Consideration
27 Section 426 of the Act provides as follows:
426 Applicant may request Tribunal to call witnesses
(1) In the notice under section 425A, the Tribunal must notify the applicant:
(a) that he or she is invited to appear before the Tribunal to give evidence; and
(b) of the effect of subsection (2) of this section.
(2) The applicant may, within 7 days after being notified under subsection (1), give the Tribunal written notice that the applicant wants the Tribunal to obtain oral evidence from a person or persons named in the notice.
(3) If the Tribunal is notified by an applicant under subsection (2), the Tribunal must have regard to the applicant's wishes but is not required to obtain evidence (orally or otherwise) from a person named in the applicant's notice.
28 As the primary judge pointed out, the appellant did not give notice within seven days of notification as required by s 426(2) of the Act. Even if such notice had been given, it is clear from s 426(3), that the Tribunal is not obliged to receive oral evidence, but that in deciding whether or not to do so, it must have regard to the appellant's wishes. In the present case, notwithstanding that notice was not given within seven days, the Tribunal considered the appellant's request and, in doing so, took into account the appellant's wishes.
29 As I have mentioned, the primary judge found that the appellant had, during the course of the hearing before the Tribunal, implicitly withdrawn his request that the Tribunal make telephone contact with the witnesses. There may be some scope to debate the correctness of that proposition. However, that is not the basis on which the Tribunal did not contact the witnesses. As it explained in its reasons at [34]-[35]:
34. The representative asked the Tribunal to take evidence by telephone from [Mr X] and an advocate who purportedly provided a letter advising the applicant there was a case filed against him and police wanted to arrest him. The Tribunal declined the request to take evidence from these two individuals. The Tribunal was willing to accept that these people would repeat the claims they made in their letters which the applicant submitted to the Tribunal. That evidence does not persuade the Tribunal to overlook the concerns it holds about the applicant's credibility which significantly discredit him as a witness. If the account of events on which the applicant's protection claims was true, whether or not these witnesses in Bangladesh give evidence purporting to corroborate that account, the applicant himself would have given the Tribunal a consistent and credible account. For the reasons given above, the applicant has failed to do so.
35. Because the applicant is not a witness of truth, the Tribunal disbelieves the applicant's claims about being attacked in November 2014 at the Academy and all events thereafter including the arrest of [Mr X], the applicant being named in a false case and the police going to his family home to locate him. The Tribunal finds that the applicant may have been involved with the Academy and had some involvement with the BNP. However, because the applicant is not a witness of truth, there is no credible evidence as to what this was. Because he is not a witness of truth the Tribunal also disbelieves the applicant's claims about suffering harm from the Awami League before he travelled to Great Britain in 2006. The applicant may well have (unsuccessfully) applied for protection in Great Britain but that does not persuade the Tribunal to accept as credible the account he advances about suffering harm in Bangladesh before he travelled to Great Britain.
(footnotes omitted)
30 Further, with respect to the request that the Tribunal take evidence from BNP officials in Australia and the United Kingdom regarding the appellant's activities in those countries, the Tribunal said at [36] that it did not take that step because it accepted the evidence that the appellant gave at the hearing about what those activities were in Australia and the United Kingdom.
31 In those circumstances, it is difficult to see what purpose would have been served in making telephone contact with them. In any event, it was a matter for the Tribunal to determine whether to take evidence from them orally. It is clear that the Tribunal's decision not to do so was, in the case of Mr Chowdhury and Mr Uddin, based on the fact that the Tribunal accepted what they said in their letters. However, the decision not to do so in the case of Mr X and the advocate was largely informed by inconsistencies in the appellant's own evidence which led the Tribunal to conclude that he was not a truthful witness including, in particular, inconsistencies in his evidence concerning travel arrangements made by him prior to this departure for Australia and events which he claimed triggered his decision to leave Bangladesh. The evidence from those persons was, as the Tribunal observed, not sufficient to persuade the Tribunal that the appellant was a credible witness or that his account of events was truthful.
32 In my view, there was nothing irrational, or illogical, or unreasonable about the Tribunal's decision not to telephone the witnesses for the purposes of having them give oral evidence. There was nothing in the letters or statements of the witnesses to suggest that anything they might say could explain away the various inconsistencies in the appellant's evidence.
33 In his written submissions, the appellant referred to the decision of Federal Magistrate Driver (as he then was) in SZOGI v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FMCA 390. However, that was a case in which the Tribunal was found to have made a jurisdictional error by failing to consider the wishes of the applicant for review when considering his request to call witnesses. It was not suggested in this case that the Tribunal failed to consider the appellant's wishes. Clearly it did so. Accordingly, the appellant's first ground of appeal fails.
34 With regard to the second of the appellant's grounds of appeal, the appellant's claim is that the Tribunal failed to consider whether the appellant was a member of a particular social group (ie. cricketers with political affiliations and holding political opinions against the Awami League). It is true that the Tribunal did not consider whether or not there was any such social group. In the circumstances of this case it was not necessary for the Tribunal to do so given that the Tribunal at [45] made a finding that the risk of the appellant suffering serious harm on return to Bangladesh was remote: SZNOE v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2012] FCA 96 at [78].