the federal magistrates court
18 In his review application, the appellant relied on the following four grounds:
1. The Tribunal failed to accord procedural fairness:
(a) The Tribunal erred in law amounting to jurisdictional error in finding that my family members were harassed and threatened to be killed by fundamentalist Muslims and I was also kidnapped and that I did not face harm for my religious belief. The Tribunal found that there is no real chance that I shall be harmed for the reason of my membership of a particular social group as a Buddhist monk.
(b) The Tribunal failed to find that I faced significant harassment prior to my departure from Sri Lanka though I provided several documents to the Tribunal which clearly establish that I was persecuted in Bangladesh for my religious belief and the Tribunal made errors of law amounting to jurisdictional error.
2. The Tribunal failed to take into consideration the letter from Ven. Mahathero and the letter from Ven. Pariponno at the time of decision and made an error in law amounting to jurisdictional error.
3. The Tribunal failed to consider me as a credible witness and ignored the documents I submitted to the Tribunal in support of my claims and made errors amounting to jurisdictional error
4. The Tribunal member failed to consider the disappearance of my father and his initiative to lead protest against the Muslim oppression to our community members and also found that I shall face societal discrimination in Bangladesh as Buddhist but I will not be harmed amounting to persecution for my religious belief and refused my claim. The Tribunal made error in law amounting to jurisdictional error.
19 On 12 September 2011 the appellant filed an affidavit sworn by him on that date, which, amongst other things, contained additional complaints about the Tribunal's decision. On 28 September 2011, the appellant was given leave to file an amended application, but the appellant did not subsequently file an amended application or any other document in the Federal Magistrates Court.
20 The appellant appeared in person at the final hearing, assisted by an interpreter. The Federal Magistrate delivered judgment on 5 April 2012.
21 The Federal Magistrate's reasons included a summary of the appellant's claims, the delegate's decision, the Tribunal's decision and the proceedings in the Federal Magistrates Court. His Honour stated that the appellant's submissions "sought only to assert 'the truth' of what he had told the Tribunal, and to therefore challenge the Tribunal's factual findings, including the findings as to credibility". His Honour concluded that:
Given that the Tribunal's findings were all reasonably open to it on what was before it, and for which it gave cogent reasons probative of the evidence, the applicant's submissions did not rise above a request for impermissible merits review.
22 The Federal Magistrate considered and dismissed the grounds of review relied on by the appellant for the following reasons.
1. The first assertion relevant to the procedural fairness ground (Ground 1(a)) sought to cavil with the Tribunal's factual findings and disclosed no jurisdictional error.
2. The second assertion relevant to the procedural fairness ground (Ground 1(b)) challenged the Tribunal's treatment of the appellant's evidence, especially its treatment of the letters of support from religious leaders. The Federal Magistrate considered the Tribunal's treatment of those documents in the context of Ground 2 and found that no jurisdictional error was made in respect of them. In substance, his Honour found that the appellant was seeking impermissible merits review.
3. Turning to the relevant consideration ground (Ground 2), the Federal Magistrate noted, first, that at the final hearing the appellant had claimed that the letters in question were 'real'. His Honour also found that the Tribunal had considered the letters from the religious leaders and accepted that they were authentic, but had identified concerns with their contents. The Federal Magistrate accepted that the weight to be accorded to evidence is a matter for the Tribunal, citing WAEE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2003) 75 ALD 630.
4. The Federal Magistrate found that the credibility ground (Ground 3) was no more than a challenge to the Tribunal's findings of fact.
5. The Federal Magistrate characterised the disappearance of family ground (Ground 4) as alleging that the Tribunal had failed to consider the claim, and determined that the Tribunal did not commit any such error.
23 Finally, as the first respondent observed this afternoon, the Federal Magistrate also considered each of the additional complaints raised by the appellant in his affidavit and concluded that no jurisdictional error arose from them. As his Honour could not otherwise discern any jurisdictional error in the Tribunal's approach, the appellant's review application was dismissed with costs.