Categories
All Countries Mexico

2022 RLLR 32

Citation: 2022 RLLR 32
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: March 8, 2022
Panel: Kari Schroeder
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Alfonso Mejia-Arias
Country: Mexico
RPD Number: VC1-05483
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2022-01960
ATIP Pages: N/A

REASONS FOR DECISION

[1]     This is the decision of the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) in the claim of XXXX XXXX XXXX as a citizen of Mexico who is claiming refugee protection pursuant to section 96 and subsection 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (the “Act”).[1]

[2]     In hearing and assessing this claim, I have considered and applied the Chairperson’s Guideline on Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender-Related Persecution,[2] which offers guidance in recognizing women as members of a particular social group and also with respect to other gender specific issues present in this claim.

ALLEGATIONS

[3]     The claimant fears a man named XXXX XXXX “XXXX” who sexually assaulted her in XXXX 2019. He had been a customer at the XXXXshe worked at and prior to the assault he had been sexually harassing her. She alleges that he is involved in a criminal organization. The claimant reported the rape to the police the next day but nothing came of it and a police officer told her just to let it go. XXXX days after the assault, the claimant’s husband was beaten. They relocated to Puebla. In XXXX 2019, the claimant received threatening phone calls. In XXXX 2019, the claimant states that XXXX associates found her in Puebla and attempted to shoot at her and her neighbour’s car that she escaped into. The claimant travelled to Canada and claimed protection in February 2020.

[4]     There was an application to join the claimant with her son but was denied as the claimant did not want to discuss the rape with her son present.

DETERMINATION

[5]     I find that the claimant is a Convention refugee under s. 96 of the Act.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[6]     I find that the claimant’s identity as a national of Mexico has been established on a balance of probabilities by her testimony and a copy of her Mexican passport.[3]

Credibility

[7]     When a claimant swears to the truth of her allegations, this creates a presumption that those allegations are true, unless there is reason to doubt their truthfulness. In this case, I have found no reason to doubt the claimant’s truthfulness. She testified in a straightforward and convincing manner, answered all of the questions posed to her, and was able to speak out of chronological order about the events giving rise to her refugee claim in Canada.

[8]     I have some documentary evidence to corroborate the allegations, most significantly a police report taken on the night of the assault as well as a letter from the claimant’s husband confirming he was assaulted two days after his wife’s assault and was told it was retaliation for reporting to the police. I also have letters from the claimant’s former colleagues at the restaurant, confirming that the agent of harm had been repeatedly harassing the claimant in the months leading up to the assault.

[9]     In addition to these documents, the claimant testified spontaneously and in a detailed manner about the risks that she faces in Mexico. I thus find that the claimant is a reliable witness and I believe what she has alleged in support of her claim.

Well-Founded Fear of Persecution

[10]   In order to satisfy the definition of a Convention refugee found in section 96 of the Act, a claimant must establish that he or she has a well-founded fear of persecution by reason of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion. In this case the claimant was a victim of sexual violence and was targeted because of her gender. I thus find that there is a nexus to the Convention ground of particular social group, namely women. I have therefore assessed this claim under s. 96 of the Act.

[11]   The claimant testified that XXXX is a very dangerous man who was known to be part of a criminal organization. She did not know the name of the organization, however, included into evidence were screen shots of an anonymous facebook group that tries to identify and expose members of criminal organizations, due in part to the fact that police are helpless to do so. In this case XXXX repeatedly sexually harassed the claimant at the XXXXwhere she worked. She testified that although he was rude to other waiters, the focus of his advances were on the claimant. When she rejected his request to celebrate her birthday with him, he followed her with his friends from the restaurant, forced her into the vehicle, and raped her. I find that the claimant has established a subjective fear of returning to Mexico to face further sexual violence from the agent of harm.

[12]   The objective evidence indicates that violence against women is a significant problem in Mexico. Sources indicate that the rate of femicides in Mexico has increased by 137 percent over the last five years, while homicides have comparatively increase by 35 percent over the same periods. Sources indicate that the number of femicides committed by organized crime groups is “on the rise” with some analyses indicating that 63 percent of femicides reported in March and April 2020 were connected to organized crime.[4]

[13]   Organized crime femicide occurs in areas where there is a presence of “gang cultures”, which women are considered “disposable” and that violence against them represents “gang cohesion and masculinity.”  Sources further state that organized crime culture is “very macho, patriarchal, with very sexist undertones” and that organized crime groups murder women because they are “seen as an object owned by the rival and, to cause damage, they kill their women.” A recent Response to Information Request cites a case where a woman was killed in her home by persons who broke in looking for her husband, their presumed target, who was not home at the time.[5] The objective evidence indicates that a number of criminal organizations operate in Mexico and that their “predatory” activities include extortion and kidnapping.[6]

[14]   Considering all the evidence before me, I find that the claimant would face a serious risk of persecution were she to return to Mexico.

State Protection

[15]   The next element in my analysis is whether there is adequate state protection for the claimant in Mexico. While there is a presumption of state protection, this presumption can be rebutted with clear and convincing evidence that protection would not be forthcoming to the claimant.[7]

[16]   The objective evidence confirms that police corruption in Mexico remains a major problem. A recent Response to Information Request (RIR) on the subject emphasizes that corruption within the federal police and the armed forces “underpins state collusion with criminals.” According to sources cited in the RIR, “analyses of drug trafficking, organize crime and human rights violations also highlight the role of police at all levels – federal, state, local – in facilitating illegal businesses, working for organized crime, and systematically violating human rights.” There are credible reports of police involvement in a number of crimes, including kidnappings for ransom.[8]

[17]   A 2017 article from InSight Crime on police corruption, including police affiliation with cartels and police effectiveness, states that “in Mexico, organized crime has deeply permeated police institutions” and reports that in most Mexican states local police “have been infiltrated by organized crime.” In a different article, InSight Crime further notes that an entire municipal police force in the municipality of Tehuacan in central Puebla state was disbanded due to allegations of corruption and links to organized crime. According to that source, the “wholesale suspension of an entire municipal police force demonstrates the level to which organized crime and corruption networks penetrate the state on a local level.”[9]

[18]   Compounding the above, the country condition documents indicate that laws addressing violence against women are not effectively enforced. Sources indicate that there has been “systemic impunity” in terms of how gender-based violence is addressed, and note the “complicity, indifference, and mismanagement of cases” involving violence against women. The United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, amongst other sources, has emphasized that there are “deep-rooted institutional, structural and practical barriers” which continue to hinder access to justice for women, including that officials within the criminal justice system, including law enforcement officers, hold “discriminatory stereotypes” and “limited knowledge” of women’s rights.[10]

[19]   In this case the claimant reported the rape to the police, but nothing was down. They told her to not to pursue anything further. Her husband was then beaten XXXX days later when XXXX found out about the police report. In view of both the objective evidence, which indicates that authorities have been compromised by corruption, and that gender-based violence is committed with impunity, as well as the claimant’s testimony on her inability to access state protection, I find that the presumption of state protection has been rebutted.

Internal Flight Alternative

[20]   The final issue is whether the claimant has a viable internal flight alternative (IFA) in Mexico. In order to determine whether an IFA exists, I must assess whether there is any location in Mexico in which the claimant would not face a serious possibility of persecution and whether it would be reasonable to expect her to move there.[11] At the hearing I canvassed whether the claimant would have an IFA in Merida. However, after considering the evidence, I find that the claimant does not have a viable IFA because I am satisfied that the agent of harm would have the motivation and means to pursue her throughout Mexico.

[21]   With respect to XXXX’s motivation, I considered that he has not contacted or threatened the claimant or her husband in the two years since she left Mexico. Conversely however, XXXXtargeted her specifically and violently attacked her when she rejected his advances. I find that if he were to learn that the claimant had returned to Mexico, he would have the motivation to pursue her in another city.

[22]   Further, XXXXwas able to find the claimant in Puebla, which is five hours away from Mexico. This is the case despite the fact that she changed her phone number. His associates tracked her from the market and shot at her. The objective evidence before me also states that if organized crime groups in other parts of Mexico are interested and willing to retaliate against people relocated in Merida, Campeche, Cabo San Lucas, or Mexico City, they could do it easily. According to sources, criminal groups are motivated to track certain individuals because they steal or lose money; due to personal rivalries or due to personal vengeance; perceived betrayal; or public exposition of relationships with public officials.[12]

[23]   Further, although the claimant is married, her testimony was that she and her husband’s relationship has changed since she came to Canada, and she is not certain that he would relocate to Merida with her. She is currently working in Canada and sending money back to the children, as he is not able to entirely support them. In terms of relocating in Mexico as a single woman, the evidence before me establishes that low-income single mothers with children under 15 years of age face limited access and enjoyment of the right to food, as well as economic, social and cultural rights due to, among others, the “vulnerable income status in which they find themselves, the discrimination they have suffered in different sectors such as social, labour and family, unequal access to employment opportunities, as well as low-paid jobs. Women face “difficulties and discriminatory practices … when attempting to enter the labour market.[13]

[24]   I therefore find that an IFA would be objectively unreasonable in the claimant’s circumstances.

CONCLUSION

[25]   For these reasons, I find that the claimant is a Convention refugee and I accept her claim.

(signed) Kari Schoeder

March 8, 2022


 

[1] Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,S.C. 2001, c. 27.

[2] Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (IRB) Chairperson’s Guideline 4: Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender-Related Persecution, Ottawa, Canada, March 1993, updated November 1996.

 

[3] Exhibit 1.

 

[4] National Documentation Package, Mexico, 29 September 2021, tab 5.20: ​Women whose past partners are involved in criminal activities and implications for their safety (2019–August 2021). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 27 August 2021. MEX200735.E.

 

[5] National Documentation Package, Mexico, 29 September 2021, tab 5.20: ​Women whose past partners are involved in criminal activities and implications for their safety (2019–August 2021). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 27 August 2021. MEX200735.E.

 

[6] National Documentation Package, Mexico, 29 September 2021, tab 7.18: Crime and criminality, including organized crime, alliances between criminal groups and their areas of control; groups targeted by cartels; state response; protection available to victims, including witness protection (2018–September 2020). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 21 September 2020. MEX200313.E.

 

[7] Canada (Attorney General) v. Ward, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 689, 103 D.L.R. (4th) 1, 20 Imm. L.R. (2d) 85.

 

[8] National Documentation Package, Mexico, 29 September 2021, tab 10.2: ​Police corruption, including police affiliation with cartels and police effectiveness; state protection, including complaints mechanisms available to report instances of corruption (2017–September 2020). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 1 September 2020. MEX200314.E.

 

[9] National Documentation Package, Mexico, 29 September 2021, tab 10.2: ​Police corruption, including police affiliation with cartels and police effectiveness; state protection, including complaints mechanisms available to report instances of corruption (2017–September 2020). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 1 September 2020. MEX200314.E.

 

[10] National Documentation Package, Mexico, 29 September 2021, tab 5.20: ​Women whose past partners are involved in criminal activities and implications for their safety (2019–August 2021). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 27 August 2021. MEX200735.E.

 

[11] Thirunavukkarasu v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1994] 1 F.C. 589 (C.A.); (1993), 22 Imm. L.R. (2d) 241 (F.C.A.).

 

[12] National Documentation Package, Mexico, 29 September 2021, tab 7.8: ​The crime situation in Mérida, Mexico City, Campeche, and Cabo San Lucas; organized crime and cartel groups active in these cities (as well as Yucatán state, State of Campeche, and Baja California Sur); the ability and motivation of organized … Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 8 September 2021. MEX200732.E.

 

[13] National Documentation Package, Mexico, 29 September 2021, tab 5.7: ​Situation of single women and of women who head their own households without male support, including access to employment, housing and support services, particularly in Mexico City and Mérida (Yucatán) (2017-October 2019). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 5 February 2020. MEX106364.E.

Categories
All Countries Sudan

2022 RLLR 31

Citation: 2022 RLLR 31
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: February 3, 2022
Panel: Siobhan Yorgun
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Jacques Beauchemin
Country: Sudan
RPD Number: VC1-06798
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2022-01960
ATIP Pages: N/A

DECISION

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

INTRODUCTIONS

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

ALLEGATIONS

[3]       The claimant’s allegations were fully set out in his Basis of Claim form. To briefly summarize, the claimant is a 41-year-old citizen of Sudan and no other country. The claimant is a XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX for a contracting company, was working on a road project for local government in South Sudan starting in 2009. In XXXX 2010, he received a substantial payment in cash for completion of the project from XXXX XXXX. He requested XXXX XXXX office manager XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX to keep the money for him, as there was fighting in the area at the time, until it was safe for him to travel with the payment back to his company in Khartoum. XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX failed to return the money to the claimant. After the claimant complained that he would take the matter up with XXXX XXXX, he was assaulted at his home and threatened not to approach XXXX XXXX office and to keep his mouth shut.

[4]       The claimant returned to Khartoum and explained the situation to his boss. His boss was disbelieving and threatened to file a suit against the claimant. The claimant said his manager could follow the matter up with the governor in question. XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX then called the claimant saying he had only himself to blame for failing to keep his mouth shut. The claimant was informed by a neighbor that two (2) men came looking for him at his house, whereupon he fled to his uncle further north in Atbara, after which he fled to Egypt and then on to Oman when his uncle told him three (3) men had come looking for him at his uncle’s house in Atbara. When his job was terminated in Oman, and the claimant could not find another to prevent the cancellation of his work visa, he fled to Canada via the US, where he had a visa to attend an international civil engineering conference. The claimant fears for his life at hand of security forces under the influence of XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX.

DETERMINATION

[5]       I find the claimant is a Convention refugee the pursuant to section 96 of the IRPA.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[6]       I find the claimant’s personal identity and identity as a national of Sudan has been established on a balance of probabilities by his Sudanese passport and birth certificate.

Nexus

[7]       I find the claimant’s allegations establish a nexus to the conventional ground of imputed political opinion because he claims to fear persecution (inaudible) his conflict with XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, the next spokesperson for the ruling Military Transition Council, will be considered or construed as opposition to the government. Opposition to corruption or criminality may constitute a perceived political opinion when it can be seen to challenge the state apparatus, and indeed the claimant’s personal knowledge of the wrongdoing of a senior political and military figure has been identified as a challenge to the state apparatus, and the state apparatus engaged in addressing this perceived threat. As such, I have examined this claim under section 96 of the IRPA.

Credibility

[8]       When a claimant swears to the truth of certain allegations, this creates presumptions that those allegations are true unless there is reason to doubt their truthfulness. Claimant’s testimony was forthright, and he provided spontaneous detail and testimony that was fulsome and consistent with his BOC and supported by the documentary evidence submitted. Which included, the letters confirming his employment in Sudan and Oman, and educational qualifications as a civil engineer. Birth certificates of his immediate family, supporting letters from family and friends attesting to their knowledge of certain events, and information on the conference for which he received a US visa. The claimant also submitted two (2) news articles from 2019, which include reference to XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX as a spokesperson for the Transitional Military Council. Having assessed these documents, I have no reason to doubt their authenticity and find on a balance of probabilities that they and are genuine and give them full weight as they corroborate the claimant’s narrative.

[9]       In light of the claimant’s credible testimony and the corroborative evidence, I therefore find that the claimant entrusted a considerable sum of money to XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, then XXXX XXXX for the local government for safekeeping while in Malakal and the south of Sudan during a period of fighting. That this money was intended as payment for XXXX XXXX to the claimant’s company for completion of the (inaudible) project. And that when the claimant asked XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX to return the funds so that he could deliver it to his company in the north, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX failed to do so. When the claimant threatened to report the matter to XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX superior, XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX threatened him and had two (2) men dressed in local suits assault the claimant.

[10]     I find the claimant on return to Khartoum had a court case initiated against him by his company for the loss of money. A company which the claimant testified was owned by the brother of then President, al-Bashir. I find the claimant was warned by his neighbour in Khartoum that two (2) men not in uniform, but in smart suits, the neighbor understood as indicating they were government security, had been looking for him. After the claimant had fled from his uncle further north in Sudan in Atbara to Egypt, his uncle called him with a similar description of three (3) men wearing suits, who appeared to be government security, looking for the claimant.

[11]     I find XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX is both a XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX and currently in a XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, described by the claimant as XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX in Sudan. I find that the claimant has established on a balance of probabilities that he has personal knowledge of threatening behavior of XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, and that official’s theft of monies from local government intended for a politically connected company. And I find the claimant has been personally threatened twice by XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX to silence him, and is on balance of probabilities, being sought by security apparatus of the state at the instigation of XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX. And that XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX has a continued interest in the claimant remaining silent, as his reputation and influence grow.

Well-founded Fear of Persecution

[12]     The claimant fears returning to Sudan as he alleged he will be on a wanted list and immediately captured by security and made to disappear to maintain the security and reputation of XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX. As well as having a subjective fear of persecution, I also find that the objective evidence before me establishes that the claimant’s fear of by persecution by security agents of the state are objectively well-founded.

