Was there an independent basis for affirming the delegate's decision apart from relocation?
76 The Minister contended in written submissions filed on 7 August 2012 that the Tribunal's finding in relation to relocation was an independent basis for its decision, "separate from the principal conclusion that the Appellant had no well-founded fear in his home province which [the Minister] submits has not been shown to be affected by error". In further written submissions, the Minister went further and submitted that the sole basis for the Tribunal's decision was its finding that "in his home area of Chittagong, Barua Buddhists (such as the Appellant) do not face a real chance of persecution, and the Appellant could return to live in that area". At the hearing of the appeal, the Minister acknowledged that the Tribunal made no express finding in these terms but submitted that this was "the only reading that makes sense".
77 The appellant, on the other hand, contended in written submissions that the Tribunal's conclusion that "Barua Buddhists did not face a real chance of persecution in the Chittagong area did not provide an alternate and independent ground for affirming the delegate's decisions such that the Tribunal's exercise of power was not affected". The appellant sought to distinguish his case from SZMCD v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2009) 174 FCR 415 ('SZMCD'), to which the Minister had referred.
78 I accept the appellant's submission that his case should be distinguished from SZMCD. First, the latter case primarily concerned the interaction of ss 424AA and 424A of the Migration Act, which are not relied on here. Second, the relocation issue in SZMCD arose in a different context from that in which the issue arises here. In SZMCD, the appellant argued that jurisdictional error arose because the Tribunal failed to consider "whether, if the appellant were to relocate within Pakistan, he would continue to behave in a way which might attract similar persecution from different Islamic fundamentalists". Tracey and Foster JJ held that the Tribunal made "definite" conclusions about the appellant's lack of credibility such that "[s]trictly speaking, there was no need for the Tribunal to consider the possibility of relocation once this finding was made"; and that it "moved on to consider the question of relocation" as "a separate and independent reason for declining to overturn the delegate's decision": see SZMCD at 437-438 [117], [119]. Accordingly, their Honours held (at 438 [120]-[122]) that:
In these circumstances, any error which the Tribunal might have committed in making this finding did not go to its jurisdiction. …
The Tribunal's discussion of relocation in the present case did not affect the Tribunal's exercise of power in the sense discussed in …Craig [v South Australia (2005)] 184 CLR 163 [at 179]. Having found that the appellant was not a person to whom Australia owed protection obligations and having done so in definite terms, it had no choice other than to affirm the delegate's decision.
In truth, the relocation findings provided an alternative and independent ground for affirming the delegate's decision.
79 In the present case, the Tribunal's stated finding that "Barua Buddhists did not face a real chance of persecution in the Chittagong area" did not definitely dispose of the matter. This was because it did not in terms address the appellant's primary claim that he had a well-founded fear of persecution as part of the Buddhist minority in Bangladesh. This claim was one of persecution as a Buddhist across the whole of Bangladesh. Furthermore, the Tribunal made no finding that Chittagong was the appellant's home area. Nor did the Tribunal make any other finding as to the appellant's home area or lack of one. The Tribunal therefore failed to find that the appellant was not a person to whom Australia owed obligations "in definitive terms", either because he would be "safe" in the relevant sense in a "home area" or "throughout the country". In this way, the finding as to Barua Buddhists in the Chittagong area was incomplete and, as such, unable to provide an independent basis for the Tribunal's decision.
80 Had the Tribunal found that the appellant did not face a real chance of harm in Bangladesh as a whole or in his home region, then such a finding or findings would have provided a complete basis for a decision that that the appellant was not a person to whom Australia owed protection under the Refugees Convention. If, as this Court has said on many occasions, such a finding had been made (after raising any necessary issue with the appellant: see below, e.g., [88], [92]) then the Tribunal would have discharged the statutory task imposed on it by the Migration Act and the Regulations: see [14] above. In this case, however, the Tribunal did not make such a finding or findings.
