[2014] 4 F.C.R. 482
IMM-7541-12
2013 FC 421
Lajos Majoros, Lajosne Majoros, Milan Majoros, Vanessza Majoros, Rebeka Majoros (Applicants)
v.
The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration (Respondent)
Indexed as: Majoros v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration)
Federal Court, Zinn J.—Toronto, February 26; Vancouver, April 24, 2013.
Citizenship and Immigration — Status in Canada — Convention Refugees and Persons in Need of Protection — Judicial review of decision of Refugee Protection Division of Immigration and Refugee Board finding applicants neither Convention refugees nor persons in need of protection pursuant to Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, ss. 96, 97(1) — At hearing, applicants, Roma family, testifying suffering harassment, violence by skinheads in Hungary — Board finding that applicants failing to rebut presumption of state protection — Whether Board’s decision, in particular, state protection analysis, reasonable — Board’s analysis faulty, conclusion unreasonable — Whether claimant diligently seeking state’s protection not constituting legal requirement for refugee protection pursuant to Act, s. 96 — Legal requirement is that claimant be unable or unwilling (because of fear) to avail themselves of state protection — Persecution suffered by applicants originating from right-wing movement; violence, harassment perpetrated indiscriminately — In cases such as these, documentary evidence, rather than individual attempts to seek protection, more relevant to state protection analysis — Board treating what considering to be applicants’ inadequate efforts in relation to police as disqualifier for refugee protection — This legal error, i.e. placing legal burden of seeking state protection on refugee claimant, unreasonable, sufficient to warrant granting application — Application allowed.
This was an application for judicial review of a decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board finding that the applicants were neither Convention refugees nor persons in need of protection pursuant to section 96 and subsection 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. The Board found that the applicants had not rebutted the presumption of state protection, which was the determinative issue. During their hearing, the applicants, a Roma family, recounted to the Board decades of harassment and violence by skinheads in Hungary. Four relatively recent incidents of persecution were of particular significance to the Board’s decision and the judicial review. The Board made no adverse credibility finding regarding the testimony of the minor claimants’ parents who testified. The Board’s finding that the applicants did not rebut the presumption of state protection was based on their failure to provide sufficient information to the police after the various attacks to allow the police to properly investigate and apprehend the persecutors and on the applicants’ failure to make any complaint to any state authority that they were dissatisfied with the police response.
The issues were whether the Board’s decision and, in particular, its state protection analysis, was reasonable.
Held, the application should be allowed.
While the Board started from the premise that a claimant must show that they have taken all reasonable steps in the circumstances to seek protection, whether a claimant has sought or diligently sought the state’s protection is not a legal requirement for refugee protection. Rather, it goes to whether the claimant has provided the clear and convincing evidence that is needed to displace the presumption of state protection. The legal requirement in section 96 of the Act is that a claimant be unable or, because of their fear, unwilling to avail themselves of the protection of their country of nationality. It thus had to be determined whether the applicants were unable to avail themselves of Hungary’s protection.
Based on the Board’s reasons as a whole, it placed decisive emphasis on the applicant’s attempts to engage the police and lost sight of the real question of whether state protection in Hungary is adequate. The evidence on the record was that the persecution suffered by the applicants was from a right-wing movement and the particular acts of violence and harassment were perpetrated indiscriminately. Thus, it would have made little or no difference had the applicants more diligently reported and followed up with the police. Where persecution is widespread and indiscriminate and unless a claimant is repeatedly targeted by the same individual(s), it is difficult to understand how individual attempts to engage the authorities will have significant persuasive evidentiary value as to the state’s ability to protect against future, indiscriminate violence. In those cases, documentary evidence, rather than individual attempts to seek protection is more relevant to the state protection analysis. In this case, although the Board did review the documentary evidence, in its decision, the applicants’ perceived inadequate attempts to engage the police not only figured prominently but were decisive in the Board’s analysis. The legal error, which was to place a legal burden of seeking state protection on a refugee claimant, was unreasonable and sufficient to warrant granting the application.
