THE AUTHORITY
9 The Authority accepted that the applicant's father had gone missing and was presumed dead: A[9]. The Authority also accepted that the applicant had resided in India as a refugee between 1990 and 1992: A[10] and A[11]. Both of these events were found to be consistent with the general events described in country information to which the Authority referred.
10 In relation to the applicant's claim that his uncle was detained under suspicion of LTTE involvement, the Authority stated at A[12] and A[13] (footnotes omitted):
12. However, I find the applicant's claim that his uncle was detained under suspicion of LTTE involvement unconvincing. In the TPV interview, the applicant advised the delegate that he had a number of relatives residing in the same camp as his uncle, including his great-grandmother. He said that the camp was 'for all the people who were displaced in the last war'. He said that his mother found out that the uncle was residing in the camp when she went to visit her grandmother. These claims were consistent with information the applicant provided in an earlier interview of 21 January 2013 (entry interview), where he indicated that some of his relatives were caught in the war zone along with his uncle, and had registered with the army.
13. Country information indicates that following the surrender of those fleeing conflict areas, they were taken to IDP camps, and suspected LTTE were either killed or removed from the camps to separate locations generally referred to as 'rehabilitation centres'. Thousands of individuals suspected of LTTE links were detained in extra-legal detentions centres, unmonitored, without counsel, and without family knowing their whereabouts. The applicant's evidence is that his uncle resided in the same camp as his other relatives, including the applicant's great-grandmother, which suggests that his uncle was residing in an IDP camp and not a rehabilitation or other type of extra-legal detention centre. Further, aside from the applicant's testimony, there is no other information before me that indicates that those detained under suspicion of involvement with the LTTE were temporarily released using a family member 'guarantor' system. The applicant's evidence in the TPV interview was that his uncle was released from the camp, for persons displaced by the conflict, and that he stayed with the applicant's family for a period of one year in 2010, which does not indicate that he was a person of adverse interest to the Sri Lankan authorities on account of any actual or imputed LTTE links.
11 The Authority noted a number of perceived inconsistencies in the applicant's claims. The Authority stated at A[15] to A[20] (errors in original):
15. Firstly, there were inconsistencies as to how many people the applicant provided shelter to following the end of the conflict. In his TPV statement, the applicant indicated that he only provided shelter for his uncle. This was consistent with his oral evidence in the TPV interview where he confirmed to the delegate that he only provided shelter for his uncle. However, in the entry interview, the applicant stated that several relatives had escaped the war zone, had come to stay with him, and were registered with the army. His claims in the entry interview were also consistent with a letter dated 29 January 2013 from N. Sivasaktheey Ananthan, Member of Parliament (Vanni District). According to that letter, the applicant's wife informed the MP that the applicant's 'relations' stayed in his house in 2009 and 2010 and have since travelled abroad.
16. Secondly, there were inconsistencies as to when and how the applicant's uncle 'escaped' from the SLA. In his TPV statement, he stated that his uncle escaped from the camp and that following this the SLA came to the applicant's house to look for him. However, in the TPV interview, he stated that his uncle was staying with him when he went missing. The delegate raised this inconsistency with the applicant, to which he responded that his uncle escaped from the camp but it was while he was living in his house. Further, the applicant initially advised the delegate that his uncle went missing after August 2011; however, later in the interview he said that his uncle went missing in March 2011. When the delegate pointed out to the applicant that he did not leave Sri Lanka until around 18 months following his uncle's disappearance, the applicant then stated that his uncle went missing about six or seven months prior to his departure from Sri Lanka (approximately March or April 2012).
17. Thirdly, the applicant gave various accounts as to what happened to his uncle following his escape. In his TPV statement, he claimed that his aunty (the uncle's wife) had told him that his uncle tried to escape to Australia by boat, but that the boat sank on its way to Australia. In the TPV interview, the applicant initially told the delegate that he did not know his uncle's location or what happened to him, nor did he know what had happened to his uncle's family. When the delegate put this discrepancy to the applicant for comment, his response was that his aunty had told his mother that his uncle's boat had sank, and that his mother relayed this information to him. I note in the entry interview, the applicant stated that he did not know where his uncle was and he speculated that his uncle had travelled to a country like Canada by boat.
