a non-selective enforcement of that law reasonably adapted for the purpose of preventing unauthorised departures of persons from that country. It found that there was no evidence before it that the appellant would be unable to pay, or to make arrangements to pay, the fine of around 50,000 rupees, would not be granted bail or otherwise would be detained for a longer period that might expose him to a greater chance of serious or significant harm. It also found there was no evidence before it to suggest that the appellant would not be able to find employment upon his return to Sri Lanka.
33 The Tribunal came to the ultimate conclusion that, having regard to all of the circumstances and the relevant country information, the appellant did not face a real chance of serious harm, then or in the reasonably foreseeable future, if he were to return to Sri Lanka as a failed asylum seeker or as a person returning from a western country, regardless of how any Refugees Convention nexus to the claimed harm was characterised. It considered his claims individually and cumulatively, and found that he did not face a real chance of persecution for any of the reasons claimed or the cumulative effect of those reasons and circumstances. For similar reasons, it found that Australia's complementary protection obligations were not engaged because the appellant did not face a real chance of serious harm on any of the grounds that he claimed. Accordingly, it affirmed the delegate's decision.