Categories
All Countries Egypt

2020 RLLR 186

Citation: 2020 RLLR 186
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: February 27, 2020
Panel: Roman Kotovych
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Hart A Kaminker
Country: Egypt
RPD Number: TB8-15854
Associated RPD Number(s): TB9-13164, TB9-13232
ATIP Number: A-2020-00518
ATIP Pages: 003305-003307

DECISION

[1]       MEMBER: I’ve heard your testimony. I’ve weighed your evidence. I’m going to give you an oral decision. You’re gonna get a transcript of these reasons at the address. There may be some small errors, I don’t see them before they get sent out.

[2]       Okay, I’ll tell you at the outset cause the reasons will take a few minutes to piece together that I’m accepting the claims today. So, I’m saying yes to all three of you.

[3]       CLAIMANT: Thank you.

[4]       MEMBER: You’re welcome.

[5]       And these are my reasons for decision. Apologies if I mispronounce your names. XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXXand XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX the claimants, seek refugee protection under Sections 96 and 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

[6]       INTERPRETER: Excuse me, Your Honor. Should I translate simultaneous.

[7]       MEMBER: If you can, that would be great.

[8]       INTERPRETER: Yes, yes I can.

[9]       MEMBER: Thank you. So, then she’ll join you in the back and explain as we’re going along. Okay.

[10]     The claimants allegations are summarized in their Basis of Claim forms. In summary, they’re alleged to be an Egyptian father, mother and adult son also with Sudanese citizenship seeking protection from persecution on the basis of their Christian Evangelical faith in both countries.

[11]     I find that you are Convention refugees for the following reasons.

[12]     First, on the issue of identity. I find that you’ve established your personal identities and citizenships. I find you’ve also established your religious identities as Christians. I was presented with copies of Egyptian and Sudanese passports for all three of you, as well as original birth certificates, marriage certificate and church documents. I find on a balance of probabilities this establishes your identities.

[13]     There is a Nexus of religion under Section 96 in this case. Ma’am, you’ve also raised a, an added gender element based on your fear of living as a woman and a Christian in these countries, which I’ve also considered.

[14]     I find you’ve adequately established on a balance of probabilities your risk of harm returning or risk of persecution returning to both Egypt and Sudan. I found the testimonies to be credible today. You testified as to your backgrounds in these countries, your religious identities, your particular experiences. And why you left when you did.

[15]     I did have some questions about failure to claim in, on several opportunities, as well as why you delayed leaving over so many years. I found the explanations reasonable in the circumstances. While you Sir, did testify as to why you didn’t take advantage of claiming in Europe and while there still is an element there of failure to claim, the explanation was reasonable in the entirety of the circumstances. It’s outweighed by and your explanation is bolstered by the objective evidence. And that in and of itself is insufficient to outweigh everything that you’ve told me.

[16]     I’ve also considered your explanations as to the escalating nature of the harm. And why you were willing to remain in these countries for the time that you did. You also testified as to why you fear having a forward­ looking harm. And while there have been political changes in these countries, the best evidence that I have as to the current situation is the country conditions in the NDP, the country conditions provided by counsel and your own testimony as to the situation in both of these countries.

[17]     And based on that evidence and with nothing else compelling or credible before me to say that the circumstances have changed sufficiently, that is the evidence that I am relying on. And I find that evidence objectively justifiable and credible.

[18]     So, having considered all the evidence including your testimonies, I find that you’ve established a serious possibility of harm returning to either country on the basis of your Christian faith.

[19]     On the issues of internal flight alternative and state protection, I find that these do not apply in the circumstances as it is the State that you fear in both cases. As well, while there’s a societal element but also the State in both countries, it would be unreasonable for you to approach the State for protection.

[20]     I also note that given some of the continued impunity against Christians in these countries, that that further points to the un-, inability or unwillingness of the State to protect Christians. Or in any event, insufficiently to protect your open practice in these countries.

[21]     On the issue of internal flight alternative, I don’t have an alternative to point to where you would not face a serious possibility of harm. You testified as to why you feel you would not be able to relocate within these countries. And I find sufficient evidence from what I have before me that the risk would continue throughout both of these countries. As such, the IFA test fails on the first prong. And I find no internal flight alternative for you. For all these reasons, I find that you would face a serious possibility of harm in both of your countries of reference.

[22]     For this reason, I find all three of you to be Convention refugees under the IRPA. And I therefore accept your claims.

———- REASONS CONCLUDED ———-

Categories
All Countries Egypt

2020 RLLR 185

Citation: 2020 RLLR 185
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: June 17, 2020
Panel: Julie Morin
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Jacqueline J Bonisteel
Country: Egypt
RPD Number: MB9-18376
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2020-00518
ATIP Pages: 002334-002338

REASONS FOR DECISION

INTRODUCTION

[1]       These are the reasons for the decision in the claim of XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX who claims to be citizen of Egypt, and is claiming refugee protection pursuant to sections 96 and 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (the Act).

[2]       This claim has been decided without a hearing, according to the Immigration and Refugee Board’s Chairperson’s Instructions Governing the Streaming of Less Complex Claims at the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) and paragraph 170(f) of the Act.

ALLEGATIONS

[3]       You allege the following: You allege that you obtained a XXXXofXXXX XXXX from the University of XXXX. You started to be involved in the community while you were studying. Then after graduation, you became involved politically. In 2006, you participated in a demonstration against the government and you were arrested and detained for several weeks.

[4]       Most recently, you participated in the peaceful demonstrations in Tahir Square until the fall of Mubarak in February 2011.

[5]       In XXXX 2012, you joined the Freedom and Justice Party and you participated in several activities for the party, such as educating citizens about their political rights and supporting candidates in the elections.

[6]       In XXXX 2013, you participated in the demonstration at Rabaa Al-Adawiya Square to denounce and reject the military coup that pushed out of power the President Morsi in 2013.

[7]       In XXXX 2016, you were arrested and accused by the authorities of belonging to the Freedom and Justice Party and being part of the Muslim Brotherhood. In detention, you were beaten, insulted and physically as well as psychologically assaulted.

[8]       While you were being questioned, you were force to give your home address. Sorne officers went to your home while your wife and children were there. They destroyed contents of your apartment and took documents and money.

[9]       You were detained for a month. The authorities threatened to detain you again if you publish anything against President El-Sisi. They also asked you to report on a weekly basis to the police station.

[10]     In XXXX 2018, you went to Germany. You thought you would be safe to travel back and forth from Egypt to Germany. However, when you came back to Egypt, you were arrested at the airport because your name had appeared on a “wanted” list. The officers confiscated your mobile phone and your laptop. They were able consequently to access your Facebook account and were able to track your search history. You were physically and psychologically abused and threatened.

[11]     After a week, they released you without charges and confiscated your passport. You were able to get your passport back with the help of a relative who intervened for you.

[12]     You tried to leave the country afterwards, but you were told at the airport that you did not have the authorization to leave the country. You were detained again in XXXX 2019 without charged against you. A National Security Officer threatened to kill you, if you wrote anything negative about Egypt.

[13]     You had obtained a Canadian visa in XXXX 2018. You decided to leave Egypt in 2019 and this time, a relative of yours was able to facilitate your departure from Egypt by bribing the authorities. You arrived in Montreal on XXXX XXXX XXXX 2019 and you filed a refugee claim with the Canadian authorities shortly afterwards. You say that you continue in Canada to publish political posts against the government on social media.

DETERMINATION

[14]     I find that you are “Convention refugee” as you have established a serious possibility of persecution should you return to Egypt based on the grounds in section 96 of the Act.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[15]     I find that your identity as a national of Egypt is established by the documents provided, namely your passport.

Nexus

[16]     I find that you have established a nexus to section 96 by reason of political opinion.