Moreover, despite that the Board reviewed the documentary evidence separately, its analysis was problematic since it failed to recognize that the corollary of the principle that protection need not be perfect is not the principle that there is adequate protection if it is found on occasion. Having regard to the decision as a whole, the Board paid only lip service to the notion that state protection must actually be sufficiently effective at the operational level and, with respect to the persecution suffered by the claimants, to be adequate for the purposes of refugee law. Rather, it placed overwhelming reliance on the government’s efforts and good intentions in arriving at its conclusion that state protection was adequate based on the documentary evidence. Therefore, its decision was unreasonable.
Instead of treating the applicants’ interactions with the police as having evidentiary relevance to the legal issue of whether state protection was available, the Board treated what it considered to be the applicants’ inadequate efforts in relation to the police as a disqualifier for refugee protection and that was an error. .
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS CITED
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27, ss. 96, 97(1).
TREATIES AND OTHER INSTRUMENTS CITED
United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, July 28, 1951, [1969] Can. T.S. No. 6, Art. 31, 33.
CASES CITED
applied:
Meza Varela v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1364; Orgona v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 1438; Ferko v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 1284, 14 Imm. L.R. (4th) 136.
APPLICATION for judicial review of a decision (X (Re), 2012 CanLII 95154) of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board finding that the applicants, a Roma family from Hungary, were neither Convention refugees nor persons in need of protection pursuant to section 96 and subsection 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. Application allowed.
APPEARANCES
Mieszko J. Wlodarczyk for applicants.
Nicole Rahaman for respondent.
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
Rochon Genova LLP, Toronto, for applicants.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment and judgment rendered in English by
[1] Zinn J.: The applicants, a Roma family from Hungary, challenge a decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board [X (Re), 2012 CanLII 95154] that found that they were neither Convention refugees nor persons in need of protection pursuant to section 96 and subsection 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27.
[2] The Board found that the applicants had not rebutted the presumption of state protection, which was the determinative issue. In my view, the Board’s analysis is faulty and its conclusion unreasonable. The decision must be set aside.
Background
[3] Lajos Majoros and his spouse Lajosne Majoros (the father and mother of the minor claimants) both testified. The Board made no adverse credibility finding. The applicants recounted decades of harassment and violence by skinheads in Hungary, including the murder and dismemberment of one of the father’s close friends while camping. However, four relatively recent incidents of persecution are of particular significance to the Board’s decision and this judicial review application. Unless otherwise indicated, the quoted passages are taken from the Board’s decision.
[4] In 2007, Mr. Majoros and some of his Roma friends attended a disco in the town of Harsány, Hungary, and fled when a group of racists armed with “bats, kaszas, swords and other farm implements came in looking for a fight.” He and 12 others fled in a car, “some inside, some hanging onto the outside” [Board’s decision, at paragraph 2], and were stopped by a police car for speeding and having too many people in the car. Although those stopped explained they were merely fleeing the scene at the disco, which they described to the police, the police fined them anyway but said [at paragraph 16] that they “would go to the disco and ask around and get back to them.” Mr. Majoros did not follow up with the police about this incident, nor did he hear back from the police.
[5] In 2008, Mr. Majoros “attended a Roma celebration during which the Guardists broke in and started a brawl. The Guardists were outnumbered but during this altercation [Mr. Majoros’] godfather was stabbed. By the time the police arrived, the assailants were gone.” [Board’s decision, at paragraph 2.] Mr. Majoros wrote in his Personal Information Form that because they were gone, “the police said they could not act”.
[6] In August 2009, “while enjoying time with his parents in the back garden of their home not far from his, 8-10 skinheads drove by yelling racial slurs, jumped out of their vehicles and threw Molotov cocktails. [The applicants] called the police who informed them that they would look for them. This was particularly frightening for [Mr. Majoros] and his family because, earlier that year, several homes in their ghetto had been set on fire when Molotov cocktails had been thrown and other incidents of violence were being reported” [at paragraph 2].
