FEY17 v Minister for Home Affairs
[2020] FCA 1014
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2020-07-16
Before
Greenwood J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (8 paragraphs)
- The appeal is dismissed.
- The appellant pay the first respondent's costs of and incidental to the appeal. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
GREENWOOD J: 1 These proceedings are concerned with an appeal from a decision of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia dismissing an application for the grant of the constitutional writs in relation to a decision of the Immigration Assessment Authority ("IAA") affirming a decision of the Minister's delegate to refuse the appellant's application for a Protection Visa subclass XE-790 (a "Safe Haven" visa) under the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) ("the Act"). 2 The background to this appeal is as follows. 3 On or around 18 March 2013, the appellant came to Australia as an unauthorized maritime arrival. The Australian navy intercepted the vessel he was travelling on and transported the passengers to Christmas Island. 4 On 18 April 2013 and 6 May 2013, the appellant underwent entry interviews with representatives from the Department of Immigration. 5 On 10 March 2016, the appellant was invited to apply for a Temporary Protection Visa, and on 18 May 2016, he lodged an application for a Safe Haven visa. 6 On 5 April 2017, a delegate of the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection refused the appellant's application, and on 11 April 2017, the delegate's decision was referred to the IAA for review. 7 On 9 November 2017, the IAA affirmed the Delegate's decision. On 28 November 2017, the appellant filed an application for judicial review of the IAA's decision in the Federal Circuit Court of Australia. 8 At the hearing on 8 November 2018, the primary judge, Judge Egan, dismissed the application and gave ex tempore reasons. 9 The appellant made the following claims, contained in a statement dated 17 May 2016 lodged with his visa application, as set out at [10] - [26] of these reasons. 10 The appellant is a Hindu of Bengali ethnicity from a small village in Bangladesh's Khulna Division, where he lived until his departure in February 2013. 11 His father owned a parcel of land and supported the family by growing rice and vegetables. Growing up, the family practised Hinduism at home, praying indoors "where it was safe to do so": AB147. His parents died in a car accident in approximately 1995, after which the appellant's elder brother took care of him. The appellant helped his brother manage the family home and grow vegetables to eat. They sold the surplus vegetables to support themselves. 12 In 2000, the appellant and his brother applied for National ID Cards and were refused. 13 In 2002, the appellant married in accordance with an arrangement between his brother and the bride's parents. The appellant's wife moved into his family home. 14 In 2003, the appellant began to work as a welder, which he continued to do for ten years to support his family. The appellant and his wife had two children, born in 2004 and 2013. 15 After the Awami League's victory in the 2008 election, the Bangladeshi Muslim community began targeting Hindus. The appellant's family was "one of only several" Hindu families in his village of about 7,000 people, which "caused serious problems for [the appellant]": AB148. 16 In the appellant's village, Muslims form the majority and the appellant's contention is that Muslim members of the village hate the Hindu families. The Muslims would go to Hindu homes and destroy their houses, force them off their land, abuse, harass, threaten and beat them. 17 In 2011, a group of Muslims came to the appellant's family home. The Muslims beat the appellant's family, threatened them and said that if they wanted to live, they needed to go away. The Muslims damaged the appellant's house and cut his crops, taking all of the vegetables and chilli he and his brother were growing at the time. 18 The appellant and his brother were frightened and lived in constant fear. Every time they saw the local Muslims, they feared what would be done to them. They sought help from the local police, but were told the police had been instructed by high command not to record any complaints against Muslims. They also complained to the Local Council Member and Chairman, who said their hands were tied and they could not help, and that it was up to the appellant and his brother to save their own lives. 19 When the Muslims learnt that the appellant and his brother had sought help from police, they came back to the appellant's house in 2012 and destroyed it completely, helping themselves to the appellant's belongings and crops in the process. 20 The appellant's family then moved to his father and mother-in-law's house and stayed there for 4 or 5 months. The appellant returned to the family home, but his brother did not, as he was too scared. His brother stayed at his wife's family's place but "when he was out one day he disappeared and was never seen or heard from again": AB148 at [30]. 