Grounds of appeal
1. The Federal Circuit Court erred in not finding the Tribunal fell into jurisdictional error in that it failed to consider a relevant consideration, or an integer of the claim, or a material question of fact, or information.
Particulars
a) The appellant's representatives provided submissions and evidence with detailed reference to diverse independent sources, and the Tribunal had material from other sources also, to the effect that there was a culture in Sri Lanka of serious harm, including torture, being inflicted by the authorities on persons including prisoners, and not necessarily specifically targeted at known political opponents but aimed at people simply as prisoners or as Tamil prisoners.
(Court Book ("CB") 171, [35]; CB 186, 189, 194-196, 201, 202, 203, 205-206, 208, 214, 216, 227-248; CB 277-278, [52], [54], [55]-[57]; CB 280, Decision Record [66], [67] and note 18; CB 281, [72], [74])
Despite having this material, although the Tribunal considered whether there might be harm targeted at the appellant as a Tamil or as a person with "an actual or perceived association with the LTTE" (CB 280, [67]) or the TNA (CB 270-273, [22]-[35]), it failed to consider whether there was a real chance of the appellant suffering significant harm, as the result of the culture of serious harm, including torture, being inflicted by the authorities on persons including prisoners, although it found that he would be for at least a short time in detention or prison as a returned failed asylum seeker who had left Sri Lanka illegally.
(CB 277-278, [55]-[57]; CB 280, [66]-[67])
b) Further or in the alternative, the Tribunal failed to consider and to determine why it should reject as unreliable reports, from various sources, of torture and prisoners, returnees and failed asylum seekers in Sri Lanka, so that it should conclude that it "does not accept that the applicant faces a real chance of persecution on this basis on return to Sri Lanka…" and that there was no "real risk that the applicant will face torture, or other instances of significant harm, either during his questioning at the airport or during any period he spends on remand." (CB 277, [52]; CB 280, Decision Record [67])
2. The Federal Circuit Court erred in not finding that the Tribunal fell into jurisdictional error in that it acted so unreasonably that no reasonable Tribunal would so have acted.
Particulars
(a) The Tribunal was unreasonable in determining, on the basis of reports of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, but without determining why it should reject other reports of torture of prisoners and returnees in Sri Lanka, that it "does not accept there to be a real chance that the applicant will face serious harm during the questioning or any period he is held on remand awaiting a bail hearing."
(CB 280, [66])
(b) The Tribunal was unreasonable in determining, on the basis of reports of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, but without determining why it should reject other reports of torture of prisoners and returnees in Sri Lanka, that there was no "real risk that the applicant will face torture, or other instances of significant harm, either during his questioning at the airport or during any period he spends on remand."
(CB 280, Decision Record [67]; CB 281, [75])