Ground 2
32 This ground for judicial review concerned the Authority's conclusion that the incident at the beach in August 2012 did not unfold in the way the applicant had claimed.
33 The ground for judicial review was rejected by the primary judge for the following reasons:
24. In the second ground the applicant asserts that the Authority ignored that he was asked only to give basic information at the entry interview, and that its findings were unreasonable and arbitrary. The applicant is here presumably referring to the Authority's findings at [15] in which the Authority relied in part on the lack of any mention of the beach incident by the applicant during his entry interview as a reason for rejecting parts of that claim.
25. That the Authority took into account what the applicant said, or relevantly, did not say, at his entry interview, does not in the circumstances of this case amount to jurisdictional error. The Authority adopted an appropriately 'cautious' approach in its reliance on the failure of the applicant to mention details of the beach incident at the entry interview. It was mindful of the fact that the applicant was not asked about the incident during the entry interview, and that the purpose of the entry interview was not to assess the applicant's claims for protection. Nevertheless the Authority referred to the beach incident as being the 'catalyst' for the applicant's departure from Sri Lanka and therefore considered the applicant's failure to mention the incident in the entry interview undermined the credibility of his claims.
26. The Authority referred to various other inconsistencies in the presentation of the applicant's claims, culminating in its conclusions at [19]. There was no error in the Authority's approach.
27. This ground does not establish any jurisdictional error.
(Footnotes omitted)
34 In relation to the content of the entry interview, the Authority said at [15] of its decision that the applicant made no reference to the beach incident in his entry interview. The Authority continued.
… I acknowledge that the entry interview is conducted shortly after the applicant's arrival in Australia, that he is not represented during the interview and that the purpose of the interview is not to assess an applicant's claim for protection. I am mindful too the applicant explained in the SHEV interview and in the IAA submission he was not asked about the beach incident during the entry interview. However, given the beach incident is the catalyst to the applicant's departure from Sri Lanka, I consider the applicant not raising the beach incident at the entry interview undermines the credibility of his claims.
35 The Authority's reasons must be read as a whole and are not to be approached with an eye keenly attuned to the perception of error: Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang (1996) 185 CLR 259. On a fair reading of the Authority's reasons, it is apparent that the identified omission from the entry interview was one of a number of factors taken into account by the Authority in rejecting some of the applicant's claims concerning the details of the beach incident and the injuries he had suffered as a result of it. The Authority said, at [16]:
The applicant has variously stated he was assaulted by the Sri Lankan army, the police and also referred to the army being in a police jeep in the beach incident. In the SHEV statement, he referred only to an injury to his thumb (which I take to be what he refers to as his 'thump' in the SHEV statement seeing as he provided an x-ray of his hand to the delegate at the SHEV Interview). At the SHEV interview, he claimed to have been knocked unconscious, but also said he fell unconscious when seeing blood and that he suffered a spinal injury which required him to be hospitalised for 1 week. In the SHEV statement and in the IAA submission, the applicant claims some of his friends died after being arrested, In the SHEV interview, he made no reference to the Sri Lankan authorities killing any of his friends, only to their arrest. In the SHEV statement, he claims Mr R told him of the arrest and deaths of their friends, which is why he left Colombo. In the SHEV interview, he said that he learnt that information from Mr T and when the delegate brought that inconsistency to his attention, the applicant then claimed Mr R also told him, but after the applicant had returned to Northern province. At the SHEV interview, he claims his younger brother was arrested in 2016, whereas in the SHEV interview, he claimed it was his elder brother who was arrested in 2016. In the SHEV interview the applicant claims the CID and paramilitaries came to his home 4 times between his return from Colombo and his departure from Sri Lanka. In the SHEV statement, he refers to the CID and paramilitaries coming only two times, the second of which was after he departed Sri Lanka. I consider these multiple inconsistencies in the applicant's evidence undermine the credibility of his claims.
36 In this passage of its reasons, the Authority identified a series of inconsistencies about the detail of the beach incident as between what it called the SHEV statement and the SHEV interview. The Authority did not err in identifying the beach incident as the catalyst for the applicant's departure from Sri Lanka. That finding was open to the Authority to make, given that the incident occurred in August 2012 and the applicant fled for Australia in October of the same year.
37 In the circumstances, it was open to the Authority to give some weight to the fact that the incident had not been raised at the entry interview, notwithstanding that the applicant was unrepresented during that interview and that the purpose of the interview was not to assess his claims for protection. It may be that a different decision-maker might have reasoned to a different result. However, simply identifying that a different conclusion was open to the Authority does not establish jurisdictional error. The primary judge did not err in rejecting the second ground for judicial review.