Consideration
19 The appellant raised the following grounds of appeal in his notice of appeal to this Court:
1. The Federal Circuit Court erred when it rejected ground 1 of the Application before it.
Particulars
i. Section 5E Migration Act
ii. Transcript and evidence, whereby the Tribunal refuses to accept facts that are obvious.
iii. For example, the Catholic Church in Australia is an identical body to the Underground catholic church in China.
2. The Federal Circuit Court erred when, despite the Application, it found that the Tribunal had not applied an onerous standard of proof.
Particulars
i. Failure to note the expressed belief by the Tribunal that the Appellant had not addressed the issue of persecution to the Tribunal, which was the opposite of the facts.
3. The Federal Circuit Court erred when, despite the Application, and despite the authorities, it found that a reasonable person would not have apprehended bias on the part of the Tribunal, and therefore contrary to the Act.
20 In his written outline of submissions the appellant raised for the first time additional particulars of his first two grounds of appeal, based on the judgment of North J in WZAPN v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 947 ("WZAPN"). WZAPN was delivered on 3 September 2014, after the Circuit Court's judgment had been delivered on 22 August 2014, but before the institution of this appeal. The Minister has applied for special leave to appeal to the High Court from the decision in WZAPN.
21 The Minister objected to the appellant relying on the grounds based on WZAPN as those grounds were not raised before the primary judge. Parties are generally bound by the conduct of their case at first instance. A court will permit a party to raise a point that was not raised at trial only in limited circumstances and in the interests of justice: see Park v Brothers (2005) 80 ALJR 317 at [34] and the cases cited therein. As WZAPN had not been delivered before the Circuit Court gave its judgment, I am prepared to grant the appellant the leave necessary to rely on the grounds based on that case.
22 In WZAPN, North J found that the Tribunal failed to apply the correct test when assessing whether the appellant in that case was at risk of serious harm within the meaning of s 91R(1)(b) and (2)(a) of the Act. Section 91R provides, relevantly:
91R Persecution
(1) 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.
(2) Without limiting what is serious harm for the purposes of paragraph (1)(b), the following are instances of serious harm for the purposes of that paragraph:
(a) a threat to the person's life or liberty;
(b) significant physical harassment of the person;
(c) significant physical ill-treatment of the person;
…
23 In WZAPN it was held that once a decision-maker finds a risk of harm under s 91R of the Act consisting of a threat to life or liberty, that section does not then permit the decision-maker to undertake a qualitative assessment of the harm that would be experienced by an applicant. North J concluded that:
30 The conclusion from the language and structure of s 91R(2) is that serious harm in s 91R(1)(b) is constituted by a threat to life or liberty, without reference to the severity of the consequences to life or liberty.
…
44 In taking the human rights approach, there is no place for a qualitative assessment of detention affecting the right to liberty for it to constitute an infringement of that right.
45 By making a qualitative assessment of the nature and degree of the harm experienced by the applicant when asking whether the threat to the applicant's liberty was sufficiently significant, the reviewer in the present case applied the wrong test in the application of s 91R(2)(a), and thereby fell into jurisdictional error.
24 The appellant submits that the Tribunal committed jurisdictional error in finding that s 91R of the Act was not engaged. The appellant submits that in order for the Tribunal to find that no obligations of protection are owed to a particular person, it is necessary for there to be a finding that the person is in no danger of persecution. The appellant relies on paragraph (a) of the definition of serious harm in s 91R(2) of the Act, "a threat to the person's life or liberty". The appellant argues that the definition possesses no qualification and once the Tribunal accepted that the appellant adhered to a Catholic faith which accords with the beliefs of the underground church in China, and once country information indicated that adherents to that faith had suffered persecution (which to an extent had waxed and waned, but had never been absent), then s 91R(2)(a) of the Act was met.
