IAA'S DECISION
6 The following paragraphs of the IAA's decision record are relevant to the sole ground of appeal as argued at the hearing.
7 At D[11], the IAA said:
The applicant's claims as set out in the initial entry interview on 17 January 2013 (the initial interview), the invalid PV [protection visa] application in 2013, the statement of claim in the SHEV application [dated 12 November 2015] and at the interview are confusing and in some areas they are inconsistent or contradictory. I have therefore approached the applicant's history and claims chronologically.
8 In relation to the death of DJG17's brother L, the IAA said (emphasis added):
12. The applicant claims that his brother L died in 1990. In the initial interview he stated that L had been taken by the SLA and the family presumed he had been shot. He said a death certificate was issued three or four years ago. The referred materials contain a copy and translation of a death certificate issued in 2007. The certificate is in L's name and states that he died in August 1990. Under the cause of death the certificate states "Believe that he is dead on the fact that more than one year has passed since his missing". Although the applicant did not mention L in his invalid PV application, his SHEV statement claims that the SLA had taken L and other young men away. About a week later, 30 burnt bodies were found in a paddy field. His father went there and identified L. At the interview the delegate noted that the death certificate listed L as missing. The applicant said that the government will not give the true reason for deaths. He also said that he thinks L had been helping the LTTE but he (the applicant) was only small at the time.
13. I take into account that while the applicant may believe that L was taken and murdered by the SLA for being involved with the LTTE, there is no other evidence other than a certificate that states L is missing. I also note that the applicant has not claimed at any time that he or any other member of his family has ever been questioned, harassed or subject to any suspicion because of L. On the basis of the evidence and information before me, I accept that L disappeared in 1990 and I am prepared to accept that his burnt body was found sometime later. However, as there is no evidence that the family was subject to any suspicion or questioning in relation to L or this incident, I do not accept that L was suspected of being a member of the LTTE or that his death was a result of any such suspicion. I do not accept that the applicant had or continues to have any adverse security profile with the authorities arising from the death of L.
9 In relation to the death of DJG17's brother S, the IAA said (emphasis added):
14. The applicant claims that his brother S was killed in a crossfire between the SLA and the LTTE. His PV and SHEV statements are contradictory, putting this event occurring in 2001 or 2006. He has however provided a copy and translation of a death certificate that states that S died in March 2001, as a result of cardio-respiratory arrest failure to brain functioning due to gunshot injuries. I accept this certificate and find that S died in 2001. I have considered the remainder of the applicant's evidence and claims against that date. I am also satisfied that the different dates given by the applicant are the result of genuine confusion and I do not draw any adverse inferences in relation to these different dates.
15. The applicant claims that S was not a member of the LTTE and was caught in crossfire. However, after S was killed, the applicant and his mother were arrested and detained by the authorities. The applicant's evidence about duration is again confused and inconsistent but I am prepared to accept the clarification given by the agent at the interview, that the applicant was held for a few hours. He and his mother were forced to sign a document stating that S was part of the LTTE before the authorities would release S's body. The applicant said that he was not harmed during this period of detention.
16. The applicant claims that he was arrested by the CID in 2006 and held in detention for about 35 days. He claims that he was asked about S's role with the LTTE and then accused of being LTTE himself. He denied any knowledge of S's involvement and denied having any role with the LTTE but the CID did not believe him. He was interrogated, beaten and tortured severely throughout this period. Eventually, his mother was able to secure his release by paying a bribe to a CID officer. After the bribe was paid, either one (the invalid PV statement) or two (the SHEV statement) CID officers put the applicant into a van, drove him to a place in the jungle and released him. They told him that he should leave Trincomalee.
17. The applicant has not explained why the authorities would suddenly take an interest in S five years after his death. However, I take into account that in 2006 the LTTE was conducting increasing military operations that led to the ceasefire breaking down and an escalation in the conflict. It is plausible that in that environment the applicant, as a Tamil male in that area at that time, was detained and questioned about his involvement with the LTTE. I am prepared to accept that he was detained for a period of time and subjected to harm and mistreatment. I am also prepared to accept that his family paid a bribe to secure his release.
10 In relation to DJG17's time in the IDP camp, the IAA said (emphasis added, citation inserted):
19. In April 2009, the applicant and his family were captured by the SLA and taken to the [redacted] Camp, an IDP camp in the [redacted] district. Although the family was kept together in this camp and the applicant was not arrested, he claims that he was called to the CID routinely for interrogation, during which he was asked questions about the LTTE and any LTTE members that he knew. He said that he was abused, beaten and tortured during this questioning. The family was released from the camp in April 2010 and returned to Trincomalee, where the applicant resumed work as a fisherman. He claims that he was required to report to the CID on a weekly basis and had to give the officers "gifts" of money, cigarettes, alcohol or fish.