21 One night, approximately five days after the appellant returned home, about ten Muslims wearing masks came to his house. One of the masked men held a pistol to the appellant's head. The men repeatedly threatened that if the appellant didn't leave, they would kill his wife and daughter. His wife was pregnant at the time and still living with her parents. The Muslim men told the appellant that he was lucky his wife and daughter weren't there. 22 The appellant recognised one of the voices as a "local terrorist", whom he identified by name. The appellant recognised his voice because he had made many threats to the appellant before at the market, in public, at the appellant's home and on the farm. 23 The appellant is very fearful because of these threats and "didn't know what happened to [his] elder brother": AB149 at [33]. He had not received any communication from his brother at all. 24 The appellant's brother's brother-in-law, who lived in Chittagong, told the appellant that the appellant's brother had hidden some money in case something happened to him and the appellant needed to run away. The appellant's brother's brother-in-law used this money to arrange and pay for the appellant's boat trips to Australia. 25 At this point, Muslims had physically abused, threatened, harassed, intimidated and stolen from the appellant. Their relentless harassment and threats caused him to fear for his safety and were the main reason why he left Bangladesh and sought asylum in Australia. The appellant "couldn't take it anymore" and "fled to Indonesia" on a boat arranged by people smugglers: AB 149 at [36]. 26 The appellant has no safe place to return to as a Hindu in Bangladesh. He also fears being seriously harmed because he is unable to prove he is Bangladeshi. He fears being killed and having his body hidden where no-one will find him, because this is what he thinks may have happened to his brother, whom he has not heard from. Since arriving in Australia, he has undertaken English lessons and engaged with his local community by volunteering at a local festival. 27 The IAA made the following findings. 28 The IAA accepted the appellant's claimed name and age (at [3]), and Hindu faith (at [10]), but did not accept that he is stateless. Having regard to the delegate's reasons and country information containing summaries of Bangladeshi legislation and trends in the number of Bangladeshis without NICs (national ID cards), plus the lack of difficulty the appellant experienced when obtaining a drivers licence in 2004 and birth certificates for his children, on which he is identified as the father, the IAA, like the delegate, found that the appellant is a Bangladeshi citizen whose receiving country is Bangladesh. 29 The IAA identified five inconsistencies between the appellant's account of events in his Safe Haven visa interview and his statement of claims, which was prepared with the assistance of a registered migration agent, who was present at the interview and indicated that the statement, which had been prepared with the assistance of an interpreter provided by the appellant, was read back to him: at [14]. 30 First, in his interview, the appellant initially stated that the first attack on the family home occurred three to four months before he left the country in February 2013, and the person responsible was a local thug associated with some sort of political party; whereas in his statement of claims, the appellant indicated that it occurred in 2011. When the delegate put this inconsistency to the appellant, he indicated that the incident occurred at night and he wasn't sure whether it was in 2011, 2012 or 2013, because the attackers destroyed the family home. The appellant then agreed that there was an incident in 2011, and this was the first time the thugs attacked his house. At another point in the interview, the appellant indicated that the family home was attacked on three occasions, in contrast to the application, where he only mentioned the two occasions in 2011 and 2012, and that the second incident probably occurred in March or April of 2011. He gave no account of the second or third incident and did not specify on which occasion the house was allegedly destroyed and his family was forced to leave the area. 31 Second, the appellant's statement of claims raised a new claim that there had been previous minor incidents where Muslims had come and taken his crops. The first incident happened when he was 25 - 26 years old. The appellant added that the Muslims threatened him on these occasions, saying "your brother has left the country now we need you to leave the country": IAA at [14]. The manner of these threats regarding his brother was also said to be inconsistent with the appellant's previous claims that he lived with his brother on the farm until 2012. 32 Third, when describing the 2011 incident, the appellant stated that masked Muslims came to his house, destroyed some of the family furniture, hit him, ransacked the property and demanded that he leave the country. The appellant initially stated that he did not recognise the attackers, but subsequently stated that he believed the attackers were people from a local thug's group which had previously threatened him on a couple of occasions. He claimed they threatened him, saying that because his brother had left the country, he now had to do the same. When the delegate put to the appellant that, according to his visa application, his brother was present at the time of the incident and not outside Bangladesh, the appellant responded that his brother had left the home village and was at his sister-in-law's family home at the time of the 2011 incident. 