General principles relating to the application of s 36(2)(aa)
25 The general effect of the operation of ss 36(2)(aa) and 36(2B)(a) is that:
(a) the visa applicant will satisfy the criteria in s 36(2)(aa) where the Minister has substantial grounds for believing that if the applicant is returned to a receiving country there is a real risk they will suffer significant harm;
(b) however, the Minister cannot be so satisfied if, inter alia, he is satisfied that it would be reasonable for the applicant to relocate to an area in that country where there would not be such a risk; and
(c) the degree of satisfaction required to activate s 36(2)(aa), being "substantial grounds" for believing the risk exists is lower than that in s 36(2B)(a) where the Minister must be satisfied of the absence of the risk in a relevant area and of the reasonableness of relocating there.
26 It was accepted by the parties that s 36(2B)(a) had two limbs. First, the decision-maker must be satisfied that the place to which the non-citizen may relocate would be one where there was not a real risk that they will suffer significant harm. Second, that it is reasonable for the non-citizen to relocate to that place: DFE16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2018) 265 FCR 57 (DFE16) at 61 [24], 62 [27].
27 For the purposes of the second limb, what is reasonable, in the sense of being practicable, will depend upon the applicant's particular circumstances and the impact upon them of relocating their place of residence within their country of nationality: SZATV v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2007) 233 CLR 18 (SZATV) at 27 [24]. Whether or not the decision-maker is satisfied as to the reasonableness of relocation is a question of fact for the decision-maker alone involving, as it does, assessment and judgment: Soosaipillai v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs [2001] FCA 357 [57] per Carr J (with whom Hill and Whitlam JJ agreed).
28 It has been generally accepted that in the formation of the state of satisfaction as to the reasonableness of relocation by the non-citizen, s 36(2B)(a) does not compel the Minister to take into account any specific matters. In particular, it has been held that the Minister is not obliged by the terms of that section to take into account any other and different risks of harm in the relocation area - that is, other than a real risk of significant harm: MZYQU v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2012) 206 FCR 191 (MZYQU) at 199 - 200 [51], [52] and [55] per Dodds-Streeton J; and that is so even where those risks are assessed as being less than the "real risk" threshold. Such risks are integers which the decision-maker is permitted, but not mandated, to consider in ascertaining whether they are satisfied of the reasonableness of the applicant relocating: MZYQU at 200 [55]; MZZJY v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 1394 (MZZJY) [21] per Davies J; MZZZA v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCA 594 [34] per Mortimer J; MZACX v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2016) 161 ALD 73 (MZACX) at 86 - 87 [48] per Kenny J.
29 However, it was also accepted by the parties that, given the structure of s 36 and of the Act generally, in ascertaining whether they have reached the required state of satisfaction stipulated by s 36(2B)(a), a decision-maker is obliged to consider the grounds raised by the applicant including any claim that it is not reasonable for them to relocate to a particular locality due to a risk of harm which is less than a "real risk" of "significant harm". For the purposes of these reasons, that is referred to as a "lesser risk of harm".
30 Ms Hoiberg for the appellant submitted that this principle was helpfully summarised by Dodds-Streeton J in MZYQU where her Honour stated (at 200 [54] - [55]):
54 While the plurality in SZATV recognised that neither s 91R nor any other provision of the Act applied to further specify the "relocation principle", it did not state, nor is it a necessary inference, that the risk of harm in the proposed new region (of whatever level and however defined) is irrelevant in applying the principle of relocation laid down in SZATV. Conversely, neither SZATV, nor any other authority to which I was directed, holds that where the risk of harm is relevant to the reasonableness of relocation, it is restricted to a risk of serious harm within the meaning of s 91R(1)(b).
55 Consistently with SZATV, factors such as "other and different risks in the propounded place of internal relocation" (which, as recognised in MZYPW, may include the "risk of violence for non-Convention reasons") may be relevant, albeit not mandatory, considerations when determining the reasonableness of a proposed relocation.
31 Ms Hoiberg further submitted that this principle had been accepted in MZZJY and MZACX. Whilst that is so, it must be kept in mind that the decision in MZYQU concerned the operation of s 91R of the Act as it then was and the concept of the "internal relocation principle" as applied by international jurisprudence in relation to the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (1951), as modified by the Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees (1967) (the Convention). Those cases were not concerned with the operation of the complementary protection provisions as they are now codified in ss 36(2)(aa) and 36(2B). The evolution from the application of the internal relocation principle derived from the Convention concept of refugee to the codified complementary protection regime in the Act was thoroughly assayed by Greenwood J in DQA17 v Minister for Home Affairs [2020] FCA 864 [106] and the differences between the two were recently considered by Wheelahan J in CXO16 v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2020] FCA 17.
32 In Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v DZU16 (2018) 253 FCR 526 (DZU16), the Full Court (Robertson, Murphy & Kerr JJ) had occasion to analyse the Authority's obligation to consider the risk of harm to a visa applicant in a putative place of relocation for the purposes of considering the reasonableness of relocation. It concluded the Authority had correctly taken into account all of the relevant risks to the applicant when considering whether relocation was reasonable. In this respect, it held that (at 554 [108]):
108 For these reasons, the Authority's reasoning was not at odds with MZYQU, MZZJY and MZACX insofar as they stood for the proposition that a risk of encountering violence in a putative place of relocation of an unspecified nature or level (that is, below the threshold of serious harm) may be relevant to the reasonableness of relocation.
33 By this, the Full Court sought to eschew the proposition that the three identified decisions imposed an obligation upon the Authority in all cases to consider any lesser risk of harm at the proposed place of relocation. The Court later held (at 554 - 555 [110]):
110 … Insofar as MZYQU, MZZJY and MZACX, if considered to apply equally to the relocation test under s 36(2B)(a), may suggest that consideration must always be given to the risk of generalised violence when assessing the reasonableness of relocation, they were, with respect, wrong as they descended to a greater level of particularity than was called for by the Migration Act, and should not be followed.
34 The Full Court subsequently identified the question for the Authority under s 36(2B)(a) as being whether it was satisfied that it would be reasonable for the visa applicant to relocate to an area in Afghanistan where there would not be a real risk that they would suffer significant harm. After considering the material to which the Authority referred, it was held that the Authority had asked itself the correct statutory question.
35 It follows that for the purposes of the second limb of s 36(2B)(a), a decision-maker is not required to consider every possible impact or obstacle associated with relocation, but is only required to consider those impacts or obstacles which the applicant has raised: see most recently CSZ16 v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2020] FCAFC 156 [10] (CSZ16). The observations in CSZ16 echo those of Kenny J in MZACX where her Honour observed (at 82 - 83 [34]):
[34] The nature of the inquiry as to the reasonableness of relocation depends on the particular objections raised by the visa applicant to relocation: SZMCD v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2009) 174 FCR 415 … at [124], citing Randhawa at CLR 442-3... These objections set the parameters for the Tribunal's inquiry: MZYXP v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2013) 137 ALD 348… at [61]. The Tribunal's task is to assess the reasonableness of relocation as regards the applicant by reference to the issues raised by him and on the other material before the Tribunal: AZAEH v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCA 414 at [21]; and NABE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (No 2) (2004) 144 FCR 1 … at [58], [60]-[61], [68].
36 However, as the Minister accepted, a decision-maker may also be required to consider an unarticulated claim which clearly emerges from the materials: see AYY17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2018) 261 FCR 503 (AYY17) at 509 - 510 [18].