The procedure
9 The present issue may be traced back to a submission to the present Reviewer dated 7 May 2012 by the appellant's solicitors and registered migration agents. It was said there that the first Reviewer's decision stemmed from his disbelief of the appellant's claim of having been arrested by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) and taken to the fourth floor of its headquarters and then detained and tortured. This formed the appellant's central claim, it was submitted. The first Reviewer's rejection of most of the other claims of the appellant, it was submitted, flowed from the refusal to believe the central claim.
10 But now, it was said in the submission, the appellant had, through lawyers in Sri Lanka, received documentary evidence in this connection which had not earlier been available. Had this evidence been produced at the earlier forums, the solicitors and registered migration agents submitted, the decision would most likely have been different. They submitted that the appellant was detained by the CID and beaten and tortured by the officers there. After five days he was produced in the Chief Magistrate's Court, Hultsdorph, Colombo 12. He and other detainees were remanded and put in the remand prison at Welikade in Colombo. He was produced in Court which ordered his release but imposed a condition that he should report to the CID each month for the next six months.
11 The solicitors and registered migration agents forwarded documentary evidence, being a certified copy (in Sinhalese) of the report (information) filed by the police with the Chief Magistrate's Court of Colombo under the relevant sections of the Criminal Procedure Code, having a specified case number, producing 39 suspects alleged to have come for destructive activities planned by the Tamil terrorist movement in the Akuressa division where they were secretly residing and were arrested, kept in detention by the Terrorist Investigation Division and then produced in the Chief Magistrate's Court, Hultsdorph, Colombo 12 under the relevant Emergency Regulations.
12 A certified English translation of the document was also attached. It was said the appellant's name appeared against number 15 in the list of suspects produced to the Court. It was said his name had been wrongly spelt in Sinhala - the wrong spelling and the correct spelling were given, the wrong spelling containing an "ri" instead of "iva" in a nine or ten letter name. It was submitted the mistake in the spelling of the name may even be due to a typographical error. It was submitted that the police did not take care to write the names properly or to give full names or give the national identity card numbers or the addresses to properly identify the so-called suspects. It was submitted that if any doubt was entertained regarding the document, the solicitors and registered migration agents urged that the Australian High Commission in Colombo be requested to kindly verify the veracity of the document through its legal sources. It was submitted that the appellant himself was willing and prepared to assist in whatever way he could in this endeavour. The document was date stamped 23 June 2011.
13 At the hearing conducted by the Reviewer on 9 May 2012 the Reviewer asked questions about the document and in particular the date of it in June 2011 when that was not a time the appellant was in Sri Lanka but was in Australia. The appellant said that his father went there in June 2011 to get the receipt. When asked about why he was presenting it today when his father had got it in June 2011 the appellant said that when he had his first review the agent did not ask him about any receipts that he had "to do with the courts". On being questioned about the document, it appears that the appellant could provide very little information about its contents because it was, for the most part, in Sinhalese and the appellant said he did not read any Sinhalese at all. The parts of the document which were in English were said to be no more than translations of the earlier pages which were in Sinhalese.
14 The appellant was asked by the Reviewer why he continued to live and work in Colombo for another year if he was having problems with the CID in 2006. He said he thought after six months during which he had to "return and sign", his problems with the CID might come to an end but they did not.
15 The appellant was asked who would harm him and why, if he were to return to Sri Lanka. The Reviewer put to the appellant that given the CID released him from the court without charge and he had completed his reporting period that would suggest he was no longer of interest to them. All of that occurred in 2006 and it was now 2012.
16 In the context of whether the appellant had a risk profile as a person suspected of having links with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), the Reviewer said that the appellant had said he had no links whatsoever with the LTTE and when he was taken in by the CID in 2006 he said in his own words that he went to the court and he was released with no charge solely on the basis that he had a requirement to report for six months. The Reviewer suggested that based on the appellant's evidence it would appear that he did not fit one of the risk profiles identified by the UNHCR.
17 The Reviewer said again, "Given that the court released you in 2006 after [they] questioned you and according to your evidence [they] interrogated you in … this area … on the… fourth floor of the building where they interrogated suspect Tamil Tigers, given that you went through that and they gave you a clearance, they released you from the court without charge, only on the condition that you report monthly, go back to your business, report monthly and there was nothing after that, that would suggest you are not of interest to the authorities on the basis of being a suspected LTTE."
18 There were further questions and answers as to why the CID came after the appellant in the first place.
19 In the Reviewer's statement of reasons at [42] the Reviewer noted that the document had been faxed and at [44] recorded the questions and answers at the interview particularly as to the date of the document in June 2011. At [48]-[49] and [60], the Reviewer set out further material put by the appellant about the CID and about why the CID came after him in the first place and why the CID would harm him now.
20 At [84], the Reviewer said that she did not find the appellant to be a reliable, credible or truthful witness. The Reviewer considered inconsistencies between the appellant's evidence on central issues like his alleged arrest by the CID as a Tamil suspect to be of a different order from the kinds of confusion or inconsistencies the UNHCR Handbook suggests decision-makers should not give too much weight to.
21 At [88], the Reviewer said that she did not accept that the appellant was arrested and interrogated by the CID on suspicion of being a LTTE operative or supporter. At [89], the Reviewer said that the appellant's profile as a long-standing businessman in Colombo and the inconsistent and implausible account of what took place when he lodged his visa application did not support his claim that it resulted in the CID arresting him. The Reviewer said she was satisfied that the appellant did not come to the attention of the CID because he was a LTTE suspect after applying for an Australian visa through a Sinhalese Minister or any other agent. The Reviewer therefore found that the appellant was not arrested and interrogated by the CID after he lodged an application for an Australian visa. She did not accept that the appellant was forced to sign a statement saying he was a terrorist. She did not accept that the appellant suffered cruel and "inhumane" treatment from the CID and that he was produced in court on concocted charges of LTTE activity. Accordingly, the reviewer did not accept that the appellant was placed on reporting conditions and experienced harassment and extortion from police.
22 The paragraph of the Reviewer's statement of reasons central to this appeal was as follows:
[90] I do not consider that the copies of what are said to be extracts from a report filed by police with a court in Columbo (together with translations) recording that 39 suspects (including the claimant with his name [sic] was spelt differently) were charged and detained for destructive activities planned by the Tamil terrorist movement, in the Akuressa division, where they were secretly hiding, outweigh the problems I have with the claimant's own evidence which I have outlined above. The claimant said he did not produce these documents at an earlier stage even though his father purportedly obtained them in June 2011. The agent invited the Reviewer to request the Australian High Commission to confirm the authenticity of these documents. I accept that they would confirm what is in the documents but in light of the above findings I do not accept that the documents relate to this claimant and give them no weight. I find that claimant [sic] was not persecuted by the CID because he was a Tamil suspect.
23 At [92] the Reviewer said that given her finding that the appellant did not come to the attention of the CID prior to his departure, she did not accept that the CID had visited his family and asked about his whereabouts nor did she accept that the CID had requested he report to them if he returns to Sri Lanka. The Reviewer found there was no real chance that the appellant will be persecuted by the CID or other Sri Lankan authorities because he was a Tamil suspect now or in the reasonably foreseeable future if he returns to Sri Lanka.