Credibility

[17]     Based on the documents in the file, I have noted no serious credibility issues. In particular, the evidence establishes the allegations as set out above: Document 7, the copy of your certificate of graduation and transcript from the XXXXofXXXX XXXXofXXXX XXXX University confirm your professional credentials; Documents 8 to 10 confirm your political participation, i.e. a copy of your membership card from the Freedom and Justice Party; printouts of your Facebook and pictures of you in demonstrations in Canada confirm that you are still active politically; Documents 11 to 15 support your allegations related to your multiple detentions in Egypt, i.e. a copy of your Egyptian criminal records, the certificate extracted from Record of Misdemeanors, the investigation record from Ain Shams Police Station, a letter from you legal counsel and a letter from the friend confirming the problems you had at the airport over the years. After reviewing the documents, I have no reasons to doubt their authenticity.

Objective Basis of Future Risk

[18]     Based on the credibility of your allegations, and the documentary evidence set out below, I find that you have established a future risk that you will be subjected to the following harm: detention, torture, death.

[19]     The fact that you face this risk is corroborated by the following documents: National Documentation Package f-r Egypt – September 30, 2019 Version: The Muslim Brotherhood and its Freedom and Justice Party were banned in 2014 (tabs 1.4 and 1.5) and the Freedom and Justice Party is still banned in Egypt (tab 2.1); The authorities arrest people for alleged Muslim Brotherhood ties on a regular basis (tab 1.5); arrests, detention, disappearance, torture, execution of individuals affiliated or accused of being affiliated to the Muslim Brotherhood: tabs 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.7, 2.8.

Nature of the Harm

[20]     This harm clearly amounts to persecution.

State Protection

[21]     I find that there is clear and convincing evidence before me that the state is unable or unwilling to provide you with adequate protection. Judges are the primary tools in the repression of political opponents (tab 1.6); also, most defendants were sentenced after mass trials that violate fundamental due process rights, and some courts relied on confessions extracted under torture (tab 1.6).

Internal Flight Alternative

[22]     I have considered whether a viable internal flight alternative exists for you. On the evidence before me, I find that there is a serious possibility of persecution throughout Egypt. In light of the evidence quoted above regarding the Justice and Freedom Party, and the problems you have had with the authorities over the years, I do not believe that you will be able to establish yourself safely in Egypt.

CONCLUSION

[23]     Based on the analysis above, I conclude that you are “Convention refugee”. Accordingly, I accept your claim.

(signed)           JULIE MORIN

June 17, 2020

Categories
All Countries Egypt

2020 RLLR 184

Citation: 2020 RLLR 184
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: March 23, 2020
Panel: Jeffrey Brian Gullickson
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Bilal Hamideh
Country: Egypt
RPD Number: MB9-17860
Associated RPD Number(s): MB9-17939, MB9-17940, MB9-17941, MB9-17942, MB9-17943
ATIP Number: A-2020-00518
ATIP Pages: 002329-002333

REASONS FOR DECISION

INTRODUCTION

[1]       The principal claimant, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, her son, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXXand other children, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXXand XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX are claiming refugee protection pursuant to sections 96 and 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. Their submitted passports prove their identity and that they are citizens of Egypt.

[2]       I have appointed XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX as designated representative for the minor children XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXXandXXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX.

[3]       In rendering my reasons, I have considered and applied the Chairperson’s Guidelines on Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender-Related Persecution.

ALLEGATIONS

[4]       The principal claimant’s father was arrested for seven months for being a member of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) in Egypt in the 1980’s and was subsequently threatened with arrest for his political opposition in Egypt. He moved the family to Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) in 1991.

[5]       The principal claimant married and had children in KSA with an Egyptian husband who has temporary status in KSA. She returned to Egypt in 2012 for a one-month visit. She supported President Morsi who was later removed from power in a military coup in 2013. She continued to support the Muslim Brotherhood and oppose the government in Egypt.

[6]       After the military coup in Egypt in 2013, the government violently repressed political opposition.

[7]       In 2017, the Egyptian authorities came to her family’s home looking for her for security reasons. She feared returning to Egypt.

[8]       In 2018, her uncle was arrested in Egypt by security forces on a charge of membership in the MB. Friends of the family were arrested on similar charges.

[9]       KSA is an ally of the current Egyptian government and threatened MB supporters in KSA.

[10]     The principal claimant feared that she and her children would be removed from KSA to Egypt. She obtained US visas to travel to the US then Canada to make a refugee claim.

DETERMINATION

[11]     The claimants are Convention refugees. They established a serious possibility of persecution on grounds of imputed political opinion or for membership in a particular social group (members of the family of the principal claimant).

ANALYSIS

Credibility

[12]     Credibility concerns were not determinative.

[13]     The claimants submitted probative evidence in support of their claims.

[14]     The claimants submitted probative evidence in support of the main elements of their claims, for example, of the principal claimant’s political activities on social media (P-4) and her father’s arbitrary arrest in 1981 in relation to the MB and that the court granted him damages in 1992 (P-3).

[15]     The National Documentation Package (NDP) for Egypt, dated September 30, 2019, shows the repression of the former ruling party, the Freedom and Justice Party and the Muslim Brotherhood, which is now an outlawed organisation in Egypt, and that there has been severe repression of persons associated with the Muslim Brotherhood or a similar political opposition to the government, such as protesters and critics of the government (NDP, Tab 4.5).

[16]     Critics of the Egyptian government face severe treatment under recent and renewed state of emergency or counterterrorism laws (NDP, Tabs 2.1 and 2.6).

[17]     Since the military coup in 2013, university students and staff have faced government suspension, dismissal and sometimes violent treatment due to the perceived or real affiliation with the Muslim Brotherhood or the former government under Morsi (NDP, Tabs 2.5 and 2.6).

[18]     The Egyptian authorities have been involved in hundreds of extra-judicial killings, and have detained or imprisoned an estimated 60,000 persons in the period of 2013 to 2016 (NDP, Tab 4.8, page 27) and that some of those victims have been males as young as 14 (NDP, Tab 4.5). Family members of persons targeted by the government have also been arrested (NDP, Tab 2.8, pages 9-10). The NDP shows that children as young as 5 and 7 had been arrested by Egyptian authorities (NDP, tab 2.1) but that reference was regarding the mother arrested and it has not been shown that the children had actually been arrested and not simply taken into custody with the mother since there was not a caregiver at the time with whom the children could have been left.

[19]     While the objective evidence shows that it is unlikely that the child claimants would be arrested upon return to Egypt, given that family members of political opponents face harassment and discrimination in Egypt, the children may face discrimination amounting to persecution due to their family relation to the principal claimant.

[20]     The military courts are currently used in Egypt and are expanding in use where defendants have fewer rights than in civilian courts – these military courts are being used against people who are protesting against the post-coup government in Egypt (NDP, Tab 1.5, pages 29- 30).

State protection and Internal flight alternative (IFA)

[21]     There is clear and convincing evidence before me that the state is unable or unwilling to provide the claimants with adequate protection, for the reasons stated above.

[22]     On the evidence before me, I find that there is a serious possibility of persecution throughout Egypt for the claimants in their circumstances.

CONCLUSION

[23]     The claimants are Convention refugees.

[24]     I accept their claims.

(signed)           JEFFREY BRIAN GULLICKSON

March 23, 2020

Categories
All Countries Egypt

2020 RLLR 183

Citation: 2020 RLLR 183
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: June 17, 2020
Panel: Julie Morin
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Loujin Khalil
Country: Egypt
RPD Number: MB9-15775
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2020-00518
ATIP Pages: 002320-002324

REASONS FOR DECISION

INTRODUCTION

[1]       These are the reasons for the decision in the claim of XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, who claims to be a citizen of Egypt, and is claiming refugee protection pursuant to Sections 96 and 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

[2]       This claim has been decided without a hearing, according to the Immigration and Refugee Board’s Chairperson’s Instructions Governing the Streaming of Less Complex Claims at the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) and paragraph 170(f) of the Act.

ALLEGATIONS

[3]       You allege the following. You were a businessman in Egypt and you provided support to the Muslim Brotherhood movement in your region during the 2011 revolution. You also participated actively in the electoral campaign in support of the Muslim Brotherhood candidates.

