3.2 The Tribunal's decision
25 On 27 November 2012, the appellant applied to the Tribunal for review of the delegate's decision. He appeared before the Tribunal on 7 March 2014 to give evidence and present arguments.
26 The appellant's claims for a protection visa before the Tribunal can be summarised as follows:
(1) The appellant feared return to Pakistan by reason of his Hazara ethnicity and Shia religion.
(2) The appellant fled Pakistan on the first occasion (i.e. when he arrived in Australia claiming Afghan nationality in 1999) because he believed he would be killed by Sunni extremists by reason of his membership of a high profile Hazara family in Quetta, several of whom had been targeted by Sunni extremists.
(3) Following his return to Pakistan, he worked for his own consultancy and as a director of a company (the employer) which was a consultant in Pakistan providing facilities for persons wishing to undertake activities abroad. In 2010, he was threatened for sending Muslim persons to non-Muslim countries. He discussed his concerns with the CEO of the employer and was advised to close down the employer's operation in Quetta as soon as possible, whereupon the appellant decided he would not be safe in Quetta and moved to Karachi. In support of this, the appellant provided a letter purportedly signed by the CEO of the employer, Mr [ABCD] which was said to confirm this version of events (the first letter).
(4) He was a prominent person in certain fields of endeavour.
27 Following the hearing, on 20 March 2014, the Tribunal wrote to the appellant inviting him to comment on, or respond to, information. In particular, the Tribunal sought the appellant's response to the following matters (AB450):
(1) documentation on file suggesting that the appellant was still signing documents on behalf of his business in Quetta as late as March 2011, noting that this was relevant because "the Tribunal may not be convinced that your behaviour is consistent with your claim that you received threats in [late] 2010 that forced you to close down [the employer's] operation, forced you to relocate … and forced you to begin winding down your business";
(2) information from New Zealand authorities about the appellant's alleged relationship with a named individual who the applicant claimed was a relative but who had denied the relationship;
(3) the appellant's previous application in Australia on the basis that he was an Afghan national;
(4) promotional information from the employer which suggested the name of the CEO was spelt differently from the name given in the letter provided by the appellant to the Tribunal in support of his claim, i.e., that the CEO's name was Mr [IBCD]; and
(5) Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Country Information: Pakistan dated 29 November 2013 on the prevalence of document fraud.
28 On 3 April 2014, the appellant's representative provided documents in response to the Tribunal, including: a statement of review from the appellant; a written submission on the appellant's behalf; a letter dated 17 March 2014 allegedly from the CEO of the employer giving the employer's Australian address in the footer but on letterhead from Head Office in Lahore (the second letter); and three articles. The second letter at AB472 stated that the first letter was genuine and contained a typographical error.
29 On 14 April 2014, the appellant's representative wrote a further letter to the Tribunal enclosing country information about relocation to other parts of Pakistan, as well as citing previous Tribunal decisions in which the Tribunal had considered that relocation to other parts of Pakistan was not a viable option for visa applicants.
30 On 25 April 2014, the Tribunal affirmed the delegate's decision.
31 The Tribunal accepted that the appellant was Hazara and Shia. However, it did not accept the appellant's evidence that he had been individually targeted in the past (Tribunal reasons at [8] and [10]-[11]). In particular, it did not believe that the appellant had received threatening phone calls leading him to close down his employer's Quetta office and close his own business down in December 2010. Nor did it accept that he was required to move to Karachi in December 2010 and gave instructions for his staff to close down the business as soon as possible (Tribunal reasons at [12]). However, the Tribunal accepted in light of the country information that Quetta was a dangerous place for Hazara and Shia people, and therefore that there was a real chance the appellant could face serious harm on account of his Shia religion and his Hazara ethnicity if he were to return to Quetta in the reasonably foreseeable future (Tribunal reasons at [14]-[15]).
32 The Tribunal then turned to consider whether the appellant could live elsewhere in Pakistan, concluding that it would be "reasonable, in the sense of practicable, for the applicant to relocate to Lahore to avoid the persecution which he fears in Quetta" (at [24]). This conclusion was drawn in light of the following matters.
(1) The Tribunal has doubts as to whether the appellant was telling the truth about being from a high profile family. Among other things, the Tribunal noted that it had difficulty accepting the appellant's evidence that he was related to certain high profile individuals in circumstances where the appellant had previously assumed the identity of an Afghan national in order to obtain residence in Australia and had also claimed to be a relative of a New Zealand citizen but that person had denied being related to the appellant. The Tribunal found that, given the appellant's "lack of credibility and the Tribunal's overall impression that the applicant simply assumes identities and relationships in order to obtain what he wants", it preferred the evidence of the New Zealand citizen that they were unrelated (at [18]).
(2) Even if the Tribunal was wrong and the appellant was related to the people he claimed to be related to and was a leader in the Hazara community, the Tribunal found that the appellant willingly returned to Pakistan in 2003 (after the deaths of his alleged relatives) and that nothing had happened to him in the eight years he had remained there (at [19]).
(3) The Tribunal considered that if the appellant relocated to Lahore, he would be able to live and work there as he had done in the past, and to participate freely in his religious and ethnic community and in their religious and social activities. In reaching this conclusion, the Tribunal did not accept the appellant's claim that he could not relocate to Lahore because his first wife's family would be after him (at [23]).
(4) The Tribunal also found that the general country information relied on by the applicant about the presence of Sunni extremist groups in Punjab was dated and mostly did not relate to Lahore (at [24]). It preferred country information emanating from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) which considered that the current security situation in Lahore was relatively free from politically motivated, terrorist and sectarian violence (at 25]).
(5) The Tribunal considered that the documents outlining the appellant's medical and mental health issues did not indicate the appellant would suffer harm if he returned to Pakistan, and that the appellant could seek treatment in Lahore (at [27]).
33 The Tribunal concluded that, taking into account the cumulative effect of all of these circumstances, it did not accept that the appellant had a well-founded fear of persecution for one or more of the Refugee Convention reasons if he returned to Pakistan and settled in Lahore now or in the reasonably foreseeable future (at [29]).
34 Similarly, with respect to the claim for complementary protection, the Tribunal concluded:
30. Having regard to my findings of fact above, the Tribunal is satisfied that it would be reasonable for the applicant to relocate to Lahore where the Tribunal considers that there would not be a real risk that he will suffer significant harm.
31. Having regard to my findings of fact above, the Tribunal does not accept that there are substantial grounds for believing that, as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of the applicant being removed from Australia to Pakistan, there is a real risk that he will be arbitrarily deprived of his life, that the death penalty will be carried out on him, that he will be subjected to torture, that he will be subjected to cruel or inhuman treatment or punishment or that he will be subjected to degrading treatment or punishment as defined. Accordingly, I do not accept that there are substantial grounds for believing that, as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of the applicant being removed from Australia to Pakistan, there is a real risk that he will suffer significant harm as defined in subsection 36(2A) of the Act.
32. For the reasons given above, the Tribunal is not satisfied that the applicant is a person in respect of whom Australia has protection obligations under the Refugees Convention. Therefore the applicant does not satisfy the criterion set out in s.36(2)(a).
33. Having concluded that the applicant does not meet the refugee criterion in s.36(2)(a), the Tribunal has considered the alternative criterion in s.36(2)(aa). The Tribunal is not satisfied that the applicant is a person in respect of whom Australia has protection obligation sunder s.36(2)(aa).
(emphasis in original)
35 The Tribunal therefore affirmed the decision not to grant the appellant the protection visa.