25 The Minister submits that WZAPN has no relevance as the Tribunal did not accept the appellant had been detained in the past and was not prepared to find that there was a real chance he would suffer harm in the future. The Minister contends that in circumstances where the Tribunal has found that there is no real chance of serious harm, the appellant cannot satisfy the criterion in s 36(2)(a) of the Act and the issues raised by WZAPN do not arise because s 91R(1) is not enlivened.
26 I consider that the Tribunal did not fall into the error identified by North J in WZAPN. The appellant ignores the Tribunal's findings at [83] of the Tribunal's reasons:
I have found that the [appellant] has not previously been involved in religious activity in China and I have rejected his claims to have come to the attention of the Chinese authorities because of his religious beliefs and activities. I have found that the [appellant] has no profile with the Chinese authorities other than that of ordinary citizen. Taking into consideration the independent information set out above concerning the circumstances in Fujian province for ordinary members of the underground catholic church and my findings that the [appellant] has never attracted the adverse attention of the Chinese authorities and my assessment of the nature of his religious practice in Australia (that is, he is an ordinary practitioner), I am satisfied that the chance of the [appellant] suffering any harm by reason of his religion is remote.
27 Section 36 of the Act provides, relevantly:
36 Protection visas
…
(2) A criterion for a protection visa is that the applicant for the visa is:
(a) a non-citizen in Australia in respect of whom the Minister is satisfied Australia has protection obligations under the Refugees Convention as amended by the Refugees Protocol …
28 Article 1A(2) of the Refugees Convention as amended by the Refugees Protocol provides that the term "refugee" applies to any person who:
…owing to well founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country…
29 In Chan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1989) 169 CLR 379 the High Court held that in order for a fear of persecution to be well-founded, there must be a "real chance" of persecution: at 389, 398, 407 and 429.
30 Section 91R of the Act defines "persecution" for the purpose of applying s 36(2) of the Act. Section 91R(1) provides that Article 1A(2) does not apply to persecution unless three criteria are met. The second criterion is that the persecution involves "serious harm" to the person, which is defined in s 91R(2)(a) to include a "threat to the person's life or liberty". The word "threat" refers to the likelihood or risk of harm, rather than a communication of intention to harm: VBAO v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2006) 233 CLR 1 ("VBAO") at [3] and [18]. If no threat or relevant risk is current or prospective, there can be no well-founded fear of persecution: VBAO at [50].
31 The Tribunal was required under s 36(2) of the Act to decide whether Australia owed protection obligations to the appellant. Sections 36(2) and 91R requires that there must be a real chance of serious harm. The Tribunal found at [83] of its reasons that the chance of the appellant suffering any harm by reason of his religion was remote and, implicitly, that there was no real chance of any harm. The Tribunal's finding necessarily meant that there was no real chance of a threat to the appellant's life or liberty. The criterion in s 91R(1)(b) was not satisfied.
32 In WZAPN the reviewer accepted there was a real chance that the applicant for a protection visa would be detained by police and a religious group for short periods. North J considered that the real chance of a threat to the appellant's liberty was enough to constitute serious harm within s 91R; and that the reviewer fell into error by engaging in a qualitative assessment of the nature and degree of the harm experienced by the appellant when asking whether the threat to the appellant's liberty was sufficiently significant. The present case is quite different because the Tribunal found that the appellant faced no real chance of any persecution, so there was no threat to his liberty, in the sense that there was no risk that he would be deprived of his liberty. The Tribunal did not commit any error of the kind identified in WZAPN.
33 The appellant next submits that the primary judge erred in attributing to the Tribunal a finding that there was no chance the appellant would suffer a threat to his life or liberty if he were to return to China. The appellant relies on the following passages from the Tribunal's reasons:
81. I have therefore considered whether there is a real chance the [appellant] will face serious or significant harm if he attends a Catholic church in Fujian province in China. While Chinese authorities have shown increased tolerance in recent years for unofficial religious activity that does not challenge the authority of the state, levels of tolerance vary by location.
…
83. … I am satisfied that the chance of the [appellant] suffering any harm by reason of his religion is remote. There is also no evidence to suggest that the [appellant] would face a real chance of serious harm on the basis of having practised as a Catholic in Australia. Consequently, I find that there is no real chance that the [appellant] would face Convention-related persecution in the reasonably foreseeable future if he were to return to China.
(Footnotes omitted)
34 The premise of the appellant's argument is not made out. The primary judge stated that "the Tribunal concluded that there was no real chance that he would face Convention-related persecution". His Honour did not suggest that the Tribunal found that there was no chance of a threat to the appellant's liberty.
35 In addition, the Tribunal found that the chance of the appellant suffering any harm by reason of his religion is "remote". The remote chance, which may be contrasted with a real chance, did not suffice to enliven the protection obligations under the Refugees Convention. Even if the primary judge erred in his understanding of the Tribunal's findings, the error would be of no consequence. The Tribunal applied the correct test.
36 The appellant submits that the country information relied upon by the Tribunal did not establish that there was no threat in Fujian province to members of the underground church, but rather that any such threat was "low". The appellant submits further that the Tribunal confused the underground church with the Patriotic Church (being a registered church). However, to entertain such submissions would require the Court to engage in impermissible merits review: NAHI v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2004] FCAFC 10 ("NAHI") at [11].
37 The second ground of the appellant's appeal relates to the standard of proof applied by the Tribunal. During oral submissions, the solicitor for the appellant explained that the second ground should be interpreted to mean that the primary judge ought to have found that the Tribunal did not adequately consider the evidence as it was not disposed to listen. The appellant observes that the primary judge accepted the Tribunal's findings by citing them with approval at [6] and [7] of his reasons, namely:
6. The Tribunal rejected the [appellant's] claims to have practised Christianity in China and to have been arrested and detained by the authorities for that reason in 2012. The Tribunal found that there were logical and factual inconsistencies in the [appellant's] evidence about those claims including the reasons for which the [appellant] converted to Christianity in the first place and also that his evidence about his practice there was vague and did not come from his own experience. For those and other reasons, the Tribunal found that the [appellant] was not a credible witness and found that he did not have a genuine fear of persecution in China.
7. On the other hand, the Tribunal accepted that the [appellant] had attended church in Sydney and, giving him the benefit of the doubt, that this was otherwise than for the purpose of advancing his claims to protection. The Tribunal then assessed the [appellant's] claims on the basis that the [appellant] would return to China and practice in the underground catholic church. On the basis of country information about people belonging to that church in the [appellant's] home province, the Tribunal concluded that there was no real chance that he would face Convention-related persecution in the reasonably foreseeable future if he were to return to China.
38 The appellant submits that the primary judge should not have accepted these findings because it was available to his Honour to find the opposite. The appellant suggests that this ground forms part of the apprehended bias argument that was run before the primary judge.
39 The appellant's third ground of appeal also relates to the question of apprehended bias. The appellant explains that this ground is to be considered in the alternative to the first two grounds, and that it also overlaps with the second ground of appeal. It is convenient to deal with this part of the second and the third ground of appeal together.
40 In order to establish that a decision of a Tribunal has been affected by apprehended bias, the Court must be satisfied that a fair-minded lay observer might apprehend that the Tribunal was not impartial: Re Refugee Review Tribunal; Ex parte H (2001) 75 ALJR 982 at [27]-[28]. Whether or not there is apprehended bias is determined by the Court objectively: Hot Holdings Pty Limited v Creasy (2002) 210 CLR 438 at [68] per McHugh J. An allegation of apprehended bias must be "firmly established": Re JRL; Ex parte CJL (1986) 161 CLR 342 at 352 per Mason J, at 359 - 360 per Wilson J and at 371 - 372 per Dawson J. It is not sufficient to merely show that the Tribunal has formed a preliminary view of the appellant's credit: Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Jia Legeng (2001) 205 CLR 507 at [72]. Robust and vigorous questioning by the Tribunal will not of itself amount to a finding of apprehended bias: SZRUI v Minister for Immigration, Multicultural Affairs and Citizenship [2013] FCAFC 80 at [4] per Allsop CJ, [24] per Flick J and [87] per Robertson J.