[4]       You officially joined the Freedom and Justice Party in May 2011 and you worked closely with the secretary general of the Rami District for the Freedom and Justice Party.

[5]       In 2015, you joined the Association of Journalists against Corruption. The association created a website as a mean of denouncing those engaged in corruption. You said that you did not write articles because you are not a journalist, but you organized secret seminars, meetings and you printed some publications.

[6]       You say that your problems started in 2019, as the regime was monitoring the actions of the association. On XXXX XXXX XXXX 2019, you shared a video on Facebook that was posted by a friend of yours who is a well-known opponent living in Greece. He is a member of the “6 of April movement”.

[7]       On XXXX XXXX XXXX 2019, you were arrested inside your company and taken into detention for five days. During that time, you were insulted and interrogated about your activities. You were also threatened of torture and sexual assault if arrested again.

[8]       After your release, you continued your activities as you wanted to confront the articles of the Constitution passed in March 2019 which increased the presidential powers.

[9]       After you published a comment on Facebook on XXXX XXXX XXXX 2020, criticizing the military, on XXXX XXXX XXXX 2020, security forces raided your apartment during the night, scaring your family. You were taken for interrogation and were tortured. Then, the security forces proposed to you to cooperate with them in exchange for your release. You accepted as you feared for your life. You were released on XXXX XXXX XXXX 2020.

[10]     You left Egypt on XXXX XXXX XXXX 2019, and you came directly to Canada as you had a valid Canadian visa. You did not want to cooperate with the Egyptian security forces by informing them about your friends’ meetings and plans. You came to Canada and asked the Canadian authorities for protection.

DETERMINATION

[11]     I find that you are a “Convention refugee” as you have established a serious possibility of persecution should you return to Egypt based on the grounds in Section 96.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[12]     I find that your identity as a national of Egypt is established by the copy of your passport.

Credibility

[13] Based on the documents in the file, I have noted no serious credibility issues. In particular, the evidence establishes the allegations as set out above: C1 is your membership card to the Freedom and Justice Party and C5 is a certificate of appreciation from the party, the evidence confirms your membership and activities within the Freedom and Justice Party. Exhibit C2 is the Association of Journalists against Corruption membership card and confirms that you joined this association; C3 and C4 are messages from Facebook confirming that you were active in the social media opposing the Egyptian government; C7 is a legal document confirming that you had been detained on XXXX XXXX XXXX 2019; After reviewing the documents, I have no reasons to doubt their authenticity.

Objective basis of future risk

[14]     Based on the credibility of your allegations, and the documentary evidence set out below, I find that you have established a future risk that you will be subjected to the following harm: arrest, detention, torture and death.

[15]     The fact that you face this risk is corroborated by the following documents. Tabs 1.4 and 1.5 corroborate the fact that the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) and its Freedom and Justice Party were banned in 20141. Tab 1.5 corroborates that the authorities arrest people for alleged MB ties on a regular basis2. The arrests, detention, disappearance, torture, execution of Muslim Brotherhood members by the authorities are corroborated by tabs 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.7, 2.8. Tab 1.4 corroborates that those with family links to members face a risk of arrest and prosecution and all persons with Muslim Brotherhood links are likely to be subjected to surveillance and monitoring of their activities3.

Nature of the harm

[16]     This harm clearly amounts to persecution.

State protection

[17]     I find that there is clear and convincing evidence before me that the state is unable or unwilling to provide you with adequate protection. Judges are the primary tools in the repression of political opponents4; also, most defendants were sentenced after mass trials that violate fundamental due process rights, and some courts relied on confessions extracted under torture5.

Internal flight alternative

[18]     I have considered whether a viable internal flight alternative exists for you. On the evidence before me, I find that there is a serious possibility of persecution throughout Egypt. In light of the evidence quoted above regarding the Justice and Freedom Party, and also taking into your specific situations, I do not believe that you will be able to establish yourself safely in Egypt.

CONCLUSION

[19]     Based on the analysis above, I conclude that you are a “Convention refugee”. Accordingly, I accept your claim.

(signed)           JULIE MORIN

June 17, 2020

1 National Documentation Package, Egypt, 31 March 2020, tab 1.4: DFAT Country Information Report: Egypt. Australia. Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. 17 June 2019. Tab 1.5: Country Information and Guidance. Egypt: Background information, including actors of protection and internal relocation. Version 2.0. United Kingdom. Home Office. July 2017.

2 National Documentation Package, Egypt, 31 March 2020, tab 1.5: Country Information and Guidance. Egypt: Background information, including actors of protection and internal relocation. Version 2.0. United Kingdom. Home Office. July 2017.

3 Supra, note 1.

4 National Documentation Package, Egypt, 31 March 2020, tab 1.6: Country Policy and Information Note. Egypt: Muslim Brotherhood. Version 3.0. United Kingdom. Home Office. July 2017.

5 Idem.

Categories
All Countries Egypt

2020 RLLR 182

Citation: 2020 RLLR 182
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: February 21, 2020
Panel: Randa Mekhael
Counsel for the Claimant(s): N/A
Country: Egypt
RPD Number: TB9-33493
Associated RPD Number(s): TB9-33535, TB9-33715
ATIP Number: A-2020-00518
ATIP Pages: 001021-001024

REASONS FOR DECISION

INTRODUCTION

[1]       These are the reasons for the decision in the claims of XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, his wife XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX and their son XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, who claim to be citizens of Egypt, and are claiming refugee protection pursuant to sections 96 and 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

[2]       These claims have been decided without a hearing, according to the Immigration and Refugee Board’s Chairperson’s Instructions Governing the Streaming of Less Complex Claims at the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) and paragraph 170(f) of the Act.

[3]       In rendering my reasons, I have considered and applied the Chairperson’s Guidelines on Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender-Related Persecution.

ALLEGATIONS

[4]       The claimants allege that they are a devout Coptic Christian family of Egyptian nationality who describe a number of incidents of intimidation, harassment, and assault at the hands of Muslim extremists as a result of their faith. They fear persecution at the hands of Muslim extremists as a result of their religious identity as Coptic Christians and have thus filed claims for refugee protection.

DETERMINATION

[5]       I find that the claimants are Convention refugees as they have established a serious possibility of persecution should they return to Egypt based on the grounds in section 96.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[6]       I find that their respective identities as nationals of Egypt are established by the documents provided: their passports,i and birth certificates.ii

[7]       They have also established their identity as Coptic Christians by providing birth certificates, baptism certificates, national identity cards, marriage certificate and supporting letters from the Coptic Orthodox Churches in Egypt and Canada.iii

Nexus

[8]       I find that the claimants have established a nexus to section 96 by reason of religion.

Credibility

[9]       Based on the documents in the file, there no serious credibility issues. In particular, the evidence establishes the allegations as set out above, namely that the claimants are of the Coptic Christian faith. After reviewing the documents, I have no reasons to doubt their authenticity.

Objective basis of future risk

[l0]      The claimants’ subjective fear of persecution is objectively well founded. Information in the National Documentation Package (NDP) confirms that abuse of Coptic Christians was increasing even before the fall of the Mubarak regime. Christian properties, including homes, businesses, and churches, have been destroyed and Christians have been the primary targets of violent sectarian attacks. Christians have been arrested and detained; they have also faced harassment, rape, mental and physical abuse and pressure to convert to Islam; police officers have been involved in the persecution of Christians. The state has not adequately protected Christians, and has failed to prosecute perpetrators.iv

State protection

[11]     I find that adequate state protection would not be reasonably forthcoming in this particular case. The objective evidence indicates that the Egyptian authorities not only fail to protect Coptic Christians, but they themselves engage in violence against them, and perpetrators of attacks against Christians commit abuses in a climate of impunity.v  I find that based on the claimants’ evidence when considered in conjunction with the objective evidence, is a clear and convincing rebuttal of the presumption of state protection.