20. I have considered information in the referred materials [Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), "Report of the OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka (OISL) (A/HRC/30/CRP.2)", 16 September 2015, at pp 202-218] and the applicant's claim that he was called in for questioning by the CID on a number of occasions whilst in the IDP camp. I note from the referred material that the Sri Lankan authorities, including the SLA and the CID, undertook a comprehensive and multi-stage screening process to identify members of the LTTE both prior to and whilst persons were in IDP camps. This included using former LTTE members as informers to identify persons. Former LTTE and military intelligence personnel often walked through DP camps and pointed out persons who were then taken for further interrogation. During the interrogations, the authorities commonly used inducements, threats and physical violence. Detainees were often questioned on many occasions. The applicant's general claims in this regard are consistent with the referred information and are plausible.
21. The information cited above also indicates that detainees of more than general interest to the authorities were required to report daily to the security offices while others simply disappeared from the camps, usually at night, and were never seen again. The IDP camps continued to operate with significant restrictions on detainees' movements, contacts and personal liberty, until the end of 2009/beginning of 2010, when the release process began. This process was also highly regulated and began with the elderly and other vulnerable groups, as well as persons whose services were required outside the camp, such as medical personnel. Other families were able to leave after paying bribes, but the applicant has not claimed that his family did so. Families returning to home areas that remained militarised reported that they often faced surveillance, threats and harassment.
22. I accept that the applicant was called in for interrogation a number of times. However, I note that he was not arrested or required to report on a daily or other regular basis. I also take into account that persons who were suspected of any involvement or association with the LTTE, including those with only a civilian or familial association, were separated from their families and taken to detention centres. I have also considered my finding above that he was questioned about LTTE involvement in 2006 and although I have accepted that his family paid a bribe to arrange his release, I take into account that at no time during his 12 months in the IDP was he asked about the 2006 detention or his escape, or subject to any other interest arising from these events.
23. It is implausible that if the CID had any level of historic or ongoing suspicion of the applicant, it would have allowed the applicant to remain with his family in the IDP camp and then later leave the IDP camp without further investigation or follow-up. The information cited above indicates that even if the authorities did not have any evidence against someone, anyone with any suspected link to the LTTE or similar profile was separated, taken to a detention camp or simply disappeared. I am also satisfied on the basis of the information cited above that if the authorities had any interest in the applicant whatsoever, including any interest arising from his detention in 2006, he would have been subject to more surveillance, monitoring and questioning after his release, rather than simply a weekly reporting regime. I am not satisfied that the applicant was of any ongoing interest to the CID when he left the IDP camp and I find that he was not at that time imputed with any support for or personal association with the LTTE (including for the reasons of residing in LTTE-controlled areas and being forced to undertake labour), or because of his brothers. I also find that he was of no interest to the CID arising from the 2006 incident.
24. I am prepared to accept that the applicant was required to report weekly after his release and that he was asked to give the authorities money or goods during these visits. I note that he was not asked any questions or subject to any harm other than the requests for "gifts" (including some of his fish catch) and occasionally being asked to do some cleaning jobs. The applicant has not claimed that the imposition of the gifts and cleaning tasks caused any hardship to him or to his family. While I accept that the impositions were no doubt annoying and frustrating, I am satisfied that the conduct did not amount to serious harm. On the basis of the country information cited above, I find that this reporting and harassment was applied to many released IDP and was not indicative that a person had an adverse security profile with the authorities. I find that the applicant did not have an adverse security profile at the time of his release from the IDP camp.
25. I have also considered whether the applicant may face similar reporting and impositions if he returns to Sri Lanka. The referred materials indicate that, as the delegate put to the applicant at the interview, there has been a decrease in monitoring and military involvement, although some individuals in the North and East still report being questioned or monitored. As noted below, the country information indicates that the government is particularly concerned about LTTE resurgence, anti-government and pro-Tamil activities and it is plausible that persons with such profiles, including persons released from rehabilitation and detention centres, may be subject to ongoing monitoring. There is nothing in the material that indicates that former IDP remain subject to monitoring or reporting, although I do note reports that in the neighbouring district of Batticaloa, there has been a fresh round of registrations. Persons who were in the Vanni area (which includes [redacted]) during the conflict have reported being questioned again about their presence there and any involvement with the LTTE. While these reports do not refer to any ongoing reporting regimes, it is plausible that persons who are under particular suspicion may be required to do so. However, I have found above that the applicant did not have an adverse security profile at the time of his release and while he has since departed Sri Lanka while subject to reporting requirements, I am satisfied that this would not of itself give rise to an adverse security or criminal profile. I am not satisfied that he will be subject to regular reporting to the authorities should he return to his home village.
