H441
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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> O. -v- MJELR & Anor [2007] IEHC 441 (12 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2007/H441.html Cite as: [2007] IEHC 441 |
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Judgment Title: O. -v- MJELR & Anor Composition of Court: Hedigan J. Judgment by: Hedigan J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2007] IEHC 441 THE HIGH COURT 2006 No. 972 JR [2006 No. 972 JR]
M. I. O. APPLICANT AND MINISTER FOR JUSTICE, EQUALITY AND LAW REFORM AND REFUGEE APPLICATIONS COMMISSIONER RESPONDENTS JUDGMENT OF MR JUSTICE HEDIGAN delivered on the 12th of December 2007
To exercise the Court's discretion in granting leave to seek such relief I must be satisfied that there are substantial grounds upon which the applicant may argue that the Refugee Appeals Commissioner acted somehow beyond his jurisdiction or not in a manner which was consistent with the applicant's right to fair procedure in the hearing of her application for a declaration as a refugee in accordance with the above Act. In this context, I have also to examine whether judicial review is an appropriate way to proceed in the light of the full appeal procedure that exists with an oral hearing and legal representation and which has been sought in this case. In his judgment delivered on the 16th May 2007 in Fatimo Oydele v. The Minister of Justice, Equality and Law Reform and Others, McGovern J stated:
In his judgment, he cited Stefan v. The Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform, where the Supreme Court, although holding that in the circumstances of that case there had been a serious breach of the requirement for a fair hearing, nonetheless held that judicial review was discretionary and could be refused where there was an adequate alternative remedy. In that case, the Supreme Court relied upon and cited the judgment of O'Higgins CJ in The State (Abenglen) Properties v. Corporation of Dublin [1984] I.R. 381, and specifically at page 393:
It seems to me that the applicable principles to be applied in determining this type of application therefore is that the Court should be slow to intervene unless the appeal procedure provided by the Refugee Act is, for some particular reason, inadequate. The Court should take into account all the circumstances of the case and therefore should consider whether in the particular case the appeal would be inadequate. Turning to the particular case therefore, the grounds that are alleged are:
(c) a failure to accept her credibility; (d) the country of origin information was used selectively; (e) no adequate reasons were given; (f) the Refugee Appeals Commissioner acted as an expert;
(h) no proper inquiry as to the availability of police protection; and
In relation to ground (a) and (d) which I can take together, it is clearly not the case that in the kind of interview which is conducted in these kinds of cases that every detail of the country of origin reports needs to be put to the applicant. It is not an adversarial contest that is occurring but an interview process to attempt to ascertain how well-founded the applicant's fear of persecution is. It is important, in my view, that the gist of the applicant's fears should be explored and then examined by the Commissioner in the light of the appropriate country of origin information. Here, it seems to me that all aspects of the applicant's fears were explored during the interview; that is, the threat from her mother-in-law, the threat from the Ogboni cult, the inability of her husband to protect her and her children, the inability of the police to protect her or act in such cases, and her inability to find any safe refuge in Nigeria. These fears were then examined by the Commissioner with the assistance of the country of origin information reports promised by the UK Home Office dated up to October 2004 which dealt with all of the above issues. The report was clearly concerned with the problem of cults and confraternities and their practices but nonetheless concluded that there were safeguards in place in the form of the police protection and relocation in Nigeria. The report of October 2005 dealt specifically with the Ogboni society relying on a letter of the 12/3/1998 which expressed a view on the structure and sacrificial practices of this cult. This letter expressed a view that there is no firm evidence to suggest they engage in human sacrifice as alleged by the applicant. Objection is taken to the date of this letter, indicating that the information is out of date. There is evidence in the country of origin information of an incident in August 2004 where Nigerian police arrested 30 witch doctors on suspicion of human sacrifice where 50 mutilated bodies and 20 skulls were found in the so-called Evil Forest. Nonetheless, the report also notes in this connection that there are no reports of any examples of cult members killing non-cult members. In any event, the report exemplifies the proposition that the police do act in cases where cult killings are suspected. In my view, it is clear that the country of origin information was not selectively quoted and further the fundamental matters which ground the applicant's fears are dealt with both in the report I have seen and in the manner in which it was applied by the Commissioner. Ground (b) refers to information that could only be prejudicial to the applicant and is not pursued, it seems to me, to be something favourable to the applicant. Ground (c) could not ground on application for judicial review save for some absence of rationality. No such absence is apparent in this case.
There are no grounds whatever, in my view, to support the proposition in ground (f) that the Commissioner acted as an expert. He considered expert reports and expressed a view thereon which is his function. Ground (g) argues the investigation of the applicant's complaints was inadequate and that the interview should have been reconvened in the event anything further came to light so as the applicant might respond to it. This is an attempt to have the Court intervene to direct the modus operandi of the investigation. This the Court cannot and should not do. Ground (h) argues that there was no proper investigation into the availability of police protection. There clearly was an investigation and country of origin information specifically on this point was addressed and cited by the Commissioner. The other matters I grouped together under point (i) are clearly matters inappropriate to grant an application for judicial review. In truth, I consider this entire application is misconceived. There is not present any specific procedural failure in the nature of that which was found in Stefan v. The Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform cited above, that is, the absence of a part of the applicant's completed questionnaire because it had been omitted from the translation from Romanian which was before the residing officer. This is the kind of fundamental error which is needed, in my view, to rise to the level of the "particular reason" needed to move the Court to intervene. In short, some fundamental flaw in the procedure that either prevented an applicant from properly presenting his case or prevented the deciding officer from coming to a proper decision. The failings alleged here and outlined in the above are matters which should be dealt with in the appeal process that has been established by the Oireachtas and which gives a perfectly adequate proceeding to enable her make her appeal. I therefore refuse the leave sought. |