Consideration
29 Questions akin to those raised by the appellant's ground of appeal have been addressed in a number of previous appeals to this Court: MZYQU v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2012] FCA 1032; 206 FCR 191 (Dodds-Streeton J); MZZJY v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 1394 (Davies J); MZZZA v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCA 594 (Mortimer J); MZACX v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2016] FCA 1212 (Kenny J); Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v DZU16 [2018] FCAFC 32; 253 FCR 526 (Robertson, Murphy and Kerr JJ); and CIT17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCAFC 150 (Collier, Markovic and Lee JJ).
30 As indicated by the Authority's reasons, the Authority found for the purposes of s 36(2)(a) of the Migration Act that the appellant was not a person to whom it was satisfied Australia had protection obligations because the appellant was a "refugee", as defined by s 5H and 5J of the Act. That was because the Authority was not satisfied that the appellant had a well-founded fear of persecution that related to the whole of Afghanistan, as it found that the appellant would not face a real chance of significant harm if he returned to Kabul. As I stated earlier, that finding directed attention to the complementary protection criterion in s 36(2)(aa), which provides -
(2) A criterion for a protection visa is that the applicant for the visa is:
…
(aa) a non-citizen in Australia (other than a non-citizen mentioned in paragraph (a)) in respect of whom the Minister is satisfied Australia has protection obligations because the Minister has substantial grounds for believing that, as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of the non-citizen being removed from Australia to a receiving country, there is a real risk that the non-citizen will suffer significant harm;
31 The criterion in s 36(2)(aa) of the Act is subject to s 36(2B), which provides -
(2B) However, there is taken not to be a real risk that a non-citizen will suffer significant harm in a country if the Minister is satisfied that:
(a) it would be reasonable for the non-citizen to relocate to an area of the country where there would not be a real risk that the non-citizen will suffer significant harm; or
(b) the non-citizen could obtain, from an authority of the country, protection such that there would not be a real risk that the non-citizen will suffer significant harm; or
(c) the real risk is one faced by the population of the country generally and is not faced by the non-citizen personally.
32 For the purposes of the three alternative criteria in s 36(2B), the Authority considered only whether s 36(2B)(a) was engaged. In DZU16 the Court framed the statutory question arising under s 36(2B)(a) at [117] -
In our opinion, the statutory question for the Authority was whether it was satisfied that it would be reasonable for the respondent to relocate to an area of Afghanistan where there would not be a real risk that he will suffer significant harm: see s 36(2B)(a).
33 In MZACX, Kenny J at [35] identified that two stages of inquiry arise under s 36(2B)(a): (1) whether there was an appreciable risk of the occurrence of the feared persecution at some other place; and (2) if not, whether the relocation to that place was reasonable. Her Honour stated at [35]-[37] -
35 In considering the possibility of relocation within a visa applicant's country of nationality, the first question that arises is whether, objectively, there is no appreciable risk of the occurrence of the feared persecution in another part of that country. If there is an appreciable risk, then the issue of relocation for a particular applicant is concluded. If, however, there is no appreciable risk of the feared persecution at some other place in the country of nationality, the issue of relocation can be further explored. At this point, as indicated earlier, the question is whether the relocation of the visa applicant to that place is "reasonable", in the sense of "practicable", having regard to the particular circumstances of the applicant and the impact upon the applicant of relocation to that place. In answering this question, it may be relevant to include different or lower risks of harm faced by the applicant at a suggested place in assessment of the reasonableness of relocation in the particular circumstances of the case. Issues of risk of harm arise at these two stages of inquiry, although each stage of the inquiry has a different focus. Jurisdictional error may arise where a Tribunal conflates the two stages of the inquiry, as MZYQU 206 FCR 191 and MZZJY [2014] FCA 1394 illustrate.
36 In MZYQU 206 FCR 191, Dodds-Streeton J held (at [61]) that there was jurisdictional error in treating a risk of serious harm (within s 91R(1)(b) of the Migration Act) as the only kind of harm that could affect the reasonableness of relocation. Her Honour explained (at [55] and [60]):
Consistently with SZATV, factors such as "other and different risks in the propounded place of internal relocation" ... may be relevant, albeit not mandatory, considerations when determining the reasonableness of a proposed relocation.
