Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Perera
[2001] FCA 1212
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2001-08-29
Before
Carr JJ
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (10 paragraphs)
THE COURT 1 The respondent is a citizen of Sri Lanka. He was born on 4 May 1962 and is now aged thirty-nine. He arrived in Perth on 17 March 1997, having obtained entry to this country on a "visitors visa". His wife and two young daughters had earlier entered Australia in December 1995 on a like visa. The respondent applied for a protection visa for himself and his family shortly after his arrival but the application was unsuccessful. On 28 November 1997, a delegate of the appellant, the Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs ("the Minister"), refused the application and, on 18 December, the respondent sought a review of that decision by the Refugee Review Tribunal ("the Tribunal"). As that application was also unsuccessful, the respondent next applied, under s 476 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) ("the Act"), to this Court for a review of the decision that had been made by the Tribunal. On this occasion, he was successful. A judge of this Court ordered that the decision of the Tribunal be set aside and that the matter be remitted to the Tribunal for reconsideration according to the law. The Court further ordered that the Minister pay the costs of the application. 2 The Minister now appeals to this Court against the decision of the judge in the Court below. 3 The respondent claimed that he should be accepted in Australia as a refugee because, so he argued, he was a person who, owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of his political opinions, was outside the country of his nationality and was unable, or owing to such fear, was unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country. 4 In his submissions to the Tribunal the respondent said that he became involved in politics after he left school. He said that he became a strong supporter of the UNP party - the political party that was then in power in Sri Lanka; he listed his activities as distributing pamphlets, pasting posters on walls, hanging flags, recruiting people to join the party and engaging in fund raising activities. Later, he became an Organiser and, later again, a Chief Organiser; his duties were to organise meetings and rallies in his area. At times, he had also acted as a bodyguard for Mr Lalith Athulathmudali, a member of Parliament and a leader of the party, who the respondent described as a "very active" campaigner in our area …" The respondent followed Mr Athulathmudali when he split from the UNP and formed the Democratic United National Front party ("the DUNF"). The respondent claimed that because of his political involvement, he became well known in his area and was harassed and threatened by the opposition, the Sri Lankan Freedom Party ("the SLFP"). He also claimed that his home had been vandalised and he attributed that to members of the SLFP. 5 In early 1993 Mr Athulathmudali was assassinated and the leadership of the party was assumed by his widow, Mrs Sitimari Athulathmudali. According to the respondent, there then followed an increase in the threats to his person, the acts of vandalism increased markedly and he "began to fear for the safety of my family and myself". The respondent said that because the threats increased, he left his home and took his family to an estate that was owned by his father. This was the start of his departure from politics, although, for a while, he continued to give his support to Mrs Athulathmudali. He said that he and his family remained in hiding for some time before ultimately returning to the family home. He said that upon his return, he found that his home had been broken into, looted and vandalised - as to this, the Tribunal found that there was no evidence to establish that these events were motivated by either his actual or imputed political opinion. 6 General elections were held in Sri Lanka in August 1994. According to the respondent, the DUNF party was in disarray because of the death of Mr Athulathmudali but he, nevertheless, remained with the party out of loyalty "and because of the anger and horror" that he felt after the death of Mr Athulathmudali. He said further, however, that prior to the elections his party went through a "transformation" in that it broke into two camps. The members of one camp gave their allegiance to the Peoples' Alliance Party ("the PA") who, according to the respondent, were the former SLFP whilst the other group returned to the UNP. The first group became known by the acronym "NDUNLF" which stood for the New Democratic United National Lalith Front. As to this division, the respondent said that: "… unfortunately it was Sirimani Athulathmudali's camp who sided with the PA and this really upset me, as I was always a UNP supporter and despite my loyalty to Lalith, I could not support the PA …" 7 The respondent had earlier said in his written submissions, that although he remained a member of Mrs Athulathmudali's party, he "kept a low profile" as he feared for his and his family's safety. In his oral evidence before the Tribunal, he reaffirmed that statement, commenting that he remained silent in the 1994 elections. Nevertheless, he claimed that he continued to receive threats, his house was stoned, PA posters were placed on his walls and he was assaulted on three occasions by PA members. It was in this climate that the respondent said that he left Sir Lanka in December 1994 for Japan where he remained for about two years. It was whilst he was in Japan that his wife and children travelled to Australia. 8 The last claim that was made by the respondent was that in February 1997, shortly after his return to Sri Lanka from Japan, harassment from the PA supporters recommenced. It was then that he made his decision to come to Australia. 