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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 [2010] IEHC 513 (22 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2010/H513.html Cite as: [2010] IEHC 513 |
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Judgment Title: O. -v- MJELR & Anor Composition of Court: Judgment by: Ryan J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2010] IEHC 513 THE HIGH COURT JUDICIAL REVIEW 2008 507 JR BETWEEN P.O. APPLICANT AND
MINISTER FOR JUSTICE AND LAW REFORM AND MAJELLA TWOMEY SITTING AS THE REFUGEE APPEALS TRIBUNAL RESPONDENTS JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Ryan delivered the 22nd October 2010 1. This is an application for leave to bring judicial review proceedings in respect of a decision of the Refugee Appeals Tribunal dated the 14th February, 2008, whereby it affirmed the recommendation of the Refugee Applications Commissioner that the applicant should not be declared a refugee. 2. The applicant’s case is, first, that the Tribunal should have expressly considered certain country of origin information, namely, an article from the “afrol News” website entitled “Half of Nigeria’s women experience domestic violence”. Second, that the Tribunal erred in its consideration of internal relocation because it did not – in accordance with the UNHCR - (a) thoroughly investigate whether relocation was a realistic option; (b) consider the social and economic conditions in any specific location and (c) identify a specific location where it would be possible for to the applicant to relocate. The third is that the Tribunal erred in assessing the applicant’s credibility. 3. The Tribunal’s decision is also based on three grounds: the applicant’s lack of credibility in a number of respects, the viability of internal relocation and the availability of state protection. The applicant through her counsel makes arguments against the credibility findings and the respondent dismisses them as nitpicking point by point deconstruction of a kind that is impermissible in these circumstances. As to the viability of internal relocation, the UNHCR Guidelines place the onus of establishing this on the Tribunal and the claim should be seen in its factual context with some particular location in mind where the asylum seeker will be safe. It is not enough simply to say that the applicant should go to some other part of the country but rather that one should have some particular place in mind. 4. I turn first to the question of state protection. The onus on this matter rests on the applicant, who makes the case that she is at risk from the actions of non-state actors and that the state protection available in Nigeria is insufficient. It seems to me that she has a relatively high burden of proof in this claim. The issues and the law in this area were analysed by Birmingham J. in the case of A.B.O. v. Minister for Justice (Unreported, High Court, 27th June, 2008) [2008] IEHC 191, where he deals with state protection at paras. 29 to 38 and subsequently. Now it is of course clear that the role of the Court is to consider whether it was reasonably open to the Tribunal to reach the conclusion it did. On the test in the Canadian case of Canada (Attorney General) v. Ward [1993] 2 S.C.R, 689, as endorsed by Birmingham J. in the A.B.O. case I think it is quite clear that the applicant has failed under this heading. It is not just that the Tribunal was entitled to come to the conclusion that it did, but rather that it would have been eccentric, to say the least, for the Tribunal to have come to any other conclusion, having regard to the evidence and to the relevant test for state protection. 5. The material in the “afrol News” article that the applicant relies on in seeking leave is irrelevant to the issues, not to mention the fact that the document is unimpressive as a source of reliable country of origin information. It is not clear even what year the article was published: it is marked simply “31 May”. The document deals with the problem of domestic violence in Nigeria whereas the applicant’s claim for asylum is not in any way based on a fear of domestic violence. I have no reason to doubt that there is indeed such a problem in Nigeria and probably in many other countries as well. But the whole article is concerned with domestic violence and the only thing that counsel can fix on is the inclusion of two words “or community” in one paragraph and he uses these two words as a justification for claiming that the Tribunal member was in error in failing to discuss this document and to set it up against other country information before she arrived at her conclusion on state protection. This proposition is untenable. The applicant has failed under the heading of state protection to establish any ground, let alone a substantial ground, for challenging the finding of the Tribunal. 6. As to internal relocation, again the same country information is relied on, but it is also said that the Tribunal did not set out and put in context the claim made by the applicant and provide details as to where and how she could be expected to make a life for herself elsewhere in Nigeria. I accept a submission made by Ms. McGrath, counsel for the respondents, in this regard. She points out that there was in fact a reference by the Tribunal member to a specific part of Nigeria, namely Delta State, where the applicant says that she lived for some two months after escaping the home of her in-laws where she claims to have been incarcerated for some six months with her children. The Tribunal member then goes on to find (at p. 21 of her decision):-
7. It does seem to me that it is not sufficient for an applicant to sit back, so to speak, and demand that the Tribunal or the presenting officer or some other agency should establish a case block by block as to an alternative life that the applicant might be able to live and that, in default of establishing such a putative alternative existence, the applicant must succeed. I think that internal relocation has to be seen in a case like this, as in all other asylum cases, by reference to the particular facts. I do not take the UNHCR Guidelines, which are extremely helpful to decision makers and to courts in analysing the work of decision makers, to establish a rigid requirement that places on a decision maker in every case where internal relocation is relevant an obligation to explore in great detail the alternative life open to the applicant. In particular, it seems to me that where the threatened persecution is local and limited in area and personnel, that it may be sufficient to point out, if the evidence justifies that conclusion, that some or many or most other regions of the country in question are available to the asylum seeker for sanctuary. In the present case the applicant is protesting about a conclusion that she could have remained in Delta State, where she was able to remain for two months in safety and without any threat to her, instead of travelling all the way to Ireland and applying for asylum. I believe the Tribunal member was entitled to reach this conclusion on the basis of the information before her. Accordingly, insofar as the question of internal relocation is concerned, I am not satisfied that the applicant has established substantial grounds for challenging the Tribunal’s decision. 8. I turn finally to the question of credibility. Here I do rather agree with the respondents’ submission to the effect that the applicant’s counsel has engaged in a point by point deconstruction for the purpose of parsing and picking apart the findings. It is of course the case that the Tribunal fundamentally based its conclusion on state protection and secondly on freedom to relocate internally. The credibility findings are part of the analysis, but I do not think that they are really the essential part. Regardless of whether the applicant had been deemed credible or not, the fact that she has failed on the other two grounds or on either of the other two grounds is fatal to her case. This notwithstanding, taking the criticisms of the credibility findings that are made by counsel, it does seem to me that they are nitpicking and do not relate at all to the context in which this claim has been made. I accept that some limited number of the points made by counsel might be considered to have weight, if one ignored the factual context in which the consideration occurred. When that background is established and kept in mind, however, it seems to me that the criticisms are drained of validity. It seems to me that the part of the Tribunal’s decision dealing with credibility is clearly set out so that there is no doubt as to what the Tribunal member was thinking or why she had reservations about the credibility of the applicant. It is not my function to question the legitimacy of the findings if they are reasonably and rationally based on the evidence that was before the Tribunal. It is not for me to say whether I agree or disagree, because that is irrelevant. 9. It seems to me overall that this is a careful considered decision. Of course, it may be open to criticism in certain respects; it can be picked apart and infelicities of style and meaning can be identified. This much it has in common with most other decisions and judgments. But it seems to me to be a clearly expressed consideration of the case put forward by the applicant and the rejection on the three grounds is reasonable and I do not think that any significant flaw in the decision can be found. 10. I refuse this application for leave.
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