...
The I[ndependent] M[erits] R[eviewer] did not consider the impact of the risk of harm in the form of generalised violence or harm (of an unspecified nature or level) due to personal circumstances on the reasonableness of the appellant's relocation. By inference, the IMR proceeded on the basis that unless the harm were serious within the meaning of s 91R(1)(b), it was unnecessary to do so.
37 In MZZJY [2014] FCA 1394 Davies J held that the Tribunal had erred in considering whether the applicant in that case could relocate within Pakistan to avoid persecution. Her Honour said (at [16] and [21]):
The applicant's primary contention in support of the proposed ground of appeal is that the FCC erred in not finding that the Tribunal, in assessing the reasonableness of the applicant relocating to Karachi, was obliged, but failed, to consider the risk of the applicant suffering harm having regard to the particular circumstances of the applicant. It was argued that the Tribunal wrongly conflated the two limbs of the relocation test, namely "appreciable risk" and "reasonableness", by failing to address the personal circumstances of the applicant in addressing the question whether it was reasonable, in the sense of practicable, for the applicant to relocate to Karachi in the face of a risk of the applicant suffering sectarian and generalised violence, however remote...
I accept the submission for the applicant that the Tribunal conflated the two limbs of the relocation test, namely "appreciable risk" and "reasonableness", by finding that the applicant could be reasonably expected to relocate to Karachi "where there is not an appreciable risk of the occurrence of the feared persecution". In SZATV v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2007) 233 CLR 18 Gummow, Hayne and Crennan JJ stated that what is "reasonable" in the sense of practicable must depend upon the particular circumstances of the visa applicant and the impact upon that person of relocation of the place of residence within the country of nationality. This criterion was recently affirmed by the High Court in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZSCA [2014] HCA 2014. In the present case, the Tribunal dealt with the position of Shias generally in Karachi but did not consider the practical realities facing the applicant, as a person at risk of attack in Karachi because of his religion. In so doing, the Tribunal wrongly elided the question posed by the "reasonableness" criterion with the inquiry, is there a lack of "appreciable risk" of harm? The conclusion that the chance of harm is not more than remote dealt only with the consideration as to whether objectively there is an appreciable risk of persecution for a Convention reason in Karachi, but did not deal with the question as to whether it is reasonable, in the sense of practical, to expect the applicant to live there faced with a risk of violence and where he would lack protection from the authorities, as the Tribunal accepted. The same considerations do not necessarily apply to both limbs. The fact that the risk of harm may be remote does not necessarily answer the question whether it is reasonable, having regard to the personal circumstances of the applicant, to expect the applicant to face that risk. The Tribunal was obliged to consider the practical realities for the applicant in determining whether it is reasonable to expect him to relocate. It did not do so, and in failing to do so fell into jurisdictional error.
34 At [38], Kenny J stated that while the decisions in MZYQU and MZZJY were different from the case before her Honour in some respects, they illuminated the argument advanced by the appellant. At [39], Kenny J stated that whether the primary judge had erred depended, at least in part, on the claims that had been made by the appellant before the Refugee Review Tribunal concerning the reasonableness of relocation. At [44], Kenny J observed that the Tribunal in its reasons had addressed the primary issue, which was whether there was an appreciable risk of the occurrence of feared persecution in Islamabad or Rawalpindi, which the Tribunal had identified as places of relocation, and determined that there was not. Her Honour stated that this left open another issue, which was whether there was nonetheless a different level of risk of harm on account of the appellant's Shia Muslim and Turi identity that militated against his relocation, when all the circumstances were considered. In respect of that issue, Kenny J held at [46]-[49] -
46 There is only one statement in paragraph [47] that touches on the second issue of whether, given some level of risk, it was reasonable in his circumstances to relocate to one of the cities. This is the stated conclusion that:
While the Tribunal considers that there is less than a remote chance of the applicant being targeted on the basis of his Shia religion or as a member of the Turi tribe from Parachinar or being caught up in generalised or sporadic violence which may occur in the country including in Islamabad and Rawalpindi, the Tribunal finds it is reasonable for the applicant to relocate to these urban centres in these circumstances.