9 The Tribunal accepted that the respondent had been a strong supporter of the UNP and of its one-time leader, his mentor, Mr Athulathmudali. It accepted that he followed Mr Athulathmudali in 1991 when Mr Athulathmudali founded the new party, the DUNF. However, the Tribunal also accepted the respondent's evidence that, with the assassination of Mr Athulathmudali, he ceased political activity; it rejected any statements to the effect that the respondent was a supporter of the UNP after 1991. 10 The 1994 elections resulted in a coalition of the PA and the NDUNLF (the successor to the DUNF). That coalition formed government and Mrs Athulathmudali became a Minister in the PA led government. The respondent had not approved of Mrs Athulathmudali giving her support to the PA but, as the respondent acknowledged, and as the Tribunal found, he kept silent during the 1994 election campaign. The Tribunal further found that, after the 1994 election, the respondent would not have been seen as a supporter of either the UNP, the DUNF or the NDUNLF, even though he had supported the Mrs Athulathmudali during that campaign. The Tribunal was prepared to accept that, initially, the respondent may well have suffered at the hands of PA supporters during the 1994 campaign but the Tribunal was satisfied that a change quickly came about. The respondent was seen to be a supporter of the NDUNLF, the NDUNLF had joined forces to become part of the current PA led government and the respondent had kept silent during the 1994 election. The combination of these factors led the Tribunal to conclude that there was thereafter no real chance that the respondent would be persecuted by the PA supporters because of his former support for the PA's new political ally. The Tribunal described the respondent as one who had not played a "non-silent role in Sri Lankan politics for over six years". Even though the Tribunal was prepared to accept that the respondent had experienced harassment and threats at the hands of the predecessors of the PA because of his early association with the UNP, the Tribunal concluded that such conduct would have ceased when Mrs Athulathmudali became a Minister; it reasoned that it was inherently unlikely that the respondent, "who had supported her, albeit quietly, would have been harassed by PA supporters in 1996-1997". The Tribunal rejected the respondent's claims that he had been threatened and harassed after 1994; it did so because he had ceased his political activity and Mrs Athulathmudali's party, to which he had given some support, was now in coalition with the PA. 11 In the Court below, the respondent argued that the Tribunal had fallen into error when it concluded that there was "no evidence before it" that the breaking into the respondent's home and the looting and vandalism of it had been politically motivated. The learned primary judge correctly rejected that submission, [at 12] saying: "But the ground for review of error of law provided by s 476(1)(e) would only arise if it could be said that the Tribunal incorrectly applied to the facts the law relating to a well-founded fear of persecution, and that such error was involved in the ultimate decision of the Tribunal that it was not satisfied that the applicant had a well-founded fear of persecution. That is to say, it must be seen that the decision of the Tribunal was affected by that error. The question whether the damage caused to the applicant's residence in 1993, whilst the applicant was absent, was inspired by the perceived political opinions of the applicant, was a minor part of the case which the applicant put before the Tribunal. Any view formed by the Tribunal on that question was not material to the ultimate determination made by the Tribunal." 12 In the Court below, the learned primary judge stated in par 16 of his reasons, that when the split occurred in the DUNF, the respondent "opposed the shift in political allegiance" that had been undertaken by Mrs Athulathmudali. It was not correct, in our opinion, for his Honour to say that the respondent "opposed" the shift in allegiance. That does not accord with the respondent's evidence or the Tribunal's findings. In par 13 of his written submissions, the respondent had said that the decision of Mrs Athulathmudali had "really upset" him. He also added that he could not support the PA but he did not say that he opposed the allegiance. On the contrary, he conceded in par 10 of his statement that he "kept a low profile" during the elections. The Tribunal accepted those sections of the respondent's evidence. 13 The learned primary judge addressed that section of the Tribunal's reasons in which it had stated that it was prepared to give the respondent "the benefit of the doubt" in respect of the claims of assault and harassment that he and his family had suffered at the hands of the PA supporters during the 1994 election campaign. His Honour then said at [10]: "If the Tribunal accepted that these events occurred as claimed by the applicant, it could not be said that the applicant was seen by PA supporters to be a supporter of the NDUNLF, or of the PA, in August 1994. The finding by the Tribunal that 'there was no real chance that …[the respondent] would now be persecuted by the PA supporters for supporting one of their coalition partners [or at least a predecessor of it] is not consistent with the facts accepted or found by the Tribunal." 14 With due respect to his Honour, his conclusion has not made allowance for the temporal sequence in which the Tribunal made its findings. What the Tribunal concluded is to be found in the following passage: "The applicant may well have suffered at the hands of the PA supporters during the 1994 campaign, but later the DUNF (or more accurately its successor) he supported became part of the current PA led government." (emphasis added)