A FAILURE TO CONSIDER CLAIMS
9 Grounds 1 and 4 as presently set forth in the Notice of Appeal to this Court relate to a failure by the Federal Magistrate to discern an error in the decision of the Tribunal, and should be construed by reference to the Grounds advanced before the Federal Magistrates Court.
10 Before the Federal Magistrate, three Grounds were relied upon in support of the application then made. One Ground alleged that there had been a failure to "consider and make findings in respect of my claims…". It was also alleged that the Tribunal member had "failed to use all the means to make the substantial evidence in terms of my fear on return to Nepal".
11 The Federal Magistrate rejected these contentions. His Honour found the Tribunal did adequately address this issue: SZRBT v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2012] FMCA 1154 at [15].
12 Another Ground was construed as an argument that the Tribunal had failed to adequately assess the claims put forward such as to amount to a failure to undertake a review in accordance with law. It was alleged that there had been a failure "to make a proper genuine and realistic assessment of the real risk of serious physical or psychological harm" faced by the Appellant in Nepal. This argument was also rejected, again on the basis that the Tribunal had in fact appropriately undertaken an assessment of the risks: at [21] and [23].
13 The final Ground alleged that the Tribunal had failed to afford the now-Appellant procedural fairness and had "heavily relied upon cross examination of myself to highlight seeming inconsistencies and then to discount my evidence…". This Ground was also rejected by the Federal Magistrate. In the absence of any transcript of the hearing before the Tribunal being available to either the Federal Magistrate or this Court, it is not possible to form any view as to either the "cross-examination" that did in fact take place or whether it was anything other than a testing of the now-Appellant of the factual account she was advancing for consideration. Nor is it possible to discern from the reasons for decision of the Tribunal the extent to which the Tribunal reached its conclusions based simply upon inconsistencies in the account being given or a simple lack of satisfaction as to the plausibility of her own account of the facts. Within the confines of procedural fairness and a need to ensure that an unrepresented party has been given a reasonable opportunity to advance a claim, an administrative decision-maker cannot be denied the benefit of a "successful" questioning and probing of evidence.
14 In none of these respects can it be seen that the Federal Magistrate has committed any appellable error.
15 It should further be noted that the grounds upon which the now-Appellant sought to challenge the decision of the Refugee Review Tribunal faced a number of fundamental difficulties. Two of these were:
that a reading of the reasons for decision of the Tribunal exposes the fact that it set forth the claims made and recorded its findings in some considerable detail; and
the fact that the Tribunal expressed considerable reservation as to the credibility of the claims being made.
In recording its findings, the Tribunal thus stated in part:
65. The applicant has claimed to fear persecution if she returns to Nepal from a number of sources and for a number of reason. She has claimed to fear that she will be raped by Maoists in the future, because she has been raped by them in the past. She claims that she will be harmed by the Maoist who raped her because he told her not to tell anyone what he had done, but she did. The applicant claimed that because she is a widow and a single woman, she will be discriminated against by Nepalese society…
66. The Tribunal had serious concerns about the applicant's credibility. She admitted to having submitted a false marriage document in order to secure a Student Dependant visa on which she travelled to Australia. She claims to have been a Maoist and to have been involved with her Maoist husband's political activism, but was not only vague about Maoist aims and her own activities, but claimed to know very little about the elections in 2008 in which the Maoist had a substantial victory, becoming the largest single party in government ... The applicant's account of her actions after she allegedly refused to enter into an arranged marriage was, in the Tribunal's view, implausible, in that she claimed that she, a 16 year old school student at the time, ran away from her parents' home having refused the marriage, and they made no attempt to pursue her. The applicant was frequently confused about key dates…
…
68. The Tribunal has given no weight to the supporting documents, a purported marriage certificate and a purported death certificate for her husband, submitted by the applicant. On her own admission she was responsible for producing fraudulent documents in order to secure a Student Dependant visa. Country information, discussed with the applicant … indicates that document fraud is widespread in Nepal. The applicant in her oral and written evidence gave information conflicting with that in the supporting documents, or evidence which was vague and unconvincing regarding events about which she had submitted documentation.
Later in its "Findings and reasons" the Tribunal stated:
72. The Tribunal does not accept that the applicant was raped by a Maoist leader as she claimed after the death of her husband. Her account was unconvincing. In particular, she said at her Tribunal hearing that she did nothing about the alleged rape, but remained in a house on her own for some two weeks before she even contacted her sister to arrange to stay with her.
73. The Tribunal accepts that after her husband's death she moved to her sister's place in Beni where she lived without incident from January to December 2008 when she departed for Australia.
74. On the evidence before it, the Tribunal is not satisfied that the applicant had ever been persecuted in a Convention sense in the past in Nepal.
75. It has considered whether there is a real chance that the applicant will be persecuted if she returns to Nepal in the foreseeable future.
76. The Tribunal has not accepted that the applicant was ever raped, by a Maoist leader or by anyone else. While the situation in Nepal may be volatile, and Nepalese citizens may be vulnerable to various types of criminal activity, including rape, the Tribunal does not accept that there is other than a remote possibility that the applicant will be raped by a Maoist or anyone else in Nepal.
It thereafter ultimately concluded:
82. On the evidence before it, the Tribunal is not satisfied that there is a real chance that the applicant will be persecuted for reason of her political opinion, either as a former Maoist supporter or a current critic of the Maoists, if she returns to Nepal.
83. On the evidence before it, the Tribunal is not satisfied that there is a real chance that the applicant will face Convention-based persecution for any reason if she returns to Nepal within the foreseeable future. It is not satisfied that the applicant has a well-founded fear of persecution in Nepal within the meaning of the Refugees Convention.
16 Given these findings of fact, the difficulties confronting the now-Appellant when she appeared before the Federal Magistrate seem considerable. Certainly no appellable error is discernible in the reasons of the Federal Magistrate in dismissing the application.
17 Construing Grounds 1 and 4 of the Notice of Appeal as an allegation that the Federal Magistrate erred in rejecting the arguments previously advanced before that Court, those Grounds are rejected.