Guden v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs
[1999] FCA 908
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
1997-08-01
Before
Tamberlin J, Lockhart J, Olney J, Sundberg J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (11 paragraphs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT BACKGROUND 1 The applicant arrived in Australia from Turkey on a visitor's visa on 17 May 1997 accompanied by his wife and son. They lodged an application for a protection visa on 2 July 1997. A delegate of the Minister for Immigration refused their application. They sought a review of the refusal by the Refugee Review Tribunal. The Tribunal affirmed the delegate's decision. The present application is for a review of the Tribunal's decision. APPLICANT'S CASE BEFORE TRIBUNAL 2 The applicant's claim focussed on his Kurdish race, his affiliations with the political party HADEP, and his membership of a particular social group comprising wealthy Kurdish businessmen. His wife's case, apart from relying on the difficulties incident upon her husband's situation, was that because she is ethnically Turkish and is married to a Kurd, her security and that of her child was threatened unless she left her husband. It will be necessary to examine the applicant's evidence in some detail later in these reasons, but in summary his story is that he was born and educated in Kurdish villages in Bitlis province in the south‑east of Turkey. Bitlis itself is about 80 kilometres from the border with Iraq and about 200 kilometres from the border with Iran. The applicant undertook military service in 1981 and 1982. In 1989 he moved to Antalya, which is in the west of Turkey, about 1000 kilometres from Bitlis and about 400 kilometres south west of the capital, Ankara. He established a building business which eventually employed ninety people. The wife had a child‑minding business. The applicant claimed that he became politically active in 1977‑1978, and attended meetings of the Republican People's Party, which were often broken up by police and soldiers. Because of his political activity he was arrested and tortured on three occasions. After the 1980 coup he participated in politics in secret, but became more politically active after establishing his business in Antalya. He had to provide new photographs of himself to the police each year or so because he was known as a political activist prior to 1980. 3 In April/May 1993 the Kurdish village in which the applicant's relatives lived was razed by government security forces. The applicant brought the relatives to Antalya and accommodated them in his hotel. As a result he was accused of assisting Kurdish terrorists and was detained and tortured. In May 1996 the hotel was sprayed with bullets. His complaint to a security agency was not fruitful. The applicant says he started giving money to the People's Labour Party (HEP) in 1993. When HEP was banned, it re‑emerged as the Democracy Party (DEP), to which he also gave money. DEP was banned, and was succeeded by the People's Democratic Party (HADEP) which the applicant joined in 1994, he says under a false name. During an election campaign in mid‑1994 he was caught distributing leaflets for HADEP and was detained and tortured. His political journalist nephew was killed in September 1994. The applicant was nominated as President of his local HADEP branch in November 1994 but declined the office because he was too busy. Instead he became Vice‑President. He conducted HADEP meetings at his hotel. 4 The applicant said there were about five HADEP members of Parliament in prison, and another seventeen had fled the country. He feared he would be targeted because of his knowledge of HADEP, and left the country after threats were made to kidnap his son. The family went to Cyprus where they obtained Australian visitor visas and the wife and child obtained passports. They returned to Antalya to finalise business arrangements. On their return there were two cars waiting outside their house. According to the applicant, the men in the cars demanded money. He said he did not have any on him but would pay later. The men went away. The family then left for Australia. Shortly after they arrived in Australia the applicant heard that two of his nephews had been detained by police. He says they have not been seen since. He believes they have been killed because they could not account for his whereabouts. Because of his race, political activities and opinions and his position as a wealthy businessman, the applicant fears he will be detained, tortured and killed if he returns to Turkey. THE TRIBUNAL'S REASONING 5 No exception was taken to the Tribunal's exposition of the law that has developed around the definition of "refugee" in the Convention. The Tribunal accepted that the applicant is ethnically Kurdish and was born and raised in a predominantly Kurdish area. It found that he moved to western Turkey in 1986. His son was born in Izmir in that year. Izmir is on the Aegean coast about 350 kilometres north‑west of Antalya. The Tribunal noted that in Antalya the applicant was removed from the focus of the ongoing war between Turkish security forces and Kurdish separatists in the south‑east of the country where he had grown up. 6 The Tribunal observed that in the applicant's initial submissions, made when he applied for a protection visa in July 1997, he had made no claim to be politically active