The Review in the Tribunal
4 The Tribunal had a number of concerns about the appellant's evidence. The Tribunal found that the appellant was not a credible witness and had not been truthful in the evidence which he gave in relation to his experiences in India, his reasons for leaving India and his fears about returning to India.
5 At [56]-[60] of the Tribunal's Decision Record, the Tribunal set out the particular matters which had led it to express the conclusions which I have summarised at [4] above.
6 At paragraph [61]-[64] of its Decision Record, the Tribunal said:
61. The Tribunal finds the above concerns so significant that it is not satisfied that the applicant is a credible witness or that any of his claims (other than his identity and nationality) are true. Given the number and significance of the inconsistencies in the applicant's evidence, the Tribunal does not consider that these can be explained by nerves or language difficulties (given that an interpreter was used, no issues have been raised about the quality of the interpreting and there did not appear to the Tribunal to be any difficulties with the interpreter). The applicant also claimed on a number of occasions, in response to inconsistencies put to him at the hearing, that he was not aware of what was in his written statement and this explained some of those inconsistencies. The Tribunal does not accept this explanation because he stated at the beginning of the hearing that he himself had read the statement (although he could not understand all of it), his friend had checked the statement for accuracy and he was confident that the statement was correct. He also asserted the correctness of much of the written statement in his s.424A response. Furthermore, this fails to explain the inconsistencies between the applicant's oral evidence to the Department and the Tribunal.
62. For the reasons given above, the Tribunal does not accept that the applicant and/or his father were involved in politics in India or were members of the BSP, BJP or Congress Party, that they were attacked by any political opponents or that there is a real chance that they would be attacked by political opponents if they were to return to India.
63. The Tribunal has considered the applicant's statement in his s.424A response that he can provide further documentation if required. The applicant has not indicated an intention to provide any particular documentation or evidence or a date by which he intends to provide it. The Tribunal discussed with the applicant whether he had any documentation at the hearing and following the hearing has provided time which would enable him to provide any evidence he wished to. No further evidence or documents have been provided. The Tribunal considers that the applicant has been provided with a reasonable opportunity to provide any evidence he wants to.
64. Having considered the applicant's circumstances singularly and cumulatively, the Tribunal is not satisfied that the applicant has a well-founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason if he were to return to India now or in the reasonably foreseeable future.