Ground 3: Did the Tribunal misconstrue or misapply s 91R of the Act?
44 Section 91R(1) provides:
For the purposes of the application of this Act and the regulations to a particular person, Article 1A(2) of the Refugees Convention as amended by the Refugees Protocol does not apply in relation to persecution for one or more of the reasons mentioned in that Article unless:
(a) that reason is the essential and significant reason, or those reasons are the essential and significant reasons, for the persecution; and
(b) the persecution involves serious harm to the person; and
(c) the persecution involves systematic and discriminatory conduct.
45 There are three elements which must be satisfied under s 91R(1) of the Act and they are cumulative. The application of s 91R(1)(b) is the subject of the decision in WZAPN v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 947 (per North J). That case has been the subject of a successful application for special leave in the High Court. The question there raised has also been considered by the Full Court, which found that it was not correctly decided, to the extent that North J said that any deprivation of liberty must constitute serious harm for the purpose of the Convention (SZTIB v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCAFC 40 at [152] ; SZTEQ v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCAFC 39 at [154] - [155]; BZAFM v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCAFC 41 at [149] - [150]). If the application of s 91R(1)(b) were the only matter to be considered under this ground, it may be appropriate to defer these reasons. However, the Minister submits that WZAPN does not determine this ground of appeal, as he submits that the appellant does not satisfy any of the necessary criteria.
46 The finding as to serious harm is the one relied on by the appellant to fall outside s 91R(1)(b) of the Act, for the reasons of North J in WZAPN. I will not consider s 91R(1)(b) and, for the purposes of these reasons, assume that the appellant satisfies that subsection. The question is whether ss 91R(1)(a) and 91R(1)(c) of the Act are also satisfied. The appellant contends that the Tribunal's findings did not amount to independent findings of non-satisfaction of ss 91R(1)(a) and 91R(1)(c).
47 The appellant points to the following findings by the Tribunal:
He left Sri Lanka illegally.
Such returnees are arrested at the airport before being brought to court to apply for bail.
The remand, in detention, could be for some days if the arrest occurred over the weekend or a public holiday.
Conditions in remand have been described as "overcrowded" but there had not been reports of torture or other forms of mistreatment.
Such detention in remand did not amount to serious harm.
The Sri Lankan laws regarding unlawful departure were not applied or enforced in a discriminatory way for a Convention reason.
48 The Tribunal stated (at [56]) that the procedures in relation to "returnees" who unlawfully departed were 'standardised procedures which apply to all cases, regardless of a person's ethnicity or the circumstances in which they left the country'. The appellant submits that "returnees", in [57] of the Tribunal decision, are "failed asylum seekers" as they are referred to as 'those returnees believed to have left the country in breach of Sri Lanka's laws on immigration and emigration'. As such, the appellant argues that the reference, in [56] of the Tribunal decision, to "returnees" was also a reference to failed asylum seekers. That is, the Tribunal was not addressing standardised procedures or laws which were applied to all returnees; rather, the procedures only applied to the appellant's particular social group, which was known as failed asylum seekers.
49 The appellant says that when the Tribunal referred to information that standardised procedures were applied to all cases, it was again referring to "returnees", that is, to all failed asylum seekers - a particular social group of which the appellant was a member and not to all people. Similarly, the appellant says, the Tribunal was referring to failed asylum seekers in its statements that the standardised procedures were applied regardless of ethnicity.
50 The appellant then submits that if, contrary to his submissions, the Tribunal's reasoning can be understood as a conclusion that Sri Lanka's laws concerning unlawful departure are laws of general application such that ss 91R(1)(a) and/or 91R(1)(c) were not satisfied, the Tribunal failed to ask the correct questions when reaching that conclusion.
51 The appellant submits that the Tribunal did not ask whether Sri Lanka's laws regarding unlawful departure were applied in a way that resulted in discriminatory treatment. Further, he argues that the Tribunal did not ask whether Sri Lanka's laws were appropriate and adapted to achieving a legitimate state objective. That is, the appellant submits that if the Tribunal's reasoning is properly understood as a conclusion that the laws concerning unlawful departure are laws of general application, that conclusion was affected by jurisdictional error. The error is that, in reaching such a conclusion, the Tribunal asked itself the wrong question, by failing to ask the correct questions.
52 The appellant relies on Applicant S v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2004) 217 CLR 387, where Gleeson CJ, Gummow and Kirby JJ explained (at [43]) that there is no general rule that a law of general application can never amount to persecution, and may be implemented or enforced in a discriminatory way. He also points to Erduran v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2002) 122 FCR 150, where Gray J noted (at [28]) that the impact of a law of general application on a person possessing a Convention-related attribute can result in a real chance of persecution for a Convention reason. Further, in order to determine whether a law whose implementation has this result or impact amounts to persecution, it is necessary to determine whether the law is 'appropriate and adapted to achieving some legitimate object' (Applicant S at [43]).
53 However as the Tribunal found that the law was not discriminatory, it was unnecessary to consider whether the law was reasonably adapted to some legitimate object of the country in question, for the reasons given by Perram J (with whom Moore J agreed in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZNWC and Another (2010) 190 FCR 23 at [40]). While the Tribunal did not state explicitly that it was considering the law as one of general application, it is apparent from its reasons that it considered it to be so. It is implicit in the Tribunal's reasoning that it considered that the procedures were directed to all returnees, to enable 'police and security clearances... [and to] reveal outstanding arrest warrants for prior criminal offences', (at [56]) as well as to ascertain evidence of involvement in people smuggling.
54 The appellant says that the Tribunal did not ask whether the laws regarding unlawful departure were applied in a way that resulted in discriminatory treatment or whether the laws were appropriate and adapted to achieving a legitimate state objective. The appellant acknowledges that the Tribunal concluded he was subject to potential detention like all returnees and was not the subject of discriminatory treatment. The appellant was not the subject of discriminatory treatment and the law was not applied in a discriminatory manner. I accept the Minister's submission that it is evident from the Tribunal's analysis that it considered the law applicable to the appellant to be a law of general application, which applied to all illegal returnees.
55 The Tribunal rejected the claim to an imputed connection with the LTTE and the claim that the appellant would be persecuted because of his membership of a particular social group. Accordingly the appellant did not satisfy ss 91R(1)(a) and 91R(1)(c) of the Act.
56 The Minister submits that, as a valid law of general application was the reason for detention of the appellant, it does not constitute persecution for the purposes of the Act (Applicant S at 402-404).
57 I accept that the Tribunal, in its reasons, does not restrict its reference to "returnees" to a sub-group, namely failed asylum seekers. The Tribunal specifically referred to the information that the screening process was the same for all persons returning to Sri Lanka, including failed asylum seekers. It considered the process that would apply to the appellant 'as a returnee to Sri Lanka'. The Tribunal considered separately the question of illegal departure from Sri Lanka and again described the processes that apply to returnees, regardless of ethnicity or the circumstances in which they left the country. It then discussed 'recently tightened procedures' for those returnees who are believed to have left the country in breach of immigration and emigration laws. Again, the Tribunal made it clear that, having rejected the claim that Tamils were treated differently, it was considering all such returnees.
58 Although the Tribunal did not state that it was considering the criteria in s 91R(1) of the Act, it is not necessary for it to have done so, as long as it addressed its mind to the relevant and correct questions. It is clear that the Tribunal addressed the criteria in ss 91R(1)(a) and 91R(1)(c) and found that they did not apply to the appellant.
59 The appellant has not made out ground 3.