until he joined HADEP in 1994. In a statutory declaration lodged with the Tribunal in December 1997, he claimed to have been politically active since 1977 or 1978. The Tribunal did not accept this claim. Nor did it accept that he was recorded as a person who was required to supply a photograph to the authorities every year because of his pre‑1980 political activity. The Tribunal found that such a significant part of his history, if true, would not have been overlooked in setting out the core of his claims in his initial application. It concluded that these aspects of his claims were fabricated after his initial application had been refused, in order to bolster his efforts to be recognised as a refugee. The Tribunal said the fact that he had completed his military service in 1981‑1982 without suffering any adverse or discriminatory treatment was consistent with its conclusion. 7 The Tribunal drew attention to differences between the applicant's initial account that his hotel had been strafed in 1993 and the account in his statutory declaration that the event had occurred in May 1996. The Tribunal did not believe the hotel had been shot at because the applicant had sheltered his relatives there. But even if it had been, the initial account strongly indicated that the event occurred when the relatives moved in. The Tribunal concluded that the applicant had later claimed that the event occurred in 1996, because he believed it would be difficult to explain why he had remained in the same place for a further four years despite being the target of attacks by the security forces. The conclusion the Tribunal drew from this was that by 1997 the authorities had no interest in harming the applicant because relatives had stayed at his hotel, and there was no likelihood that he would be harmed on that account if he returned to Turkey. 8 The Tribunal then dealt with a claim made in the applicant's statutory declaration that his journalist cousin, Ferhat Tepe, had been killed in 1994. Tepe was a newspaper correspondent for the south‑east region. His body was discovered in an area where the bodies of people who had disappeared were often found. In his oral evidence before the Tribunal the applicant said Tepe was a nephew, and acknowledged that there was a difference between a cousin and a nephew. In any event, the Tribunal accepted that while Tepe may have been related to the applicant, nothing had ever happened to the applicant as a consequence of his relationship with Tepe, and any fears he harbours that he might be adversely affected on account of that relationship are groundless. It did not believe a further claim by the applicant that he had "ghosted" articles for Tepe. It considered that he had sought to exploit Tepe's death by creating a link with him that never existed. 9 The Tribunal turned to the applicant's claims as to political activity. It noted that in his statutory declaration he claimed to have joined HADEP in about June 1994, though he told the Tribunal he had joined in November 1994. When the discrepancy was pointed out to him, he reverted to the mid‑1994 date. Further, the Tribunal thought it implausible that a local businessman, who asserted that he stood for high office in a legal political party, would use an alias on joining HADEP, or could do so without being detected. The Tribunal found that this part of the applicant's claim had been invented to pre‑empt any attempt to check HADEP's membership records for evidence of his membership. The Tribunal noted that the applicant claimed to have been nominated for Presidency of his local branch of HADEP but only agreed to stand as Vice‑President. It observed that the applicant's claims to be an office holder were not made in his initial submission, and given the enhanced public profile that holding high office in an active and legal political party would most likely bring, it was not credible that such information would have been overlooked in setting out the basis of his claim to be a refugee. 10 The Tribunal again referred to the discrepancy between the dates on which the applicant claimed to have joined HADEP (June and November 1994). Local elections were held in December 1994, yet the applicant in his statutory declaration, as affirmed in his oral evidence, claimed that the elections were held "not long after" he joined in June 1994. The Tribunal referred to country information provided by the applicant which showed that in 1995 members of HADEP had been harassed and persecuted, though the applicant did not say he had been harassed despite his claim to having been elected to the second highest office in his branch a month before local elections. The Tribunal did not accept that the applicant was a member or an office holder in HADEP, although he may have supported its cause. The Tribunal regarded this conclusion as deriving support from the fact that the applicant claimed that Leyla Zana was a member of HADEP when in fact she had been imprisoned before its formation for espousing the Kurdish cause when she was elected a member of Parliament. The Tribunal pointed this out to the applicant, whose explanation was that he had been confused between HEP, DEP and HADEP. The Tribunal did not think it credible that an office holder in HADEP, which did not have any members of Parliament, would claim that Leyla Zana was a member of that party. 