[7] In September 2009, Mr. Majoros “and his wife were spat upon and assaulted by 5-6 large men while waiting for a bus. Luckily, people passing by called the police however, because the police could [not] find the assailants, they started a case against ‘unknown assailants’ and never contacted the claimants afterwards” [at paragraph 2]. The applicants were unable to provide a description of the attackers or a license plate number to assist the police.
[8] In its decision, the Board found that the applicants failed to rebut the presumption of state protection because they had failed to provide sufficient information to the police after the various attacks to allow them to properly investigate and apprehend the persecutors, and did not make any complaint to any state authority that they were dissatisfied with the police response.
Issues
[9] The applicants raise the following issues:
1. Did the Board err by failing to reasonably assess the evidence as a whole?
2. Did the Board err by mischaracterizing the evidence of the applicants with respect to state protection, and making veiled or over credibility findings not consistent with the evidence?
3. Did the Board err by misinterpreting the definition of state protection, including by failing to assess whether the efforts being made by the Hungarian government were operationally adequate?
However, the real issue is whether the Board’s decision, and in particular its state protection analysis, is reasonable.
Analysis
[10] The Board [at paragraph 14] started from the premise that “[a] claimant must show that they have taken all reasonable steps in the circumstances to seek protection, taking into account the context of the country of origin, the steps taken and the claimant’s interactions with the authorities.” [Footnote omitted.] However, whether a claimant has sought, or diligently sought the state’s protection is—properly speaking—not a legal requirement for refugee protection. Rather, it goes to whether the claimant has provided the “clear and convincing” evidence that is needed to displace the presumption of state protection. Because of the strong presumption of state protection, concrete, individual attempts to seek the protection of the state are—as evidence—perhaps usually necessary (depending on the circumstances and other evidence) to rebut that presumption. In that sense only, seeking the protection of the state might amount to a de facto requirement in many cases.
[11] However, the legal requirement in section 96 of the Act is that a claimant be “unable or, by reason of [their] fear, unwilling to avail themself of the protection of [their country of nationality].” Here, the agent of persecution was not the state, but rather a widespread right-wing, skinhead movement. Thus, the legal issue was whether the applicants were unable to avail themselves of Hungary’s protection.
[12] I adopt Justice Mosley’s statement of the law in this regard in Meza Varela v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1364, at paragraph 16: “Any efforts must have ‘actually translated into adequate state protection’ at the operational level”. Or, as I put it in Orgona v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 1438, at paragraph 11: “Actions, not good intentions prove that protection from persecution is available.” At the same time, state protection need not rise to the level of perfection. That a state is unable to provide adequate protection, assessed at the operational level, can be proved with whatever evidence is sufficiently convincing, including documentary evidence.
[13] One can only conclude from reading the Board’s decision as a whole that it placed decisive emphasis on the applicants’ attempts to engage the police, and lost sight of the real question of whether state protection in Hungary is adequate.
[14] The difficulty with the Board’s emphasis on the actions of these applicants is this: the evidence on the record was that the persecution suffered by the applicants was from a right-wing movement, and that the particular acts of violence and harassment were perpetrated indiscriminately. As a result, one must ask: “What difference would it have made if the applicants had more diligently reported and followed up with the police, and the individuals responsible for the various acts of violence had been caught?” Based on the record, one can only conclude nothing, or at the very most very little would have changed: persecution against the Roma in Hungary is widespread and in most cases indiscriminate. As a result, the state would be offering no more “protection” than it did prior the particular acts of persecution.
[15] Justice Kane offered a similar observation in Ferko v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 1284, 14 Imm. L.R. (4th) 136, at paragraph 49:
The applicant reported every incident of violence to the police, yet he and his family continued to be victims of violence in each community they moved to. The Board accepted that the applicant’s reports to the police did not result in any suspect being apprehended. Even if they had, this would not necessarily have resulted in any future protection for the applicant’s family since nothing suggests that they were repeatedly targeted by the same individual(s). Rather, the applicant and his family were the victims of a broader pattern of violence by ‘skin heads’ against the Roma. It is, therefore, not apparent what the purpose would be for the applicant to continue to request status reports from the police about the incidents reported. It is not apparent how that would have increased state protection to him and his family. [Emphasis added.]