47 There is, however, no prior acknowledgement in the Tribunal's reasons that a risk of harm as a result of ethnically and religiously motivated violence might, as the appellant claimed, militate against relocation, bearing in mind all the circumstances of his particular case. It is true that the Tribunal in fact stated that it did not accept that, in Islamabad or Rawalpindi, the appellant would face a heightened risk because of his status as a "renewed Turi shopkeeper in Parachinar". As noted above, however, the appellant relevantly claimed that he would face a risk of harm as a result of ethnically and religiously motivated attacks if he were to relocate to Islamabad or Rawalpindi and that this circumstance was relevant to the reasonableness of his relocation to those places. It will be recalled that the Tribunal accepted that: (1) the appellant faced "a real chance of persecution" in his home area of Pakistan because of his religion and ethnicity (and thus had a well-founded fear of persecution on those grounds in that area); (2) the appellant's religion, ethnicity, tribal identity and origins were identifiable from his accent, identity documents, spelling of his name and the way he practised his religion; (3) there had been attacks, including in November 2013, on Shias in Rawalpindi; (4) there may have been some instances of the kidnapping of Turis in Islamabad and Rawalpindi in 2011; and (5) there had been incidents of violence against Shias and there will be further attacks against Shia targets in various parts of the country. As to (4), the Tribunal stated that it did not accept that there was a "real chance" that the appellant would be the victim of such crime, having regard to the size of the population and the limited number of reports over time. The Tribunal also referred to the existence of Turi political rallies as the basis for not accepting that the appellant's profile as a Turi or Turi Shia would lead to a "real chance" of serious harm away from his home region or "adversely impact on his ability to relocate".
48 The fact that a risk of serious harm, or that a person may be the victim of ethnically motivated crime, is remote does not answer the question whether it is reasonable, having regard to all the circumstances of a visa applicant, that the applicant face that risk. Further, the Tribunal did not directly address the appellant's claim that he would face a risk of harm, particularly during attendance at Shia Muslim mosques or participation in religious festivals. In considering whether or not it was reasonable for the appellant to relocate to Islamabad or Rawalpindi, the Tribunal was obliged, as Davies J said in MZZJY [2014] FCA 1394 at [21], to consider the practical realities for him.
49 Instead, in this case, the Tribunal's analysis persistently confused the issue of whether there was no appreciable risk of the occurrence of the feared persecution in Islamabad or Rawalpindi with the different issue of whether the risk of harm by reason of his Shia Muslim or Turi identity militated against relocation in all the circumstances of his case. The conclusion in paragraph [47] cannot be untied from this confusion. Indeed, the extent of the confusion is emphasised by the fact that the statement set out in [17] above (that there is less than a remote chance of the appellant being targeted on the basis of his Shia religion or as a member of the Turi tribe from Parachinar or being caught up in the generalised or sporadic violence which may occur in the country including in Islamabad and Rawalpindi) does not appear to flow out of the Tribunal's preceding analysis. Instead, this further confusion only emphasises the Tribunal's failure to consider whether relocation was reasonable, having regard to all the circumstances of the appellant's case, including whether the appellant faced a risk of harm in these cities by reason of his religion or ethnicity. The failure to address this question resulted in jurisdictional error.
35 In CIT17, the Court stated at [74] that the parties to that appeal did not dispute the principles essayed by Kenny J in MZACX, and stated at [76] that for present purposes the Court accepted those principles as being correct.
36 In DZU16 at [110] the Court recorded a submission by the Minister that insofar as MZACX, MZYQU and MZZJY suggested that consideration must always be given to the risk of generalised violence when assessing the reasonableness of relocation, they were wrong as they descended to a greater level of particularity than was called for, and they should not be followed: cf, CIT17 at [74]-[75], where the Full Court appears to treat the Minister's submissions in DZU16 as observations by the Court.