Internal flight alternative

[12]     I have considered whether a viable internal flight alternative exists for the claimants. On the evidence before me, I find that there is a serious possibility of persecution throughout Egypt.

The evidence does not suggest that the religiously-motivated violence is restricted to a particular area of Egypt, or that individuals in the claimant’s situation could find safety elsewhere.vi As such, I find that there is no viable internal flight alternative in Egypt for this claim.

CONCLUSION

[13]     Having considered the evidence, I find there is a serious possibility that the claimants would be persecuted upon return to Egypt because of their Coptic Christian identities. I conclude that the claimants are Convention refugees. Accordingly, I accept their claims.

(signed)                       R. Mekhael

February 21, 2020

i  Exhibit 1— Package of information from the referring Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) / Immigration, Refugee and Citizenship Canada (IRCC).

ii Exhibit 5 – Personal Documents

iii Ibid.

iv Exhibit 3 – National Documentation Package, Egypt, (CND – Egypt) 29 March 2019, tab 12.8: Response          to information request EGY105805. E., Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 20 June 2017; Tab 12.1: Egypt. International Religious Freedom Report.for 2017, United States, Department of State, 28 May 2018.

v Supra note 4, tab 12.8.

vi Supra note 4, tab 12.5: Egypt’s Christians Flee ISIS Violence: Displaced Call Security Officials’ Response ‘Apathetic’, Human Rights Watch, Joe Stork, 13 March 2017.

Categories
All Countries Egypt

2020 RLLR 181

Citation: 2020 RLLR 181
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: February 11, 2020
Panel: K. Khamsi
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Samir N Roman
Country: Egypt
RPD Number: TB9-24867
Associated RPD Number(s): TB9-24931, TB9-24950, TB9-24951
ATIP Number: A-2020-00518
ATIP Pages: 001017-001020

REASONS FOR DECISION

 INTRODUCTION

[1]       These are the reasons for the decision in the claims of XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, who claim to be citizens of Egypt, and are claiming refugee protection pursuant to sections 96 and 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

[2]       These claims have been decided without a hearing, according to the Immigration and Refugee Board’s Chairperson’s Instructions Governing the Streaming of Less Complex Claims at the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) and paragraph 170(f) of the Act.

[3]       The certificate of readiness was received by the Board on November 28, 2019.

ALLEGATIONS

[4]       You allege the following:

[5]       You have been discriminated in Egypt because of your religion,

[6]       You have been targeted in Egypt by Muslim extremist who asked you to convert to Islam,

[7]       You have been threatened to be killed if you do not convert to Islam.

DETERMINATION

[8]       I find that you are Convention refugees as you have established a serious possibility of persecution should you return to Egypt based on the grounds in section 96.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[9]       I find that your identities as nationals of Egypt is established by the documents provided such as your Egyptian passports.

Nexus

[10]     I find that you have established a nexus to section 96 by reason of religion.

Credibility

[11]     Based on the documents in the file, I have noted no serious credibility issues. In particular, the evidence establishes your profile as Coptic Christians, and the allegations as set out above are corroborated by country conditions evidence. After reviewing the documents relating to your religion, I have no reasons to doubt their authenticity.

Objective basis of future risk

[12]     I find that the risk you allege is objectively well-founded in the documentary evidence: NDP for Egypt – September 30, 2019 – which reveals that Coptic Christians are persecuted and discriminated in Egypt and that they continue to be the target of sectarian violence.

State protection

[13]     I find that adequate state protection would not be reasonably forthcoming in this particular case as the above cited evidence show that the police and authorities in Egypt do not always intervene to protect Christians who are victims of violent acts.

Internal flight alternative

[14]     I have considered whether a viable internal flight alternative exists for you. On the evidence before me, I find that there is a serious possibility of persecution throughout Egypt.

CONCLUSION

[15]     Based on the analysis above, I conclude that you are convention refugees. Accordingly, I accept your claims.

(signed)           K. KHAMSI

Categories
All Countries Egypt

2020 RLLR 180

Citation: 2020 RLLR 180
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: July 10, 2020
Panel: D. Willard
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Sherif Ashamalla
Country: Egypt
RPD Number: TB9-22509
Associated RPD Number(s): TB9-22529, TB9-22563, TB9-22564, TB9-22565
ATIP Number: A-2020-00518
ATIP Pages: 001001-001012

REASONS FOR DECISION

[1]       This is a decision of the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) in the claim for refugee protection put forth by Mr. XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX (the principal claimant), Ms. XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX (the female claimant), XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX and XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX (the minor claimants) under sections 96 and 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA).1 The panel has carefully and mindfully considered the claims in their entirety. The principal claimant was appointed as the Designated Representative for the minor claimants.

DETERMINATION

[2]       This is a split decision. The panel finds that the claimants who are citizens of Egypt only (that is, all of the claimants except for XXXX) are persons in need of protection as specified under section 97(1) of the IRPA. The panel finds that XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX as a citizen of the U.S., is neither a Convention refugee nor a person in need of protection. The reasons are as follows.

[3]       In reaching its determination, the panel has taken into consideration the level of education and sophistication of the principal claimant and female claimant, including the stresses in the hearing room. The panel has further taken into consideration Chairperson’s Guideline 4: Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender Related Persecution.2

ALLEGATIONS

[3]       The details of the claimants’ allegations are found in the Basis of Claim (BOC) form narrative.3 In summary, the principal claimant indicates that his family was living in Kuwait for several years. He alleges that because his family was perceived to have lots of money, a neighbour named XXXX XXXX XXXX demanded money from him. Due to the pressure, he agreed to give him some money because of his association with thugs.

[4]       In June of 2019, when the principal claimant refused to lend more money to him, Mr. XXXX became very aggressive, verbally insulted and assaulted the claimant. The principal claimant was threatened and the contents of his apartment were destroyed. He sought assistance from the police and moved but the police took no action. Days later, his son XXXX was kidnapped for ransom by Mr. XXXX who called demanding money for his release or else he would be killed. The principal claimant rushed to the police and filed a report. Once he did, a thug associated with Mr. XXXX called to tell the principal claimant that reporting to the police was a mistake and fruitless. The claimant inferred that this was likely because they had connections to the Muslim Brotherhood. The police took no action so the claimant and his father­ in-law and friends raised money to pay the ransom. They paid the money to the kidnappers. The claimant’s son continues to suffer psychologically from the experience.

[5]       The claimants did not know where else to go because his own family do not agree with his decision not to perform FGM (Female Genital Mutilation) on his daughter. He also adds in his amended narrative that his spouse is fearful of living in Egypt because she will be forced to wear the hijab which she does not wish to do and that she will be subjected to sexual harassment and abuse on the streets. The claimants stayed at a hotel and then flew to Kuwait. Upon arrival there, he was informed that his employer would be terminating his work contract. As a result, he no longer had legal status in Kuwait. The claimant made arrangements and he and his family travelled to the U.S. on XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX. They did not file claims there due to information they received. Rather, they chose to enter Canada on XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX.

[6]       Since their arrival, the principal claimant’s father-in-law has been pursued and threatened for money despite his father-in-law’s relocation to Mansoura. His father-in-law moved to Cairo in XXXX of 2019 and kept a low-profile there until he was able to leave Egypt and move to Kuwait. The claimants seek protection in Canada.

ANALYSIS

Personal identity

[7]       The claimants state that they are citizens of Egypt. They provided their Egyptian passports at the time when they filed their claims. Copies are found in Exhibit 1. The panel notes that a U.S. passport was presented for XXXX XXXX XXXX. The claimants indicate that he is a citizen of the U.S. The panel accepts, on a balance of probabilities, their alleged names, dates of birth and citizenships.

Credibility

[8]       The panel found the claimants to be generally credible with respect to the allegations related to the principal claimant. Their testimony was spontaneous, fluid, internally consistent and consistent with the documentary evidence they filed. They provided a number of documents to corroborate their allegations, all of which are found in Exhibit 5. These include: police reports, medical reports, attestations, a photograph and proof of receipt of their documents. Accordingly, the panel determines that their allegations are credible, on a balance of probabilities.

