SZNNN v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
[2009] FCA 1371
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2009-12-11
Before
Kenny J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
INTRODUCTION 1 This is an appeal from a judgment of the Federal Magistrates Court delivered on 7 September 2009, dismissing an application for judicial review of a decision of the Refugee Review Tribunal ('the Tribunal'). At the hearing of the appeal, the Tribunal was added as a respondent: see SAAP v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2005) 228 CLR 294 at 324-325 [91]. I would dismiss the appeal for the reasons that follow. 2 Before detailing these reasons, however, I note by way of background that the Tribunal found that the appellant was a Ugandan national, who arrived in Australia on 6 July 2008 and lodged an application with the first respondent's Department for a protection visa on 15 August 2008. Essentially, the appellant claimed refugee status on the basis that she would be harmed in Uganda because the Ugandan authorities claimed that she collaborated with a rebel group called the People's Redemption Army ('PRA'). On 12 November 2008, a delegate of the first respondent refused her application. 3 On 19 December 2008, the appellant applied to the Tribunal for a review of the delegate's decision. The Tribunal affirmed the delegate's decision on 23 March 2009. The appellant filed an application for judicial review in the Federal Magistrates Court, which was heard on 20 August 2009 and dismissed on 7 September 2009.
APPELLANT'S CLAIMS AND EVIDENCE 4 In its reasons, the Tribunal described the appellant's claims and evidence, as they appeared from the Department's file and as stated before the Tribunal. In summary the appellant made the following claims: · From 2000 until September 2007, she lived and worked in Kasese with her uncle, a strong supporter of the Forum for Democratic Change ('FDC'). Her uncle campaigned for the FDC in the 2001 and 2006 presidential elections. The appellant stated that the FDC "is an opposition party that really fights for change and causes great concern to the government"; that the party's slogan is "Change"; and its emblem is a hammer. She identified the party's leader. · The appellant distributed flyers, t-shirts and posters for the FDC during the 2006 electoral campaign. About one week before the election, the police and military intelligence officers arrested her and her uncle and accused them of collaborating with the PRA. The officers detained and tortured the appellant and her uncle. Two men raped the appellant in front of her uncle. · The appellant was released after one week. She went to her mother's home in Fort Portal and stayed there for about two and a half months before returning to Kasese. · On 14 September 2007, her uncle escaped detention. Thereafter, government security agents repeatedly came to the appellant's residence in Kasese. On 25 September 2007, she was arrested and taken into custody. She was accused of helping her uncle escape, tortured and interrogated for two weeks. After two weeks, new guards arrived. Among these was one guard who "seemed a bit more human than the others". This guard released her at night and gave her directions to Fort Portal in exchange for her ATM card, which she had managed to keep with her. She reached Hema after walking all night and stayed with someone she knew. She then took a motorcycle taxi to Kivito and rented student accommodation for seven days before arriving at her mother's house in Fort Portal on 18 October 2007. · The appellant stayed in Fort Portal for some time, hiding at various residences. She then went to her grandmother's home in Kijule. After government security agents found out where she was living, her aunt arranged for her to leave the country and attend World Youth Day 2008 in Australia. The appellant fears that she will be arrested, detained and killed if she returns to Uganda. 5 The Tribunal asked the appellant several questions regarding certain aspects of her claims. Thus, the Tribunal asked the appellant why, after she had gone to her mother's house following her initial release from detention, she returned to Kasese, where she was in danger. The appellant stated that she returned because she needed to work. Regarding her claim that she travelled to her mother's house in Fort Portal following her escape from detention in 2007, the Tribunal asked the appellant why she did not first contact her mother to make sure that the authorities had not been looking for her at her mother's house. The appellant stated that the authorities thought she was in Kasese, and that neither her mother nor any of her other relatives had been questioned by the authorities. The Tribunal asked the appellant why she believed she was still of interest to the authorities despite the fact that they had not looked for her in such obvious places as the homes of close relatives. The appellant stated that the authorities would not have arrested her a second time if she was not of interest, and that they "work underground and take their time" and "have their own special way of doing things". She also stated that the authorities were looking for her in Kasese or Fort Portal. 