[13]     The country condition evidence has outlined in the National Documentation Package for Sudan supports the claimant’s allegations regarding the treatment of perceived opponents to the state in Sudan by state agents. Corruption is endemic throughout Sudan and occurs with impunity. Those who speak out against it are punished. US Department of State report from the NDP for Sudan states that the World Bank rates corruption as a severe problem in the country. Officials found guilty of corrupt acts could often avoid jail time if they returned ill-gotten funds.

[14]     Journalists who reported on government corruption were sometimes intimidated, detained, and interrogated by security forces. Freedom House similarly reports that citizens who exposed public malfeasance faced arrest. And the rule of law is increasingly perceived as conditional on political connections. According to the US Department of State, the Sudanese government engages in arbitrary or unlawful killings, including of detainees. There are disappearances by or on behalf of the government authorities. Security forces continue to beat and torture detainees. Even without torture, prison conditions in Sudan are harsh, overcrowded, and life threatening. Arbitrary arrest and detention is common and for extended periods.

[15]     I find that the country conditions evidence establishes that those who have evidence of government corruption and perceived opponents of the state are arrested, tortured, and killed, amounted to persecution. I find that this threat remains ongoing for any person such as the claimant identified as a political reputational risk. As such, I find that there is more than a mere possibility of persecution should the claimant return to Sudan.

State Protection

[16]     There is a presumption that unless in complete breakdown, states are capable of protecting their citizens. However, I find that presumption has been rebutted in this case, as the agent of persecution in this case is the state, and the NDP is clear on a politically dependent inability to take action against corruption. Accordingly, I find that there is no effective state protection available to the claimant.

Internal Flight Alternative

[17]     I find that the claimant does not have a viable internal flight alternative, that there is nowhere within Sudan that the claimant will be able to relocate without fear of persecution. The state of Sudan has effective control over its territory. The claimant would not be able to enter into or move within Sudan without coming to the state’s attention. There is no evidence before me to suggest that there are adequately independent state authorities in Sudan who claimant could approach for protection in any part of the country. The claimant does not have an area within Sudan safe from persecution, and so does not have an internal flight alternative.

CONCLUSION

[18]     Based on the analysis of both, I find that the claimant is a Convention refugee pursuant to section 96 of the IRPA. and I accept this claim.

——— REASONS CONCLUDED ———

Categories
All Countries Barbados

2022 RLLR 30

Citation: 2022 RLLR 30
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: November 28, 2022
Panel: Nick Bower
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Tiffani Frederick
Country: Barbados
RPD Number: VC2-07212
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2022-01960
ATIP Pages: N/A

DECISION

[1]       MEMBER: These are my reasons for decision in the claims for protection of XXXX XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, and XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, citizens of Barbados who seek protection under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act as Convention refugees under section 96 and as persons in need of protection under section 97(1).

[2]       I have heard your testimony and considered all of the evidence before me in this matter. As an initial matter, and I mean no disrespect by using your first names, but XXXX, you are the designated representative for XXXX XXXX XXXX who is still a minor.

[3]       I have considered and applied the chairperson’s guideline 4 regarding claims of gender-based persecution.

[4]       I specifically note as a starting point at paragraph 11.2.1, the guideline states that the Convention refugee ground of membership in a particular social group includes individuals fearing gender-based persecution.

[5]       At paragraph 4.3 and paragraph 4.4, the guideline states that Members should avoid the application of myths, stereotypes, and incorrect assumptions when making findings of fact and law and when making decisions. Specific examples of these incorrect myths and stereotypes include assumptions that survivors of gender-based violence can be expected to behave in a particular manner, including pursuing criminal complaints, that a person in an abusive relationship will seek to leave at the first opportunity, that a person who has experienced gender-based violence once in Canada will automatically seek out counselling or assistance in overcoming trauma, that well-educated women or women with a capacity for self-sufficiency are less likely to experience gender-based violence, and that a person who is a victim of gender-based violence will necessarily know before arriving in Canada that they possess basic human rights, that what has happened is an infringement of those rights, and that there may be avenues of recourse available to them.

[6]       At paragraph 8.2.1, the guideline talks about corroborating evidence and notes that survivors of gender-based violence may not have access to any corroborating evidence, any independent evidence. And that of course makes sense when one (1) considers that the allegations are of domestic violence, violence that happens in the home, in a very personal and private setting, that other people in the community are not likely to see or not — in any event, not likely to see the full extent of.

[7]       At paragraphs 11.3.1 through 11.3.3, the guidelines discuss persecution. The guideline states that an individual’s experience of gender-based violence may not necessarily amount to persecution in every case. It is — it needs to be analyzed on a case-by-case basis. But discrimination amounts to persecution if the consequences are substantially prejudicial, such as the right to earn a livelihood, rights to private and family life, freedom of movement, or the right to an education, and that harassment that is sufficiently serious and occurs over a period of time of time such that the person’s physical or moral integrity is threatened may constitute persecution.

[8]       Having considered all of the evidence, I find that each of you is a Convention refugee under section 96 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

[9]       Very briefly, you allege that you have in Barbados been living in a household with long standing domestic violence, physical and emotional. The worst of the physical violence was directed against you, XXXX, but all three (3) of you did suffer threats of physical violence at the very least, as well as ongoing psychological, emotional violence. The agent of persecution, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, is still alive, well, still living in the family household in Barbados.

[10]     Turning to analysis, the first issue is identity. I have copies of your current passports in Exhibit 1 and copies of your birth certificates in Exhibit 5. I am satisfied that each of you is a citizen of Barbados. I have heard your testimony and reviewed all of the evidence.

[11]     I find that each of you is a credible witness, and I accept your testimony. There are no significant inconsistencies or omissions between your testimony and the other evidence before me. Your allegations are at the very least not inconsistent with objective evidence about current conditions in Barbados. You both testified in a spontaneous and forthright manner. You did not exaggerate or tailor your evidence.

[12]     You have provided some corroborating documents in Exhibit 5, but I accept your testimony. I find that you are credible witnesses and specifically accept your evidence that you have all survived a long standing violent domestic home at the hands of XXXX XXXX in Barbados. (Inaudible) that you have all suffered psychological harm, and that you have all been victims of — threats of, or actual physical violence from XXXX. Now, there is — I find XXXX, that you are not excluded from protection under article 1(f)(b) of the Convention. There is no evidence that — well, that XXXX XXXX XXXX father, XXXX, has consented to her coming to stay in Canada. It is potentially the crime of abduction under the Canadian criminal code, which does have a maximum penalty of 10 years, and so is presumed serious.

[13]     However, section 285 of the Canadian criminal code provides a full defense if the person who removes the child from the other parent does so to either protect the child from imminent harm, or is him or herself escaping a danger of imminent harm. As I will explain, I find that you were escaping a danger of imminent harm, as well as protecting XXXX XXXX XXXX from danger of imminent harm. You therefore have access to the full defence under section 285, and so there is no serious reason to consider that you would be excluded from protection because you might have committed a serious non-political crime outside Canada before arriving in Canada to seek protection.

[14]     There is a nexus between the persecution alleged and the particular social group of women in Barbados. The UN compilation at the NDP Exhibit 3, Tab 2.4, note that patriarchal attitudes in Barbados for example, prevent women from among other things, participating in governmental decision making. The country gender assessment at Tab 5.3 notes that very high levels of overall human development in Barbados have not been accompanied by a correlating and an expected gender equality, and that these patriarchal norms are used to justify violence against women who do not “know their place”, and support male control over women and girls’ bodies, including use of violence to get access to sex.

[15]     I find that women and girls in Barbados do constitute a particular social group for the purposes of the refugee Convention in section 96 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. Further, XXXX XXXX XXXX, I find that there is also a particular social group (inaudible) your case as the family member of a person who fears persecution under section 96. You testified that if you were to return a loan, you may face a harm or at the very least ongoing pressure from XXXX to get information from you about your mother and sister that — in addition to potentially pursuing you — to pursue you, he would also pursue you to get after your family members who allegedly face gender-based persecution, and so, there is this additional particular social group in your circumstances.

[16]     Turning to the well-founded fear of persecution, that has two (2) parts. A subjective fear and an objective basis. I have heard your testimony and I accept that each of you does have a subjective fear of persecution if you were to return to Barbados today. In the case of XXXX XXXX XXXX, I note guideline 3, dealing with child refugee claims — notes that due to a child’s age, the child might not be able to testify or give evidence themselves about specific issues in their claim, which can include whether or not they are afraid to return. But the Panel, the Division, as the deciding member, I can consider all of the evidence, and I can infer details of XXXX XXXX XXXX claim from all of the evidence provided. And based on the evidence, I can certainly infer, and I accept that she also has a subject subjective fear of persecution if she were to return to Barbados today.

[17]     Considering all of the evidence, I find that your subject fear is objectively well-founded, and that you would face a serious risk of persecution if you were to return to Barbados today. Specifically, based on the evidence I have, I am satisfied that each of you would face at the very least, a serious risk of threats of physical violence, physical violence, and ongoing psychological violence causing psychological injury from XXXX, if you were to return.

[18]     As the guideline notes, persecution can and should be considered to include threats to a person’s moral integrity. And the law is quite clear that psychological health is also health. Psychological harm is harm, just the same as physical harm. Threats of violence that cause psychological harm is as persecutory as threats and violence that cause physical harm. And it is analytically wrong to require an element of actual physical violence or harm if a person faces a serious risk of psychological harm. The evidence is that the physical violence has mostly — largely been directed against you, XXXX. But there have been threats of physical violence, and there has been, I find, on the evidence demonstrated, psychological harm to all three (3) of you.

[19]     XXXX XXXX XXXX, you and XXXX XXXX XXXX have both sought out psychological treatment for the harm you have suffered. XXXX, you have looked into the availability of psychological treatment. XXXX XXXX XXXX in particular has — you have seen — shown very concerning signs of serious psychological harm that has led her to cut herself to inflect physical harm, just to demonstrate the depth of her psychological harm. If you were to return, there is a serious risk that XXXX would continue to act as he has done in the past. That he would continue to threaten you, that he would continue to manipulate you, that he would continue to use violence or threats of violence to control you, down to the level of what you can spend for groceries, something that is not even in your control. And that these threats of violence and violence would cumulatively, seriously threaten your physical and your moral integrity, would threaten your physical and your psychological health, and amounts to persecution.

[20]     This is consistent with the objective evidence about conditions in Barbados. At Tab 2.2, the report by Freedom House notes that violence against women in Barbados remains widespread, and laws addressing domestic violence are not well enforced. At Tab 5.11, the report notes that rates of domestic violence have increased with the COVID-19 pandemic, which has forced families to remain at home.

[21]     At Tab 5.3, the report notes that Barbados has a very high rate of gender violence with 27 percent of women and girls, or more than one (1) in four (4) reporting having experienced domestic violence. At Exhibit 6, there is an article from April 2022, where the chief magistrate correctly observes that domestic violence is harmful to everyone in the family. The chief magistrate notes that — states that domestic violence around children creates war zones in households, that unleash terrorists on society. It is a recognition that domestic violence has serious ongoing long-lasting harm, whether or not that instant of physical violence is directed against that individual or someone else in the family. I will come back to that article in a moment.

[22]     If you were to return, Barbados is a very small country with a very small population. It is about 400 square kilometres, and has a population of just over 300,000 people. You would either be living with the agent of persecution again, or in the same community. There is simply not enough physical space or population to not be either living with him or living near him. If you are living with him, there is a serious risk that the same circumstances are simply going to continue, and you are going to continue to experience physical violence and psychological violence. If you were to live independently, out — away from him in another household, that would be — there would be a serious risk that would be seen as a loss of his face in the community.

[23]     The reports note that — sorry, let me just find it — that — lethal violence against women. Murders of women in Barbados have increased. They did dip for one (1) year, but have remained well, far too high. And so, simply removing yourself from the same household does not reduce the risk of ongoing violence, and maybe an inciting incident, a triggering event that can lead to an increase in violence. If you were to return based on all of the evidence, I am satisfied that each of you would face a serious — persecution.

[24]     XXXX XXXX XXXX, you are an adult. If you were to return, then it is possible that you could live outside the same home as the agent of persecution. However, you have testified, and I accept that there is a serious risk. He would still continue to pursue you either to continue to exert his control over you, as he is the man of the house, and you are therefore one (1) of (inaudible)  “his women in the house to control.” But there is also a serious risk he would continue to pursue you to force you to give information about your mother, his wife, about your sister, his child daughter. And there is a serious risk given his use of violence in the home in the past, in a domestic situation in the past, that he could threaten and could use physical violence to compel you to either give him the information he wants, or to hurt you to — through hurting you, hurt your mother and sister.

[25]     I find that you do not have a viable internal flight alternative. As noted by the CIA World Fact Book, Tab 1.3, Barbados is a very small nation. It is geographically small. It has got a small population. You have testified and I accept that everyone knows everyone. There is nowhere where you could relocate to, where you would not be able to find you easily. And of course, if he is able to find you, he would be able to travel to and reach you. It all comes down to his motivation, and there is no reason that — to believe that he will not be as motivated to continue the persecution as he was in the past. There is no reason to believe that his behaviour has changed or will change.

[26]     I also note at Tab 5.3, the report on the country gender assessment for Barbados, that occupations — work in Barbados is highly differentiated by sex, and the — this differentiation has only been growing since 1996. That women make up the majority of workers who earn less than 500 dollars a week, and men make up the majority in all income brackets, earning more than 500 dollars a week. Women are statistically at the very bottom of the pay scale. Female headed households the reports states, poverty is concentrated among female headed households in Barbados.

[27]     The CIA World Fact Book notes that unemployment overall is 10 percent as of 2017. That is one (1) in 10 people. But for youths, it is as high as 26 percent overall, and more than 20 percent for young women. That is more than one (1) in five (5). Given the evidence about work, about earnings, there is a serious risk that if you were to return and relocate, you would face poverty, because of your gender as independent women. I therefore find you do not have a viable internal flight alternative.

[28]     Finally, I find that you would not receive adequate state protection. The US DOS report and other reports do note that Barbados has legally made steps to increase the laws protecting women from violence. However, considering all of the evidence, I find that these not — these are not practically enforced. Going back to that article I referred to, where the chief magistrate correctly notes that domestic violence is hurting everyone. He then goes on to say that the police are “too much involved” in domestic matters.

[29]     You have provided another article in Exhibit 6, from January 2020, about a recent domestic violence case where the report quotes the president of the National Organization for Women, stating that domestic violence is not taken seriously by the courts, and particularly by the police. At Tab 2.4, the UN compilation, it states in regards to domestic violence and court response to domestic — “the committee was however, concerned about the insufficient resources allocated to the justice system, the overly burdened procedural rules, considerable backlogs and lengthy delays in processing cases, the limited capacity of the police and courts to address complaints from women about gender-based violence in a gender sensitive manner, and the absence of a specialized court on family laws.”

[30]     At Tab 5.5, report by the research directorate states that police are slow and reluctant to respond to calls about domestic violence, and their response is by and large, inadequate. That is also consistent with the objective evidence about patriarchal norms in Barbados and society. The police are members of society and are presumed reasonably, to share those same opinions in the absence of evidence of effective training to combat these patriarchal attitudes. There are reports that there have been some attempts to provide this evidence, but the police are still reluctant to respond to domestic violence and see it as a domestic matter.

[31]     Despite the laws in place or coming soon, I find that the police and the courts do not provide a practical adequate response to issues of domestic violence. That the police response is slow, it is inadequate, the court system is slow and inadequate, and this not only leads to a tolerance of domestic violence, a impunity for offenders, it is also consistent with and reinforces the patriarchal beliefs that say that men have control. That men are allowed to use violence to exert that control, and that women should know their place, because the police and the courts are not acting in a way to say anything different. For all of these reasons, I find that each of you is a Convention refugee under section 96 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, and I accept your claims for protection.

——————–REASONS CONCLUDED ——————–

Categories
All Countries Ukraine

2022 RLLR 29

Citation: 2022 RLLR 29
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: November 9, 2022
Panel: Hannah Gray
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Melissa Singer
Country: Ukraine
RPD Number: VC2-06405
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2022-01960
ATIP Pages: N/A

DECISION

[1]       MEMBER: This is the decision of the Refugee Protection Division, the RPD, in the claims of XXXX XXXX, the principal claimant or the PC, and her daughter, the minor claimant, XXXX XXXX, of Ukraine, who are cleaning refugee protection pursuant to section 96 and section 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, the IRPA.

[2]       At the hearing, the principal claimant, who is the mother of the minor claimant, acted as the designated representative for her child pursuant to section 167(2) of the Act and Rule 20 of the RPD Rules. Throughout this hearing and in this decision, I have considered and applied the Chairperson’s Guideline 4 on gender considerations in proceedings before the Immigration and Refugee Board as these claims include allegations of a risk of gender-based violence. I have also applied and considered the Chairperson’s Guidelines on child refugee claimants’ procedural and evidentiary issues as it relates to the claim of the minor claimant.

DETERMINATION

[3]       I find that the claimants are Convention refugees pursuant to section 96 of the IRPA based on their well-founded fear of persecution in Ukraine.

ALLEGATIONS

[4]       The specifics of their claims are stated in the claimants’ Basis of Claim forms and narratives in evidence. The principal claimant is a 33-year-old XXXX and the minor claimant is a 13-year-old girl. And they are both from Kharkiv, Ukraine. The claimants are Russian speakers and the principal claimant’s cousin and her family live Saint Petersburg, Russia. Starting in 2014 the claimants began to experience discrimination in Kharkiv as they had Russian relatives who came to visit them often. The threats they received began to escalate in 2021 when the claimants’ home was vandalized and they received written threats on a few occasions. When they went to the police, the police did not assist them or offer them protection. As the war began at the end of February 2022, the claimants began to fear for their lives and fled to western Ukraine to Lviv in early XXXX 2022 where they attempted to rent a house. They were informed that they could only rent a home if they spoke Ukrainian and if the principal claimant’s husband fought for Ukraine. They were told to leave when the principal claimant informed the landlord that her husband would not fight for Ukraine. The claimants then fled from Ukraine to Poland and then to Canada where the claimant’s cousin lives in Montreal at the end of XXXX 2022. The claimants fear they will be persecuted due to their imputed political opinion in Ukraine as they are Russian speakers who have Russian family numbers. And they also fear being persecuted by the Russian military as Ukrainian women or girls by the invading Russian troops or killed by the ongoing missiles and bombs. The claimants made their refugee claim in April 2022.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[5]       I am satisfied with the identity of the claimants as citizens of Ukraine which is established by their testimonies and the copies of their passport with Canadian visas in evidence.

Credibility

[6]       According to Maldonado, when a claimant swears the truth of their allegations, this creates a presumption that those allegations are true unless there is reason to doubt their truthfulness. I find no reason to doubt the truthfulness of the claimants. They testified in a straightforward, forthright, detailed and candid manner and there were no material inconsistencies, omissions or contradictions between the claimants’ testimonies and the other evidence in their case. They did not exaggerate or tailor their evidence. And in summary, their testimonies were consistent with the other evidence on the central aspects of their claims. I find the claimants provided ample details to expand upon their allegations. And although the claimants did not provide additional corroborating documents, I do not draw a negative inference on their overall credibility. I find that the objective evidence before me as well as the claimants’ identification documents and credible testimony establish on a balance of probabilities the facts alleged in their claims. Including that the claimants are Ukrainian women or girls from Kharkiv and Russian speakers. In addition, I accept, on a balance of probabilities, that they were threatened and received written threats to their home on multiple occasions. Therefore, I accept the subjective fear they have of returning to Ukraine now as they have nowhere to live and no protection there. And in sum, I find the claimants to be credible witnesses and therefore, I believe what they have alleged in support of their claims.

Nexus

[7]       To qualify for refugee status under the Refugee Convention, an individual must demonstrate that they have a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion. The allegations establish a nexus to the Convention ground for the claimants based on their membership in a particular social group as women or girls facing a risk of gender-based violence in a situation of war. In addition, the allegations support a nexus to the Convention ground for the claimants based on their imputed political opinion as they have relatives who are Russian family and who often visited them in Kharkiv from Russia. And therefore, the claimants experienced repercussions in the form of discrimination which escalated to threats due to their imputed pro-Russia political opinion. I will, therefore, assess their claims under section 96.

Well-founded Fear of Persecution and Risk of Harm

[8]       I find that the claimants have established a well-founded fear of persecution based on their gender due to the war. The claimants testified that they were fearful for their lives prior to leaving Ukraine due to the threats they received as well as the escalating violence from the war in Kharkiv and throughout Ukraine. Country condition evidence from the most recent update of the National Documentation Package for Ukraine. In particular, an independent legal analysis of the Russian Federation’s breaches of the Genocide Convention in Ukraine and the duty to prevent by the New Lines Institute for Strategy and Policy at NDP Item 1.13. Establishes that there are one (1), reasonable grounds to believe Russia is responsible for direct and public incitement to commit genocide. And a pattern of atrocities from which an inference of intent to destroy the Ukrainian national group, in part, can be drawn. And two (2), the existence of a serious risk of genocide in Ukraine, triggering the legal obligation of all states to prevent genocide. This report provides examples of what it describes as a genocidal pattern of destruction targeting Ukrainians. The examples include mass killings, deliberate attacks on shelters and humanitarian routes, deliberately inflicting life-threatening conditions by targeting vital infrastructure, indiscriminate bombardment of residential areas, rape and sexual violence and forcible transfer of Ukrainians.

[9]       One (1) second. Okay. In regards to the claimants’ risk of being persecuted as Ukrainian women or girls, a rapid gender analysis by Care International and UN Women at NDP Item 5.6 states that women constitute the majority of those displaced within and outside of the country. And they face significantly increased safety and protection risks, incidents of gender-based violence, particularly domestic violence and conflict-related sexual violence. Since the war began, women’s care burden has increased significantly with the lack of access to education facilities due to security risks, women’s engagement in volunteer activities, and men’s absence due to engagement in the armed forces. The war will increasingly impact unemployment rates among all categories of the population and will likely continue to push women into the unprotected informal sectors of the economy, poverty and dependency on social payments, especially among female headed households, will be expected to increase. This report, the rapid gender analysis, further states that staying in Ukraine can, however, have negative impacts on women and children’s security and can mean a lack of access to basic services. There are also accounts of family separation at the border. When women and children choose to leave, they face family separation and anxiety about the well-being of those left behind. This article further delves into the challenges for women of all ages to access aid and services in the war-torn areas of eastern Ukraine such as Kharkiv, where the claimants lived before coming to Canada. Many have fled and face further hurdles in accessing safe shelters in the western region of the country. This article states that, “For many respondents, financial and social support including pensions, child benefits and disability benefits is their only source of income. And many are concerned about whether they will be able to access these benefits. This is especially true for female headed households, families with persons with disabilities and families of pensioners. Moreover, this issue disproportionately affects women, who make up 72 percent of social protection recipients and the majority of older people and caregivers in Ukraine.”

[10]     Women and girls are also more at risk of conflict-based sexual assault. NDP Item 5.6 states that there is increasing and concerning media reports of conflict-related sexual violence emerging in Ukraine, and many interviewees raised gender-based violence as a safety concern. Interviewed women CSOs highlight the particular risk of gender-based violence in occupied war affected areas. And the executive director of UN Women, Sima Bahous, noted in her speech to the UN Security Council, that this increasing information on sexual violence committed by the Russian forces is raising all the red flags. NDP Item 5.3 states that Kharkiv has been the site of heavy fighting between Russian and Ukraine forces since the start of the Russian invasion and continues to be one (1) of the front lines of the war. As a result, there is currently limited evidence available for what is happening in Kharkiv up to date. Based on the evidence before me and the circumstances of this claim, I find the claimants have demonstrated a well-founded fear of persecution on both a subjective and objective basis. I also find that the claimants would face a serious possibility of persecution in Ukraine based on their profiles as women or girls who would be at risk of gender-based violence by the Russian military who have invaded the country of Ukraine.

State protection

[11]     The claimants faced threats and vandalism due to their Russian language and their relationship with their relatives who were Russian in the past between 2014 and 2021. When these threats were reported to the police, the police did not assist the claimants, and the police are no longer in a position to help civilians due to the war in Ukraine. While states are presumed to be capable of protecting their citizens, it is the obligation of the claimants to demonstrate on a balance of probabilities that their home country is unable or unwilling to provide adequate state protection. And I find that while Ukraine has done all it can to protect its citizens, it is currently unable to provide them with adequate protection because the enemy they face is better armed and has sheer numbers of weapons and soldiers that are more than the Ukrainians have at their disposal. NDP Item 5.6 states that women constitute the majority of those displaced within and outside of the country and they face significantly increased safety and protection risks. Incidents of gender-based violence, including domestic violence and conflict-related sexual violence, are increasing, but services for survivors are not provided in full. And in many parts of Ukraine, the police are no longer responding to such cases of domestic or conflict-related sexual violence. Furthermore, drivers, mostly women, feel it has become dangerous to drive a car in Ukraine now because traffic lights are not working, and there are no police on the streets. Based on all the country condition evidence available, it is evident that the current ability of Ukraine to defend itself is entirely reliant on the military contributions from other countries. And therefore, whatever protection is being offered to its citizens is actually a form of surrogate protection. In considering the totality of the information available to me, including the most up to date publicly available news report and all the objective evidence before me, I find the claimants have rebutted the presumption of state protection with clear and convincing evidence.

Internal Flight Alternative or IFA

[12]     I will now consider a two (2) prong test in order to determine the viability of an internal flight alternative location for the claimants. First, I must be satisfied that, on a balance of probabilities, the claimants would not face a serious possibility of persecution or risk to life or of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment or danger of torture in the proposed IFA. Second, I must be satisfied that the conditions in the suggested IFA are not such that it would be objectively unreasonable, in all the circumstances including those particular to the claimants, for them to relocate and reside there. In the circumstances of this claim, I find that the risk the claimants face would exist throughout entire territory of Ukraine if they were to return now. The forces of the Russian Federation have shown the ability and willingness to strike each and every city in Ukraine from land, sea or air. They have also shown a willingness to indiscriminately rain artillery and missile fire on civilian infrastructure, bomb shelters, train stations, maternity hospitals and shopping malls. They have shown a willingness to summarily execute unarmed civilians, starve them of food, water and medical supplies and deprive them of basic necessities and sanitation.

[13]     And this is reflected in the March 2022 UNHCR report on return to Ukraine found at NDP Item 1.23, that describes the situation in Ukraine as volatile and uncertain. The UNHCR report calls on states to suspend the return of nationals to the country. It states that in view of the volatility of the situation in the entire territory of Ukraine, UNHCR does not consider it appropriate to deny international protection to Ukrainians and former habitual residents of Ukraine on the basis of an internal flight or relocation alternative. A June 2022 report at NDP Item 1.10 indicates that there are more than 8 million internally displaced persons in Ukraine. The report highlights numerous challenges in Ukraine facing internally displaced persons,ncluding the lack of accommodation, shortages of food, water and energy supplies, and barriers to accessing financial, social support and health services. In addition, the claimants did make – take steps to relocate within Ukraine. However, due to their Russian language as well as the fact that the principal claimant’s husband did not agree to join the war, they were not invited to stay longer at their place of residence in western Ukraine. The Ukrainian government has made some efforts to counter the Russian aggression and provide protection to its citizens. But in sum, its operational effectiveness falls short of adequacy. And this state of affairs exists throughout the entire country of Ukraine. Therefore, I find there is no location within Ukraine that the claimants could relocate to now and not face a serious possibility of persecution on the Convention ground of being a woman and a girl.

CONCLUSION

[14]     For these reasons, I find the claimants are Convention refugees under section 96 of the Act and I accept their claims.

——— REASONS CONCLUDED ———

Categories
All Countries India

2022 RLLR 28

Citation: 2022 RLLR 28
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: September 28, 2022
Panel: Kylee Carreno
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Meryem Haddad
Country: India
RPD Number: VC2-06395
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2022-01960
ATIP Pages: N/A

REASONS FOR DECISION

INTRODUCTION

[1]       These are the reasons for the decision in the claims of XXXX XXXX(the principal claimant), XXXX XXXX(the spouse), XXXX XXXX(the minor claimant), and XXXX XXXX(the associate claimant), who claim to be citizens of India, and are claiming refugee protection pursuant to sections 96 and 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA).[i]

[2]       I heard these claims jointly pursuant to rule 55 of the Refugee Protection Division Rules.[ii]

[3]       I have appointed XXXX XXXXas the designated representative for the minor claimant XXXX XXXX. The spouse provided no objection to this appointment. The designated representative was provided with the opportunity to testify about any risks faced by the minor claimant in India.

[4]       In conducting the hearing and rendering these reasons, I have considered and applied the Chairperson’s Guideline 4 which offers guidance on the gender-specific aspects of this claim.[iii] I have applied this guideline when offering procedural accommodations for sensitive testimony, in not questioning the spouse regarding details of the sexual assault she faced, and in assessing the spouse’s limited testimony. The minor claimant did not attend the hearing. The claimants agreed to inform me if they wished, at any point, to testify without the presence of their child, the associate claimant; the claimants did not inform me at any point of the hearing that they desired this accommodation, and the associate claimant was present throughout the testimonies of all claimants. I have also considered and applied the Chairperson’s Guideline 3 regarding child refugee claimants.[iv] I note that the incidents outlined in the claimants’ allegations are sensitive and occurred when the associate claimant was a child. I therefore considered that, as per this guideline, he may have limited knowledge of the risks facing him and his family in India.

ALLEGATIONS

[5]       The full allegations are set out in the claimants’ BOC forms.[v] The claimants’ immediate family consists of the principal claimant, who is the husband/father; the spouse, who is the mother/wife; the minor claimant; the associate claimant; and two daughters who are not part of their claim for refugee protection. These daughters are named XXXX and XXXX. The spouse, associate, and minor claimants stated that they wished to rely on the narrative provided by the principal claimant, their respective husband and father. In summary, the claimants fear the Punjab police who accused the principal claimant of being associated with militants and the drug mafia, detained and beat him, and detained and sexually assaulted the spouse. The claimants also fear the XXXX XXXX who kidnapped the associate claimant and extorted the claimants.

[6]       The principal claimant was born in West Bengal, but later moved to Bhilai, Chhattisgarh after he finished school, as he had an opportunity to work in XXXX XXXX XXXX and wished to support his family. The claimants lived together with their children in Bhilai, where the principal claimant had a XXXX XXXX. In 2012, the associate claimant was kidnapped by an unknown person claiming to be a member of the XXXX XXXX. The claimants were forced to pay a ransom to have their son released. They knew that they would then be on the XXXXlist of people to extort, so the principal claimant had to close his business and they moved to XXXX in Punjab in 2013.

[7]       The principal claimant joined his son-in-law, XXXX XXXX XXXX (his daughter XXXX husband) XXXX XXXX XXXX. In XXXX 2016, the principal claimant and a driver from XXXX XXXX were stopped by the police. He was questioned about drugs, the police beat him, and they took him to an unknown location where he was kept for two days, beaten, and questioned about XXXX who was accused of being involved in the drug mafia. While he was detained, his house was searched, and the spouse was mistreated. His family paid a bribe for his release with the assistance of the village council, and his fingerprints, photos, and signature were taken by police. Police continued to harass him and his family. He and the spouse were detained in XXXX 2016. They were separated at the station; the principal claimant was beaten, questioned, and kept for two days, while the spouse was beaten, sexually assaulted, and released the next day. He was told to report to police every month and to bring XXXX. The claimants soon went to live with relatives in Chandigarh.

[8]       In Chandigarh, the claimants hired an agent to help them get their visas and tickets to Canada. The police continued looking for them, beat the principal claimant’s mother in Chhattisgarh, and raided their relatives’ home in Chandigarh. The claimants arrived in Canada on XXXX XXXX, 2017. The police continued to look for them after they arrived in Canada. While in Canada, the claimants extended their visitor visas, and claimed refugee protection in XXXX 2018.

DETERMINATION

[9]       I find that the claimants are Convention refugees as per s. 96 of IRPA, as they have each established a serious possibility of persecution if they were to return to India.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[10]     I find that the identities of the claimants as nationals of India have been established through their testimonies and the copies of their passports in evidence, which contain Canadian visas.[vi]

Nexus

[11]     I find that the allegations establish a nexus to a convention ground for each claimant. The principal claimant has a nexus to an imputed political opinion, as the Punjab police have accused him of supporting pro-Khalistan militant groups. The spouse, associate, and minor claimants have a nexus to a particular social group, specifically that of a family member, as their risk arises from their association to the principal claimant and the allegations made against him. Further, the allegations and profiles of the spouse and minor daughter relating to their gender speak to a nexus of particular social group by way of them being women. For these reasons, all claims will be analyzed under s. 96 of IRPA.

Credibility

[12]     A claimant’s sworn testimony is presumed truthful unless there are reasons to doubt the veracity of their allegations.[vii] In this case, the claimants’ testimony appeared emotional and genuine. However, the spouse had difficulty testifying at times, and the principal claimant and spouse often required redirecting back to the question at hand. The associate claimant’s testimony was more straightforward, and he provided testimony regarding the incidents that he directly experienced in the past. Despite lacking knowledge of details regarding his forward-facing risk from police, I find that the associate claimant’s testimony corroborated aspects of the principal claimant and spouse’s testimony. I also find his limited knowledge of the risk he faces from police to be reasonable given the considerations outlined in the Chairperson’s Guideline 3. The principal claimant also spoke of the personal risk to the minor claimant in India. The claimants’ testimonies were generally consistent with the information provided in their BOC forms and narrative, aside from that outlined below, and I find that sufficient explanations were provided for all material inconsistencies and omissions.

