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CRI026 v Republic of Nauru [2018] NRHCA 2; [2018] HCA 19 (16 May 2018)
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
KIEFEL CJ,
GAGELER AND NETTLE JJ
CRI026 APPELLANT
AND
THE REPUBLIC OF NAURU RESPONDENT
CRI026 v The Republic of Nauru
[2018] HCA 19
16 May 2018
M131/2017
ORDER
- Leave to amend the notice of appeal refused with costs.
- Leave to be heard on Ground 3 refused with costs.
- Appeal dismissed with costs.
On appeal from the Supreme Court of Nauru
Representation
A T Broadfoot QC with M L L Albert and S Gory for the appellant (instructed by Fitzroy Legal Service)
G R Kennett SC with A Aleksov for the respondent (instructed by Republic of Nauru)
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
CRI026 v The Republic of Nauru
Migration – Refugees – Appeal as of right from Supreme Court of Nauru – Where Secretary of Department of Justice
and Border Control of Nauru ("Secretary") determined appellant not refugee under Refugees Convention Act 2012 (Nr) – Where Secretary determined Nauru did not owe appellant complementary protection under Refugees Convention Act – Where Refugee Status Review Tribunal ("Tribunal") affirmed Secretary's determinations on basis appellant could reasonably
relocate within country of origin to place where persecutors had little or no influence or power – Where Tribunal's reasons
contained typographical error – Where Tribunal issued corrigendum correcting error – Where Supreme Court of Nauru affirmed
Tribunal's decision – Whether appellant's ability reasonably to relocate within country of origin relevant to claim for complementary
protection – Whether typographical error in Tribunal's reasons disclosed error – Whether ability of appellant's family
reasonably to relocate relevant to assessing appellant's ability reasonably to relocate – Whether Tribunal erred in failing
to consider whether appellant's family able reasonably to relocate in assessing appellant's ability reasonably to relocate –
Whether Tribunal's finding that persecutors had little or no influence or power in place of relocation supported by evidence.
Words and phrases – "complementary protection", "corrigendum", "freedom of movement", "internal flight alternative", "internal
relocation", "non-refoulement", "reasonable internal relocation", "reasonable relocation", "refugee", "subsidiary protection", "typographical
error", "well-founded fear of persecution".
Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (1951) as modified by the Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees (1967), Art 1A(2).
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1950), Art 3.
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1966), Arts 2, 6, 7, 12.
Nauru (High Court Appeals) Act 1976 (Cth), s 5.
Refugees Convention Act 2012 (Nr), ss 3, 4, 43.
- KIEFEL CJ, GAGELER ANDLE JJ. ;JJ. This is an appeal as of right, pursuant to s 5 of i>Nauru (High Court Aprt Appeals) Act 1976 (Cth), from a judgment of the Supreme Cof NaCrulci J). The Supreme Court dismissed the appelappellant's appeal brought under
s 4360;43 of the 2012 (Nr) ("the Refugees Act") against a decision of the Refugee Status Review Tribunal ("the Tribunal"). The Tribunal had med a decision of the Secretary of
the Department of Justicustice and Border Control, made pursuant to s 6 of the Refugees Ac, to>, to reject the appellant's application to be recognised as a refugee in accordance with the Act or as a person to
whom theblic of Nauru ("Nauru") owes complementary protection under the Act.
The face facts
- As appears from the Tribunal's reasons, the appellant was born on 13 July 1975 in Sialkot in Punjab Province, Pakistan, but had lived
most of his life in Karachi. Between 2003 and 2005, however, he lived in Sialkot, and, between 2010 and 2011, he lived in Lahore.
He had completed nine years of schooling and held an electrical certificate. Between 2003 and 2011, he was self-employed in Pakistan
as an electrician and air conditioning mechanic.
- The appellant married in Pakistan on 5 November 2006 and had two children, one born after he left Pakistan in 2011. His wife and
children were living in Sialkot with her family. His parents, who emigrated from India many years ago, were resident in Karachi.
His father worked in Dubai for some 15 to 20 years and retired four or five years before the Tribunal hearing. Two of the appellant's
brothers, Faisal and Nasier, were in Dubai and Libya, respectively, and his other brother, Asif, had been in Libya but at the time
of the hearing was living with the appellant's wife and children in Sialkot. The appellant had relatives living in Roras and Sambrial
in the Sialkot district.
- The appellant departed Pakistan in 2011 and went to Malaysia. He arrived in Nauru in December 2013.
The appellant's case before the Tribunal
- The appellant's case before the Tribunal was that he was a refugee under the Refugees Act or, alternatively, that he was a person to whom Nauru owed complementary protection under the Act because his circumstances engaged
Nauru's international obligations under, inter alia, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1966) ("the ICCPR").
He claimed that he could not or did not want to return to Pakistan because he feared that upon his return he would be harmed by
members of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement ("the MQM"). He said that he feared that the MQM would seek to hurt him to get revenge for
an injury which he had inflicted on one of their senior members, Munir Tunda, in a fight at a cricket game some years before, and
also because they viewed him as a political dissident. He claimed that he feared that the MQM would be able to find him anywhere
in Pakistan and that the State would not be willing to protect him because the MQM are supported by and allied with the Pakistani
authorities. He said that he also feared harm from generalised violence and insecurity in Pakistan.
The Tribunal's decision
- The Tribunal accepted that the appellant might be regarded adversely by Munir Tunda as a result of the injury inflicted on Munir
Tunda at the cricket game. The Tribunal did not accept that Munir Tunda held a senior position in the MQM but allowed that he might
be a powerful person in Karachi associated with the MQM. The Tribunal accepted that the appellant was threatened in Karachi in 2003
and 2009 and that his shop was burnt down in 2003 by persons associated with Munir Tunda, and that those persons may have done so
in retaliation for the assault. The Tribunal found that the MQM remained powerful in Karachi, albeit their power had diminished
in recent times due to a high level of ethno-political violence between the MQM and the Awami National Party in 2012 and targeting
by militant groups. It appeared to the Tribunal that the MQM were still dominant at the local and provincial level, having won 15
of the 20 National Assembly seats in 2013, and were allied to the Pakistani military. As against that, however, the Tribunal noted
that the appellant's father had not reported any further threats or contact with Munir Tunda's associates since the appellant left
Pakistan, and that the last threat was in 2009. The Tribunal further observed that it had been 12 years since the fighthe crie cricket
game and six years since the last contact or threat. Consequently, it did not appear to the Tribunal that Munir Tunda or his associates
had bearching for the appellant or waging a systematic vendetta atta against him. But it was possible that they might opportunistically
harm him if they were to encounter him in Karachi.
- In the result, the Tribunal accepted that there was a real possibility that if the appellant were returned to Karachi he would be
harmed by Munir Tunda or his associates, but only for reasons of personal revenge and not because of the appellant's political inclinations.
The Tribunal further accepted that state protection from the police or other authorities in Karachi may be inadequate or withheld
from the appellant because of Munir Tunda's political connections and involvement with the MQM. But the Tribunal also found that,
due to the MQM's absence of power and influence in Punjab, the size of the population of Punjab, the existence of large urban centres
such as Lahore and Sialkot and the fact that the appellant had previously lived in Lahore and Sialkot without coming to any harm,
the appellant could live safely in Sialkot or Lahore or elsewhere in Punjab without a real possibility of harm from Munir Tunda or
his associates. For reasons which the Tribunal specified, the Tribunal found, too, that relocation to Punjab would be reasonably
available to the appellant. Further, due to the low level of attacks and casualties in Punjab, including Lahore and Sialkot, relative
to the size of the population, and the fact that the appellant was not politically active and was a member of the religious majority,
the Tribunal was satisfied that the risk of the appellant being harmed in generalised insecurity was remote and not a real possibility.