37 In DZU16, the Full Court considered a challenge by the Minister to a finding by the primary judge that the Authority had failed to consider whether the established risk of generalised violence in the place of relocation, Mazar-e-Sharif in Afghanistan, rendered it unreasonable (as opposed to unsafe) to relocate. In upholding the Minister's challenge, the Full Court distinguished each of MZYQU (Dodds-Streeton J), MZZJY (Davies J), and MZACX (Kenny J).
38 As to MZYQU, the Full Court in DZU16 observed at [134] that it concerned an earlier form of the legislation, namely s 91R(1) of the Migration Act (since repealed). Section 36(2) of the Migration Act (as then in force) gave effect to the definition of "refugee" in Article 1A(2) of the Refugees Convention as amended by the Refugees Protocol. Under that form of the legislation, the reasonableness of relocation arose as a matter of inference from the more generally stated provisions of the Convention definition: SZATV v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2007] HCA 40; 233 CLR 18 at [11] (Gummow, Hayne and Crennan JJ). Section 91R of the Act qualified the Convention definition of "refugee" by requirements that included that the persecution involved serious harm to the person. The decision-maker's error which Dodds-Streeton J identified in MZYQU was in impliedly treating the level of harm referred to in s 91R(1)(b) as being the only level of harm that was capable of being relevant to the reasonableness of the relocation: see MZYQU at [54], [58]-[60]. As to that conclusion, the Full Court in DZU16 stated at [135] -
In our opinion, the same conclusion cannot be drawn in relation to the reasoning of the Authority in the present appeal, given the terms of s 36(2B)(a) which refer to "an area of the country where there would not be a real risk that the non-citizen will suffer significant harm". This is the concept the Authority applied at [48]-[50] of its reasons.
39 As to MZZJY, the Full Court in DZU16 stated at [136] that Davies J had held that the fact that a risk of harm in the place of relocation may be remote did not necessarily answer the question whether the relocation was reasonable, having regard to the personal circumstances of the applicant, to expect the applicant to face that risk. The Tribunal had fallen into jurisdictional error in failing to consider the practical realities for the applicant in determining whether it was reasonable for him to relocate. At [137], the Full Court in DZU16 distinguished MZZJY on the ground that in the case before it, on a fair reading of the Authority's reasons, it did not err in its application of the relevant criterion whether it would be reasonable for the respondent to relocate to a place where there would not be a risk of significant harm. The Full Court held that, in effect, the Authority had found that there was no specific or generalised risk and also considered the practical realities of relocation for the respondent.
40 As to MZACX, the Full Court in DZU16 at [138] stated that Kenny J had held at [49] that the Tribunal failed to consider whether relocation was reasonable, having regard to all the circumstances of the appellant's case, including whether the appellant faced a risk of harm in the cities of Islamabad or Rawalpindi by reason of his religion or ethnicity, and that the failure to address that question resulted in jurisdictional error. At [139], the Full Court in DZU16 distinguished MZACX on the ground that, in effect, the Authority in DZU16 found that there was no specific or generalised risk, and had also considered the practical realities to the respondent of relocation. In that respect, it is significant that the conclusion of the Authority in DZU16 was as follows -
61. Considering all the circumstances, I am satisfied it would be reasonable for the applicant to relocate to an area of the country such as Mazar-e-Sharif where there would not be a real risk that the applicant will suffer significant harm.
41 The Full Court in DZU16 held at [139] that these words included what the Authority had said earlier.
42 In CIT17, the Full Court held in relation to reasons of the Authority having similar but not identical characteristics to the reasons of the Authority considered in DZU16, that the Authority had not erred in its consideration of whether it was reasonable for the appellant to relocate to Mazar-e-Sharif in Afghanistan. In CIT17, the Authority had concluded at [77] of its reasons -
I note the representative's concerns about the relocation options being a durable solution and economically viable. I note that insecurity has affected Mazar-e-Sharif, however I found that such incidents were infrequent and that the applicant would not face a real chance or real risk of serious or significant harm on the basis of targeted harm or generalised violence or criminality either within the city or while accessing it upon returning. I have considered the applicant's personal circumstances and I am satisfied it is reasonable for the applicant to remain in Mazar-e-Sharif, a place where he will be able to secure shelter, employment and services upon return even in the absence of an initial familial or otherwise familiar support network.