Risk from the XXXX XXXX

[13]     I find the allegations that the principal claimant was raised in a region where XXXX XXXX were active to be credible, as he was raised in West Bengal and later moved to Chhattisgarh. The country documentation in the Indian NDP confirms that XXXX groups are active in these regions of India.[viii] I find that the principal claimant was raised with fear of these groups. I also find the allegation that the associate claimant was kidnapped by a XXXX XXXX as a young child to be credible. I find that the claimants moved to the Punjab region due to extortion and threats from the XXXX XXXX that kidnapped the associate claimant. However, I find that the claimants failed to credibly establish that a forward-facing risk from the XXXX XXXX exists for any of the claimants, as none of them have heard from a member of this group since sometime in 2013 when they moved to Punjab and the principal claimant changed his phone number. The principal claimant also testified that while they were living in Punjab, they did not experience any problems from the XXXX XXXX. The principal and associate claimants testified that they had a future risk from this group; however, they stated that their fear arises from the fact that XXXX XXXXare active in cities where they kidnap individuals for ransom and that they are a powerful terrorist group. They did not testify to any threat since 2013 or any individual, forward-facing risk to any of the claimants from a particular XXXX XXXX. While the principal claimant testified that these XXXX XXXXoperate in somewhere between 9-12 provinces in India,[ix] and the NDP documentation confirms that they operated as of 2016 in 11 states within India,  the claimants have failed to establish with sufficient credible evidence that any member of a XXXX XXXXhas continued to pursue them for the past 9 years or that they would come to the attention of a member of the XXXX XXXXin any part of India if they were to return. Consequently, I find that the claimants’ forward-facing risk is that arising from the Punjab police as discussed below.

Risk from Punjab police

[14]     The principal claimant testified that he felt responsible and that he was unable to protect his family from the police and the suffering they experienced. He stated that he feared he would be detained again upon returning to India and sentenced to many years in prison, leaving his wife and children unable to survive. He stated that that when the claimants first moved to Punjab, they had a peaceful life for three years, despite struggling with the language, as they spoke Hindi, not Punjabi. He stated that when he was first arrested, the police stopped his truck and accused him of drug trafficking and involvement with the drug mafia and ex-militants, and that his son-in-law XXXX, who was his business partner in his XXXX XXXX, was also involved in the same work. He stated that he struggled to understand the police’s words and answer their questions due to the language barrier, but he repeatedly heard the term “Khalistan”, leading him to believe he was accused of working with pro-Khalistan militants. He stated that he had never been involved in or had any interest in being involved in any of the activities or ideologies he was accused of, and no person in his immediate family was involved in these activities either. He stated that he knew XXXX was involved with the SAD-B political party, but he did not know anything about his activity with this group. He also stated that XXXX father used drugs and was likely involved in some of the alleged activities, as he was arrested multiple times and put in jail. The principal claimant stated that his relationship with this man never developed due to his drug use. The principal claimant testified to the beatings he, and his wife during the second arrest, suffered from police and details of their experience when detained, along with the trauma he experiences when thinking about those events.

[15]     The spouse also testified to the long-term effects of the beatings from the police, including an impact on her ability to work due to an injury in her hand that was worsened from these beatings. She stated that the police arrested her because she was questioning why they were beating her husband, and that when she was detained, she did not understand them, as they were speaking Punjabi, but that she repeatedly heard the word “drug”. She stated that after she was sexually assaulted by police, she was fearful of telling anyone, and the only person that she told was her husband. She stated that when she sought medical attention, it was her husband only who spoke with the doctor, and she did not tell the doctor about this sexual assault.

[16]     I find that the claimants’ testimonies establish, on a balance of probabilities, that the principal claimant was accused by the Punjab police of involvement in drug trafficking and supporting militants in their fight for Khalistan, and that he was not politically or criminally involved in any of these activities. I also find, on a balance of probabilities, that both the principal claimant and the spouse were detained, assaulted, and questioned in relation to these accusations.

Documents

[17]     I find that the claimants’ allegations are corroborated by the following documents that they provided at exhibits 4, 5, 7, and 8:

  • An affidavit from the claimants’ host in Chandigarh stating that they lived with her for two months in 2016, that the claimants told her about their circumstances, that the spouse was depressed, and that after they had moved, the police came to her residence looking for the claimants
  • An affidavit from the principal claimant and spouse’s daughter XXXX, who continues to live in India, stating that her father was illegally detained in 2016, that she tried to get him out of detention on her own but could not, and that she sought the assistance of the village sarpanch to get him released. She also stated that both of her parents were detained in October 2016, and afterwards her parents lost their reputation in the village, and it was hard for her siblings at school. She confirms the claimants then went to Chandigarh
  • Multiple treatment reports and prescriptions from the principal claimant and spouse’s treatments at the hospital following their detentions, along with individual letters for each of those claimants from the medical doctor who treated them confirming the treatment that he gave them

I find no reason to doubt the genuine nature of these documents and give them significant weight in establishing that the claimants were illegally detained by police, physically harmed, received medical treatment, went to live in Chandigarh, and that police have continued to search for them after they left. The claimants also provided documentation relating to the principal claimant’s XXXX XXXX in Chhattisgarh and his XXXX XXXX XXXX in Punjab;[x] I give these documents significant weight and find that they, along with the claimants’ testimonies, establish that the principal claimant owned a XXXX XXXX in Chhattisgarh and a XXXX XXXX XXXX in Punjab.

Delay in claiming

[18]     I note that the claimants arrived in Canada on XXXX XXXX, 2017 and stated that they renewed their visitor visas when they expired. They signed their Basis of Claim forms on May 8, 2018 and their claims were referred to the RPD on May 15, 2018. I asked the principal claimant why they did not claim refugee protection for the first nine months that they were in Canada, and he stated that as they had come with their daughter XXXX and her husband XXXXto Canada, they thought that they would receive assistance from them to establish themselves in Canada. Due to a falling out with XXXX, the claimants stopped talking to XXXX and XXXXand did not receive assistance from them. After this, the principal claimant stated that he shared the problems they were facing in India with others at the temple in Toronto, and he was told that he could claim refugee protection if he went to Montreal. The claimants then moved to Montreal and claimed protection. The spouse and associate claimants did not add further testimony regarding their delay in claiming.  I find this explanation to be reasonable, as their delay of nine months is a reasonable amount of time for the claimants to have had their expectations of family support fall apart, to tell others about their problems, to resettle in Montreal, and to have found a lawyer to complete their claim. I, therefore, do not draw a negative inference about their credibility from their delay in claiming protection once they arrived in Canada.

[19]     Overall, I find the claimants to be credible witnesses regarding the allegations I have accepted above. Based on the totality of the evidence before me, I find that, on a balance of probabilities, the claimants have established the abovementioned personal facts alleged in their claims.

Objective Basis

[20]     The objective evidence supports the claimants’ fear of returning to India.

[21]     According to the objective evidence in the National Documentation Package (NDP) for India,[xi] last updated June 30, 2022, significant human rights abuses exist in the country including extrajudicial killings perpetrated by police; torture and cases of cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment or punishment by some police and prison officials; arbitrary arrest and detention by government authorities; harsh and life-threatening prison conditions; the detention of political prisoners; lack of investigation into and accountability for violence against women; and widespread corruption at all levels in the government.[xii] The report also states that: “[d]espite government efforts to address abuses, a lack of accountability for official misconduct persisted at all levels of government, contributing to widespread impunity.”[xiii] A 2022 Human Rights Watch report at item 2.3 states that “allegations of torture and extrajudicial killings persisted with the National Human Rights Commission registering 143 deaths in police custody and 104 alleged extrajudicial killings in the first nine months in 2021.” Further, this report states that the BJP “government’s ‘zero tolerance policy’ on crime led to an increase in police killings” and that “the authorities continued to use section 197 of the Criminal Procedure Code, which requires government approval to prosecute police officials, to block accountability even in cases of serious abuses”.[xiv] Item 9.9. indicates that although India has strict laws and procedures to protect against police torture and ensure accountability, it is “very difficult” to produce evidence against the police in cases of custodial crimes.[xv]

[22]     A 2018 report at item 10.8 on encounter killings describes the timeline of how they typically occur. The report states that:

“In overwhelming majority of cases, the victims of fake encounter deaths are first targeted either as insurgent/terrorist, sympathiser or supporter of insurgents/ terrorists or as wanted criminals with bounty on their heads. The targets are detained or taken into custody, interrogated, and tortured to extract confession or leads, and thereafter, killed in a staged encounter, often by planting a weapon on the persons killed to show the firing in self defense or to prevent fleeing. Fake encounters are also carried out for revenge, settle rivalries or disputes, not giving bribe, promotion or gallantry awards or simply trigger-happy nature of the law enforcement personnel.”[xvi]

The history of the principal claimant’s interaction with the Punjab police largely follows this common structure. The principal claimant testified that after his first detention, he was forced to continue monthly reporting to the police, and after some time he was given the option to pay a bribe to stop reporting, which he did. After his second detention, he was told to continue his monthly reporting, to which he did not ever comply. Given the claimants’ history with police and the country evidence above, I find that there is a reasonable chance that if the principal claimant returned to India, he would face persecution by the Punjab police, not only through his risk of further detention based on his imputed political opinion, but also through risk of a staged encounter killing from police due to revenge or a failure to provide a bribe for him to be able to stop reporting to police, which was a condition of his release when arrested for his political opinion.

[23]     With respect to gender-based violence, a 2019 OECD report at item 5.6 states that “women in India face many barriers to their safety and protection from physical, sexual and psychological violence. Rape, domestic violence, dowry-related deaths, honor killings and sexual harassment pose serious threats to women’s physical integrity in Indian society.”[xvii] Sexual violence including rape is “widespread across the country” in public and private spaces, and women are seen as vulnerable and “easy targets.”[xviii] Rape by police officers is “widespread and conducted with impunity.”[xix] NGOs stated that the number of rapes committed in police custody was underestimated, and “some rape victims were unwilling to report crimes due to social stigma and the possibility of retribution, compounded by a perception of a lack of oversight and accountability, especially if the perpetrator was a police officer or other official.”[xx] Further, this report confirms that “rape is…underreported in India largely because of social stigma, victim-blaming, poor response by the criminal justice system, and lack of any national victim and witness protection law making them highly vulnerable to pressure from the accused as well as the police”.[xxi] Survivors of rape are frequently blamed by the community and by authorities for the attack, and suffer shame and stigmatization as a result.[xxii] Thus, not only is the spouse at risk of further gender-based violence from police, as she experienced previously, she is at risk of suffering from the stigma and its affect that would follow her within Indian society.

[24]     While the claimants testified that they were unaware of any formal charges laid against them, the principal claimant testified that on both occasions of arrests, the police took his fingerprints, photographs, and signatures. The claimants also testified that they were in a high stress state after receiving beatings and being abused by police. The associate claimant, when asked if she saw the police enter any information about her in their digital system, stated that she did not see anything because she was scared and afraid and when they started beating her, her attention did not go anywhere else. When asked the same question, the principal claimant stated that the purpose of the Punjab police was to beat him, take money from him and make him scared, and that he kept requesting that they provide him with the evidence that they had against him, but they refused. Counsel submitted that with the signatures, fingerprints, and photographs the police took, they would be able to lay false charges against the claimants. In the claimants’ documentary evidence at exhibit 7 there is an article from The Hindu stating that FIRs may be lodged or criminal proceedings may be initiated without a police diary entry—essentially, without a corresponding entry of a civilian complaint or any information regarding the arrest of an individual. While I find that predicting the police’s capacity or willingness to lay future false charges against the claimants is speculative, I have also considered the following findings: the allegations made against the claimants by police; the extensive documentary evidence regarding high levels of police corruption throughout India;[xxiii] that the police took the abovementioned claimant’s fingerprints, photographs, and signatures; that the principal claimant was forced to continue reporting to the police station; that the police were monitoring either the claimants, their home, or their family members; and that the police were able to track the claimants to Chandigarh through unknown means. In light of these findings, I further find that the Punjab police, on a balance of probabilities, created an FIR against the principal claimant, after which the objective evidence at NDP item 10.2 indicates that his information would be entered into the national CCTNS database.[xxiv]

Well-Founded Fear of Persecution

[25]     The evidence presented in the associate claimant’s testimony and the documentary evidence is less clear regarding the associate and minor claimants’ forward-facing persecution from the Punjab police. Additionally, I previously found that there was insufficient credible evidence to establish that the XXXX XXXX presented a forward-facing motivation to find the associate claimant or to target any of the claimants for further extortion. The associate and minor claimants’ BOC forms indicated that they wished to rely on the narrative and allegations outlined by their father, the principal claimant. The spouse and principal claimants testified that they feared the arrest, beatings, false allegations, and questioning that happened to them by the Punjab police would also happen to their children if they returned to India. They also testified that the minor claimant, if she were to become a victim of the police, would face the additional risk of gender-based violence at the hands of police.

[26]     The associate claimant testified that he had never received a direct threat from police, but he had witnessed the police coming to his home many times and saying abusive words to his parents.  His knowledge of why the police had accused his parents of crimes, their arrest, and release was limited. I find that with respect to Guideline 3 this level of knowledge is in keeping with his profile, as he was 12 years old when these events occurred. I find that as the associate claimant is now an adult and his claim is based on a nexus to a particular social group by way of his association to the principal claimant, it is reasonable to conclude that his mother and the Punjab police’s treatment of her as a result of her relationship to the principal claimant are reflective of a similarly situated person to the associate claimant. The Punjab police had no evidence against the spouse and the claimants testified that the police did not make any criminal allegations against her. Yet, they detained, beat, and sexually assaulted her merely due to her association with the principal claimant. Additionally, the claimants’ allegations stated that the police were monitoring them and accused the principal claimant of involvement with drugs and militancy due to his association with his son-in-law. Similarly, I found the claimants’ allegation that the police beat and questioned the principal claimant’s mother to be credible. In light of these findings, I find that the associate and minor claimants in their current circumstances would reasonably be at risk of similar treatment by the Punjab police as that previously experienced by their mother, father, and grandmother. I also find that as the minor claimant is a woman, her risk if she were detained or questioned by police includes a risk of sexual violence, similar to that experienced by her mother. I, therefore, find that these claimants have established a well-founded fear of persecution.

[27]     Based on the totality of the evidence, I find that all the claimants have established a well-founded fear of persecution or forward-facing risk if they were to return to India. This finding is made based on all the evidence before me, including the claimants’ testimony that the Punjab police have continued to search for them, as well as the objective evidence regarding police corruption, abuse, and treatment of those accused of involvement with drugs and militants in India.

State Protection

[28]     The state is presumed capable of protecting its citizens except in situations where the state is in complete breakdown. To rebut this presumption, a claimant must establish on a balance of probabilities through clear and convincing evidence that their state’s protection is inadequate. I find that the claimants have rebutted this presumption.

[29]     The agent of persecution in this claim is an agent of the state. The US Department of State report describes India as a parliamentary democracy where civilian authorities maintained effective control over security forces.[xxv] This report also indicates widespread corruption at all levels in the Indian government and extrajudicial killings and degrading treatment or punishment perpetrated by the police.[xxvi] A 2022 Freedom House report gives India a score of 2 out of 4 for both due process and protection against illegitimate use of force.[xxvii] The report indicates that due process rights are not consistently upheld, and corruption and bribery within the police remains a problem. The report also indicates that torture, abuse, and rape by law enforcement and security officials have been reported.[xxviii]

[30]     NDP item 10.12 indicates that the state of Punjab has a Vigilance department, a Police Complaints Authority, and a Human Rights Commission that are responsible for anti-corruption measures. Sources in the RIR indicate concerns with the adequacy of the various organizations. For example, the Human Rights Commission was described as having little credibility and being more or less defunct due to lack of proper infrastructure and staff to handle the complaints and notes that most of the complaints are against the Punjab police. Similarly, the report states that the Police Complaints Authority in 2017 disposed of 52 complaints against the police and that in all closed complaints no police officer was found at fault.[xxix]

[31]     The claimants did testify to the fact that their daughter XXXX, who remained in India, successfully sought police protection when she made a complaint after the police harassed her for information about the claimants. I asked the principal claimant why he had not complained about police if there were effective systems for police complaints in India, and he stated that the police had taken his fingerprints, signature, and photos along with accusing him of involvement with militants and drug traffickers; on the other hand, his daughter was not accused of anything, lived independently from the claimants, and the police had no documentation or evidence against her. Consequently, the particulars of her situation were different from those of the claimants, and given the actions the police had taken against them, he did not feel safe making a complaint about police. I find this explanation to be reasonable in the claimants’ particular circumstances. Based on the country conditions noted above regarding evidence of widespread corruption, lack of adequate police oversight, and that an agent of harm is the Punjab police, I find that there is no operationally effective state protection available to the claimants in their circumstances.

Internal Flight Alternative

[32]     There is a two-part test to determine whether an internal flight alternative (IFA) exists. I must be satisfied (a) that there is no serious possibility of the claimant being persecuted on a Convention ground, or, on the balance of probabilities, being subject personally to a danger of torture or to a risk to their life or to a risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment in the IFA and (b) that conditions in that part of the country, are such that it would be reasonable, in all the circumstances, including those particular to the claimant, for them to seek refuge there. Once an IFA is raised, the onus is on the claimants to show that they do not have an IFA. At the outset of the hearing, I proposed Mumbai and Bengaluru as potential IFAs. For the reasons below, I find that the claimants do not have an IFA available to them.