Nexus

[9]       The principal claimant states that he fears a neighbour named XXXX XXXX XXXX who is associated with thugs and the Muslim Brotherhood. He fears this individual because he refused to continue to lend him money which he states then led to his son’s kidnapping for ransom. Upon being informed that this individual has connections with the police, the principal claimant believes that he is well-connected through the Muslim Brotherhood. The panel determines that this falls within the ambit of section 97 of IRPA.

[10]     The principal claimant states that he feared relocating to his own family’s location because they would want him to perform FGM on his daughter. The panel finds that this fear falls within the ambit of section 96 of the IRPA.

[11]     In his amended BOC narrative,4 the principal claimant states that his spouse only covers her hair with a hijab when she is in Egypt because of her family’s strict expectations and customs and also because she would be subjected to sexual harassment or abuse on the street if she did not wear a hijab. The panel finds that this also falls within the ambit of section 96 of the IRPA.

Subjective Fear – Failure to Claim in the U.S.

[12]     The claimants arrived in the U.S. with valid U.S. visas on XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX. They remained in the U.S. for 4 days before arriving in Canada on XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX. They indicate that they had heard that the U.S. did not look upon Muslims favourably and separated children from their parents.

[13]     The panel notes that the claimants (apart from XXXX who is a U.S. citizen) were in possession of valid visas during their 4 days in the U.S. The panel notes they relied on information they heard to determine that filing their claims in Canada was preferable. The panel finds that they did not remain in the U.S. for a lengthy period, were in possession of valid visas at the time, and intended to come to Canada. Accordingly, the panel determines that their actions are insufficient to impugn their subjective fear.

Claim based on FGM (Daughter)

[14]     The principal claimant indicates that he cannot relocate to live with his own family in their village because his own family would forcefully impose FGM on his daughter.

Documentary evidence and Assessment of FGM in Egypt

[15]     The claimants submitted evidence on FGM in Egypt.5 Similar to an excerpt in the claimant’s own disclosure,6 the NDP refers to FGM being illegal in Egypt, that actual criminal convictions have been ordered for some practitioners of FGM in Egypt, to a prison sentence and fines ordered, the law has increased prison sentences, a fatwa has been issued declaring FGM un-Islamic, and the practice of FGM is in decline in Egypt, although it is reported that a majority of women still have traditional FGM done in Egypt.7 This evidence does not support the allegation that the minor claimant, in the particular circumstances of the claimants where both parents do not want FGM performed, would be forced to undergo FGM in Egypt, if they did not want it.

[16]     In reaching this determination, the panel has been mindful of the principal claimant’s beliefs that his extended family (aunts and uncles) would impose it. He refers to an incident in 1999 (a year after his father passed away), more than 20 years ago, when his paternal and maternal uncles took his sisters and forced FGM on them. He indicated that both of his parents have now passed away, but he believes his uncles and aunts would insist upon it for his daughter. The panel notes that this incident in 1999 after his father died was considered in light of all of the evidence, the panel finds that the circumstances have vastly changed since that time given the change in the law in 2008 and its implementation. Accordingly, the panel does not find the fear of FGM to be a credible or well-founded one.

Claim Based on Gender in Egypt (Female Claimant and Daughter)

[17]     The female claimant, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, states in the amended BOC at Exhibit 7 that she is fearful for herself and her daughter, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, because of verbal assaults, harassment and mistreatment that she received and fears her daughter would receive in Egypt. The documents in the National Documentation Package for Egypt (NDP)8 mention discrimination, harassment and violence against women in Egypt.

[18]     Regarding violence or attacks against women outside of domestic or family violence, in the amended narrative found in Exhibit 7, the principal claimant added reference to his spouse not wishing to wear the hijab in Egypt and fearing sexual harassment on the street if she chooses not to wear one in Egypt.9 The panel notes that wearing a hijab is not mandatory by operation of law in Egypt. The harassment the female claimant states she has been exposed to in Egypt occurred when she wore a hijab. She stated that she feels forced to wear one because of harassment. She stated she does not wish for her daughter to wear a hijab either.

[19]     According to the United Kingdom Home Officer report in the NDP:10

8.1.1 The 2017 DFAT report observed that:

‘Sexual harassment is a frequent occurrence for women across the socioeconomic spectrum. A 2013 UN Women study found 99.3 per cent of Egyptian women had experienced sexual harassment, while 91.5 percent reported experiencing unwanted physical contact. Sexual harassment was found to be particularly prevalent during mass street celebrations such as religious feasts, or political demonstrations. The study found that most sexually assaulted women would not report the crime to the police or tell their families.’45

8.1.2 The USSD reported sexual harassment as a serious problem and that ‘Media and NGOs reported sexual harassment by police was also a problem, and the potential for further harassment further discouraged women from filing complaints’.46

[20]     According to another NDP source:

[… ]a study conducted by the Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights that “showed that a woman’s dress had no effect on whether she was molested; in fact, the majority of victims were veiled.11

[21]     The same source further states:

According to a poll conducted by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, in which 336 gender experts in 21 Arab League states as well as Syria were surveyed, Egypt is “the worst country in the Arab world to be a woman” (Thomson Reuters Foundation 12 Nov. 2013). The report states that sexual harassment contributed to this ranking (ibid.).

The same source quotes a representative from HarassMap as saying that women “regularly ‘have to fight with the police to actually make the report, in the street, and at the police station'” (ibid.).

[22]     A New York Times article submitted by the claimants via their counsel states:12

A 2017 survey by two groups that promote gender equality, Promundo and UN Women, found that sexual harassment is rampant on Egyptian streets, particularly in urban areas. More than 60 percent of Egyptian men reported in the survey that they had sexually harassed a woman or girl on the street, and more than three-quarters of male respondents cited a woman’ s “provocative” dress as a legitimate reason for harassment. And in a 2013 study by UN Women, 99.3 percent of Egyptian women and girls in a survey said they had been the victims of some kind of sexual harassment, from unwanted advances to rape. Ms. Orman [a human rights lawyer in Cairo] said the proliferation of security cameras in Cairo may have helped discourage some sexual assaults in the city, but the problem remains common at festivals and other large public gatherings. She said the civil and legal authorities across Egyptian society still need to take the issue more seriously.

[23]     The panel notes that the female claimant’s personal circumstances are highly relevant in the panel’s assessment as to what she has experienced or would experience upon return to Egypt as well as her daughter. The female claimant testified to being mistreated in public, even while wearing a hijab. She testified that there is a culture or tradition of viewing women without a hijab as “sluts”. She stated that while there is no law requiring her to wear a hijab, she wears one because she believes it would be worse for her if she did not. She testified to “always” receiving verbal assaults. When asked to clarify, she referred to women wearing a tight hijab refusing to talk to her. When asked about approaching the police, she stated that if she did, they would tell her that she is the cause of the harassment. She stated that there is no protection nor safe place to reside.

[24]     The panel finds the female claimant’s statements to be credible and trustworthy and consistent with the objective documentary evidence. However, the panel finds that verbal accosting by women wearing tight hijabs does not amount to persecution, even on a cumulative basis. The female claimant neither testified to being the subject of sexual harassment in the past, nor did she refer to having experienced it in the past in her BOC narrative amendment at Exhibit 7. Given the documentary evidence cited above which states that the absence or presence of a hijab is not determinative in how a woman is treated, the panel finds that while she may feel she cannot wear a hijab, she has not established that she has been persecuted nor would be on this basis in Egypt. Accordingly, the panel finds that she has not established that she or her daughter would be persecuted on this particular basis in Egypt.

