Ground 1: Consideration
10 I am of opinion that the following propositions emerge from their Honours' analysis in Respondents S152 222 CLR 1. First, their Honours said that, in cases of alleged persecution by non-State agents, the willingness and ability of the State to discharge its obligations to protect its citizens may be relevant to consider at three stages of the enquiry raised by Art 1A(2), namely whether: (1) a person's fear is well founded, (2) the conduct giving rise to the fear is persecution and (3) a person, such as the appellant, is unable or, owing to fear of persecution, unwilling to avail himself of the protection of his home State (222 CLR at 9 [21]).
11 Secondly, a refugee claimant must show that he or she is unwilling to avail himself of the diplomatic or consular protection of his country extended to its citizens abroad. Their Honours explained that the two limbs of Art 1A(2) of the Convention involve first, an unwillingness of the refugee claimant to seek his or her nation's protection using diplomatic or consular processes in Australia and, secondly, that the unwillingness was owing to a fear of persecution. The second limb requires that the persecution feared is official, or officially tolerated or uncontrolled by the authorities in the State of the claimant's nationality (222 CLR at 8 [19]).
12 Their Honours said that the context in which Art 1A(2) used the word "persecuted" shed light on its meaning. They held that the immediate context was that a putative refugee, who was outside the country of his or her nationality, could make a claim for "protection" to his State's diplomatic mission in the State where he or she then was, such as Australia. Gleeson CJ, Hayne and Heydon JJ then referred to the wider context in which such a claim could be made as instructive to the construction of Art 1A(2). Their Honours observed that the Convention was an international instrument that defined and limited the form of international responsibility towards a person whose fundamental rights and freedoms had been violated in a certain respect in that person's country of nationality. They accepted that the wider sense in which "protection" was used in Art 1A(2) involved what Lord Hope of Craighead indicated in Horvath v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2001] 1 AC 489 at 495, namely:
"The general purpose of the Convention is to enable a person who no longer has the benefit of protection against persecution for a Convention reason in his own country to turn for protection to the international community."
Gleeson CJ, Hayne and Heydon JJ then went on to say in the passage on which the appellant founded his argument (222 CLR at 9 [21]):
"Having regard to both the immediate and the wider context, a majority of the House of Lords in Horvath took the view that, in a case of alleged persecution by non-State agents, the willingness and ability of the State to discharge its obligation to protect its citizens may be relevant at three stages of the enquiry raised by Art 1A(2). It may be relevant to whether the fear is well-founded; and to whether the conduct giving rise to the fear is persecution; and to whether a person such as the first respondent in this case is unable, or, owing to fear of persecution, is unwilling, to avail himself of the protection of his home State. Lord Hope of Craighead quoted with approval a passage from the judgment of Hale LJ in the Court of Appeal in Horvath ([2001] 1 AC 489 at 497) where she said, in relation to the sufficiency of State protection against the acts of non-State agents:
"[I]f it is sufficient, the applicant's fear of persecution by others will not be 'well-founded'; if it is insufficient, it may turn the acts of others into persecution for a Convention reason; in particular it may supply the discriminatory element in the persecution meted out by others; again if it is insufficient, it may be the reason why the applicant is unable, or if it amounts to persecution unwilling, to avail himself of the protection of his home State."" (emphasis added)
13 If the harm feared is not harm inflicted by the State, or agents of the State of the nationality of the putative refugee, but that State condones or tolerates the harm, then that conduct may readily be characterised as persecution and identified as the reason the person in question is outside his or her country of nationality. Their Honours added (222 CLR at 10-11 [23]):
"The attitude of the State is relevant to the decision of whether the fear of harm is well founded. It is consistent with the possibility that there is persecution. It is consistent with the person being outside the country of nationality because of a well founded fear of persecution and it supports a conclusion of unwillingness to seek (external) protection based on the fear of persecution because of the State's encouragement, condonation or tolerance of the persecution."
14 On the other hand, where the harm feared consists of random or uncoordinated attacks and there is no question that the government or the country was out of control, different considerations arise. As their Honours observed (222 CLR at 11 [25]-[26]), no country can guarantee that all its citizens, at all times, and in all circumstances will be safe from violence. Indeed, as they pointed out, every day in Australia our Courts deal with criminal cases involving violent attacks on persons and property. In conclusion, their Honours said (222 CLR at 13 [29]):
"It was not enough for the first respondent to show that there was a real risk that, if he returned to his country he might suffer further harm. He had to show that the harm was persecution and he had to justify his unwillingness to seek the protection of his country of nationality." (emphasis added)
15 Importantly, their Honours observed that not all harm or serious harm inflicted by a person's fellow citizens necessarily will amount to persecution within the meaning of "refugee" in the Convention (222 CLR at 8 [18]). The definition required that a putative refugee, outside his or her country of nationality, had to be unwilling to return to that country owing to a well founded fear of persecution that was official, or officially tolerated or uncontrollable by that country's authorities (222 CLR at [19]).