43 As to this conclusion by the Authority, the Full Court stated at [84]-[85] -
The consideration by the Authority of whether it would be reasonable for the appellant to relocate to Mazar-e-Sharif was detailed, appearing not only at [77] as submitted by the appellant but from [66]-[77] of the Authority's reasons. The conclusion of the Authority at [77] must be read against the background of its analysis in those preceding paragraphs. The Authority clearly considered drawbacks for the appellant in relocating to Mazar-e-Sharif but concluded that, against the backdrop of the political and economic environment in the city as well as the personal circumstances of the appellant it had outlined, it was nonetheless reasonable for the appellant to relocate there.
The appellant submitted that the Authority accepted that there was risk to the appellant in relocating to Mazar-e-Sharif, as noted in the reasons of the Authority at [25] (militant attacks occur in Mazar-e-Sharif) and [39] (certain aspects of the conflict with the Taliban would affect Mazar-e-Sharif). However the conclusion of the Authority set out at [77] must be read taking into account the possible risks, as well as the view of the Authority that, notwithstanding some risk to the appellant in Mazar-e-Sharif, the appellant was not at risk of significant harm if he were to relocate to Mazar-e-Sharif (including both travelling to and remaining in Mazar-e-Sharif). This analysis, read further with the detailed examination of the Authority as to whether it was reasonable for the appellant to relocate to Mazar-e-Sharif, negates the appellant's claim that the Authority failed to address the second limb of the relocation test in s 36(2B) of the Act, or that the Authority had erred in a manner akin to that identified in MZACX.
44 The issue raised by the appellant in the present case must turn on what the Authority stated in its reasons for the decision in this case: DZU16 at [102]. Although the examination of other cases is useful for the purpose of examining how other judges have considered similar issues, decisions on questions of fact concerning the formulation of the Authority's reasons in other cases do not have universal application, and do not stand as authority for any principle of law.
45 The Authority was required by s 473EA of the Migration Act to provide a written statement of its decision that set out the reasons for its decision, which is subject to the content required by s 25D of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth) in relation to material questions of fact. A court may but is not bound to infer that a matter not mentioned in the Authority's reasons was not considered: Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf [2001] HCA 30; 206 CLR 323 at [69] (McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ). A court is not bound to draw the inference because the fact that something is not mentioned in the Authority's reasons does not necessarily mean that it was not considered: Minister for Immigration & Citizenship v SZGUR [2011] HCA 1; 241 CLR 594 at [31] (French CJ and Kiefel J); Minister for Immigration & Border Protection v EEI17 [2018] FCAFC 166; (2018) 261 FCR 461 at [47] (McKerracher, Gleeson and Burley JJ). In Minister for Immigration & Border Protection v SZSRS [2014] FCAFC 16; 309 ALR 67 the Full Court (Katzman, Griffiths and Wigney JJ) stated at [34] -
The fact that a matter is not referred to in the Tribunal's reasons, however, does not necessarily mean the matter was not considered by the Tribunal at all: SZGUR at [31]. The Tribunal may have considered the matter but found it not to be material. Likewise, the fact that particular evidence is not referred to in the Tribunal's reasons does not necessarily mean that the material was overlooked. The Tribunal may have considered it but given it no weight and therefore not relied on it in arriving at its findings of material fact. But where a particular matter, or particular evidence, is not referred to in the Tribunal's reasons, the findings and evidence that the Tribunal has set out in its reasons may be used as a basis for inferring that the matter or evidence in question was not considered at all. The issue is whether the particular matter or evidence that has been omitted from the reasons can be sensibly understood as a matter considered, but not mentioned because it was not material. In some cases, having regard to the nature of the applicant's claims and the findings and evidence set out in the reasons, it may be readily inferred that if the matter or evidence had been considered at all, it would have been referred to in the reasons, even if it were then rejected or given little or no weight: MZYTS [[2013] FCAFC 114] at [52].