Claim based on Section 97 Fear- Well-Foundedness, State Protection and IFA

Well-Foundedness and State Protection

[25]     The principal claimant testified credibly regarding the threats, kidnapping and maltreatment he and his family experienced at the hands of their neighbour who has police connections and who he believes may have Muslim Brotherhood connections. He explained that this individual and his associates have marked him and his spouse’s family as having money because of the time they have spent in Kuwait. He explained that his son was kidnapped for ransom and continues to suffer psychologically as a result. He explained that his father-in-law relocated to Mansoura City, a distance away from Belkas City and was found there by the agent of persecution. Furthermore, he explained that the agent of persecution was informed by an insider at the police station when the claimant filed a police report in Belkas. The agent of persecution persisted in seeking the family and then his father-in-law and the claimant believes it is due to their anger because the claimant reported them to the police.

[26]     The principal claimant testified that he approached the police on more than one occasion and they did not assist him. Rather, they informed the persecutor that the claimant had filed a report. Taking into consideration the objective evidence on rampant corruption in Egypt,13 combined with the claimant’s own efforts to seek state protection, the panel finds that the claimant has rebutted the presumption of state protection in his particular circumstances.

Internal Flight Alternative

[27]     The test for assessing an IFA is two-pronged and is set out in the Federal Court of Appeal decision in Rasaratnam:14

  • The Board must be satisfied on a balance of probabilities that there is no serious possibility of the claimant being persecuted in the part of the country to which it finds an IFA exists and/or the claimant would not be personally subject to a risk to life or risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment or danger, believed on substantial grounds to exist, of torture in the IFA.
  • Moreover, the conditions in the part of the country considered to be an IFA must be such that it would not be unreasonable in all the circumstances, including those particular to the claim, for him to seek refuge there.15

[28]     Both prongs must be satisfied to find that a claimant has an IFA. Once the issue of IFA has been raised and the potential IFAs have been identified, the burden of proof rests with a claimant to show that they do not have an IFA. The finding of an IFA must be based on an analysis of the region proposed, taking account of a claimant’s personal circumstances. An IFA must be realistic and attainable. The claimant cannot be expected to encounter great physical danger or undergo undue hardship in travelling there and staying there.

[29]     The Australian Government confirms that the Egyptian constitution guarantees freedom of movement, residence and emigration and there is no legal impediment to internal movement.16 The UK Home Office Country Information and Guidance report for Egypt states that where the person fears non-state agents internal relocation is likely to be reasonable but “will depend on the nature and origin of the threat, as well as the person’s circumstances and profile.17

[30]     The panel proposed the cities of Cairo, Port Said and Alexandria as potential IFAs. Taking into consideration the particular circumstances of the claimants at hand, the panel determines that they have met the burden of demonstrating that there is no viable internal flight alternative for them in Egypt. In the case at hand, the agent of persecution was both motivated and able to successfully locate the claimant, abduct his son and locate his father-in-law and continue threatening him beyond Belkas City. The agent of persecution was also able to learn that the claimants had filed police reports.

[31]     Based on the actions of the agent of persecution and their determination to seek out the claimant and his family in retribution for approaching the police, being able to reach and locate members of the family in different regions, the panel determines that the claimants have, in their particular circumstances, demonstrated that they cannot relocate to other parts of Egypt safely. Therefore, the panel finds that a viable IFA is not present for them in Egypt.

Claim of U.S. Minor

[31]     The claimants indicated that they have no section 96 or section 97(1) claim against the U.S. on behalf of the minor child, XXXX XXXX XXXX. Accordingly, the panel determines that as he is a citizen of the United States, he is neither a Convention refugee nor a person in need of protection.

CONCLUSION

[32]     Having considered all of the evidence, the panel determines that there is not a serious possibility that the claimants would be persecuted in Egypt as per section 96 of the IRPA.

[33]     The panel does find, on a balance of probabilities, that the claimants XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX and XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, would be personally subjected to a danger of torture or face a risk to life or a risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment in their country as per section 97. Their claims are accepted.

[34]     The panel further finds that XXXX XXXX XXXX, a citizen of the U.S., is neither a Convention refugee nor a person in need of protection. His claim is rejected.

(signed)           D. WILLARD

July 10, 2020

Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (as amended).

2 Guidelines issued by the Chairperson pursuant to Section 65(3) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, Effective date: November 13, 1996.

3 Exhibits 2 and 7.

4 Exhibit 7, Claimant’s Documents, Amended Narrative, Lines 74-80.

5  Exhibit 6, Claimants’ Disclosure, Country Condition Documents, pages 1-5 and 8-21.

6 Exhibit 6, Claimant’s Disclosure, The Daily Mail “Girl 12, dies after genital mutilation in Egypt as her parents and the doctor are arrested over illegal practice” at page 1W.

7 National Documentation Package, Egypt, 30 September 2019, tab 5.10: Country Policy and Information Note. Egypt: Women. Version 2.0. United Kingdom. Home Office. June 2019.

8 Exhibit 3, NDP for Egypt, version September 30, 2019.

9  Exhibit 7, Claimant’s Documents, Amended BOC Narrative, lines 74-80.

10 Exhibit 3, National Documentation Package, Egypt, 30 September 2019, tab 5.10: Country Policy and Information Note. Egypt: Women. Version 2.0. United Kingdom. Home Office. June 2019.

11 Exhibit 3, National Documentation Package, Egypt, 30 September 2019, tab 5.1: Treatment of women who do not conform to Muslim practices and traditions, including wearing a veil (head covering), in rural and urban areas; state protection available to victims of mistreatment (June 2013-November 2014). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 26 November 2014. EGY105005.E.

12 Exhibit 6, New York Times, “Video Showing Sexual Assault by Mob in Egypt Draws Outrage”, page 6.

13 Exhibit 7, Claimant’s Documents, pages 22-35 and Exhibit 3, NDP for Egypt version September 30, 2019, Item 2.1 United States Department of State Report for 2018 on Egypt.

14 Rasaratnam v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), 1992 1 FC 706.

15 Thirunavukkarasu v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), 1994 1 FC 589.

16 Exhibit 3, Archive – National Documentation Package, Egypt, 30 September 2019, tab 1.4: DFAT Country Information Report: Egypt. Australia. Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. 17 June 2019, page 44, section 5.32.

17 National Documentation Package, Egypt, 30 September 2019, tab 1.5: Country Information and Guidance. Egypt: Background information, including actors of protection and internal relocation. Version 2.0. United Kingdom. Home Office. July 2017.

Categories
All Countries Egypt

2020 RLLR 179

Citation: 2020 RLLR 179
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: January 30, 2020
Panel: Paulina Gueller
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Diane B. Coulthard
Country: Egypt
RPD Number: TB9-15833
Associated RPD Number(s): TB9-15834, TB9-15835
ATIP Number: A-2020-00518
ATIP Pages: 000957-000960

DECISION

[1]       MEMBER: I have considered your testimony and the other evidence in the case and I’m ready to render my decision orally. These are the reasons for the decision in the claims of XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, a 33-year-old woman and her two children, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX and XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX who claim to be citizens of Egypt and are claiming refugee protection pursuant to Sections 96 and 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. I have appointed XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX as designated representative for the minor children, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX and XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX.

Allegations

[2]       You alleged that you fear persecution by the Egyptian authorities because your Nubian ethnicity and your active membership with the Nubian community. You allege that the Nubian community believes that the current regime in Egypt has taken Nubian lands contrary to what was promised to them in the 2014 Constitution. In 2008, you moved from Egypt to Kuwait and you became an active member of the Nubian organization in Kuwait. In 2012, you became a member of the Nubian General Union in Egypt that tried to find solutions to the Nubian problems. On June 12th, 2018, while you were visiting your family in Aswan, Egypt, you attended a meeting to discuss a new law that authorized the Egyptian government to take land from Nubians in upper Egypt.

[3]       Police officers entered the home where you gathered and tooked-, took you to the police station and the other 4 members. The police interrogated you and after about 4 hours of detention, when the police was going to transfer you somewhere else, you were able to escape from their custody. After hiding for 5 days in different family members’ homes, you went to Cairo and finally returned to Kuwait on XXXX XXXX, 2018. Your employment and temporary residency visa in Kuwait terminated in December 2018. Because you were afraid of going back to Egypt, you flew to the United States and crossed the border into Canada, making a port of entry asylum claim in XXXX XXXX XXXX 2018. You fear Egyptian authorities should you return to Egypt and that’s because of your activities on behalf of the Nubian community. You alleged that your two children are not being persecuted but you fear for their education and because the government may potentially use them to pro-, apprehend you.

