Section 430 point and associated submissions
23 Mr Krohn, of counsel, appeared for the applicants. He submitted that the RRT breached its obligations pursuant to s430 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) ("the Act") in refusing to grant protection visas to the applicants.
24 It was contended that the RRT failed to make a finding on the following material questions of fact:
· whether Mr Thayananthan was beaten during his detention in January 1996; and
· whether there is a real chance that Mr Thayananthan would suffer persecution again of the kind he suffered in his arrest, detention and beating in January 1996.
25 It was further submitted that in breach of s430 of the Act, the RRT did not refer to any evidence upon which it could base its finding that:
"I have (sic) do not accept that he would have risked his freedom or his life to assist his wife apply for a visa for Australia when there is no reason to suppose that she would not have been able to make these arrangements herself."
26 Additionally, it was contended that the RRT was in breach of s430 of the Act by not referring to any evidence which caused it to accept certain advice from DFAT about LTTE operations in Colombo.
27 Further submissions referrable to s430 of the Act were made with reference to the RRT's failure to find certain evidence of Mr Thayananthan to be credible.
28 In Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs v Singh (2000) 98 FCR 469, [2000] FCA 845, in the context of s430 of the Act, Black CJ, Sundberg, Katz and Hely JJ said that (at [57]):
"A fact is material if the decision in the practical circumstances of the particular case turns upon whether that fact exists."
29 The decision in the practical circumstances of the case before the RRT did not depend on whether Mr Thayananthan was beaten during his detention in 1996. The RRT assumed for the purposes of the argument before it that Mr Thayananthan's "problems" from 1995 to 1997 were real but held that even so, that would not lead it to be satisfied that Mr Thayananthan was perceived to be an LTTE associate during that time. The question of whether or not Mr Thayananthan was beaten during his detention in 1996 cannot be said to be a material question of fact in the context of s430 of the Act in light of Singh.
30 Mr Krohn's submission that the RRT breached s430 of the Act by failing to set out whether there is a real chance that Mr Thayananthan would suffer persecution of the sort he suffered in 1996 on his return to Sri Lanka is also rejected.
31 The RRT's finding that Mr Thayananthan would not be perceived by the authorities as an LTTE associate is consistent with the view of the RRT that there is not a real chance that Mr Thayananthan would suffer persecution on his return to Sri Lanka, being persecution of the sort alleged by him to have occurred in 1996. Further, the RRT's view that Mr Thayananthan is not of current interest to the authorities more than amply illustrates why this aspect of Mr Krohn's submissions is without merit.
32 Similar criticisms by Mr Krohn of the RRT's approach to Mr Thayananthan's return to Sri Lanka are also devoid of merit in the context of s430 of the Act and in so far as it was alleged that the RRT failed to give proper consideration to this aspect of the claim of the applicants. The case before the RRT did not "turn upon" whether Mr Thayananthan returned to Sri Lanka or his motives for so doing. His return was merely illustrative of the RRT's view that such a return could be effected without consequent persecution. It was not a matter in respect of which it was bound to make further inquiries concerning why the first applicant would return to Sri Lanka to assist his wife apply for a visa.
33 On the topic of the RRT's acceptance of the DFAT material, it is unnecessary for the RRT to say why it accepted such material. In any event, the RRT did refer to why it preferred the DFAT advice over the contrary view preferred by Mr Thayananthan, even though it was not obliged to do so: see Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs v Rajamanikkam [2000] FCA 1023 at [58], per Kiefel, North and Mansfield JJ. The RRT did not fail to disclose "that element of [its] actual reasoning process": see Singh at [46].
34 The criticism of the RRT for not referring to evidence upon which it based its finding that Mr Thayananthan would not face persecution for simply being a Tamil is without foundation. There was simply a lack of evidence to support the claim that was made in that regard by Mr Thayananthan. Mr Krohn took the Court to several parts of a written submission made on behalf of Mr Thayananthan, none of which supported the broad proposition that Tamils per se were at risk of persecution. However, even if there was such evidence, it could not assist Mr Thayananthan unless he was considered, on the evidence, to have a profile which would bring him to the attention of the authorities. There was no evidence that he had such a profile. There was no basis for the submission that Mr Thayananthan's detention may have increased his profile in Sri Lanka in light of there being no evidence to support that proposition from any event which occurred after the January 1996 detention whilst Mr Thayananthan was in Sri Lanka.
35 It was submitted further that the RRT failed to refer to any evidence or reason for its finding that the first and second applicants were not credible in many respects. That submission is rejected. The RRT did give reasons for its view that certain aspects of Mr Thayananthan's evidence were "unconvincing and implausible". That part of the evidence of the second applicant which was rejected by the RRT was evidence which was supportive of evidence which Mr Thayananthan gave and which the RRT did not accept.