11 The IAA addressed DJG17's claim that he was detained in 2012 and his departure from Sri Lanka at D[26]-[43].
12 The IAA noted that, apart from weekly reporting, DJG17 did not claim to have suffered any harm, harassment or problems for two years after his release from the IDP camp but he claimed that his problems began in early June 2012 when he attended the CID office as part of his weekly reporting and a CID officer who had interrogated him in 2006 recognised him. In his invalid PV application, DJG17 claimed that he was immediately arrested and his CID file was brought out, the CID officer asked him how he escaped in 2006 and accused him of being LTTE. He was in detention for four weeks, tortured as he has been in 2006 until his mother paid a bribe for his release. In his SHEV statement, he said that after the CID officer recognised him, he asked how he had escaped and where he had been. The officer did not believe DJG17 when he said he had been in an IDP camp but allowed him to leave. Later that month, he was detained, held and beaten for four weeks until his mother paid a bribe for his release: D[26]-[27].
13 The IAA then went on to say (emphasis added):
28. I have not drawn any adverse inferences from the minor inconsistencies between the applicant's claims. However, I have found above that although the applicant was subject to screening and regular questioning in the IDP camp, his previous detention in 2006 and escape was never identified or mentioned. I take into account the applicant's claim that at this interrogation, the CID produced and showed him a file relating to him. It is implausible that if the applicant had any sort of CID profile or file relating to suspected LTTE involvement, and/or as an escapee from CID custody, he would not have been identified during the IDP screening process. Furthermore, it is not plausible that a CID officer would recognise and remember him six years after the detention in 2006, given that the applicant had no particular profile and the large numbers (in the hundreds of thousands) of Tamils who would have been processed during that time. In addition, the applicant's claims of detention, torture and release after payment of a bribe are strikingly similar to the events he described in 2006.
29. While I am prepared to accept that the applicant may have been asked questions at various times during his reporting requirements in 2010-2012, I do not accept that he was identified, detained and tortured as he has claimed. I do not accept that he was only released after payment of a bribe. I find that the applicant has fabricated the claims in relation to the 2012 detention and that he was of no interest to the authorities and did not, and does not now have an adverse security or criminal profile. As I have found that the applicant did not have an adverse security or criminal profile, it follows that I do not accept the claims that the CID came to the coconut grove on the day he was fleeing Sri Lanka or that shots were fired.
30. I am prepared to accept that in the days immediately following his departure from Sri Lanka the authorities may have noted that he had not reported to the CID office. I am prepared to accept that officers may have visited his family home on one or two occasions in 2012 to enquire about his whereabouts, and may have intimidated his wife during these visits. However, I note that no other member of his family has been visited or questioned about him and as I have found that the applicant does not have any adverse security or criminal profile, I do not accept the applicant's claims that the authorities continue to search for him or that they visit his home or harass his wife.
31. I also take into account that the applicant has not claimed, and there is no evidence before me that he or his family has been involved in any other political, separatist, LTTE-resurgence, anti-government or similar activities, either in Sri Lanka or in Australia.
32. Overall, I find that the applicant is not a person of interest to the Sri Lankan authorities as a result of any real or imputed LTTE association, including any family association, or for any other political association, involvement or belief. I find that he does not have an adverse security or criminal profile because of his past detentions or his departure while subject to reporting requirements and that he does not face a real chance of serious harm for any of these reasons, should he return to Sri Lanka.
