34 Mr Hogan identified what it was that he was relying upon, namely the applicant's status as a journalist and activist closely aligned to the BNP. If the Tribunal did not find those underlying facts to be correct, of course it would give the opinion of Amnesty International based on such facts little weight. But those underlying facts are facts which the Tribunal itself found and accepted. The extent of the applicant's alignment with the BNP may be a matter of degree. The Tribunal might have found that the applicant did not have a sufficiently close alignment with the BNP as to attract the sort of risk to which Mr Hogan refers. But it appears not to have done so, unless by implication from its conclusion. It accepted his evidence of his and his family's long-standing opposition to the Awami-League, and that during the period of the BNP government the applicant was "appointed to positions of political patronage and at least some minor political importance" (presumably referring in part to his appointment as a ministerial adviser). To the extent to which Mr Hogan expressed views as to what may happen to the applicant if he were returned to Bangladesh, it is the sort of information to which the Tribunal routinely has regard.
35 The Tribunal then returned to further consider the applicant's position. It said that it was not clear how the applicant's knowledge of Awami League secrets "would place him at risk in the future", nor how his past activities and family background "would place him at risk of harm in the future" (my emphasis in each instance). It then said that, in respect of each of those matters and in respect of the threats made in November 1996, his activities in Denmark, and the asserted fear from his relationship in Australia with an Islamic woman, one would have expected the applicant to have sought a protection visa earlier. It then, in each instance, said that it was not satisfied that those matters or any of them have caused the applicant to fear persecution.
36 The Tribunal then gave its reasons for those conclusions.
37 It referred to the significant delay in the applicant seeking protection, although he had been at risk at least since December 1996. He had not applied for a protection visa on his trips to Australia in 1996 and 1997, nor on his most recent arrival in Australia in December 1997. He did not apply for a protection visa when his then visa expired in March 1998. The Tribunal found that he was aware of his rights to apply for a protection visa at least from March 1998, as he had discussed his fear of persecution with a qualified and competent adviser during 1998, and that he probably knew of that right before he left Bangladesh. However, the applicant had made no such application, even when placed in detention, and did not do so until he had exhausted his application for a bridging visa.
38 The Tribunal found the applicant's reasons for the delay inconsistent and unconvincing. Those reasons did vary, as the Tribunal records, and included:
· his learning only in late 1998 or early 1999 that the Awami League had discovered that he had passed on more information about it (his original application, and his evidence 23 July 1999)
· his learning in January 1999 through inquiries with his relatives in Bangladesh that it was dangerous to return to Bangladesh (his evidence 12 March 1999)
· his reluctance to seek citizenship of another country for fear of damaging his political rights in Bangladesh, as he planned to return there when the government changed (his evidence 12 March 1999)
· his reluctance to seek the protection of another country due to his standing within Bangladesh (his evidence 12 March 1999)
· during his relationship with an Australian citizen from Bangladesh between about July 1998 and 8 December 1998, his belief that it was not necessary for him to seek any other visa to be entitled to stay in Australia (his evidence 12 March 1999 and 23 July 1999)
· the fact that upon the breakup of that relationship on 8 December 1998, he had no passport as his former partner had stolen it and he was endeavouring to recover it (his evidence 4 June 1999)
· his reluctance to remain in Australia and his desire to return to Singapore or Denmark (his evidence 23 July 1999)
· his intimidation by immigration officials when he applied for a bridging visa (his evidence 23 July 1999).
39 The Tribunal concluded concerning that evidence:
"I note that they are inconsistent and find them unconvincing. Having heard the applicant's evidence, and having considered his actions, I am not satisfied that he has a genuine fear of persecution.
I am satisfied that neither the Applicant's family background nor his own political activities in Bangladesh or elsewhere, nor the political situation in Bangladesh have caused the applicant to fear persecution. I found the Applicant's actions much more persuasive than his words.
I am satisfied that if [the minister] threatened the applicant, then those threats did not produce in the applicant a fear of future persecution.
I am not satisfied that the applicant has a fear of persecution. Accordingly I am not satisfied that it is for reasons of such a fear that the applicant is unable or unwilling to return to Bangladesh.
I am not satisfied that the Applicant is someone to whom Australia has a protection obligation.
I have attempted to give the applicant the benefit of the doubt, but his claims to fear persecution on return to Bangladesh are so inconsistent with his actions as to fly in the face of commonsense."
40 Despite those various explanations, provided in the face of persistent and increasingly insistent questions from the Tribunal for an explanation for the timing of the application, one response he gave emerges in my mind as entirely consistent with the applicant's circumstances. He said from time to time during his interviews that he did not intend to seek a protection visa earlier because he did not need one. He had been able to live outside Bangladesh since mid 1995 without difficulty. He did not intend to return to Bangladesh while the Awami League was in power. Even when he was detained, he first sought a bridging visa because he thought he needed such a visa to enable him to return to Singapore. It was only when that visa was refused, and he was in detention, that he faced the prospect of being returned to Bangladesh. He believed that there was, at that point, no option then but that he would be returned to Bangladesh, unless he obtained a protection visa. He feared the Awami League, upon his return, may imprison him or have him killed. The Tribunal understood that explanation, as he was questioned about it.