33 Fourth, in his visa application, the appellant stated that his brother had disappeared from the appellant's wife's family home after the appellant returned to the farm in 2012. However, when questioned about his brother's whereabouts at the beginning of the interview, the appellant stated that his brother, his sister-in-law and their children used to live with his sister-in-law's family, but since his arrival in Australia, the appellant has been unable to contact his brother by mobile and does not have his sister-in-law's contact details, so he's unsure of his brother's current whereabouts. 34 Fifth, following the attacks on his home, the appellant stated that he was hit and threatened with a pistol on the road while returning to the house. When the delegate indicated that this incident was not mentioned in his statement of claims and appeared to conflict with his claim to have moved to his parents-in-law's house after Muslims destroyed his own home in 2012, the appellant responded that he returned to the family house to observe if there had been any improvement in the situation, but was unable to return to the family home, and that the farm had been taken over. When the delegate further put it to the appellant that this conflicted with his visa application, where he claimed a pistol was held to his head after he returned to the farm, the appellant stated that the Muslims held a pistol to his head twice: once on the road when they hit him, and once in his family home when they just threatened him: IAA at [14]. The appellant claimed that the last incident at the family home occurred three to four months prior to his departure from Bangladesh and that he lived with his parents-in-law during that time, but secretly visited the family home to see if he could live there. 35 Taking these inconsistencies into account, the IAA was not satisfied: that the appellant's house was specifically targeted as claimed; that he was forced to leave the area and live with his parents-in-law; and that he was threatened with a pistol. The IAA agreed with the delegate that it was implausible that the appellant would be unable to recall when the attacks on his family home occurred, particularly given that he claims his house was destroyed and the family was forced to live with his parents-in-law. The IAA noted inconsistencies between the appellant's account of his brother's whereabouts and, in an entry interview, the appellant volunteering his brother's contact details as his emergency contact and identifying his brother's address as being in their home village. The IAA considered it "implausible" that the appellant would have continued working as a welder in the same area and travelled approximately 35 miles to work on a daily basis until his departure if he had previously received threats. 36 Given all of these issues with the appellant's account, the IAA reached the following conclusions at [16]: I am not satisfied with the overall credibility of his claim to have been threatened, attacked and the family land being taken from him and his brother. Nor am I satisfied that his brother is missing as claimed. I am not satisfied that the applicant was threatened, or that the family home was attacked and destroyed, or that the family land has been taken over as claimed. 37 The IAA then made an assessment of whether the appellant was a refugee for the purposes of the Act. 38 Having found that the appellant was a Bangladeshi citizen despite not holding an NIC, the IAA was satisfied there was not a real chance he would be harmed due to being stateless. Further, given the IAA had already rejected that the appellant's family's land was taken and that he was subjected to threats by local Muslims, the IAA was not satisfied that the appellant would be targeted on return for this reason. 39 In relation to the refugee claim, the IAA then considered whether the appellant would otherwise be at risk of harm as a Hindu: IAA at [21]. The IAA had regard to a Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) report dated 5 July 2016 entitled "Bangladesh Country Information Report" ("the DFAT July 2016 Report"); a US Department of State report dated 14 October 2015 entitled "2014 Report on International Religious Freedom - Bangladesh" ("the USDS October 2015 Report"); and a US Department of State report dated 13 April 2016 entitled "Bangladesh - Country Reports on Human Rights Practices 2015" ("the USDS April 2016 Report"). 