The appeal
15 The appellant's original notice of appeal was obviously drawn without the benefit of legal advice, attempted to agitate issues of fact, and was accompanied by an affidavit. Pursuant to the scheme in O 80 of the Federal Court Rules, the appellant was referred to counsel for legal assistance. Amended grounds of appeal were filed, and the appeal proceeded on one of those grounds of appeal, with the consent of counsel for the Minister.
16 That ground is that the Tribunal failed to apply the correct legal test in ascertaining whether the appellant satisfied the requirement that his unwillingness to avail himself of the protection of the United Kingdom was the result of a well-founded fear of being persecuted. The argument put on behalf of the appellant rested heavily on the proposition that what the majority said in S152/2003 does not constitute a definitive statement of the appropriate test in circumstances such as those faced by the appellant, and needs to be read in the context of the case with which the High Court was dealing. Rather, it was suggested that the correct test was stated by McHugh J in that case. To deal with this submission, it is necessary to analyse S152/2003.
17 That case involved applications by a couple of Ukrainian nationals for protection visas, on the basis that the husband, who was a Jehovah's witness, had a well-founded fear of persecution in Ukraine for the reason of his religion. Before the Tribunal, the case had been that the Government of Ukraine, directly and through the media it controlled, encouraged persecution of Jehovah's witnesses. The Tribunal rejected that proposition. It was also said that the police condoned violence towards Jehovah's witnesses. The Tribunal did not accept that. The Tribunal made specific findings that it was not satisfied that the Ukrainian authorities were unable or unwilling to protect citizens from violence based on antagonism of the kind involved. An application for judicial review in this Court was rejected. On appeal to the Full Court of this Court, an issue emerged that had not been raised at first instance. The Full Court held that the Tribunal was entitled to find that there was no evidence that the Ukrainian authorities encouraged persecution of Jehovah's witnesses, but that the Tribunal had failed to consider whether Ukraine had the ability, in a practical sense, to provide protection. On this ground, the Full Court allowed the appeal and set aside the Tribunal's decision. The High Court allowed an appeal from the judgment of the Full Court.
18 The following passage appears in the judgment of the majority, Gleeson CJ, Hayne and Heydon JJ, at [25]-[26]:
The first respondent is outside his country of nationality owing to a fear resulting from a violent response of some Ukrainian citizens to his religious proselytising. The Tribunal's conclusion that the violence was random and uncoordinated was not merely an assertion. It was a finding based on the evidence, and it was directly relevant to the case the first respondent was seeking to make, which was that the violence was orchestrated and State-sponsored. The first respondent did not set out to demonstrate that his country was out of control. On the contrary, he was claiming that the government was in control, and was using its power and influence to harm people like him. The new case, raised for the first time in the Full Court, has to be related to the terms of Art 1A(2). What kind of inability to protect a person such as the first respondent from harm of the kind he has suffered would justify a conclusion that he is a victim of persecution and that it is owing to a well-founded fear of persecution that, being outside his country, he is unwilling to avail himself of his country's protection?
No country can guarantee that its citizens will at all times, and in all circumstances, be safe from violence. Day by day, Australian courts deal with criminal cases involving violent attacks on person or property. Some of them may occur for reasons of racial or religious intolerance. The religious activities in which the first respondent engaged between May and December 1998 evidently aroused the anger of some other people. Their response was unlawful. The Ukrainian State was obliged to take reasonable measures to protect the lives and safety of its citizens, and those measures would include an appropriate criminal law, and the provision of a reasonably effective and impartial police force and justice system. None of the country information before the Tribunal justified a conclusion that there was a failure on the part of Ukraine to conform to its obligations in that respect.
19 At [27], their Honours referred to the absence of any "cause to conclude that there was any failure of State protection in the sense of a failure to meet the standards of protection required by international standards". At [28], their Honours referred to the nature of the case put to the Tribunal and to the Full Court's conclusion as to that case and continued:
The only other basis upon which the first respondent's unwillingness to seek the protection of the Ukrainian Government could be justified, and treated as satisfying that element of Art 1A(2), would be that Ukraine did not provide its citizens with the level of State protection required by international standards. It is not necessary in this case to consider what those standards might require or how they would be ascertained. There was no evidence before the Tribunal to support a conclusion that Ukraine did not provide its citizens with the level of State protection required by such standards. The question of Ukraine's ability to protect the first respondent, in the context of the requirements of Art 1A(2), was not overlooked by the Tribunal. Because of the way in which the first respondent put his claim, it was not a matter that received, or required, lengthy discussion in the Tribunal's reasons. If the Full Court contemplated that the Tribunal, in assessing the justification for unwillingness to seek protection, should have considered, not merely whether the Ukrainian Government provided a reasonably effective police force and a reasonably impartial system of justice, but also whether it could guarantee the first respondent's safety to the extent that he need have no fear of further harm, then it was in error. A person living inside or outside his or her country of nationality may have a well-founded fear of harm. The fact that the authorities, including the police, and the courts, may not be able to provide an assurance of safety, so as to remove any reasonable basis for fear, does not justify unwillingness to seek their protection. For example, an Australian court that issues an apprehended violence order is rarely, if ever, in a position to guarantee its effectiveness. A person who obtains such an order may yet have a well-founded fear that the order will be disobeyed. Paradoxically, fear of certain kinds of harm from other citizens can only be removed completely in a highly repressive society, and then it is likely to be replaced by fear of harm from the State.
20 In a separate judgment, McHugh J discussed at length the requirements of a well-founded fear of persecution. After dealing with state persecution, and state condemnation of persecution by others, his Honour said at [77]:
The case that presents most difficulty is one where harm to individuals for a Convention reason may come from any one or more of a widely dispersed group of individuals and the State is willing but is unable to prevent much of that harm from occurring. In societies divided by strongly held ethnic or religious views, it commonly happens that members of one group have a real chance of suffering harm - often violent harm - because of the pervasive but random acts of members of another group. Such harm occurs although the State makes every effort to prevent it. In such cases, it would be a misuse of language to say that the fear of persecution is not well-founded because the State has "a system of domestic protection and machinery for the detection, prosecution and punishment of actings contrary to the purposes which the Convention requires to have protected".
21 The quotation is from Horvath v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2001] 1 AC 489 at 510. At [78], McHugh J said:
If there is a real chance that the asylum seeker will be persecuted for a Convention reason, the fear of persecution is well-founded irrespective of whether law enforcement systems do or do not operate within the State.
22 At [79], his Honour pointed out that an asylum seeker would have to show more than that persons whose circumstances were similar were being persecuted. The asylum seeker would have to show that there is "a real chance that he or she will be one of the victims of that persecution." This might be done either by showing that the particular person has a greater chance of harm than other persons, or to show that a very high percentage of such persons are persecuted. At [83], his Honour said:
once the asylum seeker is able to show that there is a real chance that he or she will be persecuted, refugee status cannot be denied merely because the State and its agencies have taken all reasonable steps to eliminate the risk. Nothing in the Convention supports such a conclusion.
23 The remaining member of the High Court in S152/2003, Kirby J, discussed the issues but allowed the appeal without expressing a concluded view on the differences between the majority judgment and that of McHugh J. See the judgment of Kirby J at [111]-[112].
24 This examination of S152/2003 demonstrates that it is impossible to uphold the contention, put on behalf of the appellant in the present case, that the majority judgment in that case cannot be taken as an expression of the authoritative test to apply when the issue is whether the country of nationality of an applicant for a protection visa alleges that that country lacks the ability effectively to protect him or her from the harmful actions of non-state antagonists. By the time the case reached the High Court, it was a case about the adequacy of state protection. It had become such a case because the Full Court had held that the Tribunal had failed to deal with the ability of the Ukrainian Government to prevent future harm. The majority of the High Court allowed the appeal on the basis that the Tribunal had no evidence before it that would have justified a finding that the necessary state machinery of Ukraine fell below the required standard for protection of its citizens. The majority expressed this norm by reference to international standards, and made it clear that there is no requirement that a state provide absolute protection for its citizens. In the light of what the majority said, the view of McHugh J cannot be regarded as authoritative. In Applicant A99 of 2003 v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCA 773 (2004) 83 ALD 529 at [35]-[42], Mansfield J analysed S152/2003. It is clear that his Honour thought that the view expressed by the majority was authoritative. I respectfully share his Honour's view. Even if what the majority said could be characterised technically as obiter, it would be necessary to characterise the view of McHugh J in the same way. It would be a bold step for a judge of this Court, or a federal magistrate, and especially a Tribunal member, to ignore what the majority said in favour of adopting the view of McHugh J.
25 There can be no doubt that the Tribunal in the present case applied the test expressed by the majority in S152/2003. It specifically found that the appropriate level of protection was to be determined by international standards, and that the level of protection in the United Kingdom meets international standards. There was evidence before the Tribunal to justify this finding. Once it was reached, the Tribunal was bound to decide, as it did, that the appellant's fear of persecution was not well-founded. Even if in fact the appellant might come to harm at the hands of vigilantes in the United Kingdom, his unwillingness to avail himself of the protection of that country because the protection would not be absolute would not be sufficient to bring him within Art 1A(2) of the Convention.
26 The appellant has therefore failed to make good the only ground on which this appeal was conducted.