Determination

[4]       I found that you are a Convention refugee as you have established a serious possibility of persecution on account of your membership to a particular social group as a Nubian.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[5]       I find that your identity as a national of Egypt is established by your testimony and the supporting documentation filed, including the copy of your passports at Exhibit 1. You stated that you do not have any permanent status in Kuwait as you only had a temporary working visa that ended when your employment was terminated. You also confirmed that you have no permanent resident or citizenship status in any other country other than Egypt.

Credibility

[6]       The determinative issue in this case are credibility and state protection. In making this assessment, I have considered all the evidence including your oral testimony and the documentary evidence entered (inaudible). I find you to be credible-, I find you to be a credible witness and therefore believe what you allege in support of your claim. You testified in a straightforward manner and there were no relevant inconsistencies in your testimony or contradictions within your testimony and the other evidence before me which have not been sa-, satisfactorily explained. You testified with clear and convincing evidence about your claim. You were spontaneous with details about your background and knowledge of Nubian nationality. You also provided details of the discrimination that Nubians have been suffering in Egypt. You also testified that one person that was arrested with you on XXXX-, on June 12th is still in detention. You provided corroborating doctum-, documentation to support the core aspects of the claim.

[7]       A letter from Al-, Alaqi Association in Kuwait acknowledging your membergy-, membership. Alagi is A­-L-A-Q-I. Your Nubian membership card from the General Nubian Union, marriage certificate and authorization from your husband to travel with your children to Canada, a notice against you issued by the Egyptian authorities to appear to a hearing to be held on August 15, 2018 in Aswan, Egypt that states you are a fugitive. After reviewing the documents, I have no reasons to doubt their authenticity. They corroborate that you are an active member of the Nubian Association, you have been arrested by the police and the Egyptian authorities are persecuting you. Further, I accept you are a Nubian person persecuted by the Egyptian authorities, therefore, I find on a balance of probabilities you have established that you are a member of the Nubian community and you have a subjective fear of persecution if you return to Egypt.

Objective Basis and State Protection

[8]       The objective documentary evidence describing the current treatment of Nubians in Egypt recognizes that Nubians face discrimination and some harassment. They were displaced from their homeland in the 1960’s and that they may face further forced displacement due to a new government decrease concerning land ownership. The documentation also indicates that the Egyptian government had been making changes to advance the situation of minorities including Nubians but that the government had not yet followed through on certain promises affecting the Nubian minority and that they continue to be blocked from living in certain areas of their traditional territory.

[9]       Nubian activist had been arrested and detained as a result of their activism to protect the people’s rights, therefore I find your allegations are corroborated by the objective evidence and more specifically, the National Documentation Package which states at Tab 2.1 that Nubians from upper Egypt face discrimination and persecution by security forces, especially, active members who participate in protests. In November 2017, six Nubians members were charged with gathering illegally, protesting without a permit and attacking security forces after being detained by police on their way to protest the new presidential decree concerning land ownership. When I take all that into consideration, you have demonstrated elements that are sufficient for me to consider you a Convention refugee because of the persecution you would face for belonging to the minority Nubian community and your political opinions that the State would perceive you have. So considering all that, you have demonstrated a well-founded fear of persecution based on your race or ethnicity and your perceived political opinions.

State Protection

[10]     I find that it would be objectively unreasonable for you to seek the protection of the State in light of your particular circumstances as well the evidence cited above, especially considering that the State is the agent of persecution in your case, therefore , there’s no state protection available to you.

Internal Flight Alternative

[11]     I have considered whether a viable internal flight alternative exists for you. On the evidence before me, I find that there is a serious possibility of persecution throughout Egypt as the Egyptian government is the agent of persecution.

CONCLUSION

[12]     Based on the analysis above, I conclude that XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX is a Convention refugee. Accordingly I accept your claim. The two minors. You allege that your two children are not being persecuted but you fear for their education and because the government may potentially use them to apre-, apprehend ye-, yourself. You also explained that no one in Egypt was going to take care of them. I find that on a balance of probabilities, there’s insufficient evidence that the children face a serious possibility of persecution in Egypt if they were there, therefore, based on the analysis above, I conclude that the two minors, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX and XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX are not Convention refugees under Section 96 of the IRPA or persons in need of protection within the meaning of Section 97(1)(a) or (b) of the IRPA. Accordingly I reject their claims.

———- REASONS CONCLUDED ———-

Categories
All Countries Egypt

2020 RLLR 178

Citation: 2020 RLLR 178
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: January 21, 2020
Panel: Randa Mekhael
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Marc J Herman
Country: Egypt
RPD Number: TB8-32026
Associated RPD Number(s): TB8-32090, TB8-32091
ATIP Number: A-2020-00518
ATIP Pages: 000793-000795

DECISION

[1]       MEMBER: These are the reasons, the oral judgement for XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX and her two children, XXXX XXXX XXXX and XXXX XXXX XXXX who claim to be citizens of Egypt and are claiming refugee protection pursuant to Section 96 and 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

[2]       In rendering my decision, I considered the Chairperson’s Guidelines on Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender-Related Persecution. And I note that XXXX was the designated representative for both minors.

[3]       With respect to your allegations, they are documented in the Basis of Claim form, Item 2.1, 2.2 and 2.3. And I’m not going to repeat them in this oral judgement.

[4]       Just bare-, very briefly, I just want to mention that you fear return to your country because of the domestic abuse that you had suffered at the hands of your former husband. And because of your fear of your uncle, XXXX XXXX XXXX and specifically, his profile and strong beliefs in extreme Islamic views.

[5]       With respect to your identity, I accept your personal identity as a national of Egypt as well as your children based on certified true copies of your passports.

Credibility

[6]       I found you to be a credible witness who testified in a straightforward and spontaneous manner. You, you were asked many questions with respect to your former relationship with your spouse. Sorne of the incidents that had happened in Egypt at the hands of your uncle and your former husband. And with respect to evidence that you provided, including the police report from your father. And the letter of support for your sister. There were no inconsistencies or contradictions.

[7]       Sorne of the evidence that you provided today are not included in your Basis of Claim form. And you were asked about that and you had explained that you had only received knowledge of those incidents after you had made your refugee claim. I’m not drawing any negative inferences with respect to your omission about the continuing interest from your uncle after your departure to Canada. My understanding from your oral testimony and your written testimony is, is that although you feared both these men in Egypt, it seems that your, that your biggest fear was born out of the threats that you received towards yourself and both your children from your maternal uncle XXXX XXXX XXXX.

[8]       I, I, I, the objective evidence supports that there are persons that have extreme views in Egypt. Based on your detailed narrative and your oral testimony today, I am, I have no reason to doubt the veracity of your testimony. And I accept that you were a victim, you and your children were both victims of a threat at the hands of your uncle in Egypt. You provided numerous supportive documents in support of your claim that were also consistent. And that includes a report from the Scarborough Hospital that repeats or provides similar information with respect to the harm that you suffered at the hands of your uncle. And it also refers to the abuse that you, the physical and verbal abuse you suffered at the hands of your former husband. This is found in Exhibit 6.

[9]       With respect to the well-foundedness, the objective basis in Egypt it is well documented that domestic violence including spousal viol-, violence and violence at the hands of family members in Egypt is widespread. This information is also included in the disclosures provided by your counsel that talked about the prevalence of violence against women.

[10]     Documents show that 30% of Egyptian married women suffer from spousal violence. This is consistent also with the USDOS report found in Item 2.1. It’ s also indicated, this information is echoed in Item 5.5 which is an RI Report in Egypt that talks about the spousal violence in Egypt. I note that according to the Freedom House there’s very few mechanisms that are in place to protect women and offer adequate support. And there’s some restrictions or conditions that require you to bring witnesses or have proof even just for you to have a medical or to, to, to, to go to the police station in Egypt. Which is largely ineffective in terms of the implementation of actually offering protection to women that are similarly situated to you.

