3.1.2 Reasons for dismissing the first limb of ground one of the appeal
33 We agree with the Minister that the primary judge correctly held that the Tribunal did not err in its application of s 36(2)(aa) of the Act and conflate the refugee criterion with the complementary protection criterion.
34 First, it is plainly not an element of the complementary protection criterion that the visa applicant have a subjective fear of harm. Rather, as the High Court has held, the complementary protection criterion in s 36(2)(aa) "only requires an assessment of the 'necessary and foreseeable consequence[s]' of a person's return to a receiving country": DQU16 at [21].
35 Secondly, the "reasons for the decision under review are not to be construed minutely and finely with an eye keenly attuned to the perception of error": Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang [1996] HCA 6; (1996) 185 CLR 259 at 272 (Brennan CJ, Toohey, McHugh and Gummow JJ). Read fairly and in context, while the Tribunal took into account its finding that it did not believe that the appellant "genuine[ly]" feared significant harm as a relevant factual circumstance in finding that the complementary protection criterion was not met, this does not mean that the Tribunal treated a subjective fear of harm as a necessary element of the complementary protection criterion. Rather, as the primary judge held, that finding was based on the Tribunal's rejection of the appellant's claims and finding that she was not a credible witness, and did not suggest that the Tribunal was conflating the two tests. As her Honour held (at [144]):
A full and contextual reading of the Tribunal's decision does not lend credence to the suggestion that by use of the word "genuine" at [60], the Tribunal was conflating the relevant tests. Rather, I agree with the submission of the first respondent that in its context, the word "genuine" referred to the Tribunal's overall credit findings, and did not seek to import a subjective element to the complementary protection assessment. The consequence of the Tribunal's credit findings in relation to the present ground is that the basis for the rejection of the refugee criterion could also be relied on for the rejection of the claim based on the complementary protection criterion: CDY15 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCA 175 at [41].
36 Furthermore, in its conclusion at [63], the Tribunal correctly articulated and applied the complementary protection criterion in finding that it was "not satisfied that there are substantial grounds for believing that as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of the [appellant] being removed to Vietnam, there is a real risk that she will suffer significant harm".
37 Thirdly, in having regard to whether the appellant had a subjective fear of significant harm at [61], the Tribunal did not fall into error. Rather, the Tribunal recognised, consistently with the reasoning in DQU16, that the question of whether a visa applicant will suffer significant harm in their receiving country involves an assessment of the individual circumstances of the non-citizen. Those circumstances included the fact that the appellant had not, on the Tribunal's findings, suffered harm in Vietnam in the past and that she held no actual fear of significant harm if she were returned to Vietnam because, as the primary judge held at [142], "the factual foundation of [her] claims to fear harm in Vietnam had been rejected".
38 Fourthly, there is nothing in the language or purpose of s 36(2)(aa) which supports the appellant's proposition that a person's subjective belief is a mandatory irrelevant consideration for the purposes of the complementary protection criteria. As Mason J held in Minister for Aboriginal Affairs v Peko-Wallsend Ltd [1986] HCA 40; (1986) 162 CLR 24 at 40:
where a statute confers a discretion which in its terms is unconfined, the factors that may be taken into account in the exercise of the discretion are similarly unconfined, except in so far as there may be found in the subject-matter, scope and purpose of the statute some implied limitation on the factors to which the decision-maker may legitimately have regard…
39 In this regard, the inclusion of the requirement of a "well-founded fear" in the refugee criterion in s 36(2)(a) and not the complementary protection criterion in s 36(2)(aa) lends no support to the proposition that the Parliament intended that a fear of harm be mandatorily irrelevant to the determination of the complementary protection criterion. Rather, the inclusion of the requirement that a person have a well-founded fear of persecution in s 36(2)(a) picks up the language of Art 1A(2) of the Refugees Convention which the criterion in s 36(2)(a) is intended to implement. On the other hand, the absence of any such requirement from s 36(2)(aa) reflects the fact that no there is no equivalent requirement in the international human rights obligations which the complementary protection criterion is intended to implement, including, the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, opened for signature 10 December 1984, 1465 UNTS 85, [1989] ATS 21 (entered into force generally on 26 June 1987 and for Australia on 7 September 1989), and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, opened for signature 16 December 1966, 999 UNTS 171, [1980] ATS 23 (entered into force generally on 23 March 1976 and for Australia on 13 November 1980): see the definition of "cruel or inhuman treatment or punishment" in s 5(1) of the Act; see also the definition of "non-refoulement obligations" in s 5(1).
40 Nor as a matter of logic are a person's subjective beliefs necessarily irrelevant to the question of whether there is a real risk that a particular individual will suffer significant harm if returned to their country of origin. To the contrary, it can readily be envisaged that the question of whether an individual has a subjective fear of harm can be an important piece of evidence in assessing the credibility of their claims that they will be harmed if returned. That being so, it would be a perverse and unlikely construction to hold that the section implicitly rendered such evidence mandatorily irrelevant.
41 Fifthly, the decision in SZVVE does not support a contrary view. In that case, the Tribunal rejected a number of aspects of the applicant's claims including that he had received death threats from Hezbollah and that he was suspected of being a spy by Hezbollah: at [16]-[17] of SZVVE. The Tribunal, as summarised by Perram J at [17], found that the applicant would not suffer significant harm if returned to Lebanon. The applicant, however, submitted that the Tribunal fell into error because the fact that he had a subjective belief that if he was returned to Lebanon he would be persecuted "was sufficient to make good the complementary protection claim" (at [18]; emphasis added).
42 That argument was rejected by Perram J who held that "it was not erroneous for the Tribunal to leave out of account the applicant's subjective views": at [21]. His Honour's conclusion in this regard was plainly correct in circumstances where the Tribunal had found that the objective criterion for complementary protection was not satisfied. An individual's subjective belief cannot, as his Honour held in line with the decision in DQU16, be "sufficient to make good a complementary protection claim". The further passage from Perram J's reasons on which the appellant here relies - that "[i]ndeed, it would have been erroneous for [the Tribunal] to have done otherwise than it did" - does not suggest that an individual's subjective belief is a mandatory irrelevant consideration. Rather, the applicant's subjective beliefs in SZVVE were irrelevant, in the circumstances of that case, where the objective criterion had been determined against the applicant in any event.
43 The first limb of ground 1 cannot therefore succeed.