Ground 1
35 The applicant submitted at hearing that he was involved in a bomb blast and the Authority failed to consider a police report he provided as to the alleged blast. This would appear to fall within the ambit of proposed ground 1.
36 The Authority's reasons reveal it considered this issue, but disbelieved the applicant. It stated as follows:
21. I do not accept that a bomb was thrown at the applicant's house. The accounts provided by the applicant contain multiple inconsistencies:
• In the entry interview, the applicant stated that the bomb was thrown at the house at 8 pm. However, in the police report provided by the applicant, he claimed that the bomb was thrown at midnight.
• In his statutory declaration, the applicant stated that the bombing took place in March 2012. However, in the police report and the affidavit of the applicant's wife, it is recorded that the bombing took place on 24 June 2012.
22. I consider these inconsistencies to be significant. In these circumstances, I consider that the applicant has fabricated his claims of a bombing so as to create a basis for his protection claims.
23. I note that the DFAT report in the referred material makes the following comments on document fraud:
DFAT assesses that document fraud is prevalent in Sri Lanka. Most official records in Sri Lanka continue to be kept in hard-copy format: government departments lack computerised information databases. Genuine identity documents can be obtained by submitting fraudulent supporting documents. Counterfeit documents are the primary cause of fraud within the issuance process for the NIC, passport or driver's licence. DFAT is aware of fraudulent sponsor letters and employment letters being presented by asylum seekers. Land title deeds that have been fraudulently obtained have also been presented as evidence of an individual's financial situation.
Attempts to use fraudulent documents are common and other asylum destination countries have reported receiving fraudulent documentation from asylum applicants, including anecdotal reports of a photography studio that took photos of individuals in old LTTE uniforms for use in asylum seeker applications. DFAT cannot verify the credibility of these reports.
24. Given the inconsistencies between the accounts provided by the applicant on the one hand, and the police report and his wife's affidavit on the other hand, and given the prevalence of document fraud, I place no weight on either of those documents.
25. For completeness, given that the applicant claimed in his statutory declaration that a bomb was thrown at his house in March 2012, I do not accept that the applicant would have made a complaint to the police in which he stated that the bombing took place on 24 June 2012. Therefore, I do not accept the claim raised in the IAA submissions that the applicant would face persecution for a false police report in circumstances given that I have not accepted that such report was ever made. I consider that the police report is a fraudulent document produced for the purposes of strengthening the applicant's claims.
26. The DFAT country report indicates that the military restricts access to some of the more abundant fishing areas. I do not accept that the applicant will be unable to find work as a fisherman if he returns to Sri Lanka, albeit the work he finds may be not as economically beneficial as fishing at the more abundant fishing areas. I do not consider the harm arising from any such discrimination would be so serious as to be serious harm when having regard to the non-exclusive instances of serious harm s.5J(5).
37 Clearly, the Authority considered the evidence but rejected it. It did so based on inconsistencies in the evidence and country information as to the prevalence of fraudulent documents. The weight to be given to the evidence was a matter for the Authority and it provided logical reasons for its rejection.
38 The primary judge correctly found that the weight to be given the evidence including that of the applicant's wife was a matter for the Authority.
39 The reasons do not disclose jurisdictional error in the manner in which the Authority dealt with the evidence relating to the alleged bomb blast and accordingly the primary judge was correct to reject this ground when it was before his Honour.
40 It was difficult to discern which other matters the applicant sought to raise with respect to ground 1. The Minister properly raised two potential matters. One was the matter raised by ground 1 before the primary judge as to an interview conducted with an interpreter who did not speak the applicant's language.
41 However, there is no substance to that complaint. It relates to the quality of interpreting during a first visa interview. There was nothing to indicate that the delegate took that interview into account and the Authority expressly stated that it did not take the first interview into account. There was no evidence of any interpreting issue for the second visa interview. The primary judge properly found that there was no basis to support a contention as to a deficiency in interpretation.
42 Another matter was a claim made before the primary judge that the applicant would face harm on return to Sri Lanka because he witnessed atrocities committed by Sri Lankan soldiers against Tamils. The primary judge found that such claim was not advanced before the Authority. It was unclear whether the applicant sought to pursue that claim in this Court as part of his purported grounds.
43 After the hearing, the Minister provided the Court with a copy of the court book that was before the primary judge. That contains materials that were before the Authority.
44 I have carefully considered those materials. The primary judge's assessment that the matter was not raised squarely before the Authority is in my view correct. Whilst in written submissions to the Authority the applicant's migration agent wrote (in one line) that the applicant 'witnessed the atrocities of army personnel against the Tamils', the statement was not further developed. The submission then set out alleged errors in the delegate's reasons but did not say anything further about the witnessing of conduct of army personnel or LTTE connections. There was nothing in the claim as otherwise explained in the materials before the Authority that suggested that such witnessing of conduct was a head of claim separate to his concern that he would be persecuted on the basis that he was perceived to be a suspected LTTE supporter and so was a target of the army.
45 The Authority noted the applicant's claims that during the war there were executions by the army in the district from which he came. It accepted the applicant's claims that the applicant was coerced to be a deliveryman for the LTTE between 2000 and 2004, and a messenger between the army and the LTTE between 2004 and 2005. However, the Authority was not satisfied that the applicant's Tamil ethnicity and his past activities related to the LTTE would be sufficient now to cause the applicant to be a person of interest to the Sri Lankan authorities: see the reasons summarised above at [18]-[20].
46 Therefore, the primary judge did not err in rejecting any claim of jurisdictional error based on the alleged witnessing of atrocities. As the primary judge found, such a claim was not squarely put and in any event the circumstance of risk to the applicant as a result of an imputed political opinion were addressed comprehensively and in a logical manner by the authority.