The fcc decision
5 The appellant sought judicial review in the FCC of the Tribunal's decision on two grounds. The first ground alleged that the Tribunal had failed to deal with the full integers of the appellant's claim. The particulars alleged:
The [Tribunal] failed to deal with a claim squarely raised during the hearing that the [Appellant] had been detained in Jaffna in 2007 for two days and sexually assaulted and had avoided disclosing the full details of the matter because he did not feel comfortable talking about these things in front of women.
6 The background to ground 1 is that during the course of evidence at the Tribunal hearing, the appellant told the Court that he had been sexually assaulted at the SLA camp when detained for questioning in 2006. When asked by the Tribunal why he had not mentioned the assault before, the appellant told the Tribunal that he "was really shy to talk in front of ladies, now I'm in a situation where I have no other optional choice, so I'm saying everything today". The FCC rejected ground 1 on the basis that the claim of sexual assault was not a stand-alone claim that needed to be the subject of specific consideration by the Tribunal. At [29], the FCC stated:
The claim of sexual assault is not a stand-alone claim which needed to be the subject of specific consideration by the Tribunal. The claim was that the applicant was suspected of being involved with or supportive of the LTTE and had been detained because of that and that, in the course of that detention, he had been mistreated, including being sexually assaulted. The applicant was not claiming that for some other reason independent of his claim of being of interest to the authorities and fear of being detained for that reason that either he was sexually assaulted or feared being sexually assaulted on his return. In my opinion, the Tribunal properly dealt with the claims advanced before it.
7 The FCC also reasoned that it is implicit in the Tribunal's reasons that it did not accept the reason advanced by the appellant was to why the claim of sexual assault had not been raised before and that the Tribunal rejected the claim as true.
8 The second ground alleged that the Tribunal had denied the appellant procedural fairness. The particulars were that:
The [Tribunal] failed to put the [Appellant] on notice that it did not accept the Receipt of Arrest as true and that it had been fabricated so as to substantiate his claims, denying the [Appellant] an opportunity to lead further evidence and/or make submissions regarding the [provenance] of the document.
9 The background to ground 2 is that during the course of evidence at the Tribunal hearing, the Tribunal asked the appellant about an arrest receipt that was part of the documentation that the appellant had provided in support of his claim that he had been arrested by the police in 2007 and questioned on suspicion of LTTE association. The arrest receipt was in Sinhalese and had not been translated. At the conclusion of the hearing the appellant's agent asked the Tribunal member if he wanted a translation and the Tribunal member said that he was interested in what the document stated was the reason for arrest. A translation was subsequently provided to the Tribunal but the Tribunal gave no weight to that document, finding that the document had been fabricated. The FCC rejected ground 2 on the basis that the Tribunal was not required to put the appellant on notice that it may reject the Receipt of Arrest as a genuine document. The FCC reasoned at [48]-[50], [52]:
I accept the Minister's submission that it was not incumbent upon the Tribunal to reconvene for a further hearing to enable the Tribunal to put its concerns about the genuineness of the document. Certainly, there is no provision in the Migration Act which required that procedure to be followed. There is no requirement, whether under the Migration Act or under general law principles of procedural fairness, for a Tribunal to indicate that an adverse decision may be made prior to making such a finding.
The applicant apparently contends that the Tribunal commenced a new procedure which it then did not complete by asking for a translation of the document which was already contained (in untranslated form) on the Departmental file. I accept that there is nothing in the exchange between the Tribunal member and the applicant's representative which created an "undertaking that a procedure would be followed". All the Tribunal did was ask for an English translation of a document in its possession and advise that it was interested in knowing what was said as being the reason for arrest. There is nothing in the transcript which supports a submission that the applicant had a legitimate expectation that the contents of the document would be accepted by the Tribunal.
…
I accept that the findings of the Tribunal regarding the document were open to it, having reached its conclusion regarding the credibility of the applicant.
[Citations omitted.]
10 The appellant was granted leave to raise a third ground that the Tribunal's adverse credit finding was so unreasonable that no reasonable person would have made it. It was argued that the appellant's failure to raise the claim of sexual assault when the visa application was made was central to the Tribunal's adverse credit finding against the appellant, but that the finding was made by the Tribunal without regard for the procedural protections afforded to vulnerable persons under the Tribunal's Guidance on Vulnerable Persons. The FCC rejected the contention that there was legal unreasonableness. At [88]-[90], the FCC concluded that:
Contrary to the applicant's submission the issue of the applicant raising the allegation of sexual assault late was not a "central issue determinative of the case." Rather it was one of a number of instances where his claims had developed over time, leading the Tribunal to consider that he was not a credible witness.
Understood in this way, there was no obligation for the Tribunal to consider invoking any of the procedures suggested in the Guidelines on Vulnerable Persons. This was not a case where the only issue upon which an assessment of credibility rested was the developing nature of a claim of sexual assault. Considering the evidence as a whole, the Tribunal was concerned about numerous aspects of the applicant's claims advanced at the hearing.
These concerns ultimately led to a finding that the applicant was not a credible witness. This is not a case where there was one aspect of the applicant's evidence, concerning claims of sexual assault, which raised concerns in the Tribunal's mind. Neither was it a case where such considerations as to whether the applicant was a vulnerable person, and that this may be impacting upon his ability to properly engage with the hearing process, may have been engaged.