FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

APK16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCA 1628

Appeal from:

APK16 v Minister for Immigration [2017] FCCA 782

File number(s):

NSD 676 of 2017

Judge(s):

FARRELL J

Date of judgment:

1 November 2018

Catchwords:

MIGRATION – appeal from a decision of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia – protection visa – review of decision by Administrative Appeals Tribunal to affirm delegate’s decision to refuse visa – whether the primary judge applied the correct test of persecution pursuant to s 36(2)(aa) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) – whether the primary judge erred in failing to find that the Tribunal made an error of law in its treatment of factual issues – appeal dismissed

Legislation:

Migration Act 1958 (Cth) s 36

Cases cited:

APK16 v Minister for Immigration [2016] FCCA 782

Applicant VEAL of 2002 v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2005) 225 CLR 88; [2005] HCA 72

Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZIAI (2009) 83 ALJR 1123; [2009] HCA 39

NAHI v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCAFC 10

NAJT v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2005) 147 FCR 51; [2015] FCAFC 134

SZSGA v Minister for Immigration, Multicultural Affairs and Citizenship [2013] FCA 774

SZSHK v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2013) 138 ALD 26; [2013] FCAFC 125

Tang v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2013) 217 FCR 55; [2013] FCAFC 139

Date of hearing:

21 August 2017

Registry:

New South Wales

Division:

General Division

National Practice Area:

Administrative and Constitutional Law and Human Rights

Category:

Catchwords

Number of paragraphs:

43

Counsel for the Appellant:

The Appellant appeared in person with the assistance of an interpreter

Solicitor for the First Respondent:

Mr K Eskerie of Sparke Helmore Lawyers

Counsel for the Second Respondent:

The Second Respondent submitted save as to costs

ORDERS

NSD 676 of 2017

BETWEEN:

APK16

Appellant

AND:

MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND BORDER PROTECTION

First Respondent

ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL

Second Respondent

JUDGE:

FARRELL J

DATE OF ORDER:

1 November 2018

THE COURT ORDERS THAT:

1.    The appeal is dismissed.

2.    The appellant must pay the first respondent’s costs as agreed or taxed.

Note:    Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

FARRELL J:

1    This is an appeal from a judgment of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia: see APK16 v Minister for Immigration [2017] FCCA 782. The primary judge dismissed the appellant’s application for judicial review of a decision of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal.

2    The appellant (also referred to as “APK16”) is a citizen of Bangladesh who arrived in Australia on 16 September 2013 on a visitor (Subclass FA 600) visa. He applied for a Protection (Class XA) visa on 10 December 2013 which was refused by a delegate of the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection. The Tribunal affirmed that decision.

Tribunal’s decision

3    In its decision record (or DR) at [1] and [3], the Tribunal noted that APK16 was in his mid-sixties, he had seven years of schooling and has worked as a farmer from 1966 until he left Bangladesh in September 2013. It noted that, in a statement which accompanied his application for the protection visa, APK16 claimed that:

(1)    He had joined the Bangladeshi National Party (BNP). He was involved in campaigning for the BNP at the elections in 1991, 1996, 2001 and 2008. In 2003, he had been elected as president of a [name redacted] Union BNP and in 2010 he had become the president of the Union committee and vice president of the [name redacted] Upazila BNP.

(2)    On 27 November 2011, he was attacked by Awami League cadres and seriously beaten. He spent seven days in hospital.

(3)    A false case had been filed against him in April 2012.

(4)    As a result, it was very difficult for him to stay in Bangladesh and he “managed the airport by a huge bribe”. He would be persecuted if he returned to Bangladesh.

4    At DR[4], the Tribunal noted that, under cover of a letter dated 6 July 2014, APK16’s representative provided the following documents and translations to the Department:

(1)    A list of 101 members of the committee of the Upazila BNP branch, identifying APK16 as one of ten vice presidents;

(2)    A newspaper report dated 31 July 2013 referring to him as a vice president of the Upazila BNP branch;

(3)    A charge sheet naming him as one of 49 defendants in a case “the nature of which is obscure due to the poor quality of the translation”;

and subsequently APK16 produced the following documents to the Department, together with translations:

(4)    A letter dated 12 September 2013 from a named person who was a former member of parliament (Parliamentarian), General Secretary of a [name redacted] District BNP and a member of the Central Executive Committee of the BNP (Parliamentarian’s letter). The letter certified that the person knew APK16, that he was the vice president of the Upazlia BNP unit and president of the Union BNP unit, that he was a leading activist of the BNP who had participated in various demonstrations against the current regime and if he returned to Bangladesh he would be persecuted and there were concerns for the security of his life; and

(5)    A further newspaper report dated August 2013 referring to him as vice president of the Upazila BNP unit.

5    The Tribunal then set out evidence given by APK16 to the delegate at DR[5]-[12]. Among other things it noted:

(1)    APK16 said that he joined the BNP in 1979 as a member, had become president of the Union BNP in 2003 and was re-elected as president in 2010, the same year as he was elected vice president of the Upazila BNP. He claimed that the Awami League would torture and kill him; the Awami League cadres “could not tolerate his activities”, “he was an active leader of his party”: DR[5];

(2)    As vice president of the Upazila BNP he attended all meetings and collected people to come to the meetings. He said that he organised all functions and meetings but then clarified that response to be that secretaries called a meeting but he would organise it. In response to a question of why, as one of seven or eight vice presidents, he would have been targeted, APK16 said that “his activities had been so large-scale that the Awami League cadres had not been able to tolerate it”: DR[6]. In response to another reference to the number of vice presidents, APK16 said that he was illiterate and had not been highly educated: DR[7];

(3)    The delegate noted that the Parliamentarian’s letter was dated 12 September 2013 and put to APK16 that it had been written as part of his plan to apply for a protection visa. APK16 confirmed that he had his visitor’s visa at the time he obtained the letter and had been planning to apply for protection when he arrived in Australia. When it was put to APK16 that, based on a UK Home office report, identification letters of this kind were easily forged, APK16 said that “all the documents which he had submitted were all real and true”: DR[7];

(4)    APK16 said that he learned of the false case against him in August 2012 when the police came to his home, but he had already left home. He had been able to obtain his passport in November 2012 despite the false charges “because this was easy to do in Bangladesh”. The delegate put to APK16 that the fact that he had been able to get a police letter in order to obtain the passport suggested that there were no false charges. APK16 said that the passport had been “made” by the travel agency and repeated that all his documents were real: DR[8];

(5)    In response to the delegate’s question of whether he had reported to the police the attack by Awami League supporters in 2011, APK16 said that BNP members had protested against this matter but that the police had not accepted his report. The delegate referred to APK16’s evidence provided on his visa application form that he had lived in the same place from his birth to the time that he left Bangladesh, APK16 said that he had not been at the same address but the form only required a response in relation to a place he had lived for more than six months and that he had lived for 10 or 15 days or one month in different places but he had come back again. He also said that being employed as a farmer did not require him to attend all the time: DR[9];

(6)    In response to the delegate’s proposition that the fact that he had been able to leave Bangladesh on a passport in his own name indicated that he was of no interest to Bangladeshi authorities, APK16 referred to his evidence that he had paid a big sum of money to pass through the airport. In response to the proposition that the fact that APK16 had obtained a visa on 4 July 2013 but had not left Bangladesh until 15 September 2013 suggested that his life was not in danger, APK16 said that after getting his visa he had to manage money to pay the airport people and the plane fare and he had not made those arrangements beforehand because there was no guarantee that he would get a visa: DR[10];

(7)    APK16’s representative requested the delegate to verify the documents (which I take to be those provided by APK16) and raised issues concerning the difficulty of getting documents from Bangladesh. Under cover of a letter dated 17 July 2014, APK16’s representative produced a copy of a court order dated 15 July 2014 (together with a translation) suggesting that a warrant had been issued for APK16’s arrest. In a document dated 23 November 2015, APK16’s representatives said that the Parliamentarian had known that there was a false case pending against APK16 (although there was no reference to it in the letter) and stated that all documents which had been produced were genuine. APK16’s representatives also produced copies of two further documents (together with translations) which purport to be orders made by magistrates although the dates and effect of the orders are unclear: DR[11]-[12].

6    At DR[13]-[30], the Tribunal set out its account of evidence given by APK16 to it. Among other things:

(1)    APK16 identified three people in a photograph provided to the delegate as being himself, the Parliamentarian and the BNP Secretary at a union meeting of the BNP from 2004: DR[13];

(2)    APK16 said that he had lived in his village since birth until he left for Australia but, when there had been a case against him and he had started having problems, he had lived for a few weeks - two weeks to a month - here and there. He still has family members living in the village and they are not having problems. APK16 said that in 1966 he had worked with his father but that the land was now leased to other people who were farming it and the income was shared half and half between the lessee and his family in Bangladesh: DR[14];

(3)    APK16 then discussed his involvement in the BNP in Bangladesh. He said that when he had been a member his main duty had been to knock door-to-door at election time and ask people to vote for the party and he gathered people at meeting points and they gave donations to the party: DR[15]. There was discussion concerning the 1996 and 2001 electoral outcomes in his district: DR[16]-[17]. In 2003, when he became the president of the Union BNP, he had helped in the development of projects and maintained communication with other members of the party. He had gathered everyone and taken them to sub-district meetings. He had communicated with ward members and discussed how they could improve the BNP as a team. In the 2008 election campaign, as the Union BNP president, he had helped the other members and he had been more active in asking people to vote for the party and promised that if the BNP won, it would improve and make new roads and put tube wells in houses: DR[18]. After he was re-elected in 2010 as president of the Union BNP, he also became one of ten vice presidents of the Upazila BNP. He still actively campaigned for the party and attended meetings in the district. One of his main activities had been to increase membership and to do that he sat with people in villages in other unions as well as his own and explained the benefits which he said would flow from a BNP government: DR[18].

(4)    When asked what problems he had as a result of his involvement in politics, APK16 said that “when he had become famous as a political person” he had been attacked by cadres of the Awami League on 27 November 2011 who had hit and tortured him. He said that he had been hit and slapped but not with a sharp object. Local people saved him and put him in a clinic where he had stayed for a week because he had fainted. He said that this is the only time that the Awami League had been able to attack him, although they had tried on several occasions. He had tried to keep himself safe and avoid them. When it was put to him that his evidence was that he had been campaigning door-to-door and he had been going to villages all over the subdistrict talking to people and encouraging them to join the BNP, APK16 said that was only until 2010 and after the attack “he should be a bit more careful so that these incidents did not happen”: DR[19]-[21].

(5)    APK16 said that the case had been filed against him on 22 April 2012 but he had come to know about it when the police came to his house in August 2012. He said that he had “got to know” that it had been said that he had illegally attacked the police, throwing bricks at them. When questioned about the content of documents he had produced about the case, APK16 said that it was a completely false case. He explained that he decided to leave Bangladesh because after the incident in 2011 “they” had followed him and put a false case against him so that he became fearful that if they arrested him because of the case he would be tortured in jail or put in crossfire and killed. He said that he had left the country to save his life. The Tribunal put to APK16 his evidence concerning the fact that the police had not arrested him when the police came to his house in August 2012 or at any time after that and put to him that the police had ample opportunity to arrest him in the time before he left Bangladesh. APK16 said that he had not been home when the police came. Although he had said that he stayed with relatives in the area to avoid arrest, his relatives lived only a mile from his home and he had stayed 15 to 20 km away as well, and the police had not come to his village every day: DR[22]-[23].

(6)    In relation to how he obtained his passport, APK16 said that there was a system in Bangladesh that enables travel agents to obtain passports and he had told the travel agency that there was a case against him and he had paid extra money to the travel agent to manage the passport for him. He confirmed that it was a genuine passport. He said that he had paid a large sum of money to an airport officer to enable him to leave the airport and one of his friends had managed this for him. In relation to the delay between July 2013 (when he obtained his visitor’s visa) and 15 September 2013 (when he left Bangladesh) APK16 explained that as he was from a farming family, he needed time to arrange money for the ticket and to pay people to obtain his passport and other monies as well: DR[24].

(7)    The Tribunal put to APK16 that the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) assessed that supporters or members of political parties in Bangladesh were not at risk of being arrested or living in fear of political violence on a day-to-day basis due to their political affiliations and that was consistent with his own evidence of one incident where he had been slapped and punched but not injured. The Tribunal also noted that, although APK16 said a false case had been brought against him, he had not been arrested. APK16 said that current politics was about vanishing people, killing and torturing them: DR[25].

(8)    It was put to APK16 that he did not have a particularly high profile. He said:

... he had been the president of his union branch which might be important at the local level but not beyond the local level. He had said that he had been one of the ten vice presidents at the sub-district level but the sort of activities which he had described himself as undertaking, campaigning door to door and going around encouraging people to become members of the party, were at a pretty low level.

The Tribunal put to APK16 that on the basis of DFAT’s advice, this was relevant to the risk that he would suffer harm as a result of his political involvement. In response APK16 said:

the statement he was giving was true because he had been very famous among the people and because of his political activities he had been a very favourable person among the community. … the Awami League leaders were not getting that type of publicity and they were also not getting the votes because people had been listening to him. … this had been why the Awami League cadres had been targeting him. …

When the Tribunal put it to APK16 that the Awami League had won in 2008, APK16 said they had stolen votes: DR[26]-[27].

(9)    The Tribunal raised with APK16 the fact that the Parliamentarian’s letter made no reference to the false case, APK16 said that the Parliamentarian was having problems in Bangladesh. The Tribunal noted that there was information concerning the prevalence of fraudulent documents in Bangladesh and that it was common for political party membership confirmation letters in particular to be issued even if the information was incorrect: DR[28]. APK16 said that if the Department had doubts they could go to the area and take information. The Tribunal raised the logistical difficulties of the Australian High Commission verifying the documents and gave APK16’s representative a week within which to make further submissions. The Tribunal noted that in the submissions filed in response to that invitation, APK16’s representative submitted that (“APK16” replaces the appellant’s name where it was set out in the Tribunal’s decision record):

[APK16] was an honest witness who had not sought to embellish his role in the BNP, that although country information suggested that ordinary BNP supporters were not at risk in Bangladesh his situation was different, that he was an important activist in his area and that this had led to an attack on him and to the issue of a false criminal charge against him. … [A]lthough forged documents were regularly used by protection visa applicants from Bangladesh this did not mean that all such documents were false and they submitted that the fact that [APK16] was an honest witness should be taken into account when considering documents which he had provided.

APK16’s representative also produced a copy of a further letter from the Parliamentarian dated two days prior to the representatives submission (Parliamentarian’s second letter) (together with a translation) which refers to the positions that APK16 claims to have held and the false case: DR[29]-[30].

7    At DR[31], the Tribunal found as follows:

I accept that [APK16] was a member of the BNP in Bangladesh and that he held the positions which he claims to have held in the BNP in his local area. I accept that, as his representatives have submitted, he has not sought to embellish his role in the BNP but I consider that he has exaggerated his importance by claiming that he was famous as a political person and that this was why he was targeted by the Awami League cadres. As I put to [APK16], it appears to me on the basis of his own evidence that he was not a person who had a particularly high profile. Although I accept that he was the president of the [name redacted] Union BNP I consider that this position would not have given him a profile beyond his local area and he was only one of the ten vice presidents at that sub-district level. As I put to him, the sort of activities which he has described, campaigning door to door and going around encouraging people to become members of the party, appear to me to be at a pretty low level.

8    In relation to the issue of attack by Awami League cadres, the Tribunal found that APK16’s claim that he had spent a week in hospital because he fainted “stretches credulity” and in relation to his fears of further attack, the Tribunal found that, based on APK16’s own evidence that he continued to live in the area and immediately before he left Bangladesh he had been living in his own village, Awami League cadres would have had the opportunity to attack him had they “really been trying” to do so: DR[32].

9    At DR[33] the Tribunal summarised the evidence concerning the false case and the matters which had been put to APK16 about it. The Tribunal noted that APK16 had produced copies of what purported to be a charge sheet, a court order dated 15 July 2014 suggesting that a warrant had been issued for his arrest and two documents which purport to be orders made by magistrates although the dates and the effect of those orders are unclear. It noted that he had also produced the Parliamentarian’s letter which did not refer to the false case although it said that if he returned to Bangladesh he would be persecuted and there were concerns for the security of his life and that, after the Tribunal hearing, APK16 had produced the Parliamentarian’s second letter which did refer to the false case. At DR[34], the Tribunal said that he considered information available to him concerning the significant prevalence of fraudulent documents in Bangladesh (including that it is common for political party membership confirmation letters in particular to be issued even if the information was incorrect) to be relevant to those documents. The Tribunal then repeated submissions made by APK16’s representative on that issue referred to at [6(9)] above and concluded:

However, for the reasons given above I consider that [APK16] has exaggerated his importance and I have particular difficulty in accepting his evidence that a false criminal case was filed against him on 22 April 2012 but that he was not arrested even though he remained in Bangladesh until September 2013.

In relation to APK16’s suggestion that the Department could go to the area where he lived to verify that the documents were genuine, the Tribunal noted the distance of his village from Dhaka and went on to say (at DR[35] and [36]):

35.    I do not accept on the evidence before me that this is a case where an obvious inquiry could be made about a critical fact, the existence of which could readily be ascertained. I give greater weight to the problems I have with APK16’s own evidence than I do to the documents which he has produced in relation to the false case and the two letters from [the Parliamentarian]. I do not accept that a false case was filed against [APK16] on 22 April 2012, as he has claimed, nor that the police came to arrest him in August 2012 when he was not at home. I do not accept that he was in hiding because of his fear of the police before he left Bangladesh nor that since he left Bangladesh a warrant has been issued for his arrest. Having regard to the problems which I have with APK16’s evidence I likewise do not accept that he was attacked by Awami League cadres on 27 November 2011, as he has claimed, or that he spent a week in hospital because he fainted, nor that the Awami League cadres tried to attack him on several other occasions but that he was keeping himself safe and trying to avoid them. I do not accept that, as he said when he was interviewed by the primary decision-maker, he went to the police to report the claimed attack on him on 27 November 2011 but the police did not accept his report.

36.    As I put to [APK16], the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade assesses that supporters or members of political parties in Bangladesh are not at risk of being arrested or living in fear of political violence on a day-to-day basis due to their political affiliations. The Department has said that members with high profiles may face a higher risk but, as I put to [APK16], I consider that he was not a person who had a particularly high profile. For the reasons given above I do not accept that he had the problems which she claims to have had as a result of his involvement in the BNP in Bangladesh. I accept that if he returns to Bangladesh now or in the reasonably foreseeable future he will continue his past low-level involvement in the BNP in his local area but, having regard to the advice of the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, I do not accept that there is a real chance that he will be persecuted for reasons of his political opinion if he returns to Bangladesh. I also do not accept on the evidence before me that there is a real chance that he will be denied the protection of the police for reasons of his political opinion as he has claimed occurred in the past. For the reasons given above, therefore, I do not accept on the evidence before me that [APK16] has a well-founded fear of being persecuted for one or more of the five Convention reasons if he returns to Bangladesh now or in the reasonably foreseeable future.

10    Based on DFAT’s information and the findings made in relation to Convention based harm, the Tribunal also did not accept there were substantial grounds for believing that there was a real risk APK16 would suffer significant harm (as defined in s 36(2A) of the Migration Act) if he was removed from Australia to Bangladesh: DR[37]. The Tribunal concluded that Australia did not have protection obligations to the appellant under either s 36(2)(a) or s 36(2)(aa) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth): DR[38].

Federal Circuit Court

11    APK16 was represented by Mr Kumar of counsel at the hearing of his application for judicial review.

Grounds

12    In his amended application, APK16 claimed (in summary) that the Tribunal committed jurisdictional error by:

(1)    Failing to engage with APK16’s claim that his involvement with the BNP at the local level heightened the risk of harm to him and/or it illogically concluded that he was not at the risk of harm for political activities. The particulars of this claim were that the Tribunal accepted (at DR[31]) that he was a member of the BNP and held positions in it although it did not (at DR[36]) accept that he was of high profile. The Tribunal did not engage with his claim (or an integer of it) or engaged with a different claim than that propounded by APK16 (that he was of high profile nationally), whereas APK16 was claiming that he suffered from threats in a particular region.

(2)    Denying APK16 procedural fairness and/or constructively failing to consider his claims and, in particular, the Tribunal did not engage with and consider documents submitted. The particulars of this claim are that the Tribunal found that his position at a local level did not expose him to risk. While it accepted his claim to be a member of the BNP and that he held positions in the BNP, it failed to give him an opportunity to address its findings (at DR[36]) that he is not high profile and is unlikely to be harmed. The Tribunal did not provide him with an opportunity to address country information from DFAT in light of his claims.

(3)    The Tribunal denied APK16 procedural fairness and thereby committed jurisdictional error by failing to obtain relevant information and documentary evidence concerning his political engagement and charges against him. The particulars of the claim note that the various documents, including documents relating to false charges and the relevant court proceedings had been submitted by APK16. They note that charges against persons are generally public information and readily available. They go on to state that it would have been reasonably easy for the Tribunal to obtain information about whether the charges were genuine through public records or DFAT was in a position to obtain the information regarding his BNP activities, the Tribunal having accepted his claim that he held positions in the BNP.

(4)    The Tribunal committed jurisdictional error by failing to properly engage with material the appellant provided it in respect of charges made against him.

APK16 relied on the first three of those four grounds.

Primary judge’s consideration

13    In accordance with APK16’s counsel’s submissions, the primary judge considered grounds one and two together. The primary judge referred to APK16’s written submissions in which he claimed that the Tribunal “generically characterised” APK16’s roles in the BNP and, by characterising the roles as “low-level”, the Tribunal conflated “the various roles in composite fashion” and therefore failed to assess the claim advanced by APK16. APK16 submitted that the Tribunal assessed the risk to him by reference to whether he had a high-profile nationally, whereas his claim was that he was at risk in the particular region in which he operated: J[18].

14    The primary judge first considered whether the Tribunal considered APK16’s claims on the basis that he had a national, as opposed to a regional, profile by reference to the express terms of DR[31] which is set out at [7] above. By reference to the claims made in APK16’s protection visa application, the primary judge found that it was not correct that APK16 had restricted his claim to fear harm by reference only to having a local profile. His Honour found that, in any event, the Tribunal assessed APK16’s claims based on a finding that he had a profile in his local area. Accordingly, if APK16’s claim was one based on his having only a local profile, the Tribunal assessed that claim. It was the activities APK16 undertook in his local area that the Tribunal found were “low-level”. The primary judge did not accept that the Tribunal conflated the different roles that APK16 undertook or that the Tribunal described them in a composite fashion, noting that the Tribunal identified that he was a member of the BNP, the president of the Union Committee, and the vice president of the Upazila Committee and it set out the activities he undertook on behalf of the BNP. It was by reference to these matters that the Tribunal assessed APK16’s claims. His Honour found that grounds one and two therefore failed: J[19]-[23].

15    The primary judge found that ground three was directed to the claim that the Tribunal failed to take up APK16’s suggestion that DFAT make enquiries relevant to the authenticity of documents on which he relied: J[25]. His Honour found that the ground rested on factual premises which are not supported by any evidence, such as the contention that charges against persons were generally public information and that it was easy for the Tribunal (or DFAT) to obtain information concerning whether the charges were genuine through public records or from the institution. The primary judge found that whether or not those contentions are correct depends on evidence, none of which was tendered and for that reason alone the ground was not made out: J[26]. With respect to submissions made by APK16’s counsel, the primary judge considered passages from the judgment of the High Court in Applicant VEAL of 2002 v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2005) 225 CLR 88; [2005] HCA 72 at [26] and Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZIAI (2009) 83 ALJR 1123, [2009] HCA 39 at [19] and of the Full Court of this Court in Tang v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2013) 217 FCR 55; [2013] FCAFC 139 at [28] and concluded that whether or not in any particular case the Tribunal is under a duty to make an enquiry about the existence or nonexistence of a particular fact depends on whether the fact is a critical fact and, if so, whether the fact is one whose existence or nonexistence could easily be ascertained: J[27]-[29]. While it may be accepted that the question of the authenticity of documents on which APK16 relied was critical to his claims, he submitted nothing but bare assertions to the effect that their authenticity could be easily ascertained, but there is no evidence on the basis of which the primary judge could be satisfied of that. The Tribunal gave thought to the question and did not accept that an obvious enquiry was open to it: J[30]. The primary judge found that there was another matter relevant to whether the Tribunal acted reasonably: There is evidence relevant to the authenticity of documents which it was open to APK16 to provide, the most obvious class is evidence that would show how APK16 came to possess the documents he provided to the Tribunal: for instance, did APK16 or someone else obtain them and when and how? APK16 did not provide any such evidence to the Tribunal and the Tribunal did not act unreasonably by not attempting itself to make enquiries of the organisations that purportedly issued the documents. The primary judge found that ground three also failed: J[31].

Appeal to this Court

16    The Minister filed written submissions and appeared at the hearing of the appeal by his legal representative. APK16 did not file written submissions in accordance with the timetable which had been set down and he was not legally represented at the hearing. The Court was assisted by an interpreter.

Grounds of appeal

17    APK16’s grounds of appeal are (as written):

1.    [The primary judge] failed to hold that the Tribunal committed a jurisdictional error when it failed to apply the correct test of persecution in relation to the Complementary Protection Visa Provision contained in section 36(2)(aa) of the Migration Act 1958. The AAT failed to separate the claim to be refugee and fear of harm test for the provision of the Complementary Protection.

2.    Hon Judge failed to hold that the Tribunal made an error of law when it did not take up and separately deal with the factual issues. The Tribunal failed to understand how the BNP supporter persecuted by Awami League supporter and police. I was denied procedural fairness when the Tribunal made opinion based on assumption and possibilities. The Tribunal failed to assess the current situation in Bangladesh. Where thousands of BNP workers are arrested recently and harassed by the Awami League Government Authority. In assessing danger to me the Tribunal undermined the danger,

I will face if I compelled to return Bangladesh as a returned Asylum seeker.

18    Annexed to the notice of appeal is a document entitled “Annexure: Brief Description”. That document sets out a brief chronology of APK16’s visa application history and his claims to fear persecution in Bangladesh.

19    The first ground of appeal was not relied on before the primary judge, and accordingly leave to rely on that ground is required.

Paper handed up by APK16

20    At the commencement of the hearing, APK16 handed up an eight page document which he said had been prepared by a friend.

21    Under the heading “background”, there are set out seven paragraphs containing chronological information about APK16, the history of his protection visa application, his application to the Tribunal and his application for judicial review all of which appear to be generally correct.

22    Under the heading “AAT Decision and Reasons”, there are 50 paragraphs containing some more biographical information, some of the history of the protection visa application and assertions concerning the proceedings before the Tribunal and its findings. The Minister’s legal representative pointed out, and I accept, that it appears that not all of the material in this part of the paper relates to the appeal under consideration. For instance, at [43] on page 4, it states that the Tribunal accepted that the police had briefly detained and questioned the appellant about a meeting. There is no such reference in the Tribunal’s reasons. The paper also makes references to the nature and extent of activities undertaken in Australia which have no apparent relevance to this matter since that issue appears nowhere in the Tribunal’s reasons.

23    Under the heading “Grounds of Review”, there appears the following (as written):

The Tribunal fell into jurisdictional error by deciding that the threshold requirements under s 36(2)(a) had not been met based on a misconstruction of the expression ‘political opinion’ in Article IA of the Refugees Convention.

I claimed that I was involved in the BNP,

I claimed he was attracted to BNP because I agrees with its objectives of wanting to establish democracy and encourage people right in politics.

The Tribunal asked me about my political activities and my attendance at political events, concluding that my involvement with the BNP was at a very general level.

The Tribunal found that having regard to the my vague, unsubstantiated claims about my political activities and profile in Bangladesh, and my lack of any demonstrated ongoing political interests at most I was a low-level supporter of the BNP.

The Tribunal found that ‘the applicant is no more than a low-level BNP supporter and that I did not engage in a wider range of BNP -related political activities or become an BNP activist.

The Tribunal fell into jurisdictional error by making a purported decision that was manifestly illogical, irrational or unreasonable. The Tribunal stated I said in relation to my involvement in BNP in Australia that I was not in contact with any members now. I stated I was reluctant to contact BNP or similar bodies because this could reignite memories of my past in Bangladesh and induce more anxiety.

The Tribunal ‘was sceptical about this comment, as a politically engaged person might equally be keen to maintain their network, for instance to keep abreast of local political news and for social reasons.

In my statement, I stated that I still believes in the policies of BNP.

Ministerial Direction No 56 states that decisions makers ‘must take into account DFAT country information assessments in the course of making a decision.

The Tribunal failed to consider specific relevant examples of the Awami League’s propensity for violence against supports of JI and the BNP and the culture of impunity in Bangladesh.

24    Under the heading “Conclusion” there appears the following (as written):

1.    The Minister’s delegate (DIBP) & Tribunal erred, failed to distinguish between genuine and false documents. The Tribunal and Circuit Court erred in affirming the decision.

2.    The Minister’s delegate (DIBP) & Tribunal erred, denied the genuine documents without any credible investigation of my documentary evidences. The Tribunal and Circuit Court erred in affirming the decision. And did not properly observe the Judiciary Act.

3.    The Minister delegate (DIBP) & Tribunal denied all the genuine documents based on the country information as well their chosen source (Home Office UK). The information is not fact and it varies from source to source. The Minister delegate (DIBP) & Tribunal erred to deny the facts based on country’s information and relied on their chosen source of information which is not the fact at all. The Tribunal and Circuit Court erred in affirming the decision. Only because of DFAT report.

4.    For the sake of argument, if I accept the chosen source of country information is fact (which it is not) then all the Bangladeshi citizens’ applications should be refused. But in fact, many Bangladeshi applications from my political part BNP activists are approved based on genuine evidence, not on country information. So, there is error of law not to consider the merit of the application based on evidence and did not follow the principle of DIBP & Tribunal to assess the application case by case-based supporting documentary evidences.

5.    The Minister delegate’s (DIBP) & Tribunal decision record (‘false document can be obtained’). The Tribunal rejected the country’s information and accepted the evidence such as Vice President of [name redacted] Upozela, President of [name redacted] – Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP). Again, the Tribunal erred to reject the police case and arrest warrant which were based on hypothesis rather than fact.

6.    I asked the Minister delegate (DIBP) and the Tribunal member to verify if these documents had any doubt. A simple phone call could have verified its authenticity. The Tribunal has a wide range of practice for phone calls to verify the documents without the applicant’s request. But despite my request, the delegate (DIBP) and the Tribunal member ignored to verify the genuine documents and lead to the wrong decision not to rely on evidence.

7.    The Minister’s legal representative submitted my birth certificate to the Federal Circuit Court which is not relevant to the Court decision and is not randomly submitted in other cases. There is no age bar for the refugee applicant and such any indication is an error of law.

There were then six authorities referred to.

Adjournment request

25    At the hearing, APK16 said that he was not in a position to address legal argument or explain issues raised by the paper and asked to be given time to obtain legal representation which he could not presently afford, noting that he had been represented previously. The Minister opposed an adjournment on the basis that there was no evidence as to any steps taken by APK16 to secure legal representation and an adjournment has no apparent utility such that it will be justified in the interests of the administration of justice. APK16 could not provide any estimate of time for which it would be appropriate to adjourn to allow him to obtain representation. Although it is true that APK16 has previously had legal representation, having regard to APK16’s inability to suggest a timeframe in which he would be able to obtain representation, the Court determined that it was not appropriate to adjourn the proceedings.

The Minister’s position in relation to matters raised by the paper

26    The Minister’s representative sought to assist the Court by identifying the matters which he thought the paper raised, and concluded that the Minister would have no objection to the Court considering any matter raised in the paper which could be interpreted as having been raised in the Federal Circuit Court and the two grounds of appeal having regard to the fact that the appellant is not legally represented on the appeal. However, to the extent that new matters are raised, the Minister would oppose leave on two bases. First, there is no explanation for why new grounds are now proposed in circumstances where the appellant was legally represented in the Federal Circuit Court. Second and more importantly, the additional contentions have no prospects of success in circumstances where they appear to be supported by factual assertions that are irrelevant to the present proceedings. For instance, the claim that the Tribunal’s findings were illogical, irrational or unreasonable are based on contentions (set out under the heading “grounds of review”) about findings that the Tribunal did not, in fact, make. Similarly, the issue raised concerning misconstruction of the expression “political opinion” is devoid of meaning in circumstances where it has not been particularised.

Further adjournment request

27    When APK16 was given an opportunity to speak to his grounds of appeal and the paper, he stated that he was “very sick”. The Court noted that he had not provided any medical evidence that he was unwell and APK16 explained that “with the proceedings I became sick” and that he felt faint. The proceedings were adjourned for 15 minutes. When he returned, APK16 appeared to submit that he remained subject to a warrant in Bangladesh and went on to say: “If I’m to travel now from the airport, I will be detained without any charge and I will be put into police custody. In that respect, if you give orders for me to return then I have to – I will be put up in jail once I return. That’s all I have to say”: T12.

Minister’s oral submissions in response

28    The Minister’s legal representative submitted that the matter raised in the appellant’s oral submissions went only to impermissible merit review of the Tribunal’s decision and otherwise relied on his written submissions. He noted one error in the primary judge’s reasons which he submitted (and I accept) was not material to the appeal. At J[10], the primary judge stated that the Tribunal appeared to accept that APK16 had been assaulted as claimed but went on to note that he continued to live in the area, whereas at DR[35] the Tribunal stated that “[h]aving regard to the problems which I have had with [the appellant’s] evidence I likewise do not accept that he was attacked by Awami League cadres on 27 November 2011, as he has claimed.

Consideration

Pleaded grounds

Ground one

29    This ground claims that the primary judge erred by failing to hold that the Tribunal erred by conflating the criteria set out in s 36(2)(a), which are Convention based, with those set out in s 36(2)(aa), the complementary protection criteria. As the Minister submitted, no ground that the Tribunal conflated those criteria was pleaded in the Federal Circuit Court. The primary judge therefore could not have erred in the manner suggested.

30    Leave is required for the appellant to rely on this ground. Factors which might be considered in determining whether leave should be granted are set out in NAJT v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2005) 147 FCR 51; [2015] FCAFC 134 at [166]. Justice does not demand that a new ground be considered if it lacks merit.

31    As submitted by the Minister, whether or not the Tribunal conflated its findings in relation to Convention based harm and complementary protection criteria depends on the facts of that case and reasoning of the Tribunal: see SZSGA v Minister for Immigration, Multicultural Affairs and Citizenship [2013] FCA 774 at [57] per Robertson J. In this case, APK16 claims to fear harm from the Awami League because of his political opinion supporting the BNP and his activities on its behalf. The Tribunal made factual findings and relied on country information at DR[31]-[36] in rejecting these Convention based claims. None of the claims made by APK16 had a greater scope than this. Accordingly, the findings made by the Tribunal in relation to the Convention based claims were also dispositive of any claims he made for complementary protection. In any event, the Tribunal addressed complementary protection separately at DR[37]. Insofar as the Tribunal relied on its factual findings in the context of Convention based harm in concluding that the statutory criteria for complementary protection were not satisfied, it committed no jurisdictional error in doing so: see SZSHK v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2013) 138 ALD 26; [2013] FCAFC 125 at [32] per Robertson, Griffiths and Perry JJ. Accordingly, this ground lacks merit and leave to rely on it in the appeal should be refused.

Ground two

32    I understand this ground to be that the primary judge erred by not finding that the Tribunal made a jurisdictional error by: (1) failing to accept APK16’s claims of being persecuted in Bangladesh at the hands of the Awami League and police; (2) failing to accept the current situation in Bangladesh; (3) failing to accept that thousands of BNP workers were recently arrested and harassed by the Awami League “Government Authority”; and (4) “undermining” the danger he will face if he is compelled to return to Bangladesh as a returned asylum seeker in assessing the danger to him, by which I take APK16 to mean that the Tribunal minimised the danger that he would face if he returned to Bangladesh.

33    In relation to ground two, the Minister submitted that that ground was “fundamentally misconceived” because it was not part of the function of the primary judge to undertake merits review of the Tribunal’s findings. The primary judge only had jurisdiction to assess whether the Tribunal fell into jurisdictional error. The Minister submitted that ground two merely illustrated dissatisfaction with the Tribunal’s findings and revealed no jurisdictional error or appellable error by the primary judge.

34    While the Minister did not claim that this was a new ground it is difficult to see that it is comprehended in the grounds considered by the primary judge. In any event, the ground is not made out.

35    It is the Tribunal’s obligation to determine whether it is satisfied that the criteria for a protection visa have been made out. It is apparent from the Tribunal’s reasons that it carefully considered the appellant’s claims to fear harm at the hands of the Awami League. The Tribunal accepted that the appellant was a member of the BNP and that he held the office of president of the Union BNP and vice president of the Upazila BNP. At DR[31], it found that the appellant did not embellish his role but did exaggerate his importance by claiming that he was famous as a political person and that this was why he was targeted by the Awami League cadres. It did this on the basis of the appellant’s own evidence concerning the functions he had performed, which the Tribunal described as “pretty low level”. It rejected his evidence concerning the claimed incident on 27 November 2011 because his claim that, following a beating by Awami League cadres, he fainted and was required to spend a week in hospital as a result “stretched credulity”. Further it rejected the claim that Awami League cadres had been trying to attack him but had not been successful because he avoided them on the basis that he continued to live in the area and was living in his village immediately before he left Bangladesh. The Tribunal found that if the cadres had really been trying to attack him they would have had the opportunity to do so: DR[32]. For the same reason, had the police wished to find and arrest him in relation to the “false claim” they could have done so which did not support the appellant’s claim that a “false claim” had been brought against him. This factor, together with country information concerning the prevalence of fraudulent documents in Bangladesh led the Tribunal to not accept that a false claim had been made: DR[33], [34]. The Tribunal relied on country information from DFAT to assess whether a person with the political opinion and profile which it found the appellant to have to assess the risk of harm the appellant would face if he returned to Bangladesh and continued his involvement in the BNP’s activities at the level he had previously engaged in them and found that the risk did not meet the criteria in s 36(2)(a) relating to Convention based harm: DR[36]; or for complementary protection: DR[37].

36    In my view, the Tribunal’s findings were logically based on the material before it. It was entitled to take into account the DFAT and UK Home Office “country” information and to determine the weight which should be given to it in determining the appellant’s claims: see NAHI v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCAFC 10 at [11]. Further, I accept the Minister’s submission that it was not open to the primary judge to engage in merits review of the claims made by APK16.

Grounds derived from the paper

37    The Minister’s submission that some of the material recorded under the heading “AAT Decision and Reasons” could not relate to the protection visa application made by the appellant, although some matters do appear to be relevant. The matters that clearly do not relate are:

(1)    at [30], which suggest that Awami League cadres made an attack with knives and sticks when APK16’s claim was that he was slapped and punched;

(2)    at [32], there is a suggestion that the Tribunal found that the appellant was “no more than a BNP supporter, and not politically active”. There are similar references at [44], [46], [47] and [48]. In some of those paragraphs it is asserted that that was the basis for a Tribunal finding that because of this lack of engagement there would be no risk of return to Bangladesh. However, the Tribunal in APK16’s case found that he was a BNP supporter, that had held offices in the Union BNP and Upazila BNP and that he had engaged in activities, albeit at a “pretty low level”. The Tribunal also found that APK16 was likely to engage in those activities on his return to Bangladesh;

(3)    at [36], the suggestion that the Tribunal found that it was possible, though far from certain, that the appellant was persecuted because of political reasons. The Tribunal in APK16’s case made no such finding;

(4)    at [38], the suggestion that ongoing threats were found not to have been linked to political opinion. APK16’s case was not a case where incidents were found to have happened but to have a personal, not a political, character;

(5)    at [43], there is a suggestion that the Tribunal accepted that the police may have briefly detained and questioned an applicant about a meeting he attended. This does not appear to be reflected in the decision record in APK16’s case.

38    Similarly, the material under the heading “Grounds of Review” appears to relate to a different case, in which the issue appears to have been whether the applicant held a “political opinion” at all, where he was found to be no more than a BNP supporter and where activities in Australia appear to have had relevance. These were not the issues in APK16’s case.

39    The material under the heading “Conclusion” raises the issues of the Tribunal’s decision not to give greater weight to documents he submitted to the Tribunal, its reliance on country information which indicated the prevalence of fraudulent documents in Bangladesh and its decision not to make enquiries in Bangladesh concerning the genuineness of a “false case” having been laid. Whether or not the paragraphs were derived from another matter, at least the last issue was considered by the primary judge.

40    It should be noted that in relation to the “false case” the Tribunal expressly said that it gave greater weight to the problems that the Tribunal had with APK16’s evidence than the documents produced by him in relation to it. In light of country information which suggests that fraudulently obtained documents are prevalent in Bangladesh and the Tribunal’s concerns about whether APK16 was in fact being pursued by the Awami League or the police because he remained in the area of his home village after November 2011 (when the alleged slapping incident occurred) and after August 2012 (when he says he found out about the “false case”) until September 2013 without being further attacked or arrested, the Tribunal’s concerns were logically based. It is a matter for the Tribunal whether it is satisfied by such evidence and the weight given to it. Further, as said by the primary judge, the appellant merely asserted that enquiries about whether a charge had been laid against APK16 might be made from public records which were readily available was not founded on evidence. The Tribunal did consider logistical issues about making such enquiries before it determined not to do so. On that basis, the primary judge found that APK16 had not established that such enquiries are ones about the existence of a particular and critical fact which could easily be ascertained and accordingly it was not an error for the Tribunal to fail to make the enquiries. Having regard to the High Court’s decision in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZIAI (2009) 83 ALJR 1123; [2009] HCA 39, that finding is one which the primary judge was bound to make.

41    Further, as indicated above, the Tribunal was entitled to determine on which country information it relied and the weight to be accorded to it.

42    I am not satisfied that there is anything raised in the paper which indicates appellable error by the primary judge.

Conclusion

43    The appeal should be dismissed with costs.

I certify that the preceding forty-three (43) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Farrell.

Associate

Dated:    1 November 2018