14 The IAA also made findings concerning the risk of harm to DJG17 as a Tamil male from the Eastern Province having regard to country information which indicated that the situation had improved since he departed Sri Lanka in 2012: D[34]-[41]. The country information indicated that:
(a) Political stability had improved since the election of Maithripala Sirisena as President of Sri Lanka in 2015 with greater inclusion of Tamils in important positions and representation in politics, the civil defence forces and the police (among other things): D[34]-[37]. Having said that, the IAA addressed reporting by the US State Department in "Sri Lanka - Country Report on Human Rights Practices 2015", 13 April 2016 as follows (footnotes inserted):
36. The US State Department continued to report human rights abuses in 2015 and noted cases of harassment, arbitrary arrest, detention and torture of civil society activists, journalists, and LTTE sympathisers; however, overall the reports of harm relate to people with LTTE connections or who are otherwise Tamil separatist activists. The same report notes that President Sirisena has sworn in a Tamil as the first Tamil chief justice of the Supreme Court in two decades. The president is also allowing some limited commemoration gatherings in the Northern and Eastern Provinces, changed "Victory Day" to "Remembrance Day" and permitted the singing of the national anthem in Tamil as well as Sinhala. Other information in the referred materials notes that many people who were detained under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) have been released and that investigations into civilian deaths have begun. ["Truths of Civil War Key to Harmony in Sri Lanka", New Indian Express, 21 May 2015] At the same time, Tamils have been given increasing positions and representation in politics, the civil defence forces and the police. [South Asia Terrorism Portal, "Sri Lanka Timeline - Year 2015", 19 October 2015; "Five Tamils in Lankan Council of Ministers", New Indian Express, 9 September 2015; "Sri Lanka police to recruit 1,500 Tamil youths as PCs", Colombo Page, 8 October 2015]
(b) In 2016, the United Kingdom Home Office (UKHO) reported that the new government's objective was to identify Tamil activists in the diaspora working for Tamil separatism and to destabilise the Sri Lankan state with the aim of preventing the resurgence of the LTTE (or similar organisations) and the revival of the civil war. There were four serious risk categories which included journalists and human rights activists who had criticised the government, individuals who had given evidence to the Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission implicating Sri Lankan security forces, armed forces or authorities in alleged war crimes, those who were or were perceived to be a threat to a single state, and persons whose names appeared on a "stop" list accessible at the airport, being those against whom there was an extant court order or arrest warrant: D[37].
15 At D[38], the IAA went on to say (footnote inserted, emphasis added):
38. The UKHO assessed that a person being of Tamil ethnicity would not in itself warrant international protection. Neither would being a person who evidences past membership or connection to the LTTE unless they have or are perceived to have a significant role in relation to post-conflict Tamil separatism or appear on a 'stop' list at the airport. As noted above, the 'stop' list comprises those against whom there is an extant court order or arrest warrant. [UKHO, "Country Information and Guidance. Sri Lanka: Tamil separatism (version 3.0)", 01 August 2016, at pp 5-6, 9-10] There are no claims, and there is no evidence before me that the applicant has engaged in any activities either in Sri Lanka or elsewhere that may bring him to the adverse attention of the Sri Lankan authorities for any reason, including those noted above. There is no evidence and I am satisfied that he is not subject to any court orders or arrest warrants, and that he will not appear on a 'stop' list at the airport.
16 The IAA considered information to which DJG17's agent referred at the interview with the delegate and drew its conclusion as to whether DJG17 was at risk as a Tamil male at D[39]-[41] as follows (footnotes omitted):
39. I have considered the information referred to by the applicant's agent at the interview. The applicant points to this as evidence that Tamils remain at risk of arrest, detention, mistreatment and torture. The cited information notes reports of arbitrary arrests and detention of Tamils suspected of links to the LTTE, as well as persons who are human rights defenders, family members of the disappeared, involved in Tamil separatism or LTTE resurgence, critics of the government and other activists. There were also reports of harassment and threats made against people calling for accountability for human rights violations and those who were making or have made reports or complaints to the UN.
40. I have found above that the applicant will not be imputed with any adverse political profile either personally or as a result of this family association. I have also noted that there are no claims, and there is no evidence before me that the applicant has or intends to engage in any protests, truth-seeking or commemoration activities in relation to any family members. There are no claims, and there is no evidence before me that the applicant has or intends to be involved in any other activities that may bring him to the adverse attention of the authorities.
41. I am satisfied that the situation for Tamils in Sri Lanka has improved significantly and continues to do so. There is nothing in the referred information that indicates the situation is stagnating or getting worse for Tamils in any area of Sri Lanka. I am satisfied that the new government is taking steps to address past discrimination and violence and that Tamils do not face a real chance of serious harm on the basis of ethnicity alone. I also take into account that the referred materials do not indicate that Tamil males face a real chance of serious harm on the basis of age, ethnicity and geographic location alone.
17 At D[44]-[52], the IAA considered whether there was a real chance that DJG17 would suffer serious harm if returned to Sri Lanka having departed Sri Lanka illegally and as a returned asylum seeker. It concluded that he would not on the basis of country information and his lack of an adverse profile.
18 The IAA found that there was no real chance of serious or significant harm to DJG17 if he were returned to Sri Lanka and Australia's protection obligations under ss 36(2)(a) and 36(2A) of the Migration Act were therefore not engaged. The IAA affirmed the decision of the delegate not to grant DJG17 a SHEV.