[11]     I’m not going to get into all of the objective evidence but I, I am, I am satisfied that in your personal circumstances, given the profile of specifically your uncle, alone that you would be, that there would be no state protection that would be forthcoming to you. I also do not feel that there would be, you would be safe anywhere else in Egypt given the profile of your uncle. And his motivation to pursue you even after you left Egypt. Based on items found in Exhibit A-, Exhibit 8.

[12]     So, for all those reasons, I, I am accepting you as a refugee claim. And I find that you ar-, you and your children are, merit to be Convention refugees in Canada. Okay. And I’m accepting your claim.

———- REASONS CONCLUDED ———-

Categories
All Countries Egypt

2020 RLLR 177

Citation: 2020 RLLR 177
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: February 11, 2020
Panel: P. Gueller
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Gregory J. Willoughby
Country: Egypt
RPD Number: TB8-25724
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2020-00518
ATIP Pages: 000709-000714

DECISION

[1]       MEMBER: Okay. So, yes. I have considered your testimony and the other evidence in the case, and I am ready to render my decision orally.

[2]       These are the reasons for the decision in the claim of XXXX XXXX XXXX, who claims to be a citizen of Egypt and is claiming refugee protection pursuant to Sections 96 and 97 (1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

[3]       In rendering my reasons, I have considered and applied the Chairperson’s Guidelines on Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender Related Persecution.

ALLEGATIONS

[4]       You allege that you fear persecution by the Egyptian government because your political opinion, and if you return to Egypt you will be detained by Egyptian authorities upon your arrival.

[5]       You allege that you graduated from XXXX XXXX in Alexandria in 1996. On March 15, 2018 you expressed your political position against the presidential campaign supporting el-Sisi for the elections held in March 2018 before the Egyptian Bar Association.

[6]       The afternoon of the same day security forces raided your home and arrested you without a warrant in the presence of our children. You were detained for 15 days where you were beaten and tortured.

[7]       You allege that on August 8, 2018 you were talking in the Egyptian Bar Association about the importance of organizing a demonstration.

[8]       The next day, the security forces raided your home and arrested you for a second time. During your arrest, you were beaten, sexually assaulted, humiliated, and insulted.

[9]       You were released on August 20, 2018 after you were forced to sign an undertaking not to participate in any political activities, and to report to the security office every week.

[10]     You reported three times. And after consulting a lawyer who advised you to flee the country, you paid an officer in the airport to be able to leave Egypt.

DETERMINATION

[11]     I find that you are a Convention Refugee as you have established a serious possibility of persecution on account of your political opinion.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[12]     I found that your identity as a national of Egypt is established by your testimony and the supporting documentation filed, including your passport. 

CREDIBILITY

[13]     The determinative issue in this case are credibility and State protection. In making this assessment I have considered all the evidence including, the oral testimony, and the documentary evidence entered as Exhibits. I find you to be a credible witness and therefore believe what you alleged in support of your claim.

[14]     You testified in a straightforward manner, and there were no relevant inconsistencies in your testimony, or contradictions between your testimony and the other evidence before me which have not been satisfactorily explained.

[15]     In particular, the evidence establishes the allegations as set out above. You testified with clear and convincing evidence about your claim. You were spontaneous with details about your background and persecution.

[16]     You also provided details of the arrest, torture, sexual assault, harassment, and threatening incidents that you and your family experienced in Egypt. These were details that you would expect of someone who had lived the experiences described.

[17]     You provided reasonable explanations and clarifications for minor inconsistencies. when I ask you, you did not appear at all evasive in your testimony.

[18]     You provided corroborating documentation to support the core aspects of the claim; a support letter from your husband, three letters from people who knew about your political opinion and participation in demonstrations, a support letter from a lawyer who witness your position before the Egyptian Bar Association, three Notice of Summon issued by the officer of the police station of Alraml A-L-R-A-M-L, the second for you to be present before the Public Prosecutor on the following days: October 14, 2018, December 3, 2018, and March 16, 2019, two psychological medical reports from your children who stayed in Egypt and were present at the time of your arrest.

[19]     Based upon your testimony and documentary evidence filed in support of your claim, I am satisfied of your persona) and political background, your education, and your work history.

[20]     Therefore, I accept what you have alleged in relation to your claim and find on a balance of probabilities that you faced threats by the authorities due to your political opinion.

[21]     Therefore, I find on a balance of probabilities you have a credible subjective fear of persecution in Egypt, and you have established your core allegations of being persecuted for your political opinion.

[22]     Therefore, I find on a balance of probabilities you have established that you have a subjective fear of persecution if you return to Egypt.

OBJECTIVE BASIS

[23]     I find that adequate State protection would not be reasonable forthcoming in this case. The evidence in the NDP for Egypt supports your allegations.

[24]     Item 2.3 states that since President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi secured a second term in a largely unfree and unfair presidential election in March 2018, his security forces have escalated a campaign of intimidation, violence, and arrest against political opponents, civil society activists, and many other who have simply voiced mild criticism of the government, invoking terrorism and the country’s state of emergency law to silence peaceful activists.

[25]     The NDP Item 10.1 reports that there are problems in the implementation of basic human and civil rights, in particular related to frequent impunity in the behaviour of law enforcement and unjustified or excessive violence.

[26]     The NDP evidence at Item 9.7 states that Torture appears to occur particularly frequently following arbitrary arrests and is often carried out to obtain a confession or to punish and threaten political dissenters.

[27]     Torture occurs in police stations, prisons, State security facilities, and Central Security Forces facilities. Torture is perpetrated by police officers, military officers, National Security officers and prison guards.

[28]     based on the country conditions evidence your claim is objectively well-founded. Based on the credibility of your allegations and the documentary evidence that [inaudible] I find that you have established that there is more than a mere possibility that you may face persecution if you were to return to Egypt today.

STATE PROTECTION

[29]     Therefore, based on the review of the documentary evidence I find that you have rebutted the presumption of State protection with clear and convincing evidence.

[30]     And adequate State protection would not be available to you were to seek it in Egypt, as the evidence before me is that it would be objectively unreasonable for you to seek the protection of the state in light of your particular circumstances, as the Egyptian authorities are the agent of persecution.

INTERNAL FLIGHT ALTERNATIVE

[31]     I have considered whether a viable internal flight alternative exists for you. On the evidence before me, that the Egyptian government is the agent of persecution, I find that there is a serious possibility of persecution throughout Egypt. So, there is no internal flight alternative for you.

CONCLUSION

[32]     Based on the analysis above I conclude that you are a Convention Refugee. Accordingly, I accept your claim.

[33]     So, I wish you all the best.

[34]     CLAIMANT: Thank you.

[35]     MEMBER: Welcome to Canada. And I hope you can get together with your family soon.

[36]     Thank you, Counsel.

[37]     Thank you, Madam Interpreter.

[38]     COUNSEL: Okay …

[39]     MEMBER: So, we are on the record …

[40]     PERSON UNKNOWN: Yes.

[41]     MEMBER: and one of the… what was the name? XXXX?

[42]     PERSON UNKNOWN: XXXX.

[43]     MEMBER: So, XXXX XXXX just asked me whether he can take a photograph of me…

[44]     PERSON UNKNOWN: Sorry.

[45]     MEMBER: And I am explaining to him… no that is fine. That is okay… that these are private and confidential proceedings …

[46]     PERSON UNKNOWN: Oh, okay.

[47]     MEMBER: it… suppose you should not even take a photograph of the room.

[48]     PERSON UNKNOWN: Oh.

[49]     MEMBER: So, I hope you did not do that during the break.

[50]     PERSONUNKNOWN: No.

[51]     MEMBER: Okay. So, we go off the record.

———- REASONS CONCLUDED ———-