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Date: 20150713


Docket: IMM-6875-14

Citation: 2015 FC 855

Ottawa, Ontario, July 13, 2015

PRESENT:    The Honourable Mr. Justice Phelan

BETWEEN:

KALEECHARAN KANDASAMY

Applicant

and

THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION

Respondent

JUDGMENT AND REASONS

I.                   Introduction

[1]               This is a judicial review of a Canada Border Services Agency [CBSA] officer’s [Officer] decision to apply to the Immigration and Refugee Board [IRB] to cease refugee protection of the Applicant.

II.                Background

[2]               The Applicant is a Sri Lankan national, who came to Canada as a member of the country asylum in 2004 during the Sri Lankan civil war fearing persecution at the hands of the government and the LTTE.

[3]               The civil war ended in 2009 and the Applicant returned to Sri Lanka in 2013.

[4]               The Applicant alleges that he was questioned upon his return to Canada without being informed that the motivation for the questions was an investigation into cessation of protected person status.

[5]               Of particular importance is that the Applicant was invited to an interview and/or to make submissions to the Officer before the decision to file a cessation application was made. He did neither.

[6]               The Officer proceeded with the cessation application citing as grounds s 108(1)(a) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27. The relevant provisions are:

108. (1) A claim for refugee protection shall be rejected, and a person is not a Convention refugee or a person in need of protection, in any of the following circumstances:

108. (1) Est rejetée la demande d’asile et le demandeur n’a pas qualité de réfugié ou de personne à protéger dans tel des cas suivants :

(a) the person has voluntarily reavailed themself of the protection of their country of nationality;

a) il se réclame de nouveau et volontairement de la protection du pays dont il a la nationalité;

(b) the person has voluntarily reacquired their nationality;

b) il recouvre volontairement sa nationalité;

(c) the person has acquired a new nationality and enjoys the protection of the country of that new nationality;

c) il acquiert une nouvelle nationalité et jouit de la protection du pays de sa nouvelle nationalité;

(d) the person has voluntarily become re-established in the country that the person left or remained outside of and in respect of which the person claimed refugee protection in Canada; or

d) il retourne volontairement s’établir dans le pays qu’il a quitté ou hors duquel il est demeuré et en raison duquel il a demandé l’asile au Canada;

(e) the reasons for which the person sought refugee protection have ceased to exist.

e) les raisons qui lui ont fait demander l’asile n’existent plus.

(2) On application by the Minister, the Refugee Protection Division may determine that refugee protection referred to in subsection 95(1) has ceased for any of the reasons described in subsection (1).

(2) L’asile visé au paragraphe 95(1) est perdu, à la demande du ministre, sur constat par la Section de protection des réfugiés, de tels des faits mentionnés au paragraphe (1).

(3) If the application is allowed, the claim of the person is deemed to be rejected.

(3) Le constat est assimilé au rejet de la demande d’asile.

(4) Paragraph (1)(e) does not apply to a person who establishes that there are compelling reasons arising out of previous persecution, torture, treatment or punishment for refusing to avail themselves of the protection of the country which they left, or outside of which they remained, due to such previous persecution, torture, treatment or punishment.

(4) L’alinéa (1)e) ne s’applique pas si le demandeur prouve qu’il y a des raisons impérieuses, tenant à des persécutions, à la torture ou à des traitements ou peines antérieurs, de refuser de se réclamer de la protection du pays qu’il a quitté ou hors duquel il est demeuré.

[7]               The Officer’s decision was based principally on the numerous trips the Applicant took back to Sri Lanka in the recent years. Having declined to attend an interview, the Officer concluded that based on the available evidence, the Applicant had voluntarily re-availed himself of the protection of the country of nationality and is a person described in s 108(1)(a).

[8]               In post-hearing submissions, the Applicant asks that the Court follow Justice Mosley’s decision in Bermudez v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 639 [Bermudez], rather than Justice Strickland’s decision in Olvera Romero v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 671, 242 ACWS (3d) 389 [Olvera Romero]. The parties are at loggerheads about whether an officer is obliged to consider H&C considerations before making a decision to apply for cessation.

With respect, both decisions have only limited application here.

III.             Analysis

[9]               The only real issue is whether the Officer’s decision was reasonable (see Olvera Romero). The sub-issue is whether the Applicant was accorded procedural fairness.

[10]           In my view, the Applicant’s refusal to attend an interview or make submissions (which he could have done at the interview) is fatal to this judicial review.

[11]           While in Olvera Romero, the Court held that participatory rights required by the duty of fairness did not call for an interview or oral hearing, the Court in Bermudez held that an applicant had at least the right to make submissions as to why an application to the Refugee Protection Division should not be made.

The two decisions are not in direct conflict on this point.

[12]           Given the importance of the process to the Applicant, I adopt the reasoning of Justice Mosley – the rationale for imposing some level of participation in the process.

[13]           The issue of whether an officer can or should take into account considerations of an H&C nature is academic on this record. The Officer never did because the Applicant did not exercise his “right to be heard” by attending the interview or filing submissions.

[14]           An applicant has minimal procedural rights as noted by Justices Strickland and Mosley. I concur with Justice Mosley that these would include at least the right to make submissions to an officer, including those H&C considerations relevant to the grounds upon which an application for cessation may be based.

[15]           The procedural rights are minimal, in part, because the same H&C matters may be raised at the IRB. Such a limitation on procedural rights is consistent with the two-stage process under s 108 – the decision by an officer to apply to the IRB and the decision by the IRB on the merits of the cessation application.

[16]           Considering that the Applicant did not exercise his opportunity to address the matter before the Officer made the application to the IRB, I can find no error or unreasonableness in the Officer’s decision.

IV.             Conclusion

[17]           For these reasons, this judicial review will be dismissed.

[18]           While this case is markedly different from Olvera Romero and Bermudez, where questions have been certified, I will give the parties 10 days from the date of the issuance of these Reasons to make submissions (if any) on a certified question.

 


JUDGMENT

THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that:

1.                  the application for judicial review is dismissed; and

2.                  the parties are to have 10 days from the date of the issuance of these Reasons to make submissions (if any) on a certified question.

"Michael L. Phelan"

Judge

 


FEDERAL COURT

SOLICITORS OF RECORD


DOCKET:

IMM-6875-14

 

STYLE OF CAUSE:

KALEECHARAN KANDASAMY v THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION

 

PLACE OF HEARING:

Vancouver, British Columbia

 

DATE OF HEARING:

May 4, 2015

 

JUDGMENT AND REASONS:

PHELAN J.

 

DATED:

july 13, 2015

 

APPEARANCES:

Peter Edelmann

 

For The Applicant

 

R. Keith Reimer

 

For The Respondent

 

SOLICITORS OF RECORD:

Edelmann & Co.

Barristers and Solicitors

Vancouver, British Columbia

 

For The Applicant

 

William F. Pentney

Deputy Attorney General of Canada

Vancouver, British Columbia

 

For The Respondent

 

 

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