First argument
35 The appellant's argument depended on the structure of the Tribunal's reasons, as well as their content. It was common ground the Tribunal had set out the question it needed to decide in accurate terms at [42] where it stated:
Having accepted that the applicant has a well-founded fear of persecution in [redacted] village and the Swat region, the Tribunal must consider whether the well-founded fear of persecution extends to the country as whole, and if not, whether it would be reasonable for the applicant to relocate to a part of Pakistan where he does not have a well-founded fear of persecution. It has been submitted on the applicant's behalf that relocation would not be effective to avoid the serious and significant harm feared by the applicant, nor would it be reasonable for him to relocate in his particular circumstances.
36 It was also common ground that the suggestions of relocation to Islamabad and Rawalpindi came from the Tribunal's nominations of these places in Pakistan at the hearing it conducted with the appellant. From other parts of the Tribunal's reasons, it appears the Tribunal considered on the basis of country information that these areas may be suitable because there was less sectarian violence, and there were significant Pashtun communities in those places.
37 The appellant submitted that the Tribunal's conclusions at [54] (extracted at [15] above), in relation to the claims it had recounted at [46]-[53] concentrated only on the risk of serious harm, and did not identify the correct question. The appellant submitted:
The Tribunal's concentration on serious harm or, on occasions, harm, meant that it did not identify the correct question. The question of reasonableness of relocation could not be resolved by simply applying these limited concepts, or notions of remoteness, or whether the appellant would be targeted. The issue was different again to that of significant harm, for the purposes of the complementary protection assessment.
A finding that it was unreasonable for the Appellant to relocate was open, for example, even if the chance of him being personally targeted was remote, or that he might not personally face serious harm.
38 I do not accept the appellant's submissions that the Tribunal's reasons examine risk of harm to the appellant only through the prism of what would satisfy the threshold of a well-founded fear of persecution. In paragraphs [46]-[53], the Tribunal certainly examines, as it was required to do, whether it was satisfied the appellant had a well-founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason in Islamabad or Rawalpindi if he relocated there. That it did so is apparent from the language it used - for example, in [49] where it states:
While the Tribunal has accepted that the applicant may be imputed with an anti-Taliban political opinion, it does not accept that such an opinion would put him at a real chance of serious harm in an urban metropolis such as Islamabad or Rawalpindi, rather it considers the chance of serious harm to the applicant on that basis to be remote and therefore not real.
39 However, the fact it found the risk of harm to be remote is also relevant to the Tribunal's satisfaction about the reasonableness of relocation for the appellant. There is nothing impermissible about the Tribunal using a factual finding about the remoteness of harm, as it did in each paragraph, as the basis to form an opinion about the reasonableness of relocation given the particular risk the appellant had claimed he feared. It is correct, as the appellant pointed out in his submissions, that in a structural sense the finding about reasonableness, in each of the paragraphs [47]-[52], comes at the end of the finding about well-founded fear of persecution. I do not consider it is accurate to describe these findings as "tacked on", as the appellant submitted. In some of these paragraphs, the Tribunal gives further explanation. For example, in [48] dealing with the appellant's claim to fear harm because of his Pashtun ethnicity, after making its finding on whether that ethnicity gives rise to a well-founded fear of persecution in Islamabad or Rawalpindi, the Tribunal then states:
Nor does the Tribunal consider that such actions, even if they are still occurring, make the applicant's relocation within Pakistan unreasonable. At hearing the Tribunal noted that independent sources indicated that Islamabad and Rawalpindi had significant Pashtun populations. The Tribunal has had regard to sources indicating that some Pashtuns have been targeted in Karachi, however there is no material before the Tribunal that would suggest that Pashtuns are similarly targeted in Islamabad or Rawalpindi.
40 In [51], dealing with the appellant's claim to fear harm on the basis of his moderate Sunni beliefs, the Tribunal states:
The applicant also claims to fear harm throughout Pakistan on the basis of his moderate Sunni beliefs and his appearance, telling the Tribunal that his face and clothes identify him as someone who is against the Taliban who would not leave someone with the applicant's appearance alone. He stated that he hadn't followed his religion properly, that his religion did not allow him to commit suicide as required by the Taliban and that his moderate or liberal Muslim views would cause the Taliban to believe he was against them. While the Tribunal accepts that the applicant may be imputed with an anti-Taliban political opinion as a result of his moderate Sunni Muslim views, his appearance, his education in Pakistan and time in Australia, the Tribunal does not accept on the information before it that such views, actual or imputed, create a real chance that he will be targeted for serious harm in Islamabad or Rawalpindi, now or in the reasonably foreseeable future. Nor does the Tribunal accept the applicant's assertions that he will be considered a spy for the west or a traitor to his religion on the basis of his travel to or study in Australia, noting that independent sources do not indicate that to be the case. As put to the applicant at hearing, many Pakistani nationals come to Australia for study or other purposes and return home and independent sources do not suggest they are targeted for serious harm on that basis. On the evidence before it, the Tribunal does not accept that the applicant's profile as a person who has travelled to and lived and studied in Australia make his relocation to Islamabad or Rawalpindi unsafe or unreasonable.
41 In my opinion, these two paragraphs, like the others, disclose that the Tribunal has used its findings on the first stage as part of its consideration about the reasonableness of relocation, but there is nothing impermissible about this. I do not consider the Tribunal approached its task on the basis that if it determined the appellant did not have a well-founded fear of persecution in Islamabad (for example) that would inevitably make his relocation reasonable. This is what the appellant's submissions amounted to. In my opinion the Tribunal's reasons disclose it appreciated the matters it needed to consider were distinct, both qualitatively and substantively. In each of these paragraphs it addressed the subject matter of the appellant's objections to relocation based on his fears of harm, and it did so both through the prism of well-founded fear of persecution, and then by asking whether, if there was a risk of harm less than serious harm, and less than a real chance of such harm occurring, it was nevertheless reasonable to expect him to relocate. There is nothing legally impermissible in this approach.
42 The Tribunal was not precluded from using its finding that there was a remote prospect of the appellant suffering harm for the claimed reasons as part of its grounds for deciding relocation was reasonable. I do not see the reasoning of Davies J in MZZJY [2014] FCA 1394 at [21] as inconsistent with the approach I have taken: rather, her Honour's decision reflects an assessment of the particular reasoning in the case before her.
43 The appellant's submissions seemed to suggest the Tribunal was bound to find that a risk of harm which was remote should be sufficient to make relocation not reasonable.
44 I accept that paragraph [54] of the Tribunal's reasons, expressed as a conclusion, deals with whether the appellant had a well-founded fear of persecution in Islamabad or Rawalpindi. However I consider that paragraph must be read fairly and in context, which means reading it with the paragraphs which have gone before it. Further, the last sentence of [54] makes it tolerably clear the Tribunal then turns its attention to the appellant's "particular circumstances", meaning the reasonableness of relocation based not so much on circumstances existing in Islamabad and Rawalpindi as on matters personal to the appellant relocating to those places. Again, while the Tribunal's language is not as clear as it could be, in my opinion it is tolerably clear that is what it then proceeded to consider.
45 The appellant's attack on [60] and [61] is not sustainable. These paragraphs are referring back to the Tribunal's conclusions at [46]-[54] and are a further summary. There is nothing legally erroneous about the contents of [60]-[61], even if their placement is confusing, coming after the Tribunal's substantive conclusion on reasonableness of relocation in relation to matters personal to the appellant.
46 The conclusion of the Federal Circuit Court at [13] is somewhat rolled up, but in light of the views I have formed, in my opinion it is the correct conclusion about the Tribunal's reasoning and should not be disturbed.