18. Fourthly, there were several inconsistencies as to how many times the applicant had been arrested and/or detained by the Sri Lankan authorities, and how often he was required to report. In his TPV statement, he claimed that he was taken into custody by the SLA on one occasion. He also claimed that his family members secured his release and that as a condition of his release he had to report to the SLA camp weekly. He indicated that his interactions with the SLA were either at the SLA camp or at his home. However, in the TPV interview, he claimed that the CID came two his house once or twice a week and 'sometimes' took him away for two or three days at a time. Later in the interview, he advised the delegate that he was arrested on three occasions, and that his was release was secured each time when his wife came and cried. He also stated that he was required to report to the SLA camp once a month. I note in the entry interview, the applicant stated that when he was taken by the authorities it was for three to four hours at a time.
19. Fifthly, the applicant's evidence in relation to his uncle's association to the LTTE was inconsistent. In his TPV statement, the applicant stated that his uncle lived in a LTTE controlled area (Kilinochchi) and was rounded up with other Tamils. He made no claim that the Sri Lankan authorities had imputed his uncle as a person with links to the LTTE. Rather, the applicant claimed that it was he who was suspected of being a member of the LTTE, because he is a Tamil who lived in a Tamil area. However, in the TPV interview, the applicant stated that the SLA suspected that his uncle was with the LTTE. He initially advised the delegate that his uncle was a chef for the LTTE and that his wife lost a leg as a result of a shelling incident. Later in the interview, prior to a 'natural justice break', the delegate put to the applicant that it appeared that his uncle had low-level involvement in the LTTE and on that basis it was unlikely that he (the applicant) would be a person of ongoing interest to the Sri Lankan authorities. Following the break, the applicant raised a new claim that both his uncle and aunt were former soldiers in the LTTE and that after they married his uncle undertook a lower profile role in the LTTE as a chef. The delegate asked the applicant why these matters were not raised previously, to which he responded that he had forgotten. I note in the entry interview, the applicant stated that he was unsure as to whether his uncle was in the LTTE.
20. Sixthly, in the TPV interview, the delegate asked the applicant whether he could live safely with his brother in Kandy in the Central Province. His initial response was that he could not live in Kandy because he did not have property there. The delegate again suggested that the applicant might be safe from the CID if he resided with his brother. He responded that he could not live with his brother because when the CID had previously gone looking for him they searched at his brother's house. I note this claim was not mentioned in the applicant's TPV statement.
12 On the basis of the cumulative inconsistencies reproduced above, the Authority concluded that the applicant was not recalling a genuine personal experience in relation to the events leading to his decision to leave Sri Lanka: A[22]. The Authority did not accept that the applicant's uncle was detained due to actual or imputed links with the LTTE or that the applicant had, prior to leaving Sri Lanka, come to the adverse attention of the SLA, the police, or the CID: A[22]. The Authority did, however, accept that the applicant's uncle and other relatives were displaced and taken to an internally displaced persons (IDP) camp at the end of the conflict. It accepted that the applicant resettled some relatives in his home from the IDP camp: at A[22]. The Authority concluded the applicant was not a person with an adverse profile with the Sri Lankan authorities as claimed: A[22].
13 The Authority also had regard to whether the applicant would face a real chance of harm by virtue of him being a returning Tamil asylum seeker. The Authority accepted that the applicant would be identified by the Sri Lankan authorities as someone who had departed Sri Lanka illegally: A[30]. However, the Authority was not satisfied that there was a real chance the applicant would be harmed by virtue of being a Tamil asylum seeker. The Authority accepted that the applicant would likely face a fine for committing an offence under the Sri Lankan Immigrants and Emigrants Act 1948 (Sri Lanka) (IEA). The Authority also found that the applicant might be subjected to poor prison conditions during a short period of detention. However, the Authority was not satisfied that either a fine or temporary imprisonment in poor conditions constituted significant harm: A[35].
14 The Authority was satisfied that the provisions and penalties of the IEA were laws of general application that applied to all Sri Lankans equally and were not discriminatory in their terms, or in their enforcement, or in their application in an otherwise discriminatory manner: A[36].
15 The Authority affirmed the decision of the delegate not to grant a protection visa on the basis that:
(1) the applicant was not a refugee within the meaning of s 5H(1) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) as he did not have a well-founded fear of persecution within the meaning of s 5J of the Act, and therefore did not meet the requirements of s36(2)(a) of the Act: A[37], A[38]; and
(2) the applicant did not face a real risk of suffering significant harm within the meaning of s 36(2A) of the Act, and there were not substantial grounds for believing that, as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of being returned from Australia, there was a real risk he would suffer significant harm, and that the applicant therefore did not meet the complementary protection criterion in s 36(2)(aa) of the Act: at A[46], A[47].