11 The Tribunal turned to the applicant's visit to Cyprus in March 1997 where his wife and child obtained passports and all three obtained Australian visitors visas. The applicant's passport had been renewed in Turkey earlier that year. The Tribunal observed that the family returned to their home in Antalya, according to the applicant to finish some accounting or taxation business. It said that despite both parents claiming that their child's life was threatened, they returned home when they could have gone to Australia direct. The Tribunal did not accept that the applicant would have returned to the place where he says he feared he and his family would be killed if his fears in that respect were genuine. It thought his story had been invented. The Tribunal also thought that the applicant's account of being accosted outside his house was contrived. The coincidence of the men in the two cars being at the house when the applicant returned from Cyprus was not consistent with the statutory declaration, which had the incident occurring some five weeks after the return. The Tribunal thought that, in all the circumstances, the description of the demand for money and the men's compliant departure when the applicant said he didn't have any on him, was not credible. 12 The Tribunal concluded its examination of the political activity claim by saying that the applicant had fabricated a story that he was a political activist and supporter of the Kurdish cause who attracted the adverse attention of the authorities in an attempt to gain recognition as a refugee. It accepted that he may have made donations to political parties, but did not believe his claim that he was ever active in politics or that he was harmed for that reason. In the Tribunal's view the chance that he may suffer harm as a result of his political opinions if he were to be returned to Turkey was negligible. The Tribunal then examined at length various reports on the situation in Turkey so far as it related to Kurds. It noted Turkey's unsatisfactory human rights record in relation to Kurdish nationalists, but concluded, by reference to material that it set out in its decision, that Kurds who merely assert their cultural identity do not face a real chance of persecution for that reason alone. On the other hand, those who are politically active may, in some cases, be at risk, particularly if their activities are directed at support of Kurdish nationalism. 13 The Tribunal concluded its discussion of the applicant's political activity claim as follows: "The applicant has not been politically active, although he may have made donations to HEP and DEP. If he did, he remained in the country for three further years without attracting adverse attention. He claimed that he was detained and tortured on several occasions, although his initial submission (apart from the disbelieved claim that his hotel was strafed because he assisted his relatives) indicates that he was harassed by having his car stopped and being questioned and insulted. As with other evidence of significance, the claim to be detained and tortured was not made in initial submissions and is not believed. In this respect, it is notable that his spouse gave no evidence that he was detained and tortured, although she said he would sometimes not come home at night and gave her no information when he returned the following day. She did not suggest that he displayed any evidence that he had been tortured." 14 The Tribunal then noted that the applicant's claim that two of his nephews (the Tribunal mistakenly called them brothers) had been "disappeared" did not appear in his initial application. This claim was of such significance that the failure to mention it led the Tribunal to conclude that it had been contrived after the initial application had been refused. The Tribunal concluded its decision as follows: "[The applicant] has demonstrated a willingness to fabricate evidence in pursuit of his desire to remain in Australia. It is understandable that he may wish to live in an environment that is more stable for his family than the air of insecurity that is prevalent in parts of Turkey, but the Tribunal finds that he has not been involved in political activities, nor has he been detained and mistreated for any convention reason. Nor has he been involved in any activities, either in Turkey or Australia, that might suggest to the authorities that he is a supporter of left wing or separatist activities or politics. There is no doubt that the Turkish authorities have an abysmal human rights record and that they relentlessly pursue people they suspect of being involved with opposition groups, particularly those related to the PKK and its efforts to gain autonomy for Kurds. However, the applicant has neither been involved or suspect of involvement with such groups, nor has he been pursued by the government authorities for that reason. He was able to leave the country without hindrance and whatever fears of persecution he harboured at that time were unfounded as there was not a real chance that those fears would be realised. There have been no changes in his situation or the circumstances in Turkey to found a conclusion that he now faces a real chance of persecution if he returns." GROUNDS OF REVIEW Rule or policy - s 476(1)(d) and (3)(a) 15 The applicant claims that the Tribunal's decision was an improper exercise of power in that it applied the following rules or policies without regard to the merits of his case: