The proceedings in the FCCA
11 The primary judge considered what are now Grounds 1 and 2 together.
12 In relation to the appellant's cousin, the primary judge set out, at [37], what the Tribunal had said at [28]-[31]. At [38] the primary judge noted the appellant's submissions to the effect that the appellant's claims to fear harm were said to derive, in part, from his having approached the Sri Lankan authorities to secure the release of his cousin who had been "abducted" by the CID. The Tribunal disbelieved this claim because it found the appellant not to be a witness of truth. At [42], the primary judge said that the Tribunal disbelieved the appellant's claims regarding his cousin and gave no weight to the "corroborating" documents, because of adverse credibility findings it had made about the appellant. The primary judge held, at [135], that it could not be said that the Tribunal ignored or overlooked the appellant's claim concerning his cousin. It made specific reference to it when setting out its understanding of the appellant's claims, at [8] and [10] of the Tribunal's reasons. At [139], the primary judge held that the Tribunal understood the claim made by the appellant concerning his cousin and how he said it created a fear of harm for him. It also noted information that a person with such links would be at risk of harm if they were to return to Sri Lanka. However, the Tribunal had found as a fact that it did not accept the appellant had a cousin who had been abducted by the CID. This was reasonably open to the Tribunal on what was before it, and for the reasons it gave. The primary judge rejected the claims of jurisdictional error on the part of the Tribunal in this respect.
13 In relation to the appellant's brother, the primary judge again referred to the findings the Tribunal made about the appellant's credibility. At [67], the primary judge referred to the Tribunal's reasoning at [28]-[30]. The primary judge referred to a number of elements in the Tribunal's conclusion that the brother's situation did not give rise to a well-founded fear of harm for the appellant.
14 The brother did not appear at the Tribunal hearing, nor otherwise provide any statement to support the appellant's case. The only evidence available to the Tribunal on the issue of how the brother's circumstances affected the appellant's claim was the evidence of the appellant himself. The Tribunal described that evidence as "scant". The appellant did not know what difficulties his brother had had with the Sri Lankan authorities.
15 The Tribunal found that the difficulties the appellant had with the Sri Lankan authorities "were not related to his brother". This was reasonably open. It was also reasonably open to the Tribunal to find that the appellant did not claim to fear harm because his brother left Sri Lanka in 2009. It was not irrational for the Tribunal to say that it was not bound to follow the findings of a Ministerial delegate who assessed the brother's claims and found them to be credible. As with the claims of jurisdictional error in respect of the appellant's cousin, the primary judge rejected the claims in this respect.
16 In relation to what is now Ground 3, the primary judge said, at [107], that in the current case the Tribunal made an assessment of the appellant's credit, and then assessed the value of the corroborative evidence and the effect of the contents of the documents, on the view it had otherwise formed of the appellant's credit. No jurisdictional error was revealed in the circumstances: Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZNSP [2010] FCAFC 50; 184 FCR 485 at [33]-[36].