81 In recent years the concept of a 'home area' or 'home region' has become an increasingly important, but also an increasingly complicated terrain for a decision-maker to travel (be it the original decision-maker or the Tribunal on merits review). The authorities mentioned at [74] above show the importance of determining a home area in a case like the present one and the significance of that finding for protection visa applicants. The following passage from the judgment of Yates J in SZQEN v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2012) 202 FCR 514 ('SZQEN'), to which the Minister referred, is illustrative of this. His Honour said (at 523 [38]):
I propose to apply the statement of principle in Randhawa by Black CJ (at 440-441) which plainly proceeds on the basis that the relocation principle concerns relocation from a claimant's home region to another place in the claimant's country of nationality that is not the claimant's home region. This position is supported by the United Kingdom authorities to which I have referred. In proceeding on this basis I do not think that the reference in cases to "home region" or "home area" (or similar expressions) is to be given a narrow or restrictive meaning to refer, for example, only to the place where the claimant happens to be living at the time of the feared persecution, or that a "home region" or "home area" is necessarily limited to one location if similar and substantial ties exist at another location that would also appropriately characterise that location as a "home region" or "home area" of the claimant. Whether such ties exist and whether a particular location can be appropriately characterised as a "home region" or "home area" are matters of fact.
Since whether a particular location is appropriately characterised as a "home region" or "home area" is a factual matter, it is a matter that the decision-maker can and, in a case such as the present, must determine: see [121] below. In SZQEN, the relocation principle had no application because the reviewer positively and expressly found (as was also the case in SZMCD mentioned earlier) that Jaghori (in Afghanistan) was the visa applicant's home district and that he had no well-founded fear of persecution in that place: SZQEN at 523 [39].
82 The relevant analysis is further complicated by the fact that not only is it possible that a protection visa applicant may have more than one home region, it is also possible that a person in exile for reasons of alleged persecution may not have any home area within their country of nationality at all: see, for example, SZQZN v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2012] FMCA 939 ('SZQZN') at [49]; compare SZRKY v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2012) 132 ALD 525 at [24]-[25] (appeal dismissed in SZRKY v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2013] FCA 352).
83 At the hearing, the Minister submitted that a finding that Chittagong was the appellant's home area was necessarily implicit in the Tribunal's decision because "there was no other part of Bangladesh that could be his home area on the facts" and later that "there was no other possible area that could be said to be his home area". The Minister submitted that this was so because of the "facts of where his village is" (that is, where he was born and dwelt with his family until aged 4), "where the mother's village was" (that is, where the appellant dwelt for only the shortest of times before being placed in an orphanage elsewhere) and "where the orphanage was" (that is, where he had lived without family and while still a boy, having left over ten years previously).
84 To bolster this inference, the Minister rejected the possibility that a visa applicant might not have a home area. At the hearing of the appeal, in response to the contrary proposition, the Minister's counsel replied:
Well, the difficulty - [is] - that it would be make applying the Refugees Convention very difficult if - I mean, it would be a very unusual situation because then one would have to say does he have - well, what do you do?
Reference to the difficulty of applying the law to an unusual or novel state of affairs cannot sensibly be a valid reason to conclude that that situation cannot occur in fact, especially when the law is constantly responding to meet such situations. Furthermore, this 'reasoning' (if that is what it is) cannot justify an inference that a finding as to the appellant's home area was in fact made, when it was not. I would reject this part of the Minister's argument. It is, moreover, clear enough that circumstances may arise in which a protection visa applicant may have no 'home area' or 'home region'.
85 It is possible that the Minister intended to submit that, in law, a home area must be found to exist or be deemed in some way to exist by the Tribunal because the operation of the Refugees Convention somehow mandates a finding of that nature. I would, however, also reject that submission. The Refugees Convention does no such thing: see SZATV at 25 [19] citing Januzi v Secretary of State for Home Department [2006] 2 AC 426 at 440; SZQZN at [49], [53], [88].