46 The onus of sustaining an inference that the Authority did not take a material matter into account, or misunderstood the nature of the conditions in s 36(2B)(a) of the Migration Act such as to amount to a jurisdictional error, fell on the appellant: SZGUR at [67] (Gummow J).
47 I have given careful consideration to the reasons of the Authority as a whole, and I am mindful of the guidance of Lockhart J in Politis v Commissioner of Taxation [1988] FCA 739; 16 ALD 707 at 708, which was cited in Collector of Customs v Pozzolanic Enterprises Pty Ltd [1993] FCA 456; (1993) 43 FCR 280 at 287 (Neaves, French and Cooper JJ), which was in turn cited in Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang (1996) 185 CLR 259 at 272 (Brennan CJ, Toohey, McHugh and Gummow JJ). That guidance is that in evaluating the reasons of an administrative decision-maker the Court should approach its task sensibly and in a balanced way, not reading passages from the reasons for decision in isolation from others to which they may be related, or taking particular passages out of the context of the reasons as a whole. And the Court should not construe the Authority's reasons for its decision minutely and finely and with an eye keenly attuned to the perception of error. But as the Full Court (Flick, Barker and Rangiah JJ) observed in Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Nguyen [2017] FCAFC 149; 254 FCR 522 at [34]-[36] in the context of the issues that arose in that appeal, to construe a decision-maker's reasons by reference to what they do not address is not to construe them "with an eye keenly attuned to the perception of error" by reference to the manner in which the reasons resolved issues to which attention was directed.
48 Upon my review on appeal of the material that was before the primary judge, I have respectfully come to a different view from that taken by his Honour in relation to whether, for the purposes of considering whether relocation of the appellant to Kabul was reasonable, the Authority gave consideration to the appellant's objections by reference to generalised violence in Kabul. I am persuaded that the Authority did not give such consideration, and that it fell into jurisdictional error.
49 As Kenny J identified in MZACX at [35], there are two stages of inquiry under s 36(2B)(a) of the Migration Act. If the decision-maker determines that there is no real risk of significant harm, different or lower risks of harm faced by an applicant may be relevant to the evaluation of the reasonableness of relocation. MZACX was not doubted by the Full Court in DZU16, and the Full Court in CIT17 accepted the principles in MZACX as being correct (see [35]-[36] above). In the present case, the appellant's submissions to the delegate and his response to the Authority of 23 September 2016 squarely raised objections to relocation to Kabul by reference to the general security situation in Kabul in addition to those objections that were specific to the appellant's circumstances. That such objections were raised by the appellant was accepted by the Authority, because it considered the substance of them at [63] of its reasons in the course of addressing the first logical limb of s 36(2B)(a), namely whether Kabul was a place where there would be a real risk of the appellant suffering significant harm, which is a concept that is given statutory content by s 36(2A). The Authority referred to some of the matters relevant to the appellant's objections, namely: (1) a marked increase in security incidents in Kabul in 2015; (2) the attacks in Kabul causing significant casualties amongst civilian bystanders; and (3) that those attacks were still common despite the Afghan government maintaining effective control over Kabul and a range of counter-measures being put in place. There was no evaluation at [63] of the Authority's reasons of whether the matters to which it referred, and which it accepted, affected whether it was reasonable for the appellant to relocate to Kabul. It might have been open to the Authority to consider the question of reasonableness within the context of [63], but it did not do so: cf MZZZA at [39], [41] (Mortimer J).
50 As a matter of text and structure, from [64] onwards the Authority's reasons switch attention from the question of real risk that the appellant would suffer significant harm in Kabul to the question of reasonableness of relocation. There is nothing in the text of the Authority's reasons from [64] onwards that addresses expressly the matters to which the Authority referred at [63]. As to the features of the Authority's reasons relied on by the Minister I am not persuaded that, fairly read, they indicate that the Authority gave any consideration to the reasonableness of relocation having regard to the general security situation in Kabul, including the matters that the Authority accepted at [63]. As to each of those matters -
(1) I do not consider that the reference to "exploitation and harm" at [64] of the Authority's reasons (see [20] above) should be construed as a reference to the risk of the type of harm referred to at [63]. The full reference in [64] is to, "exploitation and harm as he has never worked and it would be near impossible for him to find work or live there" (emphasis added). This is set in the context of the references to the appellant's age, and the claimed absence of his family in Kabul. In fact, I consider it would be unreasonable to construe the reference to "harm" in [64] as picking up the matters relating to the general security situation in Kabul that are the subject of [63].