6 The Tribunal questioned the appellant about her familiarity with the FDC. It asked her if the words "one Uganda, one people" were familiar. She said it was the slogan of the FDC. When the Tribunal asked the appellant why she had not mentioned the phrase earlier, she stated that "Change" was the FDC's main slogan, but the slogan was changed from time to time. The Tribunal indicated that the emblem of the FDC consisted of a key, a Ugandan flag, a blue flag, and the initials FDC, not a hammer. The appellant stated that Kasese was a small village, and people printed their own t-shirts, posters and flyers using their own emblems. She later stated that she was "not very deeply involved with the FDC". 7 The Tribunal also indicated to the appellant that it considered her claims "extremely similar" to those advanced by her sister in a separate Tribunal proceeding. I interpolate here that the appellant's sister also came to Australia in July 2008 and applied for a protection visa. As summarised in the Tribunal's reasons, the Tribunal said that both the appellant and her sister claimed that they were living in remote towns; both were living with someone who supported the FDC and as a result was suspected [o]f supporting a militant guerrilla group; their associates were both detained and escaped; the sisters were then detained but released with the help of a guard; [and] they went into hiding at the home of different relatives, who arranged for them to travel to World Youth Day. The appellant stated that she and her sister were "very unlucky and people in Uganda suffered like this all the time, you just had to be lucky to grab a chance". 8 On 20 February 2009, the Tribunal wrote to the appellant, inviting her to comment on aspects of her claims, specifically, the similarity between her account and that of her sister; her apparent lack of familiarity with the FDC despite her claim to have distributed FDC flyers, posters and t-shirts; the inconsistency between her return to Kasese following her release from detention in 2006 and her claimed fear of persecution; and the inconsistency between the lack of attention from the authorities following her claimed escape and her claimed fear of persecution. 9 In a response received by the Tribunal on 16 March 2009, the appellant stated: · In Uganda, it is not uncommon for entire families to belong to the same political party. Her family was associated with the FDC. · The majority of the Ugandan population is rural, and the government's strategy is to "indoctrinate the Ugandan rural populations who have little access to information about governance and development". For this reason, "[t]he few from the rural areas who had the chance to go to school and live in the other parts of Uganda . . . and who are against the government are harshly silenced by the government machineries". The appellant and her sister are both from rural Uganda, and both were supporters of the FDC. The letter stated that "we took a lead in the campaign and every political activity for the FDC in my village". · The FDC does not make an effort to inform its rural Ugandan supporters of its logo. Rather, information about the party is communicated through "a picture of the FDC president and the slogan of two fingers up". Even very active rural supporters of the FDC pay little attention to the symbol for the FDC. Most rural supporters do not have membership cards or "written formal recommendations from the party on the party's letter head". The FDC website to which the Tribunal referred at the hearing is directed to those outside Uganda. · Arrests are common in Uganda "because of the circumstances surrounding political crimes in the country". People are often detained because their relatives have escaped from prison, particularly if the relatives are close. · It was "very easy to escape from the detention of the captors simply because arrests are arbitrary - no records are maintained, the officials can easily be corrupted". Escapees who are re-arrested are killed to cover up the fact that their captors accepted bribes to aid their escape. · The appellant knew it was very risky to return to Kasese after her first arrest but returned knowingly. She and her family "took it for granted" that "the situation [would] normalize", and she needed to raise money to pay for medical expenses and subsistence. · The military operatives in Uganda have a very extensive spy network in rural areas, and hiding at a relative's residence is not safe, unless the relative lives in a distant area where the network is limited. When this spy network fails, the military operatives "decide to pick on the relatives". They "do not just visit to inquire about a missing prisoner, but they just invade the family". The spy network was limited where the appellant was hiding with relatives in Fort Portal, but the situation was still risky.