86 Clearly, in order for the Tribunal to find that the appellant was not a person to whom Australia owed protection obligations on the basis that he did not face a real chance of persecution in his home area, a finding of a home area had to be made. It was not. The Minister did not submit at any point that the Tribunal had made a finding that the applicant could safely reside in Chittagong without it being his home area (as apparently contemplated in SZQZN). Whilst it is well-accepted that the reasons of an administrative tribunal must not be "scrutinised upon over-zealous judicial review by seeking to discern whether some inadequacy may be gleaned from the way in which the reasons are expressed" (Minister for Immigration & Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang (1996) 185 CLR 259 at 272 (Brennan CJ, Toohey, McHugh, Gummow JJ), the issue in this case is not one of inadequate expression that can be remedied by an obvious or sensible reading. Further, while it is perhaps unnecessary to highlight, the fair or beneficial reading to be given to reasons of the Tribunal must be undertaken against the fundamental reality that the Tribunal is obliged by the Migration Act to "set out its finding on those questions of fact which it considered to be material to the decision which it made and to the reasons it had for reaching that decision": Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323 ('Yusuf') at 346 [68]. Since the Tribunal made no finding about the appellant's home area, it may also be inferred, to the contrary of the Minister's submissions, that it did not regard the facts (whatever it would have found them to be) as material to its decision. In the circumstances, as outlined below, this militates in favour of the appellant's case that there has been jurisdictional error: see Yusuf at 331 [10] (Gleeson CJ); 338 [35], 340 [44] (Gaudron J); 346 [69] (McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ). See also [120]-[122] below.
87 The inference that the Tribunal did not consider the facts about the appellant's home area to be material and therefore made no finding about it is fortified by the absence of reference to 'home area', 'home region' or equivalent in the Tribunal's reasons for decision. There is mention of the appellant's reference to his 'homeland', signifying a reference to Bangladesh, but no more than this. Nor did the Tribunal make mention of a 'home area' or 'home region' in the hearing conducted by it, as evidenced by the transcript of the hearing. Bearing these circumstances in mind and the personal circumstances of the appellant (as the Tribunal found them), including that he was an orphan who passed most of his childhood in an orphanage and had been peripatetic for much of his life since then, it is not possible to infer from the simplicity or obviousness of the factual matrix (since the appellant's connection to the Chittagong area was not simple or obvious), the language used in the Tribunal's reasons (which is far from clear and, in any event, interspersed, as the Minister accepts, with references to relocation in connection with Chittagong) or from some necessary implication of law or fact (of which there was none: see above at [85]) that the Tribunal found that the appellant had a home area or, more importantly, that "Chittagong" was it. In such a circumstance, the reading advocated by the Minister would not be one of inference, but would fall closer to "an exercise of divination of the sort s 430 was designed to avoid": Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZLSP (2010) 187 FCR 362 at 380 [55].
88 The task of finding whether or not a particular area in Bangladesh was the appellant's 'home area' was complicated by the appellant's particular circumstances. These circumstances indicated numerous possibilities, including the city or some other area referred to as Chittagong (such as Chittagong division or Chittagong province or some other area), or parts of Chittagong in the SZQEN sense (such as the Chittagong plain or the Chittagong hills) or an area surrounding Chittagong generally (as the "next best thing" to a home area); alternatively, that the appellant was without a home area. As already indicated, no finding about these matters can be inferred from the Tribunal's reasons. A finding as to any one of these possibilities may have raised different questions for the Tribunal to consider, including potentially those highlighted in SZQEN relating to "substantial ties". The Tribunal's reasons addressed none of these questions specifically.
89 At the close of the hearing, counsel for the Minister sought to draw my attention to paragraph [19] of the Federal Magistrate's reasons for judgment where his Honour said:
The tribunal found it could be reasonable for him to live in Bangladesh in the Chittagong area, albeit not his old village nor the village where his mother is living.
90 While this is what the Tribunal found, it does nothing to clear up whether the Tribunal made this finding on the basis of the appellant's home area, the next best thing to a home area or, as discussed below, on the basis of some kind of "reasonable relocation" or some curious amalgam of each of them where questions of persecution and reasonableness remained live.
91 For these reasons, I would reject the Minister's submission that there was an independent basis for affirming the delegate's decision apart from relocation. The absence of any finding about the appellant's home area (including lack of it) precludes this possibility.
92 The Minister did not attempt to argue that the Tribunal's decision might stand on the basis that the appellant had "no home area" and, in consequence, the mere location of a "safe area" would be determinative of his claim. Had such a submission been made, I would have rejected it. Not only were there no findings made by the Tribunal that would provide an adequate foundation for this reading of the Tribunal's decision, but also the question whether the appellant had "no home area" was never raised with him by either the Tribunal or the delegate. Any argument of this kind would therefore suffer from the same flaws that attended the alternate independent basis for which the Minister in fact argued: see above. Further, there would be a question as to whether the mere location of a "safe area" could have determined the appellant's claim in any event.