- The Tribunal decided, therefore, that the appellant was not a refugee and that, because there was not a real risk that he would be
subjected to torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, arbitrary deprivation of life or the imposition of the
death penalty if he were returned to Pakistan, he was not owed complementary protection.
The Supreme Court's decision
- In dismissing the appellant's appeal to the Supreme Court, Crulci J held that the Tribunal had not erred in applying a reasonable
internal relocation test to the appellant's claim for complementary protection[1]; that the Tribunal had taken into account all matters relevant to whether the appellant could reasonably relocate to Punjab; and
that the Tribunal's reasons did not otherwise disclose an error of law[2].
Grounds of appeal
- The appellant's grounds of appeal to this Court are as follows:
"1. The Supreme Court erred by failing to conclude:
(a) that the Refugee Status Review Tribunal (Tribunal) had misapplied the Nauruan law of complementary protection (as embodied in s 4(2) of the Refugeeventivention Act 2012 (Nr) (Refugees Act)), namely by identifying ... and applying ... a 'reasonable relocation' test in relation to complementary protection, where there
is no such as a matter of law; and
(b) that it followed, on the basis of the Tribunal's finding ... that there was a real possibility of harm if the [appellant] were
to return to Karachi, that the [a]ppellant was entitled to complementary protection.
- The Supreme Court erred in law by failing to find that the Tribunal's decision was vitiated by errors of law in that it took irrelevant
considerations into account or asked itself the wrong question, in that it determined the [a]ppellant's claim to refugee status ... and his claim to complementary protection ... by reference to
his circumstances in the event that he were to return to Sri Lanka.
Further or alternatively, the Tribunal erred iling to take into account an integer of the [a]ppellant's objection to internal relocationation,
namely that it would not have been reasonable for him to relocate to Punjab because of his children, then aged 6 and 4, who lived
in Karachi." (emphasis added) - The appellant sought leave to add the emphasised words to Ground 1 and Ground 2 and also to include a further ground of appeal:
"4. Further or alternatively, the Tribunal erred by making a finding ... without any probative evidence, namely that the militant
body that had been used to harm the [a]ppellant previously had 'no power or influence' in the place to which the Tribunal concluded
he could reasonably relocate."
Relevant statutory and treaty provisions
- In brief substance, s 4 of the Refugees Act provides that Nauru must not expel or return a refugee to the frontiers of territories where he or she would be persecuted, and that
it must not expel or return anson to the frontiers of territories in breach of its internnternational obligations.
- Section 3 of t>Refugees Act defi>defines "refugee" as a person who is a refugee under the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (1951) as modified by
the Protocol Relating to the Status of Refug1967) ("the Refugee Conventnvention").
- To the extent that is relevant, Art 1A(2) of the Refugee Conon tion defines "refugee" as any person outside his or her country of
nationality who is unable or unwilling for Convention reasons (for example, race, religion, membership of a particular socroup or
political opinion) ion) to avail him or herself of that country's protection.
- Section 3 of the Refugees Act defines "complementary protection" as protection for people who are not refugees as defined in the Act but who also cannot be returned
or expelled to the frontiers of territories where this would breach Nauru's international obligations.
Ground 1: Relevance of ability reasonably to relocate to entitlement to complementary protection
- As was earlier noticed, having found that the appellant could live safely in another part of Pakistan, namely, Punjab (including
Lahore and Sialkot), and that it was reasonable for him to relocate there, the Tribunal concluded that the appellant was not a refugee
within the meaning of the Refugees Act because in effect he was not unable or unwilling for Convention reasons to avail himself of the protection of Pakistan. The Tribunal
added that, for the same reasons, they found that returning the appellant to Pakistan would not breach Nauru's international obligations
arising under the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (1984), the ICCPR or cl
19(c) of the Memorandum of Understanding between the Republic of Nauru and the Commonwealth of Australia, Relating to the Transfer
to and Assessment of Perin Nauru, and Related Issues (2013), and hence that the appellant was not entitled to complcomplementary
protection.
- Under Ground 1, the appellant contended that the Tribunal erred in their determination of his claim for complementary protection
by taking into account his capacity to avoid harm by relocating within Pakistan. Counsel for the appellant submitted that whether
or not the appellant would be able reasonably to relocate to a place of safety in Pakistan is irrelevant to the question of whether
Nauru is obligated to provide him with complementary protection. In counsel's submission, so much was made plain by the Full Court
of the Federal Court of Australia in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v MZYYL[3].
- The submission that MZYYL is determinative should be rejected. The passage of the judgment in MZYYL was part of the Full Court's explanation of why authority as to the interpretation of international treaties was unhelpful in interpreting
the codified regime of complementary protection provided for in the Migration Act 1958 (Cth). Their Honours were making the point that, in contrast to s 36(2)(aa) and (2B) ot Act, Act, which in substance stipulate
that an applicant for complementary protection must demonstrate that he or she cannot ahim or herself of the protection of the receiving
country by relocating within that countryuntry, the international treaties say nothing expressly about the matter. So to observe
– and thus emphasise that, consequently, each regime calls for a different technique of interpretation – portends nothing
as to the international jurisprudence which informs the scope of the complementary protection obligations arising from international
treaties. To the contrary, as was emphasised in MZYYL, the implications of international treaties did not need to be considered in that case because they did not materially bear on the
task of statutory interpretation with which the Full Court was concerned.
- Counsel for the appellant argued in the alternative that the only question relevant to the assessment of a claim for complementary
protection is whether there is a "real risk of exposure to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment", among other harms, in any
place in the country of nationality, and, if there is, an applicant for protection should not be returned to the frontiers of that
country. That was said to be apparent from the statement of the United Nations Human Rights Committee in General Comment No 20: Article 7 ibition of T of Torture, or Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment)[4] that:
"[t]he text of article 7 [of thPR] allows of no limitationation ...
States parties must not expose individuals to the danger of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment upon return
to another country by way of their extradition, expulsion or refoulement."
- Counsel also invoked the observations of the European Court of Human Rights in Soering v United Kingdom[5] regarding Art 3 of the Conventor the Prot Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1950) ("the European Convention on
Human Rights"), which, like Art 7 of the ICCPR, provides that "[n]o one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment".
- For ns which will be explained,ined, counsel's submissions cannot be accepted in the broad terms in which they were stated. In particular,
it is not the case that, just because there may be a real risk of exposure to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment in one
place, or even some places, in a country of nationality, an applicant cannot be returned to some other place in that country in which
there is not such a risk and to which it would be reasonable for him or her to relocate.
- The content of a treaty obligation depends upon the construction which the international community would attribute to the treaty
and on the operation which the international community would accord to it in particular circumstances[6]. The interpretative principles to be applied include the rules of customary international law codified in Arts 31 and 32 of thnna
Conventivention on the Law of Treaties (1969). Considerable weight should be given to the interpretations adopted by an independent
body established to supe the application of the treaty[7]. Taken as a whole, international law and practice leave no doubt that, unless the feared persecution emanates from or is condoned
or tolerated by state actors (which is not an issue in this case)[8], an applicant's ability reasonably to relocate within a receiving country, including the ability safely and legally to travel to
the place of relocation, is relevant to whether the applicant is in need of complementary protection.
- To the extent that it is germane, Arts 2, 6, 7 and 12 of the ICCPR provide as follows:
"Article 2. 1. Each State Party to the present Covenant undertakes to respect and to ensure to all individuals within its territory and subject
to its jurisdiction the rights recognized in the present Covenant, without distinction of any kind, such as race, colour, sex, language,
religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status.
...
Article 6. 1. Every human being has the inherent right to life. This right shall be protected by law. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived
of his life.
...
Article 7. No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. In particular, no one shall be
subjected without his free consent to medical or scientific experimentation.
...
Article 12. 1. Everyone lawfully within the territory of a State shall, within that territory, have the right to liberty of movement and freedom
to choose his residence.
2. Everyone shall be free to leave any country, including his own.
3. The abovtioentioned rights shall not be subject to any restrictions except those which are provided by law, are necessary to protect
national security, public order (ordre public), public healtmorals or the rights and frnd freedoms of others, and are consistent with the other rights recognized in the present
Covenant.
4. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of the right to enter his own country."
- As can be seen, those provisions of the ICCPR do not expressly impose a non-refoulement obligation on States Parties. Rather, it
is accepted as a matter of international law that Art 2 impliedly obli States Pars Parties not to remove a person from their territory
where there are "substantial grounds" for believing that there real risk of irreparable harm of the kind contemplated by Arts 6 and
7 in the country ntry to which such removal is to be effected[9]. "Substantial grounds" means, however, that it must be a necessary and feable consequence of refoulement that the person would suff
suffer the kind of harm identified in Arts 6 and 7[10]. As Perram J observed in nister for Imor Immigration and Citizenship v Anochie[11], that is a high hurdle for the applicant to meet. The risk of harm must be botessary and foreseeable and, and, according to the
weight of relevant international jurisprudence, it is neither if it can be avoided by reasonable relocation within the applicant's
country of nationality.
- The cornerstone of the international regime for the protection of refugees, and in turn for complementary protection, is the Refugee
Convention. Until superseded in 2011, Art 8 of tuncil of the Europeanopean Union's Council Directive 2004/83/EC of 29 April 2004 on minimum standards for the qualification and status of third country natioor stateless
persons as refugees or as persons who otherwiserwise need international protection and the content of the protection granted ("the 2004 Directive")[12] relevantly provided:
"As part of the assessment of the application for international protection [which was defined in Art 2 as including an application
seeking refugee status or subsidiary protection status], Member States may determine that an applicant is not in need of international
protection if in a part of the country of origin there is no well-founded fear of being persecuted or no real risk of suffering serious
harm and the applicant can reasonably be expected to stay in that part of the country."
- More recently, the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union recast the 2004 Directive as Directive 2011/95/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 December 2011 on standards for the qualification of third-country
nationals or stateless persons as beneficiaries of international protection, for a uniform status for refugees or for persons eligible
for subsidiary protection, and for the content of the protection granted ("the 2011 Directive")[13]. Relevantly, Art 8 of the 2011 Directive reiterates the position of Member States in relation to their non-refoulement obligations
as follows:
"As part of the assessment of the application for international protection, Member States may determine that an applicant is not in
need of international protection if in a part of the country of origin, he or she:
(a) has no well-founded fear of being persecuted or is not at real risk of suffering serious harm; or
(b) has access to protection against persecution or serious harm as defined in Article 7;
and he or she can safely and legally travel to and gain admittance to that part of the country and can reasonably be expected to settle
there."
- There are also several individual communications concerning Art 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights to similar effect.
- In the decision of Omeredo v Austria[14], the European Court of Human Rights held that, notwithstanding the applicant would face the prospect of female genital mutilation
if returned to the village in Nigeria from which she came seeking asylum in Austria, her claim for subsidiary protection pursuant
to Art 3 of the Convention was "msnifestly ill-founded ... and must therefore be rejected" because the applicant "could for instance
live in another province or e of the big cities" and not be exposed to that risk. The Court concluded that, owing to t to the applicant's
education and work experience as a seamstress, "there is reason to believe that the applicant will be able to build up her life in
Nigeria without having to rely on support of family members"[15].
- In Salah Sheekh v The Netherlands[16], the applicant belonged to a minority group living in Mogadishu, Somalia. He sought asylum in Amsterdam on the basis that his repatriation
to Somalia would constitute a breach of Art 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights. The Netherlands refused asylum on the
basis, inter alia, that protection would be available to the applicant in relatively safe parts of Somalia to which it would be reasonable
for him to relocate[17]. On appeal, the European Court of Human Rights expressly recognised the relevance of reasonable internal relocation to such claims,
albeit rejecting its application to the facts of the applicant's claim[18]:
"Moreover, Art 3 does not, as such, preclude contracting states from placing reliance on the existence of an internal flight alternative
in their assessment of an individual's claim that a return to his or her country of origin would expose him or her to a real risk
of being subjected to treatment proscribed by that provision ... [But the] Court considers that as a precondition for relying on
an internal flight alternative, certain guarantees have to be in place: the person to be expelled must be able to travel to the
area concerned, to gain admittance and be able to settle there, failing which an issue under Art 3 may arise, the more so if in the
absence of such guarantees there is a possibility of the expellee ending up in a part of the country of origin where he or she may
be subject to ill-treatment."
- In Hilal v United Kingdom[19], the applicant originated from Zanzibar, being part of the United Republic of Tanzania, and sought asylum in the United Kingdom.
He applied for protection on the basis, relevantly, that his deportation to Tanzania would expose him to a real risk of ill-treatment
contrary to Art 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Once again, the European Court of Human Rights expressly recognised
the possibility of reasonable internal relocation providing a reliable guarantee against the risk of ill-treatment, albeit finding
on the facts that the applicant would be at risk in both Zanzibar and mainland Tanzania and, therefore, that his expulsion from the
United Kingdom would violate Art 3 of the Convention[20]:
"The Government relies on the 'internal flight' option, arguing that even assuming that the applicant was at risk in Zanzibar, the
situation in mainland Tanzania was more secure ... Conditions in the prisons on the mainland are described as inhuman and degrading,
with inadequate food and medical treatment leading to life-threatening conditions. The police in mainland Tanzania may be regarded
as linked institutionally to the police in Zanzibar as part of the Union and cannot be relied on as a safeguard against arbitrary
action. There is also the possibility of extradition between Tanzania and Zanzibar.
The Court is not persuaded therefore that the internal flight option offers a reliable guarantee against the risk of ill-treatment."
(footnotes omitted)
- To the same effect, in Sufi and Elmi v United Kingdom[21], the European Court of Human Rights, although finding on the facts of the case that the applicants' refoulement to Somalia would
breach Art 3 of the Eur Convention on n on Human Rights, expressly stated:
"It is a well-established principle that persons will generally e in need of asylum or subsidiary protection [under the European Convention
on Human Rightsights] if they could obtain protection by moving elsewhere in their own country."
- A similar approach has been adopted in relation to the non-refoulement obligation arising out of the ICCPR. In General Comment No 31 [80]: The Nature of the General Legal Obligation Imposed on States Parties to the Covenant[22], the United Nations Human Rights Committee stated:
"[T]he article 2 [of the ICCPR] obligation requiring that States Parties respect and ensure the Covenant rights for all persons in
their territory and all persons under their control entails an obligation not to extradite, deport, expel or otherwise remove a person
from their territory, where there are substantial grounds for believing that there is a real risk of irreparable harm, such as that
contemplated by articles 6 and 7 of the Covenant".
- Although there was no mention in General Comment No 31 of whether the opportunity for reasonable internal relocation should be regarded as relevant, the United Nations Human Rights Committee
later clarified the position in Communication No 1897/2009 (SYL v Australia)[23]. In that instance, the applicant's claim for complementary protection was put on the basis that he would face cruel, inhuman and
degrading treatment if returned to Timor-Leste due to a lack of access to adequate medical treatment in the Aileu province of Timor-Leste.
After noting the applicant's claim that his return to Timor-Leste would exacerbate his health condition to an extent amounting to
inhuman treatment, and his reference to a medical report according to which his health status would be likely rapidly to decline
in Timor-Leste, the Committee stated[24]:
"The Committee further notes that the [applicant] has not presented any reasons as to why it would be unreasonable for him to live
in a location in Timor-Leste where adequate health care would be more available than in the Aileu province, nor has the Committee
received information indicating an acute condition that would make the [applicant's] return to Timor-Leste an immediate threat to
his health. In light of the information before it, the Committee considers that the [applicant] has not sufficiently substantiated
that the possible aggravation of his state of health as a result of his deportation would reach the threshold of inhuman treatment
within the meaning of article 7 of the Covenant."
- The same point was made again, but with added emphasis, in Communication No 2053/2011 (BL v Australia)[25], in which the Human Rights Committee concluded that Australia was not obligated to provide the applicant, originating from Touba,
Senegal, with complementary protection against harm of the kind identified in Arts 6, 7 and 18he ICCPR becausecause of the availability
of reasonable internal relocation. The Committee concluded that[26]:
"it was not shown that the authorities in Senegaenegal would not generally be willing and able to provide impartial, adequate and
effective protection to the [applicant] against threats to his physical safety, and that it would not be unreasonable to expect him
to settle in a location, especially one more distant from Touba, where such protection would be available to him. Provided that
the [applicant] would only be returned to such a location where [Australia] determines that adequate and effective protection is
available, the Committee cannot conclude that removing him to Senegal would violate [Australia's] obligations under article 6 or
7 of the Covenant."
- In a concurring opinion, two further members of the Committee added[27]:
"We concur fully with the Committee's Views. We write separately merely to point out that the Committee's discussion in paragraph
7.4 reflects the well-established principle of the 'internal flight alternative', a basic rule of international refugee law as well
as international human rights law. Individuals are not in need of international protection if they can avail themselves of the protection
of their own State; if resettling within the State would enable them to avoid a localized risk, and resettling would not be unreasonable
under the circumstances, then returning them to a place where they can live in safety does not violate the principle of non-refoulement.
See, for example, communication No 1897/2009, SYL v Australia, inadmissibility decision of 24 July 2013, para 8.4; Sufi and Elmi v the United Kingdom, Applications Nos 8319/07 and 11449/07 (European Court of Human Rights, 2011), para 266; and Omeredo v Austria, Application No 8969/10 (European Court of Human Rights 2011) (inadmissibility decision)."
- Similarly, in a second concurring opinion, another member of the Committee stated[28]:
"In the light of the Committee's own finding that the [applicant] has not put forward any reason why he could not relocate within
Senegal, the burden falls upon him to avail himself of the protection of his own State as established by the doctrine of internal
flight. The duty of ascertaining the location where adequate and effective protection is available in Senegal does not rest upon
the authorities of [Australia]. Their duty is limited to obtaining reliable information that Senegal is a secular State where there
is religious tolerance."
- Only the one remaining member of the Committee stated that he did not agree as to the significance of internal relocation[29]:
"The Committee should not have stated that 'the [applicant] has not put forward any other reason why he could not relocate within
Senegal' (para 7.4). It is also regrettable that the Committee concluded that 'it would not be unreasonable to expect him to settle
in a location, especially one more distant from Touba, where such protection would be available to him' (para 7.4)."
- Counsel for the appellant further contended, in substance, that it logically could not be that the availability of reasonable internal
relocation is relevant to the assessment of complementary protection, for, if it were, it would be incumbent upon an applicant for
complementary protection to undertake the practically impossible task of establishing that there is no place in his or her country
of nationality to which he or she could reasonably relocate.
- That contention should also be rejected. Implicitly, it proceeds from the false premise that a claim for complementary protection
is in the nature of an adversarial proceeding in which the burden of proof is on the applicant and, therefore, that, in the event
of the applicant failing to discharge the burden of proof, the claim for complementary protection must fail. To the contrary, however,
as appears from BL v Australia, before a decision maker may properly reject a claim for complementary protection on the basis of the availability of reasonable
internal relocation, the decision maker needs reliable information as to the safety and suitability of the place of relocation[30]. Moreover, as Gummow, Hayne and Crennan JJ observed in SZATV v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship[31] in relation to a claim for refugee protection:
"What is 'reasonable', in the sense of 'practicable', must depend upon the particular circumstances of the applicant for refugee status
and the impact upon that person of relocation of the place of residence within the country of nationality."
Accordingly, depending on the issues and circumstances identified by the applicant, the decision maker not only will need reliable
information as to the safety and suitability of the place of relocation but also will need to pay careful regard to the applicant's
personal and family circumstances. It is only when and if the decision maker concludes on that basis that internal relocation would
be reasonable that the claim for complementary protection may be rejected on that basis.
- Of course, that does not mean that it will be necessary in every case for a decision maker to identify with precision the proposed
place of relocation and undertake the analysis of reasonableness in relation to that precise place. In some cases it may be that
the reliable information available to the decision maker demonstrates that the risk of harm of the kind described in Arts 6 and 7
of the ICCPR exists only in one place or area, or a couple or few places or areas, within the applicant's country of nationality,
and that elsewhere the country is relevantly risk free. In such cases, it is accurate to say that the burden would be upon the applicant
for complementary protection, once sufficiently alerted to the significance of the information available to the decision maker, to
present reasons why it would nonetheless be unreasonable to expect the applicant to relocate to any place beyond the affected places
or areas[32]. Each case is fact specific and must be dealt with accordingly. The point for present purposes, however, is that treating reasonable
internal relocation as a relevant consideration in the determination of a claim for complementary protection is not in any sense
impracticable or unfair.
- Counsel for the appellant contended that, be all that as it may, it was apparent that judicial recognition of the relevance of reasonable
internal relocation to a claim for protection under the Refugee Convention is based on the definition of "refugee" in the Convention
and, since there is no such applicable definition of "refugee" in or in relation to the ICCPR, and since the ICCPR is of such a different
nature from the Convention, the logic of regarding reasonable internal relocation as relevant to complementary protection does not
apply.
- Logically, that does not follow. Admittedly, judicial recognition of the relevance of reasonable internal relocation to a claim
for protection under the Refugee Convention has been said to be based on the Convention definition of "refugee". As will be recalled,
the Convention defines a "refugee" in substance as any person outside his or her country of nationality who is unable or unwilling
for Convention reasons to avail him or herself of that country's protection[33]. And as Lord Bingham of Cornhill observed in Januzi v Secretary of State for the Home Department[34], a person is not unable to obtain the protection of his or her country of nationality if he or she is able to obtain it in a part
of that country to which he or she could reasonably relocate:
"The Refugee Convention does not expressly address the situation at issue in these appeals where, within the country of his nationality,
a person has a well-founded fear of persecution at place A, where he lived, but not at place B, where (it is said) he could reasonably
be expected to relocate. But the situation may fairly be said to be covered by the causative condition to which reference has been
made: for if a person is outside the country of his nationality because he has chosen to leave that country and seek asylum in a
foreign country, rather than move to a place of relocation within his own country where he would have no well-founded fear of persecution,
where the protection of his country would be available to him and where he could reasonably be expected to relocate, it can properly
be said that he is not outside the country of his nationality owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for a Convention reason
...
The ground of refusal would be that the person is not, within the Convention definition, a refugee."
- But so to conclude in no way gainsays the relevance of reasonable internal relocation to the extent of non-refoulement obligations
which, as a matter of international jurisprudence, are accepted as being implicit in Art 2 of the ICCPR and comparable treaty provisions.
Rather to the contrary, given that a person who is outside his or her country of nationality is considered to be not unable to obtain
the protection of that country if able to obtain protection at a place within that country to which he or she can reasonably relocate,
parity of logic dictates that, if by reasonable relocation to that place the person can avoid risk of harm of the kind identified
in Arts 6 and 7 of the ICCPR, it should not be seen as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of the person's refoulement to that
place that he or she will be at risk of that kind of harm.
- Counsel for the appellant further contended that Nauru's non-refoulement obligation arising by implication from the ICCPR, properly
construed in its context, is not so limited in scope because to deny a person complementary protection on the basis that he or she
could avoid risk of harm by relocating to a place in that country to which he or she could reasonably be expected to relocate would
be to deny him or her freedom of movement in that country and thus constitute a breach of Nauru's international obligations under
Art 12.
- That contention also faces difficulties at several levels. In the first place, and most fundamentally, the fact that a person may
be at risk of harm at a place in his or her country of nationality and thus chooses to relocate within that country does not, without
more, mean that the person is not free to go to or remain at that place or to choose to reside there. In such a case, a rational
choice to relocate from that place to another place to avoid the risk of harm in the former is not a denial of freedom of movement
but a manifestation of its exercise.
- In the second place, while it may be that Nauru is under an international obligation arising out of Arts 2 and 12 of the ICCPR to
respect the right of a person who is lawfully within Nauruan territory to freedom of movement within Nauruan territory, and to choose
his or her place of residence in Nauruan territory, nothing in the text of Arts 2 and 12, or any other article of the ICCPR to which
this Court was referred, suggests that Nauru is under an international obligation to procure for a person who, ex hypothesi, is unlawfully
within Nauruan territory a right to freedom of movement within that person's country of nationality[35].
- In the third place, counsel was unable to identify any international jurisprudence in which it has been held or suggested that a
State's international non-refoulement obligations arising out of the ICCPR or comparable international treaties are to any extent
informed by an applicant's right to freedom of movement within his or her country of nationality. To the contrary, the decision
of Omeredo v Austria suggests[36] that they are not. Further, as Nauru submitted, it is not otherwise apparent why Art 12 of the ICCPR would t in t in defining the
scope of the non-refoulement obligation arising by implication from the ICCPR, given the obligation is noivened by potential breaches
of Art 12.
- In the fourth place, even if Nauru owed some kind of international obligation to procure for a person who, ex hypothesi, is unlawfully
within Nauruan territory a right to freedom of movement within that person's country of nationality (and there is no reason to suppose
that it does), for Nauru to permit a person who is unlawfully within Nauruan territory to remain in Nauru, rather than returning
to that person's country of nationality, would do nothing to procure that person's freedom of movement in his or her country of nationality.
Consequently, such if any right as that person may have to move freely in his or her country of nationality cannot logically be
the basis of the kind of non-refoulement obligation for which the appellant contended.
- Given the weight of international jurisprudence in favour of the relevance of reasonable internal relocation to the assessment of
complementary protection, the apparent absence of any international jurisprudence to the contrary, and the evident logic and common
sense of regarding reasonable internal relocation as relevant to complementary protection just as it is relevant to refugee protection,
leave to add the words "to Karachi" to Ground 1 should be refused and Ground 1 should be rejected.
Ground 2: Error in taking irrelevant considerations into account or asking wrong question
- As was earlier noticed, counsel for the appellant sought leave to add the words "or asked itself the wrong question" to Ground 2.
Leave should be refused.
- Under the heading of "General insecurity", the Tribunal recorded that the appellant had stated that there were ongoing targeted killings,
violence and attacks in Pakistan, and the Tribunal accepted that there had been a level of insecurity in Pakistan, particularly in
the tribal areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the Federally Administered Tribal Lands. But the Tribunal found that, in general, urban
centres tended to be more secure, the situation in Lahore was relatively secure and better than many other areas of Pakistan and
the evidence before the Tribunal did not indicate that Sialkot was insecure. It followed, as the Tribunal found, that, although
there was a level of insecurity in Pakistan, by contrast Punjab (including Lahore and Sialkot) was relatively secure. Accordingly,
given that the appellant was not politically active or associated with a government or military institution which might be targeted,
and was of the majority Sunni faith, he was not a person at risk of being targeted and the risk of him being harmed in generalised
insecurity was remote and not a real possibility.
- Having so concluded, the Tribunal then added to its reasons the following, evidently incongruous, further observation:
"Refugee assessment
- Having regard to all of the evidence and findings above, the Tribunal finds that the [appellant] does not face a real possibility
of persecution now or in the reasonably foreseeable future in Sri Lanka [sic] because of an imputed political opinion, his race or
his membership of particular social groups comprising his family, young Tamils from the north, failed Tamil asylum seekers, Tamil
returnees, persons who left Sri Lanka illegally or young Tamils separately and cumulatively [sic]. The Tribunal finds that the [appellant]
is not a refugee."
- The appellant contended that it is apparent from that further observation that the Tribunal took into account irrelevant considerations
concerning Sri Lanka amils which had nothinothing to do with the case in point, or alternatively asked themselves the wrong question,
and therefore the Tribunal's reasoning process ffected by error.
- At first sight, that might appear to be so. By any standard, it is remarkable that, in a matter concerning a Pakistani applicant
claiming refugee protection on the basis of an alleged fear of being harmed by the MQM waging a vendetta against him for the injury
he inflicted on Munir Tunda, the Tribunal should express its "Refugee assessment" in terms of the applicant not facing a real possibility
of persecution in Sri Lanka because of an imputed political opinion, his race or his membership of particular Tamil social groups.
Axiomatically, the latter has nothing at all to do with the former and thus, other things being equal, the Tribunal's reference
to the latter would tend to imply that the Tribunal's reasoning process had gone seriously awry[37].
- Closer examination of the Tribunal's reasons shows, however, that the Tribunal in fact reached their conclusion – that the
appellant was not a refugee – on the basis of the evidence and findings essayed at paragraphs 11 to 67 of the reasons: the
evidence and the Tribunal's findings regarding the appellant's dealings and experiences with the MQM in Pakistan, his expressed fears
of being harmed by the MQM in the event of returning to Karachi, the level of general insecurity in Pakistan, and the unlikelihood
of him being harmed by the MQM or others in places in Pakistan elsewhere than in Karachi. That included the Tribunal's conclusion
in the paragraph which immediately precedes the incongruous observation in paragraph 68 that:
"67. ... [The Tribunal] is satisfied that [the appellant] is not a person at risk of being targeted in an attack ... and is satisfied
that the risk of the [appellant] being harmed in generalised insecurity is remote and not a real possibility."
- Viewed in that context, it will be seen that the incongruous observation in paragraph 68 was truly intended to be a formal restatement
of the conclusion immediately before expressed, in paragraph 67, on the basis of all of the relevant considerations essayed in paragraphs
116, and that somehow a typa typographical error – possibly an error in editing a form of words cut and pasted from a previous
decision in another matter &# resulted in references to Sri Land Tamils ratherather thar than Karachi and the MQM.
- It is unfortunate that such an error should have been permitted to occur. It suggests a lack of care in final proof reading of reasons
for which all three members of the Tribunal were responsible – but the principal burden of which falls on the presiding member
– that should not have occurred and should not be repeated. Such errors are likely to create doubts about the validity of
decisions which should not arise. Nevertheless, reading the Tribunal's reasons as a whole, it is plain beyond peradventure that
in this case it was not an error in the reasoning process of the kind for which the appellant contended and should be disregarded:
falsa demonstratio non nocet[38].
- It remains to mention two other matters pertaining to Ground 2. irst is that, some 84 d 84 days after the appellant filed his notice
of appeal in the Supreme Court (in which he complained of error in the Tribunal's reasoning process by reference to the mis statement
in paragraph 68 h 68 of their reasons), the Tribunal published a corrigendum stating that the original paragraph 68 of their reasons
should be deleted and that a new paragraph 68 should be inserted in its place as follows:
"68. Having regard to all of the evidence and findings above, the Tribunal finds that the [appellant] does not face a real possibility
of persecution now or in the reasonably foreseeable future in Pakistan because of an actual or imputed political opinion, his race
or his religion or his membership of a particular social group comprising persons subject to a vendetta or any other Convention reason
separately and cumulatively. The Tribunal finds that the [appellant] is not a refugee."
- When the matter was before the Supreme Court, Nauru relied on the corrigendum as evidence of what the Tribunal had truly intended,
and the appellant, who was then unrepresented, did not object. When the matter came before this Court, it was contended on behalf
of the appellant that the Tribunal did not have power to issue the corrigendum and that it should be ignored.
- Whether the Tribunal had power to issue the corrigendum, as Nauru contended, or whether they published the corrigendum when they
were functus officio, as the appellant contended, is debatable. As Gummow J observed in Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Kurtovic[39], where a discretionary power reposed by statute in a decision maker is, upon proper construction, of such a character that it is
not exercisable from time to time but rather is spent upon publishing a decision, the decision maker is prevented from later resiling
from the decision because the power to do so is spent and the proposed second decision would be ultra vires. In Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Bhardwaj[40], Gaudron and Gummow JJ embraced the conclusion of the Supreme Court of Canada in Chandler v Alberta Association of Architects[41] that, as a general rule, once an administrative tribunal have reached a final decision in respect of a matter before them in accordance
with their enabling statute, the decision cannot be revisited because the tribunal have made an error within jurisdiction. Their
Honours also endorsed[42] the Supreme Court's conclusion that, in such a case, the principle of functus officio applies on policy grounds favouring the finality of proceedings as opposed to the rules of procedure which apply to formal judgments
of courts whose decisions are subject to a full appeal[43]. But it is apparent that those observations were directed to the possibility of a statutory tribunal making substantive changes
to a decision as the result of a change of mind, substantive error within jurisdiction or subsequent change of circumstances. They
did not relate directly, if at all, to whether, in circumstances in which a tribunal have made a mere textual error in recording
their reasons for decision, it is open to the tribunal later to correct the text to make it accord to what the tribunal always intended.
The latter case is more akin to the kind of error to which procedural slip rules may apply[44].
- That said, as Hill J observed in Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Taveli[45], in relation to the admissibility of a statement of reasons provided by an administrative decision maker under s 13 of the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth), where a statement of reasons is made after the event it will as a matter of general principle not be received asence in
favour of the person making the statement, because ause it is both self-serving and a narrative of the past event which purports
to be the equivalent of or a substitute for direct testimony of the event it narrates. In terms of general principle, parity of
reasoning suggests that the same is true of an ex post facto amendment to reasons for decision. If so, except where it is admitted
into evidence by consent, it should not be received.
- In this matter, the position is further complicated by the fact that, on one view of the proceedings before the Supreme Court, the
corrigendum was received into evidence without objection. Other things being equal, that would pose a question as to whether the
appellant waived objection to the admissibility of the corrigendum and whether he is now estopped from resiling from the waiver[46]. But in turn, the resolution of that question might well turn on the fact that the appellant was unrepresented before the Supreme
Court and that the judge did not alert him to the chance to object.
- Ultimately, however, it is unnecessary to reach a concluded view about the issue. As has been stated, the fact that the errors in
paragraph 68 were unintended textual errors is apparent from the face of the Tribunal's reasons without reference to the corrigendum.
For the reasons earlier stated, it is clear from the remainder of the reasons, particularly paragraphs 11 to 67, that the references
in paragraph 68 to Sri Lanka and Tamils were something which the Tribunal could not possibly have intended. The matter therefore
falls to be decided on the basis previously stated, by reference to the contents of the original reasons alone, and, as all parties
ultimately accepted would be appropriate in those circumstances, the corrigendum can be disregarded.
- The other remaining point in relation to Ground 2 is that, in his written submissions, the appellant identified three other alleged
errors in the Tribunal's reasons which, either alone or standing together with the alleged error evident in paragraph 68, were said
to be productive of error in the Tribunal's reasoning process which vitiated their decision. The first was a reference to the appellant
having appeared before the Tribunal with the assistance of an Arabic interpreter when in fact the appellant had appeared with the
assistance of an Urdu interpreter. The second and third were references to the appellant having previously lived in "Mianabad" and
"Marianbad" which, as was accepted, should have appeared as "Moeenabad". Unsurprisingly, counsel for the appellant did not pursue
any of those complaints in oral argument. He was right not to do so. None of them could seriously be conceived of as productive
of error or as evidence of error in the Tribunal's reasoning process.
- In the circumstances, there would be no point in granting the leave that was sought. Ground 2 should be rejected.
Ground 3: Failure to take into account integer said to be relevant to assessment of capacity reasonably to relocate
- Under cover of Ground 3, which was not advanced before the Supreme Court, counsel for the appellant sought leave to contend that
the Tribunal erred in failing to respond to the appellant's "substantial, clearly articulated argument" that he would and could not
relocate to a place where his young family would not be safe, educated and provided for. That contention is untenable. There was
no substantial, clearly articulated argument of the kind suggested and the Tribunal were not required to consider claims that were
not clearly articulated or which did not clearly arise on the materials before them[47]. Leave should thus be refused.
- Relevantly, the furthest the appellant's evidence before the Tribunal went was as follows:
"I had to travel back and forth between Lahore and Sialkut [sic] because the MQM had established a base in Sialkut [sic], so I did
not feel safe there, and the MQM knew my address in Lahore, so I did not feel safe there either. I did not have any family anywhere
else in Pakistan, so there was nowhere else I could go because it is too dangerous in Pakistan to attempt to relocate without a familial
support network",
and as follows:
"In future, you know, I can see that I can't survive over there [in Punjab]. I have to educate my children. I have to [give] them
a good education, look after them and establish myself and, given the situation and this – all the things I've told you, I
cannot see [us] surviving and settling down in future at all. Like [the] MQM are still growing up in – like, before maybe
not that much, but [they are] getting stronger in Punjab as well. They are opening up their offices in Punjab as well ...
And unfortunately, any of those men, if they are there or come there, and I don't want to risk my life and my children's life because
of that in future. And I tried my best that I don't get out of Pakistan, that I settle down with my family and my children and run
my business in Pakistan. But I couldn't. That's why I had to leave."
- The furthest the appellant's submission on the point went before the Tribunal was as follows:
"We submit that it would be very difficult for our client to obtain employment should he relocate within Pakistan. This would make
it extremely difficult for him to subsist, especially with his wife and children as dependents, and thus we submit our client would
be subjected to undue hardship should he attempt to relocate within Pakistan."
- The Tribunal then responded comprehensively to that evidence and submission as follows:
"The Tribunal therefore accepts that there is a real possibility that the [appellant] will be harmed by Monir Tunda [sic] or his associates
in Karachi. The Tribunal finds that the harm will arise for reasons of personal revenge, not for a Convention reason. However,
the Tribunal accepts that state protection from the police or other authorities in Karachi may be inadequate or withheld from the
[appellant] because of Monir Tunda's [sic] political connection and involvement with the MQM.
...
... The MQM's support base is largely confined to Urdu speakers in the main cities of Sindh, particularly Karachi and Hyderabad.
The Tribunal accepts that the MQM has campaigned in Punjab and may have an office or a presence in Lahore and in Sialkot. However,
the MQM was not successful in securing seats at the national or provincial level in Punjab in 2013 and has little or no influence
or power outside Sindh.
The Tribunal notes that Punjab has an estimated population of 91 million people and a number of large urban centres including Lahore
which has an estimated population of over 6 million. Sialkot city, also in Punjab, has a population of about 500,000. The Tribunal
notes that the [appellant] lived in Sialkot between 2003 and 2005 and during 2011 without experiencing any harm and that he lived
in Lahore between 2010 and 2011 without experiencing any harm.
In view of the absence of MQM power and influence in Punjab, the size of the population of Punjab, the existence of large urban centres
such as Lahore and Sialkot and the fact that the [appellant] has previously lived in Lahore and Sialkot district without coming to
any harm, the Tribunal is satisfied that he could live safely in Lahore or Sialkot or elsewhere in Punjab without a real possibility
of harm from Munir Tunda or his associates of Munir Tunda [sic].
In relation to whether relocation is reasonable, the Tribunal notes Punjab is Pakistan's most prosperous province. It is ethnically
diverse and has a large industrial and manufacturing base.
The Tribunal notes that the [appellant] speaks and reads Urdu which is spoken widely throughout Punjab; that he was born in Punjab
and that he speaks some Punjabi.
The [appellant] claims that he was unable to find work in Sialkot. The Tribunal notes that the [appellant] confined his job search
to the small village in Sialkot district he was residing in at the time and notes that large urban centres such as Lahore offer greater
employment opportunities and access to services. The [appellant] has a portable skill and training [he held an electrical certificate
and was a self-employed electrician and air conditioning mechanic between 2003 and 2011] and the Tribunal is satisfied that he could
obtain employment in Lahore or Sialkot city.
The Tribunal notes that the [appellant] has relatives living in Sialkot, a relatively short distance from Sialkot city; and that his
wife's family also lives in Sialkot. The Tribunal also notes that Lahore is relatively close to Sialkot. The Tribunal is satisfied
that the [appellant] has access to family support networks in Punjab.
The Tribunal also notes that Punjab, including Lahore and Sialkot, is relatively secure ... and safer than Karachi which has been
subject to ethno-political violence and targeted insurgency.
Having regard to the information above, the Tribunal is satisfied that the [appellant] has family support in Punjab and will be able
to find employment and accommodation in Punjab and live securely and establish a normal life there with his family and that, accordingly,
relocation to Punjab is reasonably available to the [appellant]." (footnotes omitted)
- Counsel for the appellant contended that the Tribunal's findings on relocation were "vague and ambiguous" because the Tribunal did
not identify where it was in Punjab – an area the size of Victoria, Australia, with a population of approximately 91 million
people – that the appellant could reasonably relocate.
- That contention should also be rejected, for two reasons. First, the Tribunal were not required to identify the place of reasonable
internal relocation with the degree of precision for which the appellant contended[48]. Secondly, the Tribunal did specifically identify both Sialkot and nearby Lahore as cities to which the appellant could reasonably
relocate on the basis, inter alia, that he had lived in those cities in the past without harm befalling him, they were relatively
secure, and the appellant could obtain employment and have access to family support networks in them.
- Counsel for the appellant argued that the Tribunal's reasoning was deficient because, in concluding that the appellant would have
access to family support networks in Sialkot and nearby Lahore, the Tribunal evidently failed to take into account the appellant's
evidence that when he had last lived in Sialkot he was only safe because he was in hiding.
- That argument must also be rejected. The appellant did not say that he was in hiding in Sialkot because he feared being harmed in
Sialkot. He said that he was in hiding in Sialkot because he had been beaten in Karachi. And, as the Tribunal found, not only was
Punjab, including Lahore and Sialkot, relatively more secure and safer than Karachi, which had been subject to ethno-political violence
and targeted insurgency, but Sialkot was where the appellant's wife and children were living with her family.
- Finally on this aspect of the matter, counsel for the appellant submitted that the Tribunal's "passing, generalised reference to
the [a]ppellant's 'family' or the ability to live a 'normal life'" was insufficient to demonstrate that the Tribunal had considered
the appellant's objection that he would not be able reasonably to relocate his young children with their needs as a family.
- That submission is equally unpersuasive. As will be recalled, the only bases which the appellant advanced before the Tribunal for
concluding that it was not reasonable to expect that he relocate were that he feared that the MQM would come after him and, perhaps
implicitly, his family; he had no family elsewhere in Pakistan; and it was too dangerous to relocate without family support. The
Tribunal effectively disposed of each of those arguments by their findings that the MQM would not pose a significant threat to the
appellant's security, and thus implicitly his family's security, in Punjab; the appellant had family support networks in Punjab;
and, because of the appellant's skills and the economic and social diversity of the area, he would be able to obtain employment there.
- In the circumstances, there is no point in granting the leave that was sought.
Proposed Ground 4: No evidence to support critical finding
- As was also earlier noticed, counsel for the appellant sought leave to advance a further ground of appeal, proposed Ground 4, to
the effect that there was no evidence to support what counsel described as the Tribunal's critical finding that "the MQM ... has
little or no influence or power outside Sindh". Leave should be refused.
- As has been seen, the Tribunal's statement that the MQM had little or no influence or power outside Sindh formed part of their larger
finding that:
"[t]he MQM's support base is largely confined to Urdu speakers in the main cities of Sindh, particularly Karachi and Hyderabad. The
Tribunal accepts that the MQM has campaigned in Punjab and may have an office or a presence in Lahore and in Sialkot. However, the
MQM was not successful in securing seats at the national or provincial level in Punjab in 2013 and has little or no influence or
power outside Sindh." (footnote omitted)
In turn, as appears from the Tribunal's reasons, that finding was based on footnoted references totry of nationality informatormation
from the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada and The Nation newspaper. Those sources were not adduced in evidence before the Supreme Court, and, just as they were not in evidence before the
Supreme Court, they were not in evidence before this Court. Nor did counsel for the appellant suggest that the appellant should
be permitted to tender those sources into evidence for the first time on appeal to this Court. He was right not to do so. In the circumstances, there is nothing to say that there was insufficient evidence to sustain the Tribunal's finding, and, accordingly,
the argument in support of proposed Ground 4 must fail. Leave to advance Ground 4 should be refused.Conclusion
- The appeal should be dismissed with costs.
[1] See CRI026 v The Republic [2017] NRSC 67 at [40]- [41].
[2] See CRI026 v The Republic [2017] NRSC 67 at [43].
[3] [2012] FCAFC 147; (2012) 207 FCR 211 at 215 [18]- [20].
[4] 44th sess, UN Doc A/44/40, (1992) at [3], [9].
[5] [1989] ECHR 14; (1989) 11 EHRR 439 at 467-468 [88].
[6] Queensland v The Commonwealth [1989] HCA 36; (1989) 167 CLR 232 at 240 per Mason CJ, Brennan, Deane, Toohey, Gaudron and McHugh JJ; [1989] HCA 36.
[7] See Ahmadou Sadio Diallo (Republic of Guinea v Democratic Republic of the Congo) [2010] ICJ Rep 639 at 664 [66].
[8] See United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Guidelines on International Protection: "Internal Flight or Relocation Alternative" within the Context of Article 1A(2) of the 1951
Convention and/or 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees, UN Doc HCR/GIP/03/04, (2003) at [13]; Sufi and Elmi v United Kingdom [2011] ECHR 1045; (2012) 54 EHRR 9 at 220 [36].
[9] See, for example, United Nations Human Rights Committee, General Comment No 31 The Nature of the Gene General Legal Obligation Imposed on States Parties to the Covenant, 80th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.13, (2004) at [12].
<[10] See United NatioNations Human Rights Committee, Communication No 470/1991 (Kindler v Canada), 48th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/48/D/470/1991, (1993) at [6.2]; United Nations Human Rights Committee, Communication No 692/1996 (ARJ v Australia), 60th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/60/D/692/1996, (1997) at [6.8]-[6.9], [6.14].
[11] [2012] FCA 1440; (2012) 209 FCR 497 at 512 [62].
[12] [2004] OJ L 304/12.
[13] [2011] OJ L 337/9.
[14] European Court of Human Rights, Chamber, Application No 89, (2011) at 2, 5.
[15] European Court of Human Rights, Chamber, Application No 8969/10, (2011) at 5.
(2007) 007) 45 EHRR 50.
[17] Salah Sheekh v The Netherlands (205 EHRR 50 at 1164 [31].
[18] Salah Sheekh v The Netherlands (2007) 45 EHRR 50 at 1199 [141].
[19] [2001] ECHR 214; (2001) 33 EHRR 2.
[20] Hilal v United Kingdom [2001] ECHR 214; (2001) 33 EHRR 2 at 49 [67]- [68].
[21] [2011] ECHR 1045; (2012) 54 EHRR 9 at 220 [35].
[22] 80th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.13, (2004) at [12].
[23] 108th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/108/D/1897/2009, (2013).
[24] United Nations Human Rights Committee, Communication No 1897/2009 (SYL v Australia), 108th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/108/D/1897/2009, (2013) at [8.4].
[25] 112th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/112/D/2053/2011, (2014).
[26] United Nations Human Rights Committee, Communication No 2053/2011 (BL v Australia), 112th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/112/D/2053/2011, (2014) at [7.4] per Yadh Ben Achour, Christine Chanet, Ahmad Amin Fathalla, Cornelis Flinterman, Victor Manuel Rodríguez-Rescia, Anja Seibert-Fohr,
Yuval Shany, Konstantine Vardzelashivili, Margo Waterval and Andrei Paul Zlătescu.
[27] United Nations Human Rights Committee, Communication No 2053/2011 (BL v Australia), 112th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/112/D/2053/2011, (2014) at Appendix I per Gerald L Neuman and Yuji Iwasawa.
[28] United Nations Human Rights Committee, Communication No 2053/2011 (BL v Australia), 112th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/112/D/2053/2011, (2014) at Appendix II per Dheerujlall B Seetulsingh.
[29] United Nations Human Rights Committee, Communication No 2053/2011 (BL v Australia), 112th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/112/D/2053/2011, (2014) at Appendix III [4] per Fabián Omar Salvioli.
[30] See, in particular, United Nations Human Rights Committee, Communication No 2053/2011 (BL vralia), /i>, 112th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/112/D/2053/2011, (2014) at [7.4], Appendices I-II.
[31] (2007) 233 CLat 27 [24]; [2007] HCA 40. See also MZZQV v Minister foer for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCA 533 at [68]; Hathaway and Foster, The Law of Refugee Status, 2nd ed (2014) at 330-331.
[32] See, in particular, United Nations Human Rights Committee, Communication No 1897/2009 ( Australia),, 108th sess, UN Doc CCPR/C/108/D/1897/2009, (2013) at [8.1]-[8.4].
[33] See Conventilating to the Status of Refugees (1951) as modified by the the Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees (1967),
Art 1A(2).
[34] [2006] EWHC 1450; [2006] 2 AC 426 at 440 [7]- [8]. See SZATV v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2007] HCA 40; (2007) 233 CLR 18 at 25-26 [19]- [22] per Gummow, Hayne and Crennan JJ; Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v SZSCA (2014) 254 CLR 317 at 326-327 [22]-[23] per French CJ, Hayne, Kiefel and Keane JJ, 330-332 [35], [39]-[40] per Gageler J; [2014] HCA 45.
[35] See generally Joseph and Castan, The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights: Cases, Materials, and Commentary, 3rd ed (2013) at 392-394.
[36] See European Court of Human Rights, Chamber, Application No 8969/10, (2011) at 5.
[37] See and compare SZIFI v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2007] FCA 63 at [36]; SZNZK v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCA 651; (2010) 115 ALD 332 at 341 [38].
[38] See and compare Diocesan Trustees of the Church of England in Western Australia v Solicitor-General [1909] HCA 66; (1909) 9 CLR 757 at 761-762, 765-766 per Griffith CJ (Barton J agr at 767-768), 771 per per O'Connor J; [1909] HCA 66.
[39] (1990) 21 FCR 193 at 211. See and compare ComptroGeneral of Customs v Kawasaki Motors Pty Ltd (No 1) (19> [1991] FCA 519; (1991) 32 FCR 219 at 225 per Beaumont J.
[40] [2002] HCA 11; (2002) 209 CLR 597 at 615-616 [52]- [53]; [2002] HCA 11.
[41] [1989] 2 SCR 848 at 861-862 per Dickson CJ, Wilson and Sopinka JJ.
[42] See Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Bhardwaj [2002] HCA 11; (2002) 209 CLR 597 at 615 [52]- [53].
[43] See also, for example, Bailey v Marinoff [1971] HCA 49; (1971) 125 CLR 529 at 530 per Barwick CJ; [19CA 49; Achurch v ch v The Queen (2014) 253 CLR 141 at 153-154 [17]-[18] per French CJ, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ; [2014 10.
[44] See Burrell v The Queen (2i> [2008] HCA 34; (2008) 238 CLR 218 at 224-225 [21] per Gummow ACJ, Hayne, Heydon, Crennan and Kiefel JJ; [2008] HCA 34. See, in particular, Interpretation Act 2011 (Nr), s 89.
[45] [1990] FCA 169; (1990) 23 FCR 162 at 168 per Davies J, 187 per Hill J. See also Nezovic v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCA 1263; (2003) 133 FCR 190 at 205-207 [48]- [55].
[46] See, for example, Harrison, "Hearsay Admitted Without Objection", (1955-1957) 7 udicatae 58 at 67-6867-68; Weinberg, "The Consequences of Failure to Object to Inadmissible Evidence in Criminal Cases", (191 Melbourne University Law Review 408 at 424-426; "Note: The Status of Hearsay and and Other Evidence Admitted Without Objection", (1985) 1 Australian Bar Review 155 at 158. See also Radford (1993) 66 A Crim R 210 at 232-233 per Phi CJ a CJ and Eames J.
me="fn47" href href="#fnB47">[47] See and compare Dranichnikov v Minister for Iation and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 77 ALJR 1088 at 1092 [24] per Gummow and Callinallinan JJ (Hayne J agreeing at 1102 [95]); 197 ALR 389 at 394, 408; [2003] HCA 26. See generally NABE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (No 2) [2004] FCAFC 263; (2004) 144 FCR 1 at 18-20 [58], [60]-[61]; NAVK v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2005] FCAFC 124 at [31]; SZTQP v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCAFC 121; (2015) 232 FCR 452 at 463-464 [50].
[48] See Randhawa v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs [1994] FCA 1253; (1994) 52 FCR 437 at 440, 443 per Black CJ (Whitlam J agreeing at 453); Plaintiff M196 of 2015 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] HCATrans 240 at 10-11 per Gordon J.
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