16 The reviewer made findings of fact that (1) Malistan was entirely populated by Hazars; (2) it was out of the reach of Taliban control, albeit due to the military and political power of the faction; (3) there had been no reported clashes between the Taliban and the faction; (4) the Taliban had not taken any steps to challenge the faction or any other groups in control of the Malistan district; (5) Malistan was safe and relatively stable compared to other places in the Ghanzi Province; and (6) there were no reports about Taliban attacks in Malistan. Accordingly, the reviewer was not satisfied that, because he was an Hazara Shia, the appellant faced a real chance of serious harm amounting to persecution if he returned to his village in Malistan.
17 Earlier, in the course of rejecting the appellant's claims to past persecution, the reviewer did not accept that, by reason of the appellant's ethnicity and religion, he faced a real chance of harm amounting to persecution by the Taliban. In arriving at that finding, the reviewer relied on a deal of country information. This included advice from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade given in February 2010 which the reviewer accepted, namely that while there "are strong perceptions of discrimination and a sense that development needs in the Hazarajat are being neglected, the Hazara do not live in fear of "systematic persecution as they did under the Taliban, and that currently Hazaras are not being persecuted on any consistent basis"."
18 The willingness of the State to provide its citizens with protection may be relevant in the three circumstances to which Gleeson CJ, Hayne and Heydon JJ referred in Respondents S152 222 CLR at 9 [21]. I am of opinion that their Honours' explanation of the three stages of the inquiry raised by Art 1A(2) at which the willingness or ability of the State to discharge its protection obligations could be relevant, however, was not intended to mandate that in every case, and at each of the three stages, it was relevant. Their Honours identified, by using the word "may", whether such an inquiry was actually relevant would depend on the facts.
19 The reviewer's finding that the appellant's claimed fear was not well-founded was a finding of fact. She addressed that inquiry in a conventional way by asking herself whether there was a real chance that the appellant would be persecuted for a Convention reason if he returned to Malistan. No doubt he was unwilling to return. The reviewer was entitled, and bound, to make findings about whether or not the appellant faced a real chance of persecution. She had to do so in the context in which she had found that the stable and unthreatening political and military situation in Malistan would not change for Hazaras there in the foreseeable future. Once the reviewer had arrived at those findings, any inquiry as to the role of the Afghan State in protecting that peace in Malistan did not arise. That is because the reviewer had found that the situation in Malistan posed no threat to the appellant that gave rise to a well founded fear of persecution. Thus, she found that the appellant had not shown that the harm he feared was persecution: Respondents S152 222 CLR at 13 [29].
20 Australia's obligation to offer a putative refugee protection does not extend to protect him or her against a State that may or may not have broken down. It is only to afford protection if the person has a well-founded fear of persecution where the State in which the person lived was unable or unwilling to provide that person with protection from such a fear. In my opinion, once the appellant's claimed fear was found by the reviewer not to be well-founded, then there was no occasion, for the reviewer to go on to inquire about whether the Afghan State would be able or willing to offer particular protection from an unfounded fear.
21 Such an inquiry would only arise if the appellant had a well-founded fear that if he returned to Malistan he would be persecuted for the reasons that he claimed. For the reasons I have explained above, the reviewer found that the appellant's fear of persecution was not well-founded. Australia's protection obligations could not be enlivened without the appellant having a well-founded fear of persecution. I am of opinion, the trial judge was correct to treat this as a finding of fact. In Siaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2001] FCA 953 at [7] Sundberg J came to a similar conclusion saying:
"The political composition of those who are keeping the peace and making an area secure is not relevant to the assessment of whether an applicant has a well-founded fear."
22 His Honour observed that a similar view had been taken by Spender, Marshall and Goldberg JJ in Cole v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2001] FCA 76 at [17]-[18]. Obviously, those decisions ante-dated the decision of the High Court in Respondents S152 222 CLR 1. However, subsequently in SVTB v Minister for Immigration, Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2005] FCAFC 104 at [23] Marshall, Mansfield and Stone JJ applied Respondents S152 222 CLR 1. In that case, their Honours observed that the Refugee Review Tribunal had rejected an appellant's claim that she feared sexual assault or other criminal behaviour by reason of her membership of a particular social group as not being well-founded. They said:
"The issue of state protection was then simply an additional reason for the Tribunal's conclusion in relation to that fear."
23 They noted that the tribunal had found that there was a serious problem with violence directed against women in Albania. But, their Honours concluded that that finding was simply that the appellant had been at no greater risk of sexual assault or other criminal conduct by reason of her being a single woman in Albania without male protection than any other Albanian woman, concluding:
"In other words, [the tribunal] did not accept that she was vulnerable to such conduct by reason of her membership of a particular social group."
24 Here, the reviewer rejected both the appellant's claims to have a well-founded fear of persecution by reason of the past, as well as the future, as justifying his fear of returning. The reason that the reviewer found that his fear was not well-founded was because the source of the fear - the Taliban - had no real capacity to act within the Malistan area so as to cause harm to the appellant. The reviewer found as a fact that people in that area could go about their daily lives without fear. Accordingly, the issue of State protection was not a matter which the reviewer was obliged to take into account. No error has been shown in the trial judge's rejection of this argument.
25 For these reasons, the first ground fails.