NAML v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs
[2002] FCA 1190
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2002-09-27
Before
Sackville J, Tamberlin J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (8 paragraphs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT 1 When the matter came on for hearing the applicant sought leave to file an amended application. As there was no opposition by the Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs ("the Minister") to the substance of the amended application, I granted leave to file the amended application, except in so far as the amended application joined the Refugee Review Tribunal ("the RRT") as a respondent. I accepted the submissions of counsel for the Minister that the RRT was not a necessary or appropriate party to the application. In this respect I adopt the reasoning of Sackville J in NAAA v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2002] FCA 362 at [10]-[27]. 2 The applicant is a citizen of Iran who arrived in Australia on 10 August 1999. On 5 June 2000 he lodged an application for a protection visa under the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) ("the Act") on the basis that he was a refugee as defined by Article 1A(2) of the Convention relating to the Status of Refugees done at Geneva on 28 July 1951 as amended by the Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees done at New York on 31 January 1967 ("the Convention"). 3 The application for a protection visa was refused by a delegate of the Minister and on 14 July 2000 the applicant applied for review of that decision by the RRT. The RRT on 1 May 2002 affirmed the decision not to grant a protection visa and from that decision an application for judicial review was made to this Court under s 39B of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth). The applicant claims that the RRT erred in ignoring the evidence of a witness, Mr Tavallaie Farshchi, which he said corroborated his involvement with an Evangelical Christian group in Russia in the period between 1994 and 1999 and his claimed commitment to Christianity after arrival in Australia. 4 The applicant was born in 1968 and raised in Iran and is the son of an affluent gynaecologist. His parents were strict Muslims who supported the Islamic revolution and this loyalty to the Islamic regime was rewarded by his father's promotions within the medical hierarchy in Iran. As a child he came into contact with Christian children, which caused him to become disillusioned with the fanaticism and intolerance which he saw as afflicting the practice of Islam. He says that this was reinforced by the necessity of being seen to follow Islamic rituals at university. During the course of his studies at university he claimed that he became more interested in Christianity although he did not reveal this to his parents. He completed a science degree in Iran and was accepted in the Moscow Medical Academy where he commenced studying medicine in January 1993. In Russia the applicant claims that he found the Russian Orthodox Church to be "austere and inflexible". 5 The applicant claims that he and a friend, Mr Tavallaie Farshchi, who was also studying medicine in Moscow, were attracted to an Evangelical Christian Union at the university which held frequent bible study groups and prayer meetings. He says that he became a full member of the Union and carried what he considered to be a duty to evangelise. The Union used an amphitheatre and not a church within the university for its activities as there was no Evangelical Church. He claims that Evangelical Christians were harassed and vilified by Orthodox Christians but the applicant most feared Iranians in Moscow who were loyal to the Iranian regime. He claimed to have received phone calls from Iranians threatening him for his apostasy and that he was physically assaulted in his apartment for this and for his Evangelism. He says that this occurred during the summer vacation in 1997 when he and Mr Tavallaie Farshchi who had been less involved than him in Christian activities, returned to Iran. The applicant claims that the assaults did not stop him evangelising despite the continuance of the threatening phone calls. 6 In 1998, a few months before he was due to graduate, the applicant says that he received photos of himself coming and going from the "church" together with statements that he was an apostate. These were signed by Iranians. He says he was informed by an anonymous caller that the material was being passed to the Iranian government. He also claims that after Mr Tavallaie Farshchi was assaulted by agents of the Iranian government in February 1999, that he and Mr Tavallaie Farshchi decided that it would not be safe to remain in either Russia or Iran and the applicant applied for a visa to continue studies in Australia because of Australia's democracy and perceived tolerance. He says he was afraid to return to Iran. However, he did go back to Iran in 1999 at the behest of his father to whom he was very close. He says this was because he believed that his father's authority and influence could save him from harm. He claims that he was detained at the airport on entry and was abused, beaten, and later released into his father's care. He was again re-arrested and he left the country because he said his father paid a bribe to facilitate his exit. He claims to have received a notice requiring him to appear before an Islamic court in Iran. 7 At the hearing the RRT member asked the applicant a large number of questions about his alleged activities in Russia and his return trip to Iran. 8 The applicant called three witnesses to give evidence at the hearing. Two Australian Ministers of religion gave evidence as to the applicant's current adherence to Christianity in Australia. Mr Tavallaie Farshchi gave evidence of his association with the applicant and their involvement in the Evangelical Union while at the Moscow Medical Academy. Mr Tavallaie Farshchi's evidence was to the effect that the applicant was more involved in Christian activities than he had been in Russia and he gave evidence as to the name of the leader of the Union and the location of the amphitheatre where religious activities were held. 9 In relation to Mr Tavallaie Farshchi's evidence, the RRT member, at the close of the hearing, said that she thought Mr Tavallaie Farshchi's evidence had been very helpful and that he had gone some way towards convincing her that the applicant was a genuine Christian. However, the member said that she was troubled by a combination of matters which she had referred to during the hearing and informed the applicant that if any further submissions were thought appropriate, he could make further submissions, particularly in relation to the question as to whether there was some way of obtaining confirmation that the relevant group of Evangelical Christians existed in Russia and that he was a member of the group or that he was involved in Christian activities whilst in Russia. The member said that Mr Tavallaie Farshchi had provided assistance in relation to these issues as a source of evidence but observed that he was a "good old friend" and that this had to be borne in mind. 10 Subsequent to the hearing, the applicant's advisers wrote to the RRT member stating that the applicant was only able to give the address of one church in Moscow, namely the Church of Saint Andrew. The letter gave details of the location of the church in Moscow together with a website address. The letter stated that contact could not be made with the church as it may have possibly moved location or closed. The advisers requested that the RRT place appropriate weight on the evidence of Mr Tavallaie Farshchi, who it was said had been residing in Moscow at the same time as the applicant and could verify the applicant's attendance at the church.