The findings of the Independent Protection Assessor
8 In his statutory declaration dated 20 April 2011 in support of his application for a Protection Obligation Determination the appellant said that he left Iran because the regime in Iran was "an oppressive and stifling one". He said that after the elections, in about July or August 2009 he "joined in a demonstration". He said that from that point he had lived in fear that he would be "identified and arrested through photographs taken at random by the Basij". Eventually he decided to leave Iran. He said that if he returned to Iran he "will be arrested at the airport and probably killed." In his declaration he said:
If I was to return to Iran, the authorities there will know I must have been unlawful in Australia and suspect that I applied for refugee status and failed, they will know I spoke badly about Iran and that I am against the regime, I will be accused of been [sic] a spy and Sharia law will apply, they will arrest me and do with me what ever they want as they did many others.
9 A submission by the appellant's solicitors and migration agents dated 15 November 2011 asserted that the appellant's fear of persecution rested on his religious beliefs, they being less conservative than the religious beliefs of the regime; his imputed political opinion, that being less conservative than the political opinion of the regime; and his membership of particular social groups, those groups being:
people who did not comply with fundamentalist religious norms imposed by the Iranian regime;
people who transgress religious moral codes/policies/laws imposed by the Iranian regime; and
supporters of Mousavi/the Green Party.
The submission also stated that the appellant feared that if he was returned to Iran he would be persecuted due to his being a failed asylum seeker. The appellant in oral submissions before this Court relied in particular on paragraphs of the submission at Appeal Book 161, to which we will return later in these reasons.
10 The Assessor found that the appellant was not particularly credible. His evidence at the interview was internally consistent and generally consistent with known circumstances in Iran, however there were some inconsistencies between his evidence at the interview and his earlier evidence. On balance, and extending to the appellant the benefit of all doubt, the Assessor accepted that the appellant's fear that if he returned to Iran he would be arrested and probably killed was genuine. However the only evidence that the appellant had provided on which he could base his fears were the following assertions:
that he set a Basij motorcycle alight and helped an injured demonstrator; and
that the Basij have taken his photograph; and
that the Basij visited his father's house and told his father that the appellant participated in a demonstration and for that reason they want him.
11 The Assessor did not accept that any of those events actually took place. While he accepted that the appellant attended a demonstration (by accident rather than by design) he did not accept that the appellant had ever been politically active or that he was known or wanted by the authorities. In making these findings of fact, the Assessor was also aware of the appellant's claim that he had participated in a second demonstration a few days after the first. He described the appellant's involvement in the demonstrations as, by his own evidence, "short lived and limited". It followed that neither the appellant's political opinions nor any political opinions that could be imputed to him led to a real chance of persecution. He was unknown to the authorities and he was unlikely to come to their attention for any past action in Iran. The appellant had not indicated that he had ever been vocal in his opposition to the moral codes and policies of the regime in Iran. He had not indicated that he was a religious dissenter. Although he claimed to have voted for Mousavi (by the official count more than 13 million Iranians voted for Mousavi) he had not claimed to have campaigned or advocated for Mousavi in any way and he had certainly not participated in the Green Movement which developed after the 2009 election. He had said that neither he nor his family had ever been involved with any political party or movement.
12 There was no evidence that the appellant had ever expressed religious dissent. The moral code of that regime appeared to be more of an irritant and an inconvenience to the appellant and it appeared most likely that the appellant had left Iran in order to avoid this irritation and inconvenience.
13 With regard to his political opinion, there was no evidence, and the appellant did not claim, that he was an activist, agitator or organiser and there was no evidence that he would be thought to be such by the authorities. Indeed, his evidence was that he had scrupulously avoided any political activity both before and since what appeared to be a brief and somewhat opportunistic involvement in a demonstration following the 2009 election and his limited involvement in another demonstration a few days later. The Assessor found there was not a real chance that the appellant could face persecution for his religious beliefs or his political opinion.
14 Turning to the submission of 15 November 2011 which asserted that one of the "issues that should be taken into consideration" is "the risks of Convention related persecution that the involuntary removal of the [appellant] to Iran as a failed asylum seeker may trigger", the Assessor said that it was not clear if this was an additional claim that the appellant would be targeted as a result of an imputed political belief based on him having sought asylum in Australia, or an additional claim that as a result of him being a member of a particular social group made up of failed asylum seekers he would face persecution.
15 The Assessor said that he had considered both possibilities. He first considered whether or not the appellant would be identified as a failed asylum seeker on return to Iran. The appellant's passport was taken from him by the people smuggler on his way to Australia and the appellant would thus have to obtain new travel documents before he would be allowed to enter Iran. It seemed likely that in the process of obtaining documentation, whether in Australia or on arrival in Iran, the Iranian authorities would become aware, or at least suspicious, that the appellant had applied for asylum. While unable to determine that the authorities would become aware that the appellant had sought asylum, the Assessor accepted that it was likely that they would. Even accepting that the authorities would be aware that the appellant had sought asylum, it was not at all clear that he would be stopped or detained on return to Iran. Advice from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade appeared to leave open the possibility that a person who was identified as a "low level protestor" by the authorities could be stopped but it provided no specific information as to whether a person who was not identified as a protester at all would be stopped. The Assessor concluded that the chances of the appellant being maltreated were at the lower end of the range covered by the word "possible". Indeed, given that the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade did not know of any specific instance, and only acknowledged that it was "possible" in "isolated" cases, the Assessor said one might think that the possibility was no more than theoretical. While accepting the advice that it was possible that the appellant may suffer maltreatment as a result of seeking asylum, he did not accept that the acknowledgement of the possibility of this happening necessarily meant that there was more than a remote chance of it happening.
16 Having analysed the facts founding a decision of the Refugee Review Tribunal of 22 October 2010, the Assessor said:
[109] … As I have found that [the appellant] has not come to the attention of the authorities, except in relation to relatively trivial and ordinary matters concerning social behaviour, the task is to determine whether simply because he is an asylum seeker he would face serious harm. That he would is not supported by the evidence cited in the RRT decision.
17 The balance of the Assessor's reasons was as follows:
[112] I have accepted that as a failed asylum seeker [the appellant] will come to the attention of the Iranian authorities. There is a clear body of evidence suggesting that if he had already come to the attention of the authorities for any reason which could strongly suggest a political opinion or religious belief that is considered to be opposed to the opinions and beliefs of the regime he would face serious harm. In this regard I note that the 2005 Canadian Immigration Review Board report which quoted the cases described by the Toronto Globe and Mail also quotes the US Department of State Human Rights Report in which it states that "[c]itizens returning from abroad sometimes were subjected to searches and extensive questioning by government authorities for evidence of anti-government activities abroad." [Footnote omitted] This strongly supports the conclusion that the rationale by which the authorities decide how to deal with returnees is whether they have been involved in anti-government activities rather than whether they have sought asylum.
[113] As I do not accept that he has ever come to the attention of the authorities in a way that would suggest political or religious activism, I do not accept that there is a real chance that the authorities would show any interest in him on return to Iran. I do not accept that there is a real chance that he would suffer serious harm either because he would be a returned asylum seeker or because as a returned asylum seeker he would be imputed to have a political opinion opposed to the regime.
[114] I therefore do not accept that there is a real chance that [the appellant] would face persecution resulting in serious harm for a Convention reason and I do not accept that any fear he may have in this regard is well-founded. In arriving at this conclusion I have considered the reasons individually and cumulatively. I find that there is not a real chance of [the appellant] facing persecution resulting in serious harm for any Convention reason or reasons.