Motivation

[33]     The principal claimant testified that after his first arrest, the second arrest occurred months later at the time that XXXXcame to visit their home. Counsel submits that this demonstrates that the police were monitoring the claimants’ home.  I find that the police entered the claimants’ home and arrested the principal claimant and spouse on this occasion due to their monitoring of either the claimants’ home or the claimants themselves or their close family members, including their son-in-law. Regardless of whether the police were monitoring the claimants, their home, or their family members, I find that this demonstrates that the Punjab police had a significant interest and motivation in tracking the claimants and their family. The principal claimant testified that after they left to Chandigarh, which he testified was 80 kms away from their village, the local police who had arrested them continued looking for them. I found that the claimants previously established this fact, including that the police raided the home of the individual they initially stayed with in Chandigarh after the claimants had left to stay in the Gurdwara. Further, I find that the claimants established that the police questioned and beat the principal claimant’s mother, who lived in Chhattisgarh, when they came looking for the principal claimant. The principal claimant also testified that a friend who they continue to communicate with informed them that as recently as six weeks ago the police continued to look for them in their local village. I find this to be credible. The principal claimant stated that with the formation of a new government, the police are looking for them more diligently, as the police wish to close their open cases. An article published in the RF Issue Brief at exhibit 6 speaks to the increased war on drugs and crime arising from the region’s current leadership since 2019. I find this testimony to be credible as there is no reason to doubt its veracity and it is objectively corroborated.

[34]     While I acknowledge that the claimants did not testify to having relatives in the proposed IFA locations of Mumbai or Bengaluru, I find that the Punjab police’s efforts to locate the claimants through their relatives in multiple provinces in India is indicative of their desire to use the resources available to them to find the claimants throughout India, including Mumbai and Bengaluru if the claimants were to relocate there. As the Federal Court has established, “there is no onus on a claimant to personally test the viability of an IFA before seeking protection in Canada.”[xxx] Thus, I find that the fact that the claimants did not previously attempt to live in Mumbai or Bengaluru, and consequently do not allege that the Punjab police attempted to find them in Mumbai or Bengaluru, is not indicative of the police’s forward-facing motivation to find them in these IFA locations. I find that the fact that the police searched for the claimants while they were in India only through their previously known locations and family members does not place restrictions on where the Punjab police would be motivated to find the claimants if they were to return to India. Rather, I find that the efforts made to search for them in multiple locations, including multiple provinces, speaks to a high level of motivation to find the principal claimant and spouse throughout India.

[35]     The principal claimant also testified that the police harassed his daughter XXXX who remains living in India while asking for information about the claimants’ whereabouts, but she then filed a complaint against the police, and they stopped bothering her. However, he later testified that the police continued coming to visit her home roughly every two weeks. I asked the principal claimant why he stated previously that the police no longer harassed his daughter after she effectively filed a complaint against them, and he stated that after she married, they believed that they could defame her and their family name, so they continued visiting her and asking questions about the claimants. I find that that this explanation does not reasonably explain the discrepancy in the principal claimant’s testimony on this fact, and that the claimants failed to establish with credible evidence that the police continue to visit their daughter XXXX in India to ask about them. However, the totality of the evidence establishing the principal claimant and spouse’s allegations that the Punjab police continue to look for them with other relatives in other cities and within their local village outweighs the insufficient, inconsistent evidence in establishing that the police continued to visit their daughter in India to ask about them. Consequently, I find that the documentary evidence and findings made regarding the police’s attempt to locate the principal claimant and spouse in various locations throughout India, including their local village in Punjab, Chandigarh, and Chhattisgarh, establishes that the police remain motivated to find these claimants.

[36]     The associate claimant testified that he had not yet completed secondary school and continued to study. The minor claimant is also currently a student. The principal claimant and spouse testified to the fact that they would not be living apart from their children if they were to return to India, as both the associate and minor claimants remain dependent upon their parents. Consequently, I find that as I found the police remain motivated to find the principal claimant and spouse, and the associate and minor claimant would be living with the principal claimant and spouse, the associate and minor claimant would also be at risk of detention and mistreatment by police if they were to be found by police due to their association with their father. Further, the minor claimant’s risk if her parents were arrested would increase from her profile as a young, vulnerable, single woman, which the Indian NDP largely demonstrates is a high-risk profile in India,[xxxi] and it would be unreasonable to expect her to live in India in these circumstances. Therefore, I find that while the police may not have expressed motivation to find the associate and minor claimants until today, their association with their parents—the principal claimant and spouse—makes them similarly at risk from the Punjab police if their parents were to be found, for which I find that the Punjab police have demonstrated motivation.

Means

[37]     The principal claimant testified that he no longer has an Indian national identity document (ID), that he could not rent accommodation in Bengaluru, Mumbai, or anywhere in India without this ID, that he could not find employment without this ID, and that he is unwilling to obtain a new identity document because the process of doing so would bring their location to the attention of the local Punjab police who are searching for them. The spouse and associate claimant stated that they agreed with his testimony and did not have anything further to add. Similarly, counsel submitted that the Punjab police would be able to locate the claimants when they went to rent accommodation through the tenant verification system using CCTNS. As I previously found that an FIR against the principal claimant was, on a balance of probabilities, created by the Punjab police and his information was consequently entered into a national database, I find that there is a reasonable chance the police would use this national database to find the claimants. The claimants also provided an extensive amount of documentary evidence regarding the rapidly expanding use of surveillance cameras throughout India, including information that Delhi, Chennai, and Mumbai are within the top 10 cities with the most surveillance in the world and that India is a policing superpower.[xxxii]

[38]     NDP item 10.13, indicates that India established the CCTNS system to connect the thousands of police stations across India for the purpose of collecting and sharing information on crime and criminals. The RIR quotes a source indicating that as of October 2020, 15,620 of the 16,098 police stations have had the CCTNS system deployed. The report also indicates that 81 percent of data for police stations is synced with the CCTNS system on the same day and that 91 percent of old information has been migrated to the system. The RIR also indicates that Punjab is listed as one of the top three states with most access to the CCTNS system. As of December 2020, police and law enforcement agencies across India can search details of any case registered. The DFAT report at item 1.5 indicates that “if a person of interest is being sought by another state, the states would work together in securing the arrest of that person” and that “there is a good degree of cooperation between state police services”.

[39]     Additionally, item 10.13 states that one of the uses of the CCTNS system is with respect to the verification of tenants. The report notes that the state of Punjab is one of the states that often replies promptly to tenant verification requests.[xxxiii] Item 14.8 describes how the tenant registration process is being used with the CCTNS system to verify whether the person had any criminal involvement or is absconding from the police in another state in India.

[40]     As I previously found, the Punjab police have tried to locate the claimants through their associates and family in India—in the village where the claimants used to reside in Punjab, in Chandigarh, and in the province of Chhattisgarh, where the principal claimant’s family lives. The police were able to successfully track the claimants’ location when they were in Chandigarh, along with contacting their family members in another province. It is well established in the Federal Court that a claimant does not have to cut themselves off from their family in order to live safely in an IFA.[xxxiv] Given the efforts of the Punjab police, I find that if the claimants were to return to India and stay in contact with their family, that there is a serious possibility that the Punjab police may be able to locate the claimants through both their family members and the surveillance systems throughout the country, including the CCTNS. For the abovementioned reasons, I find that the Punjab police have the means to locate the claimants throughout India.

[41]     Given the country condition documents indicating the widespread use of the CCTNS and surveillance systems, the corruption previously noted within the police in India, the continuing motivation to locate the claimants demonstrated by the Punjab police, including through the claimants’ family, I find that the claimants would face a serious possibility of persecution in Mumbai, Bengaluru, and throughout India.  

[42]     Since I have found that the claimants face a serious possibility of persecution in the proposed IFA locations and throughout India, I find it unnecessary to consider whether it would be objectively reasonable under the second prong. As such, I find that the claimants do not have a viable IFA.

CONCLUSION

[43]     I find that the claimants are Convention refugees and accept their claims.

(signed) Kylee Carreno

December 13, 2022


 

[i] Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,S.C. 2001, c. 27.

[ii] Refugee Protection Division Rules, SOR/2012-256.

 

[iii] Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (IRB) Chairperson’s Guideline 4: Gender Considerations in Proceedings before the Immigration and Refugee Board, updated July 18, 2022.

 

[iv] Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (IRB) Chairperson’s Guideline 3: Child Refugee Claimants: Procedural and Evidentiary Issues, effective September 30, 1996.

 

[v] Exhibit 2.

 

[vi] Exhibit 1.

 

[vii] Maldonado v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1980] 2 F.C. 302, 31 N.R. 34 (CA).

 

[viii] Exhibit 3, item 10.8.

 

[ix] Exhibit 3, item 10.8.

 

[x] Exhibit 4; Exhibit 7.

 

[xi] Exhibit 3.

 

[xii] Exhibit 3, item 2.1.

 

[xiii] Ibid.

 

[xiv] Exhibit 3, item 2.3.

 

[xv] Exhibit 3, item 9.9.

 

[xvi] Exhibit 3, item 10.8.

 

[xvii] Exhibit 3, item 5.6.

 

[xviii] Exhibit 3, item 5.9.

 

[xix] Ibid.

 

[xx] Exhibit 3, item 5.9.

 

[xxi] Ibid.

 

[xxii] Exhibit 3, item 5.4.

 

[xxiii] Exhibit 3.

 

[xxiv] Exhibit 3, item 10.2.

 

[xxv] Exhibit 3, item 2.1.

 

[xxvi] Ibid.

 

[xxvii] Exhibit 3, item 2.6.

 

[xxviii] Ibid.

 

[xxix] Exhibit 3, item 10.12.

 

[xxx] Alvapillai, Ramasethu v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 1998 CanLII 8280 (FC).

 

[xxxi] Exhibit 3.

 

[xxxii] Exhibit 7.

 

[xxxiii] Exhibit 3, item 10.13.

 

[xxxiv] Ali v Canada 2020 FC 93.

Categories
All Countries Lebanon

2022 RLLR 27

Citation: 2022 RLLR 27
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: August 30, 2022
Panel: Kay Scorer
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Michael G. Sherritt
Country: Lebanon
RPD Number: VC2-05006
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2022-01960
ATIP Pages: N/A

DECISION

[1]       MEMBER:  This is the decision of the Refugee Protection Division in the claim of XXXX XXXX, a Lebanese national claiming protection in Canada pursuant to section 96 and subsection 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

ALLEGATIONS

[2]       The claimant’s allegations are contained in full in his Basis of Claim Form, his detailed narratives, and testimony at the hearing.

[3]       Summarized only briefly, the claimant alleges he faces persecution in Lebanon from Hezbollah due to his refusal to join or support the organization and the threats he faced from the organization as a result.

DETERMINATION

[4]       I find the claimant is a Convention refugee. I find the claimant has established a nexus to the Convention ground of political opinion. I have, therefore, assessed this claim under section 96 of the Act.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[5]       I find the claimant’s identity is established on a balance of probabilities by his testimony and by the other evidence before me, which includes copies of his passports in Exhibit 1.

Credibility

[6]       The claimant benefits from a presumption that his allegations are true. I found the claimant to be a credible witness today and I have no reason to doubt the claimant’s truthfulness.

[7]       The claimant testified in a spontaneous, forthcoming, and detailed manner. The claimant did not embellish his claim. I identified no relevant inconsistencies, omissions, or contradictions between his testimony and the other evidence before me.

[8]       The claimant also provided documentary evidence that supports and corroborates various aspects of his claim. These documents can be found in Exhibits 4 and 5. This includes education and employment letters, including for employment in the UAE, and corroborating the cancellation of his work and status in that country, and numerous detailed supporting letters corroborating the claimant’s allegations of harm. I have no reason to doubt the authenticity of any of these documents. I assign these documents weight as they help establish the material elements of the claimant’s allegations.

[9]       I will just note that the claimant did reside in the UAE for a significant period of time and I have considered whether he has ever had status or access to status in the UAE that would be comparable to that of citizens of permanent residents of that country. I find he has not. The claimant was in the UAE on a work permit and his status was contingent on his employment. He has since lost his employment and his status has expired. While I note his wife remains in the UAE and is working, she, too, is a Lebanese national and in the UAE on temporary status of her own. I find the claimant’s status, real or potential, has been at all times temporary and subject to cancellation.

[10]     Ultimately, I find the claimant has established that he has been and continues to be pursued by the Hezbollah in Lebanon. I find the claimant has established his subjective fears on a balance of probabilities.

Objective basis

[11]     There is documentary evidence before me that supports the claimant’s fears of persecution from Hezbollah in Lebanon, all of which can be found in the National Documentation Package (NDP) in Exhibit 3. I will go through a few.

[12]     According to Item 1.3 of the NDP for Lebanon, Hezbollah is a prominent political party and powerful player in Lebanon’s economy, politics, and media. The armed component of Hezbollah is the most significant and heavily armed Lebanese militia. This document states that Hezbollah has the effective control over parts of South Lebanon, Southern Beirut, and The Beqaa Valley.

[13]     According to Item 7.9, Hezbollah is a Shia political and militant organization in Lebanon that has evolved from being a militant group fighting against Israel to an established political party in Lebanon with active political and military wings.

[14]     Also according to Item 7.9 of the NDP, Hezbollah has been deemed a terrorist group by the Canadian government and according to Item 7.8 Hezbollah is considered the most powerful force in Lebanon’s parliament. Hezbollah maintains an excessive network of social services throughout Lebanon to build popular support. There are multiple articles regarding a number of people who have been targeted throughout 2019.

[15]     Item 1.3 of the NDP states that Hezbollah starts with societal pressure or persuasion and then moves to social marginalization and eventually resorting to direct threats and violence if they feel their power is genuinely threatened. Further, in areas under Hezbollah’s control they are a defective government and Lebanese government are unable to enforce law and order. Sources also state that Shia community members, like the claimant, are not able to criticize Hezbollah without fear of consequences such as harassment, intimidation, financial pressure, and exclusion from Hezbollah services like health and education. This can all be found at Items 1.3 and 7.8.

[16]     Ultimately, I find the evidence before me regarding the issues with Hezbollah in Lebanon reasonably applies to the claimant’s situation and establishes the claimant’s allegations. On an objective basis, I find the claimant’s fear of persecution in Lebanon is well-founded and forward-facing.

State protection and internal flight alternative

[17]     In this case I find the presumption of state protection has been rebutted. There is political interference and bribery in the country which is a noted problem in the documents in the NDP.

[18]     According to Item 9.1 of the NDP, police do not provide adequate protection to those who receive death threats.

[19]     Items 1.3 and 7.8 of the NDP confirm that government forces are unable to enforce the law in areas controlled by Hezbollah.

[20]     The evidence before me in the NDP also confirms that Hezbollah is in part part of the state. Therefore, I find there is no reasonable state protection available to the claimant who continues to be relentlessly pursued and threatened by Hezbollah in Lebanon.

[21]     Further, I have also considered whether there is a viable internal flight alternative for the claimant in Lebanon. Sources in the NDP, including at Items 1.3, 7.8, 2.1, and 7.4, state that individuals identified as being opposed to Hezbollah, like the claimant, are unlikely to avoid societal discrimination through internal relocation. Hezbollah appears to have reached throughout all of Lebanon. Hezbollah uses various methods to obtain information about perceived adversaries, just like the claimant. They have informer networks. They engage in telephone and internet monitoring. Further, sources in the objective evidence state that Hezbollah are able to locate wanted individuals throughout all of Lebanon.

[22]     It is also worth noting at Item 1.3 the airport in Lebanon is located in South Beirut where Hezbollah has significant control and the airport itself is significantly controlled by Hezbollah.

[23]     Therefore, for these reasons noted above, I find there is no viable internal flight alternative for the claimant in all of Lebanon.

CONCLUSION

[24]     Based on the above analysis, I find the claimant is a Convention refugee. His claim is, therefore, accepted.

——— REASONS CONCLUDED ———

Categories
All Countries Ukraine

2022 RLLR 25

Citation: 2022 RLLR 25
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: October 25, 2022
Panel: David Jones
Counsel for the Claimant(s): James Hill Lawson
Country: Ukraine
RPD Number: VC2-04081
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2022-01960
ATIP Pages: N/A

DECISION

[1]       MEMBER: So, this is the decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada for the claims of the principal claimant, XXXX XXXX and her husband, the associate claimant, XXXX XXXX who are citizens of Ukraine seeking refugee protection pursuant to sections 96 and 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. I have also reviewed and applied the Chairperson’s Guideline on Gender Considerations and Proceedings Before the Immigration and Refugee Board.