41 The appellant submits that the Tribunal's insistence on considering the appellant's claim in relation to Fujian province rather than Jiangxi province, in spite of the appellant's objections, would lead a reasonable person to apprehend that the Tribunal's conclusion that the appellant was not a member of the underground church in China was not reached on an objective assessment of the facts. The appellant submits that the refusal of the Tribunal to consider the risk of harm to the appellant in Jiangxi province, the absence of any finding that the appellant had lied about being located in that province and the fact that it was not for the Tribunal to direct the appellant to go to any particular province establishes that the Tribunal's decision was affected by apprehended bias. The appellant alleges that the Tribunal made adverse findings as to the appellant's credibility as a "solution" to the evidence that was before it; that is, the Tribunal made a finding that the appellant was not involved in the underground church in China in order to avoid a conclusion that the appellant did have a well-founded fear of persecution. This accusation is not supported by the evidence before the Court. The Tribunal carefully considered the appellant's claims and was willing to give the appellant the benefit of the doubt in the operation of s 91R(3) of the Act. I have considered the transcript of the Tribunal hearing. For the reasons advanced by the primary judge, the questioning of the appellant by the Tribunal was merely directed towards fulfilling the Tribunal's obligations and ensuring that the appellant was apprised of the arguments against him. It was not expressing disbelief in the form of prejudgment.
42 Most of the appellant's submissions on the ground of apprehended bias were directed to the issue of the country information relied upon by the Tribunal. In NAHI at [11] the Court stated:
By s 420(2)(a) of the Migration Act, the Tribunal is not bound by the rules of evidence. By s 424(1), in conducting a review, the Tribunal may get any information that it considers relevant. There can be no objection in principle to the Tribunal relying on 'country information'. The weight that it gives to such information is a matter for the Tribunal itself, as part of its fact-finding function. Such information as the Tribunal obtains for itself is not restricted to 'guidance', as the appellants submitted. It may be used to assess the credibility of a claim of a well-founded fear of persecution. It is not, as the first appellant submitted, an error of law, or a jurisdictional error, for the Tribunal to base a decision on 'country information' that is not true. The question of the accuracy of the 'country information' is one for the Tribunal, not for the Court.
43 The primary judge appropriately and comprehensively dealt with the appellant's arguments relating to the reliance placed on the country information and, in particular, the use of information relating to Fujian province. As was recognised by the primary judge, it was appropriate for the Tribunal to consider the country information relevant to Fujian province because that is the appellant's home province and will likely be the province to which he returns. It is also relevant that the Tribunal disbelieved the appellant's claims as to what he alleged occurred in Jiangxi province; such a finding left little need to consider the risk of harm in other provinces.
44 Section 424AA of the Act provides:
If an applicant is appearing before the Tribunal because of an invitation under section 425:
(a) the Tribunal may orally give to the applicant clear particulars of any information that the Tribunal considers would be the reason, or a part of the reason, for affirming the decision that is under review; and
(b) if the Tribunal does so--the Tribunal must:
(i) ensure, as far as is reasonably practicable, that the applicant understands why the information is relevant to the review, and the consequences of the information being relied on in affirming the decision that is under review; and
(ii) orally invite the applicant to comment on or respond to the information; and
(iii) advise the applicant that he or she may seek additional time to comment on or respond to the information; and
(iv) if the applicant seeks additional time to comment on or respond to the information--adjourn the review, if the Tribunal considers that the applicant reasonably needs additional time to comment on or respond to the information.
45 The Tribunal was careful to put to the appellant the concerns it held about his evidence and claims to fear harm as it was required by s 424AA to do. On numerous occasions the Tribunal asked the appellant to address its concerns. Rather than evidencing a closed mind, the Tribunal's questioning provided the appellant with an opportunity to respond to what could be perceived as weaknesses in the appellant's case, and to provide any additional information the appellant considered was relevant to assessing his claim. The appellant's second and third grounds of appeal are not made out.