(2) Likewise, the reference to "safe and reasonable" in the latter part of [64] of the Authority's reasons is shaped by what follows in the balance of [64], none of which relates to the general security situation in Kabul.
(3) In relation to the reference by the Authority at [65] of its reasons to the UNHCR recommendations, the context of that reference is confined to the exception for relocation to able-bodied men and married couples of working age and without identified specific vulnerabilities. That consideration went to the question of relocation generally in Afghanistan. It did not address the specific objections to relocation to Kabul concerning the security situation there that were the subject of the appellant's submissions to the delegate, and other information on which the appellant relied that was specific to Kabul, such as a report by the United Nations Assistance Commission in Afghanistan to which the appellant's representative referred in the submission dated 23 September 2016 (see [12] above). That information was picked up and relied on by the appellant's representative on the question of reasonableness of relocation (see [13] above).
(4) As to the reference by the Authority at [66] of its reasons to living conditions in Kabul not being without difficulties, in context I do not construe that as referring to the type of generalised risks that are the subject of [63] of the Authority's reasons. That is because at [66] the Authority thought that difficult living conditions were ameliorated because the appellant had "close family links in Kabul which I am satisfied he would be able to utilise to obtain their support". It is difficult to conceive how family links could rationally affect the type of general security risks referred to by the Authority at [63], and I do not construe the Authority's reasons as suggesting that they would.
(5) I do not construe the reference by the Authority at the end of [66] to the appellant's "personal circumstances" as being sufficient to indicate that the Authority had taken into account the general security situation in Kabul in evaluating whether it was reasonable for the appellant to relocate there. The personal circumstances to which the Authority referred at [66] are fairly understood to be those circumstances which the Authority specifically addressed, namely the appellant's personal attributes such as his age, his family situation, his lack of work experience, the fact that he had never lived in Kabul, his ethnicity, and whether he had social connections in Kabul. In relation to this last aspect, the Authority at [66] found, contrary to the appellant's claims, that his father was living in Kabul, and quite possibly his mother and siblings.
(6) Finally, standing back and reading the Authority's reasons as a whole I am persuaded that the Authority has examined the security situation in Kabul and the risk to civilians only for the purposes of considering whether there would not be a real risk that the appellant would suffer significant harm if he were to relocate to Kabul, and has not examined the security situation and the risk to civilians more generally for the purposes of considering the reasonableness of the relocation.
51 The Authority's failure in the course of its review function under s 473CC of the Migration Act to consider the general security situation in Kabul for the purposes of evaluating the reasonableness of relocation was a failure to consider a significant objection to relocation which the appellant had squarely raised by the submissions made on his behalf to the delegate and to the Authority: see NABE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (No 2) (2004) 144 FCR 1 at [58], [60]-[61]. Those submissions were part of the framework set up by the objections of the appellant to relocation to Kabul: see, SZMCD v Minister for Immigration at [124] (Tracey and Foster JJ), citing Randhawa v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (1994) 52 FCR 437 at 443 (Black CJ, Whitlam J agreeing). Another conclusion is that in assessing the appellant's objections to relocation to Kabul on the basis of the general security situation in Kabul, the Authority confined its consideration to only one limb of s 36(2B)(a) of the Migration Act, and thereby proceeded upon a legally erroneous appreciation of the dual criteria in s 36(2B)(a).
52 Had the Authority considered the question of reasonableness of the appellant relocating to Kabul having regard to the general security situation there, there was a realistic possibility of a different outcome on review, and therefore the error was material and was jurisdictional: Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v SZMTA [2019] HCA 3; 363 ALR 599 at [45].