ALLEGATIONS

[2]       The claimants fear a risk to their lives from the Russian army and Russian supporters if they were to return to Ukraine. Principal Claimant is 77 years old, and the associate claimant is 84. The claimants from Dnipro in Ukraine. On February 24th, 2022, Russia began a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The claimants’ town was bombed at the start of the war. The claimants spent most of their time in a bomb shelter. The associate claimant became extremely ill due to the lack of water, food, and medicine. The claimants’ home has been damaged in the conflict. On XXXX XXXX, 2022, the claimants took a refugee train from XXXX XXXX XXXX, Poland. On XXXX XXXX, 2022, the claimants flew to Canada because they have family here in Canada. The claimants both have significant health issues. For example, the principal claimant is taking medication for her high blood pressure and kidney problems. The associate claimant has problems breathing, significant mobility issues and is scheduled to have heart surgery on XXXX XXXX, 2022.

DETERMINATION

[3]       I find that the claimants are Convention refugees.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[4]       The claimants’ identities as citizens of Ukraine has been established on a balance of probabilities by their Ukrainian passports located at Exhibit 1 as well as by their testimony.

Nexus

[5]       The claimants fear persecution from the invading Russian army due to their Ukrainian nationality. Counsel for the claimants provided a sanitized RPD decision from January 30th, 2022 that is located at Exhibit 7. That decision provides for a detailed argument for why the current situation in Ukraine demonstrates that the claimants have a nexus to the Convention ground based on their nationalities. While other RPD decisions are not binding on me, the Federal Court has directed that administrative decisionmakers and reviewing courts alike must be concerned with a general consistency of administrative decisions as those affected by administrative decisions are entitled to expect that like cases will be generally treated alike and that outcomes will not depend merely on the identity of the individual decisionmaker. I do find that the decision at Exhibit 7 is persuasive, and I adopt the reasoning with respect to nexus to the Convention grounds due to the claimants’ Ukrainian nationality. And based on that analysis, I do find that the allegations before me support a nexus to the Convention grounds for the claimants based on their nationality as Ukrainians. In addition, the claimants’ allegations also support a nexus to the Convention ground based on membership in a particular social group as elderly persons with chronic health issues. Further, the principal claimant’s allegations also support a nexus to the Convention grounds based on their membership in a particular social group as a woman.

Credibility

[6]       I find that the claimants are credible witnesses. In making that finding, I am relying on the principle that a claimant who affirms to tell the truth creates a presumption of truthfulness unless there are reasons to doubt their truthfulness. The principal claimant provided the majority of the testimony, and she was able to testify clearly about their fears of returning to Ukraine. The principal claimant explained their health issues and the associate claimant’s mobility issues and how they have no support or family left in the country. The principal claimant described the mental difficulties she faced when living in the bomb shelter for almost a month and also the physical pain that caused them. The principal claimant described their fears in the Russian army and fascist groups and spoke in details about how their home was invaded, how food and clothing were stolen and how their dog was unfortunately killed. Finally, the claimants testified that their pensions were their only source of income. The associate claimant confirmed the principal claimant’s testimony and also spoke about the risks to him from stress due to his health.

[7]       In addition, the claimant provided personal documents to support their claims, which are found at Exhibits 4 and 9. Personal documents consist of identity documents and documents related to the associate claimant’s health conditions. I have no reason to doubt the genuineness of these documents. I find that given the claimants’ credible testimony, documents and the country condition documents discussed below, that they have established on a balance of probabilities the facts alleged in their claims, including a subjective fear of returning to Ukraine.

Objective Basis

[8]       The country condition documents for Ukraine in the National Documentation Package, which is found at Exhibit 3, supports the claimants’ fears of returning to the country. For example, a report from May 2022 at Item 1.13 called an Independent Legal Analysis of the Russian Federation’s Breaches of the Genocide Convention in Ukraine and the Duty to Prevent states that “(1), reasonable grounds to believe Russia is responsible for direct and public incitement to commit genocide, and a pattern of atrocities from which an inference of intent to destroy the Ukrainian national group in part can be drawn and (2), the existence of a serious risk of genocide in Ukraine, triggering the legal obligation of all States to prevent genocide.” The report provides examples of what I described says “genocidal pattern of destruction targeting Ukrainians”. Those examples include mass killings, deliberate attacks on shelters and humanitarian routes, deliberate inflicting life-threatening conditions by targeting vital infrastructure, indiscriminate bombardment of residential areas, rape and sexual violence and the forcible transfer of Ukrainians.

[9]       With respect to gender-based violence, I find that the country condition documents indicate that the principal claimant would face an increased risk due to her gender. This finding is supported by an April 2022 report on sexual violence and the Ukraine conflict at Item 5.3 that states that since the Russian invasion in February 2022, there have been numerous reports of Russian soldiers sexually assaulting women. The report indicates that Russian soldiers have been deliberately targeting women and children after Ukraine did not surrender. In addition, there are reports that women including senior citizens were gangraped and, in some instances, killed. These reports of gender-based violence are also found in other parts of the National Documentation Package such as a Human Rights Watch report from April 3rd, 2022, which is found at Item 1.24 and the May 2022 CARE International Report at Item 5.6.

[10]     With respect to the claimants’ age and health issues, a recent report in the National Documentation Package at Item 1.30 also indicates that there have been deliberate Russian attacks on health facilities in Ukraine. This report indicates that medical supplies across many parts of Ukraine are running low, especially in conflict-affected areas as access to many locations remain blocked. A report of social security and the war at Item 1.19 indicates that recipients of social security such as the claimants are in a vulnerable position. The report also indicates that Russia has been specifically targeting social infrastructure, particularly social care institutions. Finally, a report from the organization for security and cooperation in Europe, which is found at Item 2.7, indicates that there is evidence that Russian soldiers have targeted older persons intentionally. The report also notes that the destruction of social security system or the impossibility to get access to payment points constitutes a serious threat to the life for those such as the claimants who rely on their pension for income.

[11]     The claimant also provided country condition documents which are found at Exhibits 5 and 6. For example, Exhibit 6 contains nine (9) articles highlighting war crimes committed by Russia since the start of the invasion and reports an article as describing the Russian attacks as genocide against Ukrainians.

[12]     Based on the totality of the evidence, I find that the claimants have established a well-founded fear of persecution. Further, given the ongoing Russian invasion and that the claimants area has been attacked by Russia in the past, I find that the claimants face a serious forward-facing possibility of persecution if they were to return.

State Protection

[13]     I have considered whether adequate state protection is available for the claimants, and I find that there is none. The claimants fear violence from the invading Russian army. While the Ukrainian state is attempting to provide protection from the Russian attack, there is great uncertainty about the level of protection a state will be able to provide. As such, I find that there is no operationally effective state protection available to the claimants in their circumstances.

Internal Flight Alternative

[14]     I have also considered whether the claimants would have a viable internal flight alternative available to them and I find that they do not. The principal claimant testified that there is nowhere in the country where they could go and be safe and how they have no family or anyone else in Ukraine to support them if they were to return. Given the ongoing crisis in Ukraine related to the Russian invasion that is affecting the entire country, I find it would be unreasonable for the claimants in these circumstances to try to seek refuge elsewhere in the country. This is reflected in the March 2022 UNHCR report on returns to Ukraine, which is found at Item 1.23, that states that “In view of the volatility of the situation in the entire territory of Ukraine, UNHCR does not consider it appropriate to deny international protection to Ukrainians and former habitual residents of Ukraine on the basis of an internal flight or relocation alternative.” Further, a June 2022 report at Item 1.10 indicates that there are more than eight (8) million internally displaced persons in Ukraine. The report highlights numerous challenges facing the internally displaced persons, including the lack of accommodation, shortages of food, water and energy supplies, and barriers to accessing financial social support and house services. As such, I find that the claimants do not have a viable internal flight alternative available to them.

CONCLUSION

[15]     For the reasons above, I determine that the claimants are Convention refugees pursuant to section 96 of the Act and the Board, therefore, accepts their claims. Given I am granting protection under section 96 of the Act, I find it unnecessary to consider their claims under section 97.

——— REASONS CONCLUDED ———

Categories
All Countries India

2022 RLLR 24

Citation: 2022 RLLR 24
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: October 11, 2022
Panel: Kevin Kim
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Deepak Pawar
Country: India
RPD Number: VC2-04045
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2022-01960
ATIP Pages: N/A

REASONS FOR DECISION

INTRODUCTION

[1]       This is the decision of the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) in the claim of XXXX XXXX as a citizen of India who is claiming refugee protection pursuant to section 96 and subsection 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (the “Act”)[i].

ALLEGATIONS

[2]       The specific details of the claimant’s allegations are contained in his Basis of Claim (BOC) form and the narrative therein.[ii] The claimant fears persecution in India based on his imputed political opinion because the police in India allege that the claimant is affiliated with Khalistani extremists.

[3]       The claimant is a 38-year-old Sikh Indian man who is a public supporter for the establishment of Khalistan, or a separate Sikh state. The claimant intermittently worked as a XXXX XXXX in the United Arab Emirates from 2005 to 2018. During his time in the Emirates, the claimant was issued temporary work visas from his employer, and had no permanent status or residency in the Emirates.

[4]       In XXXX 2015, a violent incident between terrorists and the Punjab police took place in the claimant’s home village. The claimant stated that the police arrested the claimant, who was not involved in the incident, as the police were aware of the claimant’s work history in the Emirates. The claimant stated that since the Emirates is an Islamic nation, the police suspected that the claimant was involved in the attack. In custody, the claimant was beaten and had his fingerprints, photographs, and signatures taken by the police. The claimant was kept in custody for three days and was able to be released after the claimant’s family provided the police with a bribe.

[5]       Following this incident, the claimant returned to Dubai and resumed his work as XXXX XXXX XXXX. In XXXX 2016, the claimant returned to India to visit his family. The claimant indicated that although he returned to India despite the incident in XXXX 2015 as he thought that the incident with the police was an isolated incident, and that the police would have had arrested the individuals responsible for the terrorist attack. The claimant indicated that he thought all suspicion surrounding him would have been cleared at that point.

[6]       However, in XXXX 2016, the claimant was arrested by the police again. The police detained the claimant from his home and made allegations that the claimant was assisting Sikh militants and that he was traveling to Pakistan using fake identity documents. The police further alleged that the claimant was assisting the Sikh militants financially. The police took the claimant’s fingerprints, photographs, and signatures again. The claimant’s family provided the police with another bribe, and the claimant was able to be released. Upon release, the claimant was instructed to report to the police before he travels out of India and again when he returns.

[7]       In XXXX 2016, the claimant returned to the Emirates to resume his employment. When in the Emirates, the claimant began to grow fearful of his eventual return to India as the nature of his employment in the Emirates was temporary. The claimant feared that should his employment be terminated in the Emirates, he would have to return to India as his status in the Emirates was dependent on his employment. The claimant contacted an agent in India, who began to prepare a Canadian visa for the claimant.

[8]       In XXXX 2018, the claimant was informed by his agent that in order to finalize his visa application, he would have to return to India. In the same month, the claimant traveled back to India and provided his agent with his passport, photographs, and payment in order to secure his visa. Upon return, the claimant presented himself at the police station as the police demanded.

[9]       On XXXX XXXX, 2018, the claimant was summoned to the police station. The police instructed the claimant that he will be sent to Pakistan to join a militant group, and to send all information he receives back to the Punjab police. The claimant reported this to the district commissioner in Kapurthala on XXXX XXXX, 2018, who promised the claimant that he would investigate the matter.

[10]     On XXXX XXXX, 2018, the police attended the claimant’s home while the claimant was not present. The police stated that the claimant was making false allegations against them, and proceeded to threaten the claimant’s wife in order to locate the claimant. When the claimant discovered that the police had attended his home, the claimant fled to his uncle’s home in Delhi in order to hide. The claimant also contacted his agent who provided him with other hiding locations within Delhi. Eventually, the claimant fled India in XXXX 2018.

[11]     The claimant indicated that approximately five months after arriving in Canada, he has become a public supporter of Khalistan. The claimant stated that he has participated in pro-Khalistan rallies and referendums since his arrival in Canada.

DETERMINATION

[12]     I find that the claimant is a Convention refugee pursuant to section 96 of the Act.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[13]     I find that the claimant’s personal identity and his identity as a citizen of India has been established on a balance of probabilities by the claimant’s testimony and a copy of his Indian passport on file.[iii]

Nexus

[14]     For a claimant to be considered a Convention refugee, the well-founded fear of persecution must be by reason of one or more of the five grounds enumerated under section 96 of the IRPA: race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion.

[15]     In this case, I find that the claimant’s allegations establish a nexus to the Convention ground of political opinion, real or imputed, as the police allege that the claimant is affiliated with Khalistani militants. Therefore, I will assess this claim under section 96 of the Act.

Credibility

[16]     The Federal Court has held in Maldonado that when a claimant swears to the truth of certain allegations, it creates a presumption that those allegations are true unless there is a reason to doubt their truthfulness.[iv] The presumption of truthfulness does not apply to inferences or speculation.

[17]     In this case, I have no reasons to doubt the truthfulness of the claimant. He testified in a straightforward and consistent manner, and answered all questions asked to him spontaneously. He did not appear to exaggerate or embellish his testimony.

[18]     Furthermore, the claimant submitted documentary evidence in support of his claim. The documents form parts of Exhibit 4, and contain the following:

  1. Corroborative affidavits from the claimant’s wife, father, uncle in Delhi, and village decision-maker, all with accompanying identity documents;
  • Medical report detailing the nature of the injuries and treatment given to the claimant in November 2015;
  • The claimant’s Khalistan Referendum voter registration card; and
  • Photographs of the claimant during a pro-Khalistan rally and photographs of the claimant’s activities in a Sikh temple in Canada.

[19]     I have no reasons to doubt the genuineness of these documents and I accept them as genuine. As these documents relate to the central elements of the claimant’s allegations, being that the Punjab police have targeted the claimant by alleging the claimant is affiliated with Khalistani terrorists, I assign significant weight to these documents in establishing the claimant’s allegations as true.

[20]     Based on the claimant’s straightforward testimony coupled with the documentary evidence noted above, I find the claimant to be a credible witness and accept the claimant’s allegations in support of his claim to be true.

Well-Founded Fear of Persecution

[21]     Based on the claimant’s testimony and the objective country conditions evidence as set out in the National Documentation Package (NDP), I find that the claimant has a well-founded fear of persecution from the police in India based on his imputed political opinion.

[22]     The claimant has suffered harm from the police due to his imputed political opinion as the Punjab police falsely alleged that the claimant was affiliated with Khalistani militants. The claimant indicated that these are false allegations, and that he has only begun to support the establishment of Khalistan after his arrival in Canada.

[23]     Country conditions documents in the NDP for India confirms that police corruption is widespread and that the police have broad arrest and detention rights. A report by the UK’s Home Office[v] reports:

The USSD HR Report 2017 noted that ‘Police may detain an individual without charge for up to 30 days, although an arrested person must be brought before a judge within 24 hours of arrest. Lengthy arbitrary detention remained a significant problem due to overburdened and under resourced court systems and a lack of legal safeguards. Arraignment of detainees must occur within 24 hours unless authorities hold the suspect under a preventive detention law.

[24]     A report by the US Department of State[vi] states the following regarding the prevalence of in-custody treatment:

Significant human rights issues included: unlawful and arbitrary killings, including extrajudicial killings perpetrated by police; torture and cases of cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment by some police and prison officials; arbitrary arrest and detention by government authorities; harsh and life-threatening prison conditions.

… There were reports of abuse in prisons at the hands of guards and inmates, as well as reports that police raped female and male detainees.

[25]     Further, an RIR by the IRB[vii] on the treatment of perceived separatists or Khalistan supporters in and outside of the state of Punjab states the following:

… the World Sikh Organization of Canada, an organization promoting the interests of Canadian Sikhs, stated that the “government, civil society and media vilify Sikhs advocating for Khalistan as extremists and militants by default” … the government is “hostile” to separatist movements.

According to sources, the police “keep track of” or “monitor” Khalistan supporters… security services are more likely to focus on Sikh separatists because they represent “a perceived political threat to the unity of India”… Khalistan activists who participate in activities such as demonstrations, meetings or posting on social media will be monitored… individuals who move to another city will continue to be tracked since that information will be shared.

According to the WSO representative, “suspected supporters of Khalistan are not safe outside of Punjab, anywhere in India”. The same source added that “no Sikh can openly be an advocate for or support the creation of Khalistan” and doing so results in harassment by police, false cases and also hatred of those who do not support Khalistan”; the government portrays anyone supporting separatism as “an extremist or terrorist and as an ‘anti-national’ that can be legitimately targeted for violence”.

[26]     I find that the claimant is an individual who has been falsely alleged and implicated by the police to be affiliated with extremists due to the claimant’s frequent travel between India and the Emirates. Given the objective evidence listed above, which indicates that police in India act with impunity towards perceived Khalistan supporters, I find that the claimant would face a serious possibility of persecution should he return to India.

State Protection

[27]     In all refugee claims, the state is presumed to be capable of protecting their citizens unless there is clear and convincing evidence to the contrary. A claimant who alleges that state protection is not available must persuade the Board, on a balance of probabilities, that the state would be unable or unwilling to offer protection.