40 The IAA noted DFAT's assessment that Hindus are subjected to moderate levels of societal violence, especially during periods of heightened political tension such as national elections, and also had regard to DFAT's summary of attacks on Hindus in the lead up to and following the 2014 elections, in which hundreds of Hindu homes and businesses were destroyed, such violence being most prevalent in northwest Bangladesh. The IAA accepted that there have been outbursts of violence against Hindus which, according to DFAT, increased during periods of heightened political tension such as elections, including in the appellant's home district, but found there was no evidence to indicate these attacks were condoned by the Bangladeshi government, noting that, in 2014, the government provided assistance to victims and helped communities restore religious and private property. Given the appellant's lack of political activity or involvement, the IAA found the appellant would not be imputed with a political opinion on return simply for being a Hindu. The IAA also found there was no evidence to suggest there have been targeted attacks on Hindus in the appellant's district by extremists or that there is a real chance the appellant would be targeted there because of his religion, or that he would be targeted as a returnee asylum seeker. 41 The IAA then considered the appellant's complementary protection claim. The IAA re-iterated its earlier analysis, particularly its rejection of the appellant's claims to be stateless and to have been targeted by Muslims in his home village, and also concluded that the appellant does not face a real risk of suffering significant harm on return to Bangladesh as a Hindu or as a returnee asylum seeker. The complementary protection claim was therefore dismissed, and the delegate's decision not to grant a protection visa affirmed. 42 In his application to the Federal Circuit Court, the appellant relied on the following ten grounds: 1. THE APPLICANT IS A CITIZEN OF BANGLADESH; 2. THE APPLICANT CLAIMED THAT AUSTRALIA OWED PROTECTION OBLIGATIONS IN RESPECT OF HIM 3. THAT THE DECISION OF THE SECOND RESPONDENT THE IAA WAS AFFECTED BY LEGAL ERROR 4. THE APPLICANT CLAIMS TO FEAR PERSECUTION FROM THE BANGLADESH NATIONAL PARTY (BNP) AND AWAMI LEAGUE (AL) 5. THE APPLICANT FEARS PERSECUTION AND THERE IS A REAL CHANCE THAT THE PERSON WOULD BE PERSECUTED 6. THE REAL CHANCE OF PERSECUTION RELATES TO ALL AREAS OF THE RECEIVING COUNTRY 7. THE PERSECUTION INVOLVES SERIOUS HARM AND SYSTEMATIC AND DISCRIMINATORY CONDUCT 8. THE ESSENTIAL AND SIGNIFICANT REASONS FOR THE PERSECUTION IS RACE, RELIGION, NATIONALITY, MEMBERSHIP OF A PARTICULAR SOCIAL GROUP 9. THE APPLICANT DOES NOT HAVE A WELL-FOUNDED FEAR 10. RELEVANT INFORMATION NOT CONSIDERED 43 On 8 November 2018, the primary judge dismissed the application. His Honour made the following findings at [16] - [21]: [16] The application filed on behalf of the applicant identified 10 grounds for review. The first nine grounds variously assert factual errors and matters related thereto, as well as a re-statement of the applicant's claims that he feared persecution should he be returned to Bangladesh, the applicant also alleging that he would suffer serious harm and systematic and discriminatory conduct if he was returned to Bangladesh. Those matters are the subject of what would be required to be undertaken in the nature of an impermissible merits review and are without substance. [17] The tenth ground alleges "relevant information not considered". The lack of particularity of such ground is, in itself… a disqualifying factor, but the first respondent has treated such ground as at least a valid ground for the purpose of argument. In that regard, however, it can be seen that the Authority did consider the applicant's claims by reference to the legislative criteria, and that it made findings of fact that were open to it for the reasons which it gave. Those reasons were logical and causally directed to the claims made by the applicant. [18] The Authority found that the applicant did not meet the definition of "refugee" under the Act, and found that the applicant did not meet any of the protection criteri[a] under the Act. The findings were not ones which no rational or logical decision-maker could arrive at on the same evidence (see Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZMDS (2010) 240 CLR 611 at [130]). [19] Nor did the authority's reasons lack "an evident and intelligible justification" (see Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v Li (2013) 249 CLR 332 at [76]). [20] The Authority complied with its procedural fairness obligations in Division 3 of Part 7AA of the Act, which is the exhaustive statement of the natural justice hearing rule in relation to reviews undertaken by the Authority. [21] There is no merit to the application for review. It is ordered that the application be dismissed. 44 On 23 November 2018, the appellant filed a Notice of Appeal in this Court, raising four grounds of appeal. 45 On 9 May 2019, the appeal proceeded to an oral hearing. At that stage, the appellant had not filed a written outline of submissions. The appellant, through an interpreter, informed the Court he had neither received the appeal book nor the Minister's submissions. The matter was adjourned for a month to give the appellant the opportunity to obtain assistance from a friend from Melbourne, so that he could understand the Minister's submissions and prepare his own. 46 The appellant then filed two written outlines of submissions on 5 June 2019. The first document is labelled "THE APPLICANT'S WRITTEN ARGUMENTS', and the second, "Outline of Applicant Submission." They are referred to in these reasons, respectively, as the "Appellant's Written Arguments" and the "Appellant's Outline".