41 I suspect the Tribunal's approach was influenced by its understanding that the applicant needed protection at least from 1997. So much can be seen from the records of interview. It seems to have equated the fact that the applicant may be at risk if he returns to Bangladesh with him having a need, from that point in time, to procure a protection visa. It is that circumstance which seems to have led the Tribunal to the detailed questioning of the applicant about why he had not applied for a protection visa earlier. In my view, that is a misunderstanding on its part. But that misunderstanding does not necessarily give rise to a ground of review available under s 476 of the Act. It should also be recognised that the applicant did give a series of inconsistent answers to the Tribunal, as it recorded, which understandably caused the Tribunal to have concerns about his credibility.
Consideration of contentions
(a) Bias?
42 To establish that the Tribunal was actually biased, it is necessary to show that the decision-maker pre-judged the case against the applicant, or has acted with such partisanship or hostility as to show that the decision-maker had a mind made up against the applicant and one which was not open to persuasion in favour of the applicant: per North J in Sun Zhan Qui v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1997) 81 FCR 71 ("Sun Zhan Qui"). See also the observations of Burchett J at 127. It is not sufficient that the decision-maker has formed a preliminary conclusion about an issue. "There will be actual bias only when preliminary views are incapable of alteration": per Wilcox J in Sun Zhan Qui at 123.
43 Whether actual bias has been shown must be determined in the context of the hearing as a whole, including all the material before the decision-maker. It should also be noted that bias is not synonymous with absence of good faith. A person may in all good faith believe that that person was acting impartially but nevertheless the mind may be affected unconsciously by bias: see Burchett J in Sun Zhan Qui at 127; Lockhart J in Sarbjit Singh v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (18 October 1996, unreported).
44 The applicant's claim is that the Tribunal was biased in the sense that it was determined to decide the application adversely to him following the receipt by the Tribunal (by its Acting Principal Member) of a letter from Amnesty of 1 July 1999. He contends that the hearing conducted by the Tribunal on 23 July 1999 demonstrates that bias. In his initial submissions, the applicant asserted one other reason for the Tribunal being or becoming biased against him. He referred to it during the hearing on 23 July 1999, when challenged by the Tribunal to explain his claim of bias. It related to a submission made by the applicant to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee Inquiry into the Operation of Australia's Refugee and Humanitarian Program. However, he expressly abandoned that ground or reason for bias on the second occasion this application was heard. I was not persuaded that it provided any grounds for making out bias but, in the circumstances, it is not necessary to explain that view.
45 The reason for the bias was the content of the Amnesty letter of 1 July 1999. It was written to the Acting Principal Member of the Tribunal. It raised serious concerns at recent comments made by members of the Tribunal regarding Amnesty's submissions on behalf of individual asylum seekers. There were three particular instances identified. The third concerned the applicant. Reference was made to comments of the Tribunal at the examination which took place on 4 June 1999 after receipt of the letter from Amnesty International signed by Mr Hogan dated 2 June 1999. The tribunal member constituting the Tribunal on that occasion made comments suggesting that the contents of the letter were "an extraordinary use of Amnesty's reputation and their time, money and energy", that the views could not possibly carry any weight because Mr Hogan's opinion was not an opinion from Amnesty and that making an opinion on an individual was "exceptional" and "does nothing for Amnesty's reputation". The tribunal member said that letter was a waste of Amnesty's funds, and could carry no weight. He said he was not "particularly interested in Mr Hogan's view of the applicant, as Mr Hogan had not met him". Amnesty complained that those sort of comments were reflective of a hostility to any submission made by Amnesty in respect of individual cases, and complained about that, particularly as Amnesty information and publications were used by the Tribunal from time to time.
46 I have listened carefully to the recording of the examination conducted on 23 July 1999. I have also considered in detail the transcript of the examination of that day. The applicant in his submissions refers generally to that transcript, but not to any particular part of it although I was directed to a number of pages of the transcript as illustrating his concerns. He said the manner of the questioning, the cutting off of his answers, the aggression in tone, and the failure to listen, all indicate that the Tribunal by then simply decided to reject his application. He said that is confirmed by what appears to be the quite unreasonable findings of the Tribunal.
47 The interviews on 12 March 1999 and 4 June 1999 disclose that the Tribunal sought, in an appropriate way, to identify the applicant's concerns and the facts relating to them. In the course of those interviews, the Tribunal came to focus to a large extent on why the applicant had not applied for a protection visa earlier. The applicant did give inconsistent answers to questions on that topic, and on occasions was asked questions which indicated some scepticism of an answer already given. It is not inappropriate for the Tribunal to indicate, in an appropriate way, that a particular answer or answers seem unlikely or implausible so as to invite an applicant to respond to that perception. A visa applicant may well provide an insight into the circumstances which removes the initial concern about the accuracy of the answer, or which puts the answer into a context which was not previously understood.