[28]     Since the state is the agent of persecution in this case, I find, on a balance of probabilities, that the claimant will not be able to access adequate state protection in his home country and that the presumption of state protection has been rebutted. I find that state protection would not be reasonably forthcoming for the claimant as the police are accusing the claimant of collaborating with militants, which resulted in the arrest, detention, and abuse of the claimant.

Internal Flight Alternative

[29]     The question then becomes whether the claimant could find safety in an internal flight alternative (IFA). At the outset of the hearing, I proposed Mumbai and Delhi as possible IFA locations.

[30]     Once the issue of an IFA has been raised, the onus is on the claimant to show that he or she does not have an IFA.[viii] To find a viable IFA, I must be satisfied that there is no serious possibility of the claimants being persecuted or, on the balance of probabilities, being subjected personally to a danger of torture or a risk to life or cruel and unusual punishment in the proposed IFA. Furthermore, the conditions in that part of the country are such that it would be reasonable in all the circumstances, including those particular to the claimants, to seek refuge there.

[31]     I find that the police still have continuing motivation to seek the claimant in India. It is the claimant’s testimony, which I find to be true, that the police continue to visit the claimant’s village and home in search of the claimant. Given the police’s continued efforts to visit the claimant’s home in search of the claimant despite the passage of time from the initial incident in XXXX 2015, I find that the police are still motivated to seek the claimant.

[32]     The question then becomes whether the police would have the means to locate the claimant in India should he return. Based on the objective evidence in the NDP, I find that the police would have the means to locate the claimant in India.

[33]     The objective evidence shows that anyone moving to another part of the country from their regular area of residence will have to undergo a background check when filling out an application for tenancy or lease. According to a Response to Information Request by the IRB,[ix] “sources describe tenant registration [or verification] as mandatory”, and that “tenant verification aims to detect criminal background, if any, and maintain a database on people living in a particular area”. The report further states that “through police verification, the history of any tenant can be verified whether the person had any criminal involvement or absconding from other states’ police”.

[34]     As part of the background checks used in verifying tenants, Indian authorities have access to a nationwide database known as the Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems (CCTNS), which contains information on crime and criminals, police daily diary and general diary entries, as well as Integrated Investigation Forms (IIF).[x] It also interconnects police stations across the country.

[35]     According to an RIR, 97 percent of India’s police stations are connected to the system. The CCTNS is also deployed in 95 percent of police stations nationwide; 81 percent of the data from police stations across India is synched with the CCTNS on the same day. Punjab, meanwhile, is among the states which report the most access to functioning CCTNS.[xi]

[36]     The claimant indicated that he was never presented with any formal paperwork from the police or has been informed by the police that an FIR has been lodged against him. However, according to an RIR[xii] by the IRB, the police “keep track of or monitor Khalistan supporters” and that the “security forces are more likely to focus on Sikh separatists because they represent a perceived political threat to the unity of India”. The same RIR further mentions that individuals who move to another city will continue to be tracked since that information will be shared.

[37]     According to a researcher who studies digital policing in India, only a portion of the CCTNS records data come from FIRs; in addition, the system also captures the “‘daily diary’ or the ‘general diary’ (an account of the daily functioning of the police station).”[xiii] Given such evidence, I find on a balance of probabilities that the claimant’s encounters with the police in XXXX 2015,  XXXX 2016, and XXXX 2018 were recorded as part of the police’s daily or general diary, meaning they have a record of his stay there. As such, I find that it is more likely than not that the claimant’s name would notify Punjab police should the claimant go through the tenant verification process in the proposed IFA locations. 

[38]     Given the mandatory nature of tenant verification checks in India, coupled with the fact that personal information of Khalistan supporters, real or imputed, are tracked even to different cities, I find, on a balance of probabilities, that the police in India would have the means to locate the claimant in the proposed IFA cities.

[39]     Ultimately, I find that the IFA test fails on the first prong, and I find that no viable IFA exists for the claimant.

CONCLUSION

[40]     For the foregoing reasons, I find that the claimant is a Convention refugee pursuant to section 96 of the Act and I accept his claim.

(signed) Kevin Kim

October 11, 2022


 

[i] Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,S.C. 2001, c. 27.

 

[ii] Exhibit 2.

 

[iii] Exhibit 1.

 

[iv] Maldonado v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1980] 2 F.C. 302

 

[v] Exhibit 3. National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 10.10: ​Country Policy and Information Note. India: Actors of Protection. Version 1.0. United Kingdom. Home Office. January 2019.

 

[vi] Exhibit 3. National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 2.1: ​India. Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2021. United States. Department of State. 12 April 2022.

 

[vii] Exhibit 3. National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 12.8: ​Situation and treatment of suspected or perceived Sikh militants and Khalistan supporters in the state of Punjab by society and the authorities; prevalence of arrests, including methods used by the police to track them; treatment of Sikhs outside t.. Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 30 May 2022. IND201037.E.

 

[viii] Rasaratnam, [1992] 1 F.C. 706 (C.A.).

 

[ix] Exhibit 3. National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 10.13: ​Databases, including the tenant registration (or tenant verification) system, the Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems (CCTNS), and POLNET; police access to these databases and their ability to track individuals; cases of individuals … Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 7 June 2022. IND201036.E.

 

[x] Exhibit 3. National Documentation Package, India, 29 April 2022, tab 10.6: ​Surveillance by state authorities; communication between police offices across the country, including use of the Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems (CCTNS); categories of persons that may be included in police databases… Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 25 June 2018. IND106120.E.

 

[xi] Exhibit 3. National Documentation Package, India, 29 April 2022, tab 10.13: ​Police databases and criminal tracking, particularly the Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems (CCTNS); relationship with the Aadhaar and tenant verification systems; capacity to track persons through these systems (2019–May 2021). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 26 May 2021. IND200626.E.

 

[xii] Exhibit 3. National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 12.8: ​Situation and treatment of suspected or perceived Sikh militants and Khalistan supporters in the state of Punjab by society and the authorities; prevalence of arrests, including methods used by the police to track them; treatment of Sikhs outside t.. Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 30 May 2022. IND201037.E.

 

[xiii] Ibid.

Categories
All Countries India

2022 RLLR 23

Citation: 2022 RLLR 23
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: November 24, 2022
Panel: Katarina Bogojevic
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Harneet Singh
Country: India
RPD Number: VC2-03987
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2022-01960
ATIP Pages: N/A

REASONS FOR DECISION

[1]       This is the decision of the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) in the claim of XXXX, as citizen of India who is claiming refugee protection pursuant to section 96 and subsection 97(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.[1]

DETERMINATION

[2]       I find that the claimant is a Convention refugee pursuant to section 96 of the Act.

ALLEGATIONS

[3]       The claimant’s allegations are contained in his Basis of Claim form.[2] The following is a brief summary:

[4]       The claimant is from Kurukshetra, Haryana, where he lived with his mother. His family belongs to the Chamar caste, which is a scheduled caste in India. He met a girl named XXXX at school in 2015 and they began to date. The two kept their relationship a secret because the claimant and his family are from a lower caste than XXXX and her family. The claimant traveled to Canada in XXXX 2017 for school and maintained a long-distance relationship with XXXX. When he returned in XXXX 2017, he decided to surprise XXXX at her workplace, however her brother caught them hugging. XXXX brother and his friends beat the claimant. The next day, the claimant and his mother went to XXXX house to convince her parents to allow the two to marry. Her family verbally and physically abused the claimant and he agreed to stop seeing XXXX. 

[5]       On XXXX XXXX, 2017, XXXX came to the claimant’s house alleging that her brother had seen intimate photos of them on her phone and that her family had beaten her. Shortly afterwards, XXXX family and the police arrived. When they discovered the claimant and XXXX together, the claimant was taken into custody. While in custody the police beat the claimant and threatened him to stay away from XXXX and her family. The claimant was released from custody on XXXX XXXX, 2017 after his mother paid a bribe. The claimant returned to Canada on XXXX XXXX, 2017.

[6]       In XXXX 2018, the claimant received a call from his mother stating that the police were looking for him; XXXX had disappeared, and they suspected that he was involved. At the start of the hearing, the claimant submitted a BOC amendment alleging that the police had started to accuse him of being anti-national and had visited his mother and relatives recently in search of him.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[7]       I find that the claimant’s identity as a national of India is established on a balance of probabilities by his sworn testimony and the copy of his Indian passport in evidence.[3]

Nexus

[8]       In order to satisfy the definition of a “Convention refugee” found in section 96 of the Act, a claimant must establish that he or she has a well-founded fear of persecution by reason of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion.

[9]       In this case, I find that the claimant’s allegations have a connection to the Convention on the basis of ethnicity, as the claimant is a member of a scheduled caste, as well as political opinion, with relation to the police’s current allegation that the claimant is anti-national. As such, I have assessed his claim pursuant to section 96 of the Act.

Credibility

[10]     When a claimant affirms to tell the truth, this creates a presumption that his allegations are true unless there is reason to doubt their truthfulness. In this case I have found the claimant to be a credible witness. The claimant testified in a consistent and straightforward manner. While there were some concerns with material portions of his evidence at the outset of the hearing, I find that he was able to provide reasonable explanations for my concerns. I did however find the claimant to be speculative with regards to the reasons for the police’s current search for him and their connection to XXXX and her family. I outline my findings in more detail below:  

Significant Change to BOC

[11]     At the start of the hearing, the claimant submitted an addendum to his BOC stating that he was now wanted by the police because of allegations that he was anti-national. He also submitted affidavits from his mother, neighbour, cousin and uncle alleging that the police had been to their homes recently in search of the claimant and that they had alleged he was anti-national.[4] This is a significant change from the claimant’s original BOC which focused on the threats that he faced due to his relationship with XXXX.

[12]     I questioned the claimant about the addendum. He told me that the police first made this accusation to his mother in XXXX 2022. Prior to this, they had approached his cousin in Rajasthan in XXXX 2021 and made the same allegation. The claimant does not know why the police are making this allegation. The police do not provide much detail other than saying that they believe he is an anti-national goon and that he has been instrumental in fights and riots. The claimant is not aware if the police have filed a First Instance Report against him or whether there is a warrant for his arrest.

[13]     I asked the claimant why he didn’t update his BOC back in XXXX 2022 when he first found out about the situation. He indicated that he did not know that he had to mention this to his counsel, and thought it was something he would tell me about in the hearing. Given that the claimant testified that he did not mention this to his counsel earlier, I find it reasonable that he was not advised by his counsel that this was something that he should raise as soon as possible.

[14]     The claimant provided affidavits from his mother, neighbour, cousin and uncle in support of this allegation.[5] Each affidavit is consistent with the claimant’s allegations, and I have no reason to doubt the credibility of these affidavits, so I give them significant weight in establishing the claimants’ allegations. I also give the claimant’s testimony in this regard significant weight as it was detailed and consistent. He did not exaggerate his claim, but rather confirmed that this was something that came out of the blue and that the police had never previously accused him of being anti-national when they were investigating XXXX disappearance. The claimant was also able to provide specific dates of when the police visited his mother including on Diwali and his birthday.

[15]     While I acknowledge that it is unclear why the police are now searching for the claimant on an entirely new basis, it would be speculative of me to set out what a “reasonable agent of persecution” should do. The Federal Court has previously found that it is an error for the Board to “speculate as to the rational actions of reasonable agents of persecution.”[6] Therefore, given all the foregoing and weighing all the evidence before me, I am satisfied on a balance of probabilities that the police are actively searching for the claimant across India and alleging that he is anti-national.

Police Search not connected to XXXX disappearance  

[16]     The claimant testified that he believed the current search by the police was connected to his relationship with XXXX and instigated by her family. He testified that he has no proof of this but believes that it is a matter of honour for her family and that they manipulating the police with their connections. When asked about XXXX family’s police connections, he stated that his mother learned about them from an unknown person at the jail when she came to bail the claimant out. This individual told his mother that XXXX father was a goon and people were scared of him. With regards to their political connections, he said that his mother told him about them, and she probably learned of them in the news. He did not submit any newspapers on this point into evidence. However, when the claimant spoke to XXXX about her father, she told him that he dealt with properties and never mentioned any illegal activity or connections.

[17]     The claimant testified that since his detention, XXXX family had never been to his house looking for him. He explained that people of XXXX caste do not like to associate with people of his caste. He testified that the police were regularly contacting his mother regarding XXXX disappearance, however, he later stated that he assumed this, and his mother hadn’t told him anything to that effect. I find this to be speculative. Based on the evidence before me, there has been no involvement of the police or XXXX family in relation to XXXX disappearance since XXXX 2018. As such, there is insufficient credible evidence before me that the current searches by police are connected in any way to the claimant’s relationship with XXXX or her disappearance.

Documentary Evidence

[18]     I have also considered the other documentary evidence the claimant submitted in support of his claim.[7] Of relevance is his Scheduled Caste Certificate, obtained by the claimant’s mother from the Court in Haryana, which confirms that he belongs to the Chamar caste which is a scheduled caste.

Subjective Fear

[19]     The claimant testified that when he returned to Canada at the end of 2017, he was still on a study permit. His study permit expired on XXXX XXXX, 2019, and afterwards he applied for a study permit extension which was rejected after 5-6 months. He was not aware at the time that he could apply for refugee protection. He testified that he did not become aware until he started going to a temple in Brampton where he was advised to submit an application for refugee protection. The claimant applied for refugee protection on January 20, 2020.

[20]     I find that the claimant’s actions demonstrate that he has subjective fear on a balance of probabilities as he was always actively taking steps to secure his status in Canada and applied for refugee protection shortly after he was advised to do so by individuals at his temple.

Well-Founded Fear of Persecution

[21]     To be considered a Convention Refugee, the claimant must demonstrate that he has a well-founded fear of persecution which includes both subjective fear and an objective basis for that fear. Based on the claimant’s BOC, testimony, documentary evidence and the National Documentation Package for India[8], I find that the claimant does face a serious possibility of harm in India.

Dalit Status

[22]     In reviewing the country condition documents in the NDP, it is clear that despite the fact that the Indian Constitution specifically prohibits discrimination on the grounds of caste, there are a number of troubling issues faced by members of the Dalit caste in India.[9] Dalits were historically associated with work seen as less desirable, including work involving cleaning or waste, and traditional taboos existed against members of the four castes touching them. Many Dalits continue to work in occupations that include scavenging, street cleaning and handling of human or animal waste, corpses or carcasses.[10] The evidence outlines that violence and discrimination against Dalits continues. Dalits have more limited educational and employment opportunities and face discrimination in health care and access to other essential services.[11]

[23]     Untouchability practices in India remain widespread in both urban and rural settings. These include dominant castes not touching Dalits, not letting them use the same mugs, utensils etc., not entering Dalit houses, not allowing their children to play with Dalits or to be in a relationship with a Dalit. There are thousands of variations of untouchability practices and the severity and prevalence vary depending on location.[12]

[24]     The claimant testified that he and his family have suffered serious and continued discrimination because of their Dalit status. His father used to work as a farmer but was never paid full price for his crops. This led him to seek other employment however he was frequently dismissed for minor mistakes. The claimants’ father has been living and working in Italy since 2010 due to his inability to maintain employment in India because of his Caste. The claimant testified that he was discriminated against in school. The teacher would force children from lower castes to sit in the back seat, they were not allowed to travel in the school bus, play school sports, or drink from the same water cooler as higher caste students. The family had to buy groceries from a different store and attend a different temple because of their caste.

Honour Crimes

[25]     The objective evidence supports that honour-based crimes are a problem in India, particularly in the provinces of Haryana, Punjab and Uttar Pradesh. The term “honour killing” or “honour crime” is used to describe incidents of violence and harassment caused to a couple who are together against the wishes of the community or family members. Such crimes can be linked to unapproved relationships.[13] Caste based violence additionally continues to persist in India, and unions between Dalit and non-Dalit individuals are some of the least socially accepted, especially where the male comes from an inferior or less dominant social group. They can give rise to serious violence including lynching and killings by family members or vigilante groups.[14]

Police Corruption

[26]     The objective evidence also supports that there is widespread corruption in India.[15] Officials frequently engage in corrupt practices with impunity.[16] Police officers routinely demonstrate brutal behaviour, including torture and extrajudicial killings with impunity.[17] Additionally, police effectiveness is undermined by inadequate training and equipment, and limited resources. Investigations are seriously hampered by some police officers refusing to register victims’ complaints, poor quality of investigations, insufficient training and legal knowledge, inadequate and outdated forensic and cyber infrastructure and a lack of public trust.[18] A report from the Swadhikar – the National Dalit Movement for Justice suggests that police are accomplices in violence against Dalits through custodial torture and deaths, encounter deaths, raids of Dalit homes, and false arrets of Dalits among others. It recounts the story of a Dalit man who was abducted by police, tortured, abused using derogatory caste names and had a false charge filed against him.[19]

[27]     The objective evidence demonstrates that Dalits face serious violations of their fundamental rights that amount to persecution. These violations extend to all parts of their lives, including their relationships. The claimant has established on a balance of probabilities that he has experienced discrimination and harm due to his Dalit status throughout his childhood and most recently with regards to his relationship with a girl from a higher caste. Additionally, I find that the claimant has credibly established that he is being targeted by the police because of the belief that he is anti-national. While it is unclear why the police are suggesting this, the objective evidence corroborates the prevalence of police corruption as well as violence when it comes to Dalit individuals involved with the justice system. Given all of the foregoing, I find that the claimant would face a serious possibility of persecution in India.

