Iyer v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs
[2000] FCA 1567
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2000-11-08
Before
Mathews J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (9 paragraphs)
INTRODUCTION 1 The applicant, Mr Iyer, seeks review of a decision of the Refugee Review Tribunal ("the Tribunal") dated 22 September 1999 which affirmed a decision of the respondent's delegate that the applicant was not entitled to a protection visa. 2 In order to be eligible for a protection visa an applicant must meet the criteria set out in s 36(2) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) ("the Act") and Subclass 866 in Sch 2 of the Migration Regulations 1994. Both provisions require that the applicant for a protection visa be a person to whom Australia has protection obligations under the Refugees Convention as amended by the Refugees Protocol ("the Convention"). Article 1 of the Convention defines a "refugee" as any person who "… owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country …". 3 Mr Iyer says that he has a well-founded fear of persecution in his country of nationality, Sri Lanka, for reasons of his race and his imputed political opinion.
factual background 4 The following account of Mr Iyer's background in Sri Lanka is taken from the statements he later provided to the respondent's delegate and to the Tribunal. They were lengthy statements, and this summary extracts only those matters that were relevant to the Tribunal's decision. 5 Mr Iyer is a Sri Lankan Tamil who was born in 1966 in Jaffna in the country's north. His family is Brahmin, a group which is known to be non-violent. 6 Between 1970 and 1983 Mr Iyer's family lived in Colombo where he studied at the Royal College. After the July 1983 riots in Colombo he and his family returned to Jaffna. Not long afterwards Mr Iyer went to India where he studied engineering. At that time his father was working in the Maldives. In May 1985 Mr Iyer's mother died in Jaffna. It was not safe for him to return to Jaffna at that time so he was unable to attend his mother's funeral. 7 Other than a brief visit to Jaffna in October 1985, Mr Iyer did not return to Sri Lanka until September 1987. In October of that year he was arrested in Jaffna by the Indian Peace Keeping Force ("the IPKF"). He was held for approximately one month during which time he was interrogated and seriously mistreated and assaulted. 8 After Mr Iyer's release by the IPKF he returned to Colombo. Shortly afterwards, in December 1987, he was arrested, this time by the local police who suspected that he was a supporter of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam ("the LTTE"). Again he was beaten and ill-treated. He was released after about three weeks, as were a number of other Tamils who had been arrested at much the same time. 9 In November 1988 Mr Iyer left Sri Lanka and went first to India and later to the Maldives. He returned to Colombo in April 1992, and six months later returned to Jaffna. In March 1993 he was taken from his home by members of the LTTE and placed into a truck which went to an unknown destination. There he was detained under appalling conditions. He suffered serious deprivation, humiliation, illness and physical assaults. He was eventually released seven months later, in October 1993, upon his promise to give his house and all his property to the LTTE. It was not until four months later, after he had made good this promise, that he was allowed to leave the Jaffna area. 10 In May 1995 Mr Iyer left Sri Lanka and did not return for nearly three years. He spent most of the intervening time in Singapore where he studied at an Institute of Technical Education. In February 1998 he returned to Colombo for the purpose of applying for a visa to Australia. There he was required to register with the police. He and a number of other Tamils had to wait for a considerable time - about seven hours - in order to register. He was not ill-treated during this time, but was very apprehensive that he might be. 11 On 5 March 1998 Mr Iyer received an Australian visa. He left Sri Lanka almost immediately and arrived in Australia on 8 March 1998. 12 On 23 April 1998 Mr Iyer applied for a protection visa. His application was accompanied by a very lengthy statement, which is summarised above. He gave the following reasons for submitting that he was unable to return to Sri Lanka. "1. I have no relatives or any member of my family living in Sri Lanka. If I returned I have to find accommodation in a lodge or in a private house as a boarder. A Tamil youth who lives in these conditions and is alone is the primary target for the authorities. 2. The authorities will not accept my bona fide as I will not be able to obtain the Necessary [sic] testimonials they require. Furthermore, I would always be looked upon with suspicion that I am in Colombo to engage in some subversive activity on behalf of the Tigers. 3. The reports coming out of Sri Lanka confirm that the harassment of the Tamils, particularly those living in Colombo is continuing unabated. I have never lived in any other part of Sri Lanka other than Colombo and Jaffna. I cannot go back to Jaffna because if by some chance the authorities get to know that our property was given over to the Tigers I would be branded as Tiger supporter and persecuted. 4. Sri Lanka has turned out to be a nation, which is totally alien to me. The only memories I have are of torture and harassment. I can never make up my mind to live in that nation because I have genuine fears that due to the fact that I am single and have no connections whatsoever that I would be singled out for unjustifiable persecution by the authorities." 13 On 30 May 1998 the respondent's delegate refused Mr Iyer's application for a protection visa. On 22 June 1998 he applied to the Tribunal for a review of the delegate's decision. On 27 April 1999 Mr Iyer made a lengthy statutory declaration which was forwarded the next day to the Tribunal. It gave an account of his background which was essentially similar to that contained in his earlier statement. On 25 June 1999 his solicitor forwarded a lengthy submission (19 pages) to the Tribunal quoting various items of country information and stressing the difficulties faced by Tamils in Sri Lanka. 14 On 30 June 1999 the Tribunal conducted a hearing at which Mr Iyer and his representative attended. The transcript of that hearing was not included in the papers sent to the Court. However the Tribunal's decision contains a description of the salient points of this hearing. In the absence of any criticism of this account, I must assume its general accuracy. Later, on 20 July 1999, Mr Iyer's solicitors wrote a further letter to the Tribunal addressing issues which had arisen at the hearing and providing further country information. The letter concluded in the following terms:- "Concluding submissions It is respectfully submitted that given the totality of the evidence before the Tribunal, the claims of our client are credible and well-founded. It is submitted that as a young man from Jaffna, Mr Iyer faces an increased risk on his return to Colombo of Convention related persecution. It is further submitted that such a risk is well-founded given the evidence available. He has no immediate family in Sri Lanka to offer him protection, in Colombo or in Jaffna, assuming he is able to return there. His risk is not only arrest and torture as a suspected LTTE supporter, but also arrest for purposes of extortion, as a Tamil with family overseas. It is submitted that the use of extortion in such cases is not only persecution but also Convention related as it is directed at Tamils, not at Sinhalese or the population in general. It is submitted that he meets the criteria of a well-founded fear of future persecution because of Convention related claims."