THE TRIBUNAL'S REASONS
16 In its reasons for its decision of 5 April 2004, the Tribunal accepted that the applicant is a citizen of Afghanistan and referred to the delegate's finding of 13 December 1999 that the applicant was a person to whom Australia owed protection obligations under the Refugees Convention. The Tribunal then said that the first question that arose was whether, in accordance with Article 1C(5) of the Refugees Convention, the applicant could no longer continue to refuse to avail himself of the protection of Afghanistan because the circumstances in connection with which he was recognised by Australia as a refugee had ceased to exist.
17 The Tribunal said that, at a hearing to give the applicant the opportunity to explain his claims, it was put to the applicant that the Taliban had been removed from power in Afghanistan by mid-November 2001 and that the Taliban no longer existed as a political movement. It was also put to the applicant that the Taliban did not pose a direct threat to the civilian population and that the targets of the Taliban were currently Coalition and Government security forces and international aid workers. It was also put to the applicant that strengthening of the Taliban remnants in some parts of Afghanistan did not reach the Hazara areas of Jaghori district and was unlikely to do so without open conflict with the Wahdat.
18 The applicant told the Tribunal that all the world knew that the Taliban was no longer in power. Nevertheless, he asserted that twelve Hazaras had been killed before Christmas, three of them from Jaghori. He asserted that eight people from the international forces had been killed in the Hazara area of Ghazni province and that that sort of killing was going on every day.
19 The Tribunal made a finding that the Taliban had been removed from power in Afghanistan and that they are no longer in a position to massacre Hazaras or Shia Muslims in the manner referred to by the delegate in the original decision record of 13 December 1999. The Tribunal did not accept that there was a real chance of the Taliban re-emerging as a viable political movement in Afghanistan in the reasonably foreseeable future. Notwithstanding isolated incidents, such as the killing of twelve Hazaras, the Tribunal did not accept that the Taliban remnants remaining in Afghanistan were targeting civilians. The Tribunal found that the targets of the Taliban were members of the Coalition and Government security forces and international aid workers.
20 The Tribunal found that strengthening of Taliban remnants in some parts did not reach the Hazara areas of Jaghori district and that it was unlikely to do so without open conflict with the Wahdat. The Tribunal did not accept that there was a real chance that the applicant would be persecuted by the remnants of the Taliban because he is a Hazara. The Tribunal then made an express finding that, because the circumstances in connection with which the applicant was recognised as a refugee had ceased to exist, he can no longer continue to refuse to avail himself of the protection of Afghanistan for those reasons. The Tribunal concluded, therefore, that Article 1C(5) of the Refugees Convention applied to the applicant.
21 However, against the possibility that it was wrong about the application of Article 1C(5), the Tribunal also went on to consider whether, as at the date of its decision, the applicant had a well-founded fear of being persecuted on the basis of the circumstances in connection with which he was originally recognised as a refugee. It did so in order to determine whether s 36(3) of the Act applied to the applicant. The Tribunal found that, as a national of Afghanistan, the applicant is able to avail himself of a right to enter and reside in Afghanistan. The Tribunal found that, having regard to the changed circumstances in Afghanistan since the applicant was originally recognised as a refugee, the applicant no longer has a well-founded fear of being persecuted on the basis of the circumstances in connection with which he was originally recognised as a refugee. The Tribunal concluded, therefore, that, quite apart from Article 1C(5), s 36(3) applies such that Australia does not have protection obligations to the applicant under the Refugees Convention in relation to the circumstances in connection with which he was originally recognised as a refugee.
22 The Tribunal then applied afresh to the applicant the test for refugee status. The Tribunal considered whether, having regard to the situation in Afghanistan at the time of its decision, the applicant had a well-founded fear, if he returned to Afghanistan then or in the reasonably foreseeable future, of being persecuted for one of the Convention Reasons, by reason of the additional matters that were raised by the applicant for the first time at the hearing before the Tribunal. At that hearing, the applicant claimed for the first time that an uncle was a member of the Sepah faction of the Wahdat and that he believed that another of his uncles had been involved in the Sepah faction as well. The applicant claimed that, because his uncle was a member of the Sepah faction, he would be regarded as a member too. He also outlined to the Tribunal a claimed fear of the Nasr faction of the Wahdat because of an association with the opposing Sepah faction.
23 The Tribunal referred to concerns expressed by the applicant in a further statement dated 3 October 2002, which was lodged in support of his application to the Tribunal for review. The applicant said that, although he had been told that the Taliban was no longer in control of his home area, he believed that his village was now being fought over by various groups of the Wahdat. He said that, before the Taliban had come to control the area, there had been two different Wahdat groups that had fought for control. The applicant said that neither he nor his father nor any of his brothers had ever been involved with either of those groups. He said, however, that he feared that, if he returned, he would be forced to join one of the Wahdat groups and would have to fight and kill for them. He said that he feared that, if he refused to fight for a group, he would be accused of supporting one of the other groups and they would kill him. He said that he also feared that the Taliban would return to his area in the future.
24 The applicant claimed, in addition, that the Afghan government did not support or assist the Hazara people and that the government was controlled by Pashtun and Tajik people. He said that the government had no control over his home area and it would not be able to protect him in his village. He said that he also feared being persecuted because he was a Shia Muslim and the Pashtuns are all Sunni Muslims. He said that the Pashtuns wanted the Shia religion out of Afghanistan.
25 The Tribunal did not accept that members of the applicant's extended family are members of the Sepah faction. Nor did it accept that the applicant or other members of his immediate family are regarded as members of that faction as a consequence. The Tribunal therefore concluded that there was not a real chance that the applicant would be persecuted by the opposing Nasr faction because of any real or perceived association with the Sepah faction.
26 The Tribunal also concluded that any discrimination against Hazaras in Afghanistan falls short of what is required to constitute persecution for the purposes of the Refugees Convention. The Tribunal did not accept that there was a real chance that the applicant would be persecuted for reasons of his race, as a Hazara, if he returns to Afghanistan now or in the reasonably foreseeable future.
27 The Tribunal referred to the applicant's claim that, outside Kabul, it was very hard for Hazara people to live and that, even in Kabul, Hazaras have problems. The applicant claimed that, if he went back to Jaghori now, there would be no land and no work. However, the Tribunal referred to the applicant's evidence that, before the Taliban came to power, his family were doing very well in Jaghori. The Tribunal did not accept that the applicant would not be able to run a shop, given that he assisted his brother in running his shop before the Taliban came.
28 The Tribunal considered that the information available to it suggested that the situation of Shia Muslims in Afghanistan is generally good. The Tribunal did not accept that there was a real chance that the applicant would be persecuted for reasons of his religion, as a Shia Muslim, if he returns to Afghanistan now or in the reasonably foreseeable future. The Tribunal also found that hundreds and thousands of refugees have returned to Afghanistan from Iran and Pakistan and that the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees is monitoring the return of those people to places like the applicant's home area of Jaghori.
29 Having considered the totality of the applicant's circumstances as a Hazara, a Shia Muslim and someone who will be returning to Afghanistan from a western country, the Tribunal was not satisfied, even taking into account the cumulative effect of all those circumstances, that the applicant has a well-founded fear of being persecuted for one of the Convention Reasons if he returns to Afghanistan now or in the reasonably foreseeable future.