State Protection

[28]     There is a presumption that countries can protect their citizens. The claimant bears the burden of rebutting that presumption with clear and convincing evidence. I find that there is clear and convincing evidence that adequate state protection is not available to the claimant in this case given the state is one of the agents of persecution.

Internal Flight Alternative

[29]     I have considered whether the claimant has an internal flight alternative (“IFA”) in India and have concluded that he does not. To find a viable IFA, I must be satisfied that (1) there is no serious possibility of the claimant being persecuted or, on the balance of probabilities, in danger of torture or subjected to a risk to life or cruel and unusual treatment or punishment in the IFA and (2) that conditions in that part of the country are such that it would be reasonable, in all the circumstances, including those particular to the claimant, for him to seek refuge there.

First Prong: Risk in the IFA

[30]     On the evidence before me, I find that there is a serious possibility of the claimant being persecuted or, on the balance of probabilities, in danger of torture or subjected to a risk to life or cruel and unusual treatment or punishment anywhere in India.

  1. Means and Motivation of the Agents of Persecution

[31]     There is insufficient credible evidence before me that either XXXX family or the police have continued to pursue the claimant in relation to XXXX disappearance since XXXX 2018. However, I do find that the police have demonstrated recent and continued means and motivation to pursue the claimant outside of their jurisdiction based on the belief that the claimant is anti-national. Starting at the end of 2021 and continuing to just a month prior to the hearing, the police have approached the claimant’s mother and neighbour in Kurukshetra, his cousin in Rajasthan state and his uncle in Maharashtra state. Further, the claimant explained that it was the local police who visited his cousin in Rajasthan and his uncle in Maharashtra, indicating that information about the claimant has been passed along to different police forces across the country. Given the foregoing, I find that there is a serious possibility that the claimant’s information is contained in national police databases and that the police across India are searching for the claimant.  

  • Dalit Status

[32]     On the evidence before me, I find that there is a serious possibility of the claimant being persecuted because of his Dalit status. DFAT notes that Dalits in India face a high risk of official and societal discrimination including social segregation, exclusion, and compromised access to education and healthcare.[20] Violence against Dalits also continues, including killings, mob violence, assaults, and intimidation.[21] Further the objective evidence suggests that Dalits would have significant difficulty relocating to urban areas and are often denied accommodation and employment. A social network would be essential in finding employment and housing.[22]

[33]     While cities provide some limited level of anonymity, social networks would be essential in finding employment and housing in urban areas.[23] Those without social networks would face high discrimination in jobs and housing and often end up at the bottom of the social hierarchy.  Although Dalits are reported to have increasing opportunities in cities, including a system of quotas to ensure employment of Dalits in certain sectors such as educational institutions and the federal public service, the quota system can generate hostility towards Dalits.[24] “Severe inequalities persist, however, with Dalits making up a large proportion of those engaged in the urban informal labour sector as domestic workers, rickshaw-pullers, street vendors and other poorly paid sectors.[25] While the claimant has family outside of his village, including an uncle in Mahrashtra state where one of the proposed IFAs is located, the claimant would be unable to access these social networks due to the fact that the police are monitoring his relatives in search of him.

[34]     For the foregoing reasons I find that the claimant has demonstrated that the police have the means and motivation to pursue him to various parts of India. Further, I find that the claimant has demonstrated that he would face a serious possibility of persecution due to his Dalit status in other parts of India. As such, I do not need to consider the second prong of the test and find that there is no viable IFA for the claimant.

CONCLUSION

[35]     For the forgoing reasons, I find that the claimant is a Convention refugee. The claim is therefore accepted.

(signed) Katarina Bogojevic

November 24, 2022


 

[1] Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,S.C. 2001, c. 27.

 

[2] Exhibit 2.

 

[3] Exhibit 1.

 

[4] Exhibit 5.

 

[5] Exhibit 5.

 

[6] Hernandez Cortez v Canada (Citizenship and Immgiration), 2021 FC 1392 (CanLII); Senadheerage v Canada (Citizenship and Immgiration), 2020 FC 968 (CanLII).

 

[7] Exhibit 5.

 

[8] Exhibit 3.

 

[9] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 2.1: ​India. Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2021. United States. Department of State. 12 April 2022.

 

[10] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 13.4: ​Treatment of Dalits by society and authorities; availability of state protection (2016-January 2020). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 9 January 2020. IND106277.E.

 

[11] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 1.5: ​DFAT Country Information Report: India. Australia. Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. 10 December 2020.

 

[12] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 13.4: ​Treatment of Dalits by society and authorities; availability of state protection (2016-January 2020). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 9 January 2020. IND106277.E.

 

[13] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 5.10: ​Honour-based violence, including prevalence in rural and urban areas; legislation; state protection and support services available (2016-May 2020). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 4 June 2020. IND200256.E.

 

[14] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 12.5: ​Situation of inter-religious and inter-caste couples, including treatment by society and authorities; situation of children from such marriages (2017-May 2019). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 16 May 2019. IND106276.E.

 

[15] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 2.1: ​India. Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2021. United States. Department of State. 12 April 2022.

 

[16] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 2.1: ​India. Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2021. United States. Department of State. 12 April 2022.

 

[17] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 10.10: ​Country Policy and Information Note. India: Actors of Protection. Version 1.0. United Kingdom. Home Office. January 2019.

 

[18] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 10.10: ​Country Policy and Information Note. India: Actors of Protection. Version 1.0. United Kingdom. Home Office. January 2019.

 

[19] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 13.6: ​Chapter 2: Nature and extent of caste based atrocities. Chapter 3: Response of enforcement authorities: Police. Chapter 4: Response of the Judiciary. Equity Watch 2015: Access to Justice for Dalits in India. Swadhikar – National Dalit Movement for Justice. Nalori Dhammei Chakma. 2015.

 

[20] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 1.5: ​DFAT Country Information Report: India. Australia. Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. 10 December 2020.

 

[21] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 13.4: ​Treatment of Dalits by society and authorities; availability of state protection (2016-January 2020). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 9 January 2020. IND106277.E.      

 

[22] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 13.8: ​Application of the caste system outside of Hinduism; treatment of lower castes by society and the authorities; availability of state protection for lower castes; ability of lower castes to relocate and access housing, employment, education … Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 16 June 2020. IND200260.E.

 

[23] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 13.4: ​Treatment of Dalits by society and authorities; availability of state protection (2016-January 2020). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 9 January 2020. IND106277.E.

 

[24] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 13.4: ​Treatment of Dalits by society and authorities; availability of state protection (2016-January 2020). Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 9 January 2020. IND106277.E.

 

[25] National Documentation Package, India, 30 June 2022, tab 13.10: ​India. World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples. Minority Rights Group International. June 2020.

Categories
All Countries Pakistan

2022 RLLR 22

Citation: 2022 RLLR 22
Tribunal: Refugee Protection Division
Date of Decision: May 24, 2022
Panel: Alannah Hatch
Counsel for the Claimant(s): Birjinder P.S. Mangat
Country: Pakistan
RPD Number: VC2-01083
Associated RPD Number(s): N/A
ATIP Number: A-2022-01960
ATIP Pages: N/A

DECISION

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

DETERMINATION

[2]       For the reasons that follow, I find that you are a Convention refugee as you have established a serious possibility of persecution on account of a Convention ground, namely religion.

ALLEGATIONS

[3]       Briefly, you fear that you will be killed by your Sunni relatives and former Sunni colleagues, members of the XXXX and for the record, that is XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX Pakistan, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, generally, and two (2) XXXX leaders, specifically, named XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX and XXXX XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX. You also fear members of other anti-Shia extremist groups such as the XXXX, (inaudible), and the XXXX, as well as the political party, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX and you fear them because you have converted to the Shia faith, because you XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, and because you were actively supporting fellow Shia Muslims in Pakistan as a member of both the XXXX, which is a Shia Muslims religious and political party, and also a lawyers forum that provided legal assistant to Shia Muslims and other minorities.

ANALYSIS

Identity

[4]       I find that your personal identity – an identity as a national of Pakistan is established by the documents provided, including a certified copy of your Pakistan passport.

Nexus

[5]       For a claimant to be a Convention refugee, the claimant must have a well-founded fear of persecution due to a Convention ground and I find that the harm you fear is by reason of the Convention ground of religion due to your conversion to the Shia faith.

Credibility

[6]       When a claimant swears to the truth of certain allegations, this creates a presumption that those allegations are true unless there is a reason to doubt their untrue — or to doubt their truthfulness and I found you to be a credible witness. You testified in a straightforward manner, and you answered my questions, giving detailed answers without hesitation. There were no relevant inconsistencies in your testimony or contradictions between your testimony and the other evidence before me. I accept on a balance of probabilities that you converted to the Shia faith. You provided a lengthy Basis of Claim form, a narrative in Exhibit 6 detailing why you chose to convert and how you converted. In addition, you provided documentary evidence showing that you continue to follow your faith in Canada. You have also provided other documentary evidence to support your allegations, including letters from your mother and friend, letters regarding your membership in the XXXX and the lawyers forum in Pakistan, a copy of the fatwa issued against you by the SSP, a medical report showing the injuries that you sustained after you were attacked, the letter that you wrote to the police requesting that an FIR be registered, and a land registry document showing the land and the graveyard that you donated. In summary, you have provided extensive evidence of the threats and the attacks made against you.

[7]       You have also provided several photographs of yourself participating in protests in Calgary and copies of six (6) different newspapers from Pakistan, which reported the protest, and which contain your photograph and name. Upon a review of these items, I find no reason to doubt their authenticity and therefore, place significant weight on them as they serve to corroborate your allegations. I find that you have established on a balance of probabilities that you converted to the Shia faith in XXXX 2018. You joined the XXXX, a Shia political and religious party, in XXXX 2018 and participated in approximately seven (7) to eight (8) peaceful protests, rallies, and hunger strikes in Pakistan in support of Shias.

[8]       You joined the (inaudible) forum in XXXX 2018, an organization formed to provide legal support to Shias and other minorities in XXXX, your home city, and your particularly — you particularly helped three (3) or four (4) families who have been charged with blasphemy. You first began to receive threats in XXXX 2019 when you XXXX XXXX XXXX to a Shia neighbor for his XXXX. You received threats from XXXX XXXX XXXX, who arranged a group of people to attend and attempt to stop XXXX XXXX from happening. Mr. XXXX and his group called the Shias kafirs and infidels. The next day, your cousin who follows XXXX and also both — he also follows both the XXXX and the XXXX — he threatened you, telling you to revert to Sunni Islam and to XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX, or you will face the consequences. You receive more than one (1) threatening call from XXXX XXXX, a leader of the XXXX, who told you to revert to Sunni Islam and XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX or it would be the cause of your death. In XXXX 2019, you were physically attacked by four (4) armed individuals shouting XXXX slogans, calling you ‘Kafir’ and said, ‘If you wish to be alive,’ to ‘Revert to the Sunni faith and give back the land you donated.’ Your neighbours took you to the hospital to tend to your injuries. You then went to the police station who took your complaint, but when you gave the name XXXX XXXX to the police, the police’s attitudes changed and said that you were responsible for the attack and they did not issue an FIR, and you believe that the police told XXXX XXXX of the XXXX about your visit to the police because XXXX XXXX mentioned you in the phone calls.

[9]       In XXXX 2019, XXXX XXXX forcibly entered your home with members of the XXXX while you were not present and searched for you. In XXXX 2019, your XXXX XXXX XXXX of the XXXX in XXXX was murdered by Sunni extremists on his way to work. You arranged a protest and demanded the police to lodge a FIR. You received more threats. You left Pakistan in XXXX 2019 and first flew to the United States where you had intended to make a refugee claim, but you were advised that your claim would be refused in the United States due to President Trump’s immigration policy, so you decided to come to Canada, and you arrived on the XXXX XXXX XXXX 2020 and made a refugee claim at the border. In your absence, the XXXX has posted a fatwa outside your residence, calling for your death as a blasphemer and apostate. You – friends – apostate. Your friends and family have stated that the XXXX continue to search for you.

Well-Founded Fear

[10]     I find that you have established a subjective fear of persecution in Pakistan based on your conversion to the Shia faith. I also find that the objective evidence before me establishes that your fears of persecution are objectively well-founded. The country condition evidence as outlined in the National Documentation Package for Pakistan supports your allegations regarding the treatment of those who follow the Shia faith in Pakistan. Item 1.8 is the UNHCR guidelines for assessing religious minorities in Pakistan, and it indicates blasphemy is criminalized in Pakistan and can carry the death penalty. The addition of the blasphemy laws to the criminal penal code has “Contributed to the institutionalization of discrimination against religious minorities,” and has been criticized for fueling extremist violence and targeted attacks. The report indicates that Shiites are the main target of sectarian, attacks and the number of blasphemy allegations against Shiites increased exponentially between 2012 and 2015. Extremist militant groups view the Shiites as heretics, infidels, and apostates who should be punished by death. A footnote in the UNHCR report — and for the record, that is footnote 369 — indicates the four (4) militant groups which are responsible for most of the attacks against Shiites in Pakistan: one (1) is the XXXX and another is the XXXX.

[11]     You have provided additional evidence regarding the treatment of Shias in Exhibit 5 that indicate sectarian violence has been rising in Pakistan. One (1) article from the Minority Rights Group describes a wave of online and offline campaigns against the Shia community in August and September 2020. Online hate speech was documented and there were major spikes in hate speech during that time period with the Urdu word for ‘Infidel’ being particularly prevalent in searches. Also in Exhibit 5 is an article from The Diplomat that shows at least six (6) large anti-Shia rallies took place by different Sunni groups in five (5) different cities, including Karachi. Another article he provided indicates that rallies were orchestrated on successive dates with at least 30,000 people attending, some chanting anti-Shia slogans, and there are also reports of Shias being killed in broad daylight by Sunni extremists.

[12]     In addition, the objective evidence indicates that 43 blasphemy cases, primarily targeting Shias, were registered in August 2020 alone. One (1) of those charged was a mourner who was only three (3) years old. Societal violence due to religious intolerance is also reported by the United States Department of State report, which is Item 2.1 of the NDP, and it reports Shia Muslim activists reported continuing instances of targeted killings and enforced disappearances in part of the country – in parts of the country. One (1) article he provided in Exhibit 5 suggests that either the state has acquiesced to anti-Shia hysteria or is wholeheartedly backing it. The New York Times article in Exhibit 5 indicates the new political party in Pakistan, the Tehreek-e-Labbaik, was approved to run on a platform of punishing those who blaspheme Islam, and the leader of the political party was also the leader of the banned anti-Shia group, ASWJ. I find that the country condition evidence establishes that Shia practitioners are targeted by militant groups such as the XXXX and LeJ and political parties, such as the Tehreek-e-Labbaik, and you have established on a balance of probabilities that you have been personally targeted for death by the XXXX. As such, I find that there is more than a mere possibility of persecution, should you return to Pakistan.

State Protection

[13]     As a presumption that – absent a complete breakdown, states are capable of protecting their citizens, however, I find that presumption has been rebutted in your case as the agent of persecution is in part, the state. You have sought assistance from the police when you were attacked, and they have refused to register a FIR and said that you were responsible for the attack. Furthermore, the local authorities were unable to protect your mentor, the president of the (inaudible) unit of the political party you were part of. He was targeted and murdered on his way to work in XXXX of 2019. The UNHCR report at NDP 1.8 indicates analysists describe the state authorities as being “Indifferent, incompetent, or even complicit in the violence and discrimination against Shiites.” So accordingly, I find that you have rebutted the presumption of state protection and I find that there is no adequate state protection available to you.

IFA

[14]     I find that there is no internal flight alternative for you in Pakistan. The objective country evidence indicated that attacks against Shiites occur throughout Pakistan. As already stated, large demonstrators against — demonstrations against Shias occurred in five (5) cities in succession in 2020. The XXXX is a group that operates throughout Pakistan and (inaudible) has issued a fatwa against you since you left Pakistan. And your family is still approached by members of the XXXX about you and they are keeping tabs on your activities as they had newspaper articles about you, concerning your — the protests that you attended in Calgary. One (1) of the largest militant authorization — organizations in the country has said that they want you killed for your conversion to the Shia faith. So, I find that there is no internal flight alternative available to you in Pakistan.

[15]     So, in conclusion, based on the analysis above, I find that you are a Convention refugee pursuant to section 96 and I accept your claim. This hearing is now concluded.

[16]     COUNSEL: Thank you, ma’am. Thank you very much.

[17]     CLAIMANT: Thank you so —

——— REASONS CONCLUDED ———