SZQRD v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship
[2012] FCA 874
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2012-08-20
Before
Nicholas J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT 1 This is an appeal from a decision of a Federal Magistrate (Raphael FM) delivered on 24 February 2012 dismissing the appellants' application for judicial review of a decision of the Refugee Review Tribunal (the Tribunal) dated 24 August 2011. 2 The first appellant appeared for himself and the third and fourth appellants at the hearing of the appeal. He did not appear on behalf of the second appellant. There was no appearance for the second appellant at the hearing of the appeal. 3 The first respondent sought an order appointing the first appellant as litigation representative of the third and fourth appellants (who are minors) pursuant to Rule 9.63 of the Federal Court Rules. I propose to make that order which will operate with effect from the date of the commencement of the appeal, viz 15 March 2012. I will also make an order dispensing with the requirements of Rule 9.63(2) and (3).
BACKGROUND FACTS AND THE claims before THE TRIBUNAL 4 The appellants are citizens of India who arrived in Australia on 25 December 2010. On 4 February 2011 the first appellant, the husband of the second appellant, applied for a protection visa. In his application the first appellant nominated his wife and their son and daughter, who are the third and fourth appellants respectively, as family members. 5 The Tribunal's reasons for decision give a detailed account of the first appellant's claims. According to his original application the first appellant was born in 1967 in Gujarat, India into a traditional Muslim family. In his application he stated that he was a Sunni Muslim. He married the second appellant in July 1995 in Gujarat. His first child was born in 1996 and his second child in 2001. Both the children were given Hindu names. 6 In his application, the first appellant gave an account of various incidents that occurred from 1974 to 1976 and again from 1984 to 1994. During these periods there were communal riots in Gujarat, and the first appellant and his family had to move out of Gujarat into a safer region. His uncle was killed during one of the communal riots and the first appellant's studies at high school and college were disrupted. The first appellant claimed that in July or August 1987, following his election to the position of General Secretary to the student wing of the Congress Party, he was "kidnapped" by members of the BJP and its student supporters, and threatened with physical harm if he did not give up his position at the college. The first appellant claimed that, as a result of the threats made by the student wing of the BJP, he was forced to leave college and cease his studies for about four years. 7 During that four year period he supported the Congress Party and was employed by the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation as a sanitary inspector. He claimed that he worked in that position until 1994 when he left his job due to animosity and hatred directed at him as a result of the demolition of the Babri Masjid mosque and his religious and political beliefs. He claimed that BJP members tried to kill him on a number of occasions, and that they also accused him of involvement in Pakistani-backed Muslim organisations and the riots in Ahmedabad. He claimed that he was taken by the police to a police station and tortured but later released without charge. 8 The first appellant claimed that in August 1994 he joined the Development Credit Bank (DCB) as a junior officer where he worked until September 2008. He said that he reported a number of employees for fraud and, after an internal investigation, they were sacked. He said that after they were sacked they began to threaten him on the telephone, and that they approached the BJP and told its local leader that they had been sacked from their positions because of their membership of that party. He said that following intervention by the local leader of the BJP, a manager of the DCB advised the first appellant to resign his job and move away. The first appellant left that job in September 2008 and then, after obtaining a tourist visa, travelled to Australia. 9 The first appellant told the Tribunal he returned to India from Australia after he received a telephone call from his wife in which he was told that someone had threatened to kidnap their children from school. He said that he returned to India in August 2009 despite fears for his life and reported the matter to the local police who apparently could not, or would not, help him. 10 The first appellant claimed to fear persecution because he was Muslim and also because of his political involvement with the Congress Party at the hands of BJP officials and radical Hindus. He also claimed that his children faced harassment at school as a result of tensions between Hindus and Muslims.