[16] Where persecution is widespread and indiscriminate, and unless a claimant is repeatedly targeted by the same individual(s), I fail to understand how it can be said that individual attempts to engage the authorities will have significant, persuasive evidentiary value as to the state’s ability to protect against future, indiscriminate violence. In those cases, documentary evidence, rather than individual attempts to seek protection, is more relevant to the state protection analysis. As discussed below, the Board in this case did review the documentary evidence; however, one cannot escape the conclusion reading the decision as a whole that the applicants’ perceived inadequate attempts to engage the police not only figured prominently, but were decisive in the Board’s analysis. That legal error—which is to place a legal burden of seeking state protection on a refugee claimant—is unreasonable and itself sufficient to warrant granting this application.
[17] Moreover, although the Board reviewed the documentary evidence separately, its analysis is problematic in that it fails to recognize that the corollary of the principle that protection need not be perfect is not the principle that there is adequate protection if it is found on occasion. The Board repeats the following statement from the recent response to information request [at paragraph 28]: “[T]he central government’s general failure to maintain strong and effective control mechanisms over rights violations takes its toll on Hungary’s largest minority, the Roma” [emphasis added; footnote omitted]. Also, as in Orgona, it points to the example where the police made arrests in nine horrendous violent and deadly attacks against Roma, and from that it concludes that the government’s efforts to combat racism have had “mixed results” [at paragraph 30].
[18] In my view, having regard to the decision as a whole, the Board paid only lip service to the notion that state protection must actually be sufficiently effective at the operational level and with respect to the persecution suffered by the claimants, to be adequate for the purposes of refugee law. Rather, it placed overwhelming reliance on the government’s efforts and good intentions in arriving at its conclusion that state protection was adequate based on the documentary evidence. For that reason too, the Board’s decision is unreasonable.
[19] Incidentally, the Board’s treatment of the documentary evidence also reverts to a criticism of the applicants’ imperfect interactions with the police, with no attention paid to what would have been the practical significance of those interactions. At one point, the Board wrote (at paragraph 31):
… the claimant has not demonstrated that state protection in Hungary is so inadequate that he need not have approached the authorities at all, or that he need not have taken all reasonable efforts to seek state protection in his home country, such as seeking help from people higher in authority, or with other mechanisms, such as the Minorities Ombudsman’s Office or the Independent Police Complaints Board (IPCB), before seeking international protection in Canada.” [Emphasis added; footnote omitted.]
At also (paragraph 35):
There was no evidence adduced that the claimants made any attempts to follow up on any report that may have been taken by police regarding any incident of violence or discrimination committed against them nor did they complain to anyone that the police did not get back to them.
[20] As I stated above, what the Board fails to address is the question: how would state protection be more forthcoming if the applicants had followed up with, e.g., the Minorities Ombudsman’s Office? Would they be any safer or any more protected? Again, instead of treating the applicants’ interactions with the police as having evidentiary relevance to the legal issue—Is state protection available?—the Board treated the applicants’ (in its view) inadequate efforts in relation to the police as a disqualifier for refugee protection. To repeat: that was an error.
[21] In summary, the Board erred in its state protection analysis in two ways: first, by focusing on the applicants’ alleged inadequate reporting to the police with no regard to the practical significance of that reporting to the real issue of state protection; and second, by focusing almost exclusively on the efforts being made by the Hungarian government to curb persecution against the Roma, with little or no attention paid to the operational effectiveness of those measures. For those reasons, the Board’s decision must be set aside.
[22] Neither party proposed a question for certification.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that this application is allowed, the decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board is set aside, the applicants’ refugee protection claims are remitted back to be redetermined by a differently constituted panel, and no question is certified.