48 There are a few occasions during those two initial interviews when the content or tone of the question reveals that the Tribunal doubts the accuracy of the answer being given. One such occasion was when the applicant was endeavouring to explain why his political profile was great enough to attract attention but not so great that, like the BNP leaders, publicity would ensure that he was treated according to law. They do not, in my judgment, demonstrate bias on the part of the Tribunal.
49 The third interview was a more argumentative one. The Tribunal focussed on why the visa application had not been made earlier. It is apparent that the Tribunal had not been persuaded by the applicant's earlier answers. The explanation about the personal relationship was firmly challenged because (it was put) it could not provide a means to a visa to stay in Australia in any event in the particular circumstances. The Tribunal insisted on its questions being directly answered. The tendency of the applicant to answer questions by referring to answers given on earlier occasions was curbed by frequent interruptions by the Tribunal, insisting that the questions be directly answered. The exchanges were quite vigorous. The Tribunal was aggressive in its questions, and at times even somewhat hectoring. It may well be that the applicant was endeavouring to directly answer questions, but in his own way and perhaps somewhat more discursively than the Tribunal was prepared to accommodate. Towards the end of the interview, the applicant expressed his concerns that the Tribunal was biased and that he was not getting a fair hearing.
50 It is not necessary to comment upon the form, content and manner of the questioning beyond my conclusion that, notwithstanding the applicant's concerns, I do not consider that it has been shown that the Tribunal was biased. I do not consider the interviews, in particular the interview of 23 July 1999, do show that the Tribunal was simply not prepared to accept anything the applicant may have said about why the visa application was made only in January 1999. The course of the interviews reveals that the Tribunal either had not appreciated, or had rejected, the claim that the applicant did not want a protection visa until he was faced with what he otherwise believed was inevitable return to Bangladesh. As I have observed earlier in these reasons, that may have been brought about by the other conflicting reasons proffered by the applicant. Even if that amounted to a flaw in the Tribunal's reasoning process, in my view it does not demonstrate bias on its part. At worst, it shows an erroneous understanding of the claim and the reasons for it. It is consistent with that view of the Tribunal's reasoning that the Tribunal should have become more focussed upon the issue as to why the visa application was so late to ensure that it understood what the applicant wished to say. It is also consistent with that view of the Tribunal's reasoning process that it became somewhat exasperated at his inconsistent responses. Nevertheless, in my judgment, the process undertaken by the Tribunal was not one where its mind was closed to whatever the applicant presented. Although I can understand his belief that the letter from Amnesty of 1 July 1999 might be a circumstance which led to the Tribunal to close its mind to the proper consideration of his claim, I do not consider that it did so.
(b) Errors of law?
51 The errors of law alleged are set out in par 8 above. I shall address them in turn.
52 The existence of a genuine fear of persecution on the part of the applicant if he returned to Bangladesh is one element of the Tribunal being satisfied that he has a well-founded fear of being persecuted for a Convention reason: Chan; Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Guo (1997) 191 CLR 559 ("Guo"). The Tribunal addressed that question. It had regard to the evidence. As its reasons show, it did not regard the applicant as having a sufficient political profile to attract the attention of the Awami League should he return to Bangladesh, notwithstanding his earlier activities. It apparently regarded the threat made in November 1996 as relatively idle, or too long ago. It placed very considerable weight on the perceived delay in the applicant seeking a protection visa in reaching its conclusion. I have indicated earlier in these reasons that there is another view of the timing of that application which would not carry the significance which the Tribunal attributed to it. There are also many factors which could point to the conclusion that the applicant should have succeeded on his application. However, this application is not a review of the Tribunal's decision on the merits. The critical finding of the Tribunal noted above was one which was available to it. I do not consider that any error of law has been shown, or must necessarily exist, in the Tribunal reaching that finding.
53 The suggestion that the production of the applicant's passport might enable prompt and favourable resolution of his claim was made at the interview on 4 June 1999. It was a conditional suggestion only. The Tribunal did not say that production of the passport would resolve the application favourably to the applicant. I do not think that any error of law is shown in respect of that matter.
54 I also do not consider any error of law is shown in the use, or rejection, of the Amnesty letter of 2 June 1999. In fact the Tribunal did place some weight upon its contents, despite the firm views expressed at the interview on 4 June 1999. It is for the Tribunal to determine what weight is given to any particular piece of evidence, although as I have indicated above, I consider that the Tribunal perhaps should have given more weight to that evidence than it was disposed to do. However, that matter does not give rise to an error of law within the scope of s 476(1)(e) of the Act, and on matters such as this the Court is restricted to the grounds specified in s 476 in reviewing a decision of the Tribunal. In Attorney-General (NSW) v Quin (1990) 170 CLR 1 at 35-36 Brennan J said: