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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> R. -v- Refugee Appeals Tribunal & Anor [2010] IEHC 514 (22 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2010/H514.html Cite as: [2010] IEHC 514 |
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Judgment Title: R. -v- Refugee Appeals Tribunal & Anor Composition of Court: Judgment by: Ryan J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2010] IEHC 514 THE HIGH COURT JUDICIAL REVIEW 2008 1123 JR BETWEEN A. S. R. APPLICANT AND
REFUGEE APPEALS TRIBUNAL AND MINISTER FOR JUSTICE, EQUALITY AND LAW REFORM 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 1st September, 2008, whereby it affirmed the recommendation of the Refugee Applications Commissioner that the applicant should not be declared a refugee. Mr. Anthony Hanrahan B.L. appeared for the applicant and Ms. Sinead McGrath B.L. for the respondents. Background. 3. According to the applicant's version of events, his father was a commander in Hizb-i-Islami from 1985 onwards. The applicant himself was at no time a member of Hizb-i-Islami but, in 2005, he distributed anti-government political leaflets on the instructions of his father. On foot of this, the applicant was arrested by the Afghan secret police. He was beaten and mistreated while in custody. Under interrogation he revealed to the police that his father had given him the leaflets. After five days of detention the applicant's mother secured his release by bribing a guard. The guard brought the applicant out of the police station in the early morning under the pretence of going to pray at the mosque. He gave the applicant something to cover his face. From the mosque, the guard brought him by public bus and taxi to the applicant's aunt's house. The applicant then learned that his father and older brother had been arrested two days previously in connection with their activism in Hizb-i-Islami. They were later killed in prison and their bodies released to the applicant's mother. The applicant's family were aware that the police were looking for him and his uncle therefore organised his departure from Afghanistan. He left Afghanistan on the 3rd November, 2005 and travelled to Ireland via Pakistan. 4. The Refugee Applications Commissioner made a negative recommendation in respect of the applicant. The Commissioner found the applicant's account to be lacking in credibility in a number of respects. Moreover, the Commissioner stated that "if the applicant's claim to be a member of a Hizb-i-Islami family were deemed credible, it is considered, taking country of origin information into account... that the applicant as a non-member of Hizb-i-Islami himself, is in his own words, a low level worker who distributed some leaflets on the orders of his father, would not be targeted by the authorities." 5. The Refugee Appeals Tribunal rejected the applicant's appeal. The Tribunal Member made negative credibility findings against the applicant in relation to the following matters:
• his account of escaping from police custody; • his claim to have distributed subversive anti-government leaflets in public places during daylight hours; • the fact that no independent corroboration, such as international media reports, could be found to support the applicant's claim that his father and brother had been killed in prison. The Application for Judicial Review. 7. The applicant's oral hearing before the Tribunal took place on the 3rd December, 2007 and the decision is dated the 1st September, 2008. The applicant argues that the passing of almost nine months renders the decision unsafe and in breach of fair procedures and natural and constitutional justice. Mr. Hanrahan, Counsel for the applicant, spoke of the importance afforded to viva voce evidence in our legal tradition and opened a number of cases which espoused the primacy of oral evidence. He made the case that after almost nine months the Tribunal Member could not possibly have recollected the applicant's testimony and demeanour with any accuracy and she can only have based her decision on her notes of the hearing and the documentation submitted to her. In the result, the applicant was essentially deprived of the benefit of giving oral evidence and his entitlement to an oral hearing under s. 16(10) of the Refugee Act 1996 was effectively worthless. 8. In reply, the respondents submit that no actual prejudice has been caused to the applicant by the delay; in order to succeed in an application for certiorari, there must be some disquiet as to the Tribunal Member's decision. The respondents rely on the authority of A.M.R. v. Minister for Justice (Unreported, High Court, 25th April, 2008) [2008] IEHC 108 where, in the context of a fifteen week delay, McGovern J. held as follows:
I do not believe that it would be desirable to set down a rigid rule which states that unless a decision is given within three months of the hearing, that it is therefore reviewable on the grounds of excessive delay. Even where credibility is in issue there may be good reasons for the delay. In addition, there may be circumstances in the particular case which would tend to suggest that the applicant has not been prejudiced by any delay on account of the nature of the evidence considered. It seems to me that each case should be considered on its own merits and be dealt with in a way which is consistent with fairness."
I am not of the view that delay per se should, as a general proposition, give rise to the quashing of a decision of the Tribunal. There may be cases of such egregious delay that it would be untenable to permit the decision to stand but they must be far and few between. This is not such a case. There may be cases in which a change of circumstances occurs in the course of the period when a decision is awaited which would make the decision unsafe. It may be that in cases where credibility is in issue that the delay has led to a fear as to the accurate recollection of the evidence by a Tribunal member. To that extent, one would have to have regard to the facts and circumstances of any particular case. I am conscious of the fact that the hearings before the Tribunal have at their heart an individual's human rights and consequently it is important that decisions should be given within a reasonable period of time. However, I would be slow to indicate the level of delay which is unacceptable. In the circumstances of this case the delay was less than satisfactory. However, no prejudice of any kind was suffered as a result of the delay. In those circumstances I am not satisfied that the applicant is entitled to leave on this ground."
12. Turning to the issue of credibility, it is submitted on behalf of the applicant that the Tribunal's findings were flawed in a number of respects. One credibility finding made against the applicant was to the effect that he displayed only a limited knowledge of Hizb-i-Islami and their activities. The applicant asserts that in determining this matter the Tribunal Member erred, inter alia, by failing to have adequate regard to the applicant's young age in requiring detailed knowledge of the Hizb-i-Islami structure and the subtleties of the participation of some former members of the present Afghan government. In reply, the respondents argue that the Tribunal Member did have regard to both the applicant's age at the date of hearing and the age that he was when the alleged events took place in 2005. At pp. 8-10 of her decision, the Tribunal Member goes into some detail on the status of minors for the purpose of asylum law and the special considerations that apply. At p. 20-21 she makes the following findings:
13. The second credibility finding made against the applicant by the Tribunal concerned his account of escaping from police custody:
14. The respondents invoke the case of M.E. v Refugee Appeals Tribunal (Unreported, High Court, 27th June 2008) [2008] IEHC 192 where Birmingham J. dismissed an attempt to judicially review a Tribunal decision on the grounds that it was based on conjecture and speculation:
On the other hand, a Tribunal Member is not expected to accept without challenge or question every account given to him or her. Rather, he or she is expected to weigh, assess, analyse and draw inferences... I am forced to conclude that in complaining that the decision was based on conjecture, what the applicant is really saying is that the Tribunal Member should not have reached the view that she did." 15. The third credibility finding made by the Tribunal concerned the applicant's claim to have distributed subversive anti-government leaflets in public places during the daytime. The Tribunal was of the view that considering the content of these leaflets, the fact that the applicant's father was stated to be a commander in Hizb-i-Islami, and the inherent danger of distributing such leaflets, it was not credible that the applicant would have been distributing these leaflets during daylight hours. The applicant submits that the question of the time of day when the leaflets were distributed is peripheral to the applicant's core claim and should not have been relied upon, and that her finding on this matter is irrational and based on speculation. The respondents assert that the Tribunal did no more than draw inferences and made deductions, as she is entitled to do, and that the conclusions drawn were reasonably open to her. 16. The fourth credibility finding of the Tribunal was with respect to the fact that no independent corroboration, such as international media reports, could be found to support the applicant's claim that his father and brother had been killed in prison. The Tribunal found as follows:
17. The final basis on which the applicant claims he was prejudiced was that the Tribunal Member erred in not having regard to certain more up-to-date country of origin information in reaching her decision. The respondents rebut this argument, observing that there is nothing in the applicant's pleadings or submissions to suggest that there was information in the more up-to-date country information which would fundamentally alter or weaken the Tribunal Member's decision. The Court's Assessment. 19. The reasoning in S.M.R does not apply by way of analogy to the present case. In S.M.R. the matter on which the Supreme Court departed from the High Court's findings concerned evidence on affidavit, not oral testimony. For this reason the more relevant authority would seem to be Hay v. O'Grady [1992] 1 I.R. 210, where the Supreme Court held that it would not interfere with findings of fact made by a trial judge who hears oral evidence if such findings are supported by credible evidence. 20. The applicant's submissions proceed on an assumption that I think is unjustified. That is that the process of decision making and writing the decision are entirely discrete elements and not elements in a continuing process. Counsel makes the assumption that the Tribunal Member did not entertain any thought about the case between the conclusion and the hearing and shortly before the decision was compiled and that she had in the interim forgotten all the material facts and was accordingly wholly and exclusively reliant on such notes of the hearing as she possessed. There is no evidence that this was the case. It does not follow as a matter of logic. And the contents of the decision suggest otherwise. 21. It is clear from the various authorities that there is no universal cut-off point at which a period of delay will be deemed inordinate and the decision unsafe. Each case must be assessed on its own particular facts. Clearly, any unnecessary delay is undesirable, particularly in the context of asylum applications, where fundamental rights are at stake. No reason has been put forward to explain or justify the delay in the present case. It may well be that in any given case there is good reason for delay in producing a decision. Facts have to be checked, documentation has to be considered, the issues have to be weighed up and the decision has to be put down in writing. An applicant is as likely to benefit as to suffer from a period of time elapsing between hearing and decision. 22. The applicant has not adverted to any error of fact or other flaw that could be attributed to delay. However, it is argued that the he has suffered prejudice in that the nine month delay deprived the Tribunal Member of any reasonable ability to recollect the applicant's oral testimony at hearing. The applicant submits that such was the delay that the applicant's assessment of credibility - a central feature of the decision - was compromised. I do not accept this argument. The Tribunal's decision runs to 26 pages. A detailed record of the oral hearing set out at pp. 2-7 of the decision. Having set out the applicable law, the Tribunal Member goes on to provide an assessment of the applicant's case. The decision is thorough and well-reasoned in respect of each of its findings. The conclusions reached and the manner in which they are reached are entirely reasonable and rational and at no point does the Tribunal Member base her findings on conjecture, speculation or peripheral issues. 23. This is a case of delay simpliciter as a ground for judicial review. I am in agreement with the decisions of McGovern J. in A.M.R. and of Dunne J. in FKS., the latter of which concerned a delay of similar length to that at issue in the present case. Such is the soundness of the Tribunal Member's decision that I can see nothing to suggest that she was in any way hampered by the delay or that any actual prejudice has been caused to the applicant as a result. 24. I am satisfied that the Tribunal Member acted correctly in assessing the applicant's credibility and in making the findings that she did. 25. The Tribunal decision rejected the appeal on an additional ground based on country of origin information. At p. 24 of the decision, the Tribunal Member stated as follows:- "Without prejudice to the aforegoing, it is unlikely that the applicant would be of interest to the authorities were he to return to Afghanistan." She went on to consider country of origin information before concluding:- "Considering the amount of time that has elapsed since the applicant's arrest for distributing pamphlets, the fact that he was not a member of Hizb-i-Islami and the fact that he would not support violence but supports negotiation, it is unlikely that the applicant would be of any interest to the government were he to return to Afghanistan." As to the applicant's submission that the Tribunal Member erred in not having regard to certain more up-to-date country of origin information in reaching her decision, there is nothing in the applicant's pleadings or submissions to say that the more up-to-date country information might have led the Tribunal Member to reach a different conclusion than she did. Thus, even if the Tribunal Member had accepted the applicant's credibility, he would have failed on this ground. There is therefore nothing to support this argument and I would dismiss it accordingly. 26. In the circumstances, I refuse the application for leave.
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