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DQL18 v Minister For Home Affairs & Anor [2019] FCCA 2091 (20 March 2019)
Last Updated: 16 August 2019
FEDERAL CIRCUIT COURT OF AUSTRALIA
DQL18 v MINISTER FOR HOME AFFAIRS &
ANOR
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Catchwords:
MIGRATION – Application for judicial review
– protection visa – no matters of principle – application
dismissed.
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First Respondent:
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MINISTER FOR HOME AFFAIRS
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Second Respondent:
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IMMIGRATION ASSESSMENT AUTHORITY
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REPRESