Did the tribunal require or expect the appellant not to unnecessarily disclose his drug and criminal history?
44 The findings of the primary judge that the appellant contends are affected by the alleged error are said to be contained in the following two paragraphs:
60. I am not satisfied that the Tribunal adopted an implicit expectation that the Applicant would not or should not "unnecessarily" disclose his criminal record. Rather the Tribunal finding that there was no evidence that it would be necessary for the Applicant to disclose his criminal record on return to Pakistan is to be understood in context as a specific response to the Applicant's unsupported assertion at the Tribunal hearing that he might be required to disclose his criminal record to potential employers or accommodation providers. The Tribunal found there was no evidence that he would be so required.
61. It is clear that the Tribunal was deciding the issue on the narrow basis of the claims raised by the Applicant. In that context it considered whether in fact he would be required to disclose information about his past record when making applications for accommodation and employment (see SZATV at [89]). It found, in effect, that there was no evidence to indicate that he would be so required. Moreover, in contrast to the situation considered in Appellant S395/2002, the Tribunal did not go on to consider generally the position of former criminals in Pakistan. It was not obliged to do so because no claim was made on that more general basis. The principles in Appellant S395/2002 did not arise because the Tribunal was not requiring the Applicant to make any modification of his behaviour.
(Original emphasis.)
45 In SZATV at [89] Kirby J explained that the common feature of the two joint majority decisions in S395 was the need for the decision-maker to focus attention on the propounded fear of the individual applicant and whether that was well-founded. In other words, S395 is authority for the proposition that the question of whether a propounded fear of persecution is well-founded must be considered "on an individual basis and not, for example, by reference to a priori reasonable conduct that could or might avoid persecution". The decision-maker was required to concentrate on what would happen to the applicant, rather than on what could or might happen if he behaved in a particular way which would reduce the risk of persecution, such as by behaving discreetly.
46 In the present case and in contrast to the position taken in the court below, it was common ground on the appeal that the appellant's evidence was to the effect that he would only disclose his criminal history if asked about it. Shortly put, the appellant's argument was as follows.
47 First, the material before the tribunal shows that the appellant's concerns about disclosing his drug and criminal history were not limited to a fear of not being able to obtain employment or accommodation but were part and parcel of his claims to fear persecution as an outsider or an involuntary returnee.
48 Second, in RRT [28] the tribunal did not merely address the appellant's concerns about the impact of disclosing his drug and criminal history when seeking accommodation or employment but made a general finding that the appellant would not unnecessarily disclose that history, including to the authorities at the airport upon his involuntary return to Pakistan or to anyone else who might be hostile to him as an outsider. Her Honour erred in taking a narrow view of the tribunal's finding.
49 Third, noting that the tribunal had questioned the appellant about what he would say to an accommodation or employment provider if the subject came up, but did not question him about "the other areas where he might disclose the information", there was a gap in the evidence which the tribunal filled (at RRT [28]) with a requirement to say nothing unless it were necessary.
50 Referring to the claims made in the statutory declaration annexed to his visa application, the written submissions filed for the appellant state:
The appellant went on to say that he would have a problem getting employment. He did not speak, read and write Urdu and had a criminal record for drug related offences. He then stated: "I will not be able to obtain employment and disclosing this information when trying to obtain employment or accommodation may actually put me at risk of being targeted". It will be submitted that this targeting includes being targeted as an outsider and will be referred to as the "outsider claim".
(Original emphasis.)
51 The "involuntary returnee" claim is that the appellant feared persecution upon his involuntary return to Pakistan. This is how it was put in the appellant's written submissions:
The appellant's advisor submitted that "having criminal convictions in Australia and being returned as an involuntarily returned failed asylum (sic) in Australia also puts the Applicant at risk of Convention related persecution and significant harm": AB 184. The advisor expressed concern that the appellant did not know what information would be provided to the Pakistani authorities to arrange for his removal, including whether the appellant had a criminal record as this information might increase the risk of persecution by the Pakistani authorities in their suspicion and screening of involuntarily returned individuals: AB 194. The advisor submitted that knowing the basis on which the Pakistani authorities decided to penalise, scrutinise or detain an involuntarily returned person with a criminal record such as the appellant's was essential to enable an assessment of the risk of Convention related persecution or other types of harm which would engage Australia's non-refoulement obligations: AB194-195. This claim will be referred to as the "involuntary returnee claim".
(Original emphasis.)
52 The proposition that the appellant's concerns about disclosing his drug and criminal history were not limited in the way the primary judge found was said to be supported by several documents.
53 First, the appellant pointed to the following passage in the statutory declaration annexed to his visa application, emphasising the emboldened parts:
Another problem that I will have in Pakistan is getting employment and accommodation. I do not speak, read and write Urdu. I have a criminal record for drug related offences. I will not be able to obtain employment and disclosing this information when trying to obtain employment or accommodation may actually put me at risk of being targeted.
(Emphasis added.)
54 The reference to the appellant's illiteracy in Urdu was said to be a reference to his outsider claim, so-called. The appellant's counsel, Mr Gormly, contended that the juxtaposition of these two matters in the one paragraph indicated that there was an overlap or relationship between the appellant's criminal history and his claim to fear persecution as an outsider. For my part I do not see why the appellant's statement that he cannot speak, read or write Urdu has any connection with any risk he may face by reason of his criminal history.
55 It is not entirely clear what the appellant meant in this passage. I will assume that by "at risk of being targeted" the appellant meant at risk of being harmed. I suppose that it is conceivable that the appellant was trying to say that by revealing his criminal history he would be exposed as a person who had spent time in Australia, he might be seen as a person who had been corrupted by the West, that this information might cause accommodation and employment providers to want to harm him, and that they might pass on the information to others who might be hostile to outsiders. But that was not how the appellant put his case. Nor was it what the tribunal took him to be saying. The tribunal explored the issue with the appellant during the hearing. After putting to him that his English language skills might be an asset to him in Pakistan, the tribunal asked him what he thought about that. The appellant's reply tends to confirm the construction put upon his claim by the primary judge. He said:
I thought - yeah, maybe I thought because I've got a criminal record they won't, I won't be able to get employment disclosing that to my employer or for a house or anything like that.
56 The following exchange ensued:
Q. Why do you think that you would have to disclose your Australian criminal record?
A. Because I thought that's, you know, I'd have to disclose it, I don't know. I thought it was disclosed already.
Q. You think that they already know about it?
A. No, I thought well if I was to tell them that then they would know about it, yeah, yeah.
Q. I'm asking whether you--
A. Yeah.
Q. --is there any reason why you would tell them?
A. Well just because just telling the truth and I just, yeah, like I've got a record and that's about it, cause I thought maybe they needed disclosure too.
Q. All right.
A. Yeah.
Q. So you don't know what the situation is about that sort of thing in Pakistan, getting employment in Pakistan?
A. No.
Q. I don't either. I know in Australia, if you were go for a job in a government agency--
A. Yep.
Q. --that they will ask you, and they often do police checks.
A. Yes.
Q. But I don't think that that's necessarily the case in the private sector.
A. Oh yeah. I just thought that maybe if you're deported or something like that, you know, they would be aware about it or I don't know much. Over there like the only jobs I can think of would be like in English speaking jobs. I'm not sure how, like the jobs work over there, like, like to be, you know, like it's a pretty corrupt country so maybe they just give good jobs to people that they think, you know, they, they are known to them and, and, like I thought maybe if I want to try and go for a job like that, you know, they would have my criminal record, it would be disclosed that he was from overseas. Just with my accent and all that, you know, like I thought maybe just because of the way I speak they will be able to - yeah, I'm not sure.
Q. They will be able to what, make some inquiries about you do you think?
A. Yeah that's what I think, yeah.
(Emphasis added.)
57 The appellant relied on the parts emphasised in [56] to submit that the appellant was telling the tribunal that he was afraid that "they're going to know about it because he has been deported and the information will be out there". During argument, however, he said that "they" was a reference to the employment and accommodation providers. While the appellant's evidence is confusing (and, at times, arguably contradictory), I am not at all persuaded that the primary judge was wrong to conclude that the appellant's concerns about his drug history and his criminal record becoming known were limited to the employment and accommodation context.
58 The appellant also pointed to the fact that his written submissions to the tribunal (prepared by his migration agent) included the following assertion under the heading "Persecution on the basis of political opinion/imputed political opinion":
The Applicant claims that he fears persecution by Islamic extremists /fundamentalists in Pakistan because of his rejection of Islam, westernised values, behaviour and his imputed/political opinion (anti-religious fundamentalism, opposition to Islamic extremist/ fundamentalists, pro-Western countries).
(Emphasis added.)
59 The appellant contended that the word "behaviour" in this passage should be taken to include his criminal history. I am not persuaded by this argument either. In my view, this reference is far too vague to be of any assistance. It is not clear what was intended. More than likely this was merely a reference to what the appellant described in his statutory declaration as his "westernised way of being and dressing".
60 The appellant also pointed to the following submission made to the tribunal by his migration agent:
We further submit that having criminal convictions in Australia and being returned as an involuntarily returned failed asylum [seeker] in Australia also puts the Applicant at risk of Convention related persecution and significant harm ...
In terms of an assessment of the risks that the involuntary removal of the Applicant as an involuntarily returned failed asylum seeker may trigger on arrival in Pakistan, it is important to consider that the Applicant does not know what information will need to be provided/disclosed to Pakistani authorities to arrange/attempt to arrange his removal from Australia to Pakistan.
For example, whether authorities will be told that the Applicant is held in an Immigration Detention Centre and has a criminal conviction …
Thus the risk of Convention related persecution or significant harm of the involuntary return of the Applicant may arise in Pakistan as a result of the Pakistani authorities' actions/suspicions/screening of involuntary returned individuals, particularly those with a criminal record.
61 I accept that this does muddy the waters somewhat. But there are several answers to the appellant's arguments.
62 First, the submission does not explain the connection between criminal convictions in Australia and being an involuntarily returned failed asylum seeker (a status that can be acquired for various reasons) or between criminal convictions and the risk of Convention-related persecution. The appellant submitted that "[t]he closest the submissions get … is in the third last paragraph, where the adviser says [t]he applicant would be at risk of [C]onvention related persecution or significant harm as an involuntary returned failed asylum seeker because of the views, suspicion, motives, action, practices of authorities of his or her country". This passage gets nowhere near establishing a connection.
63 Second, the submission does not imply, let alone assert, that the appellant will have to disclose his drug and criminal history upon his involuntary return to Pakistan and that there is a real risk that he will come to harm if he does so. It is a frank acknowledgment that he has no idea what may happen to him. At the hearing in the tribunal the appellant's migration agent accepted that there was no reason to believe that the appellant would be the subject of particular attention by authorities at the airport. She said that she had searched in vain for information that would support her submission.
64 In substance, the submission raised the possibility of a claim if information could be obtained to support it, but no such information was before the tribunal.
65 Third, the tribunal considered that the proposition that the appellant's return to Pakistan would attract official attention was entirely speculative and the agent agreed.
66 As the Minister accepted, the tribunal may err if it assesses a refugee claim on the basis that an applicant is required or expected to take reasonable steps to avoid persecution if returned to his or her country of origin. The risk of harm must be assessed on the basis of what an applicant will do, rather than what he or she could or should do: S395 at [40], [50] (McHugh and Kirby JJ) and at [80], [82] (Gummow and Hayne JJ).
67 But the Minister contends that the tribunal did not impose such a requirement in this case. He argued that the tribunal's finding at RRT [28] should be understood as a specific response to the appellant's unsupported assertion that he might be required to disclose his criminal record to potential employers or accommodation providers or the authorities, noting the evidence that the appellant was unaware of whether disclosure was required in Pakistan. The Minister also contends that the appellant did not indicate that he wished or intended to make voluntary disclosure. In those circumstances, he argued that it could not be said that the tribunal required or expected the appellant to behave in a particular way. Rather, he submitted:
[I]ts finding that the Appellant would not be required to disclose his criminal history upon return to Pakistan was made upon the Tribunal's assessment of what would happen, not what might happen if the Applicant took some step, in order to avoid harm, which he would otherwise not take. There is no error in this approach.
68 I respectfully agree.
69 In S395 the tribunal found that homosexual men in Bangladesh constituted a "particular social group" for the purpose of the Convention and that it was not possible to live openly as a homosexual without running a risk of serious harm. Noting that the visa applicants had hitherto lived discreetly and thereby avoided serious harm, it concluded that there was no risk of persecution if they continued to conduct themselves discreetly. The passage of the tribunal's reasons that was challenged in that case was the tribunal's statement that the men had
clearly conducted themselves in a discreet manner and there is no reason to suppose that they would not continue to do so if they returned home now" (S395 at [21]).
70 The majority disapproved of statements made in a series of decisions that asylum seekers are required or can be expected to take reasonable steps to avoid persecutory harm (at [48]-[50]; see also [80], [82]). But the Minister argued that the tribunal had not imposed a requirement that the men live discreetly; it had merely found that they would do so in the future, there being no reason to think otherwise. The High Court unanimously accepted this argument. The vice in S395 was different. The evidence in S395 indicated that the appellants might have been discreet about their relationship because they feared that otherwise they would suffer harm of the kinds suffered by homosexual men who were open about their sexuality. The majority of the court held that, having found that they would act in a way that would avoid persecution the tribunal erred by failing to consider why they would do so. In the present case, the tribunal did not find that, by not disclosing his drug and criminal history, the appellant would avoid persecution.
71 The parties in the present case accepted the following summary of the principles for which the S395 is authority given by the Full Court in Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs v VWBA [2005] FCAFC 175 at [6]:
(a) The Tribunal will err if it assesses a claim on the basis that an applicant is expected to take reasonable steps to avoid persecution if returned to his or her country of origin. The Tribunal's task is to assess what the applicant will do, not what he or she should do. See S395 at [40] and [50] per McHugh and Kirby JJ and at [80] and [82] per Gummow and Hayne JJ.
(b) If the Tribunal finds that a person will act in a way that will reduce a risk of persecution that would otherwise have been well-founded, the Tribunal must consider why the person will act in that way. If it fails to do so, it commits a jurisdictional error. See S395 at [43] and [53] per McHugh and Kirby JJ and at [88] per Gummow and Hayne JJ.
(c) The Tribunal will err if, having found that a person will act in a way that will reduce a risk of persecution, it does not go on to consider whether the person nevertheless has a well-founded fear of persecution because, despite the conduct that reduces the risk, there is still a real risk that the person will be persecuted. See S395 at [56] per McHugh and Kirby JJ and at [85]-[86] per Gummow and Hayne JJ.
(Original emphasis.)
72 Most of these issues do not arise on a consideration of the first ground of appeal in the present case. The tribunal did not assess the appellant's claim on the basis that he was expected to take reasonable steps to avoid persecution if he were returned to his country of origin. That is, the tribunal did not assess what the appellant should (as opposed to would) do, in relation to the disclosure of his drug and criminal history, or require him to behave in any particular manner. RRT [28] contained nothing more than an observation about the state of the evidence and a finding of fact about the prospect of the appellant's drug and criminal history becoming known.
73 Moreover, there is nothing in the documentation before the tribunal or in the transcript of the evidence to suggest that the appellant was concerned that, if his history of drug abuse or his criminal record became known to a potential employer or accommodation provider, somehow others, who were hostile to westernised Pakistanis, might come to know of it also and, as a result, cause him harm. The interpretation the tribunal put on this evidence was quite different. At [13] the tribunal summarised the evidence in this way:
The applicant also said that he will be unable to get employment in Pakistan, or to obtain accommodation because of his criminal record … When I asked why he thought his criminal record would become known, he responded that he does not know how it works in Pakistan, that it is pretty corrupt so maybe they only give jobs to people they know, or maybe because he looks Westernised they will ask questions or they will find out when he returns.
74 The tribunal's finding at RRT [28] must be read in context. This is part of that context. It is apparent that the tribunal took the appellant to be saying that he feared his drug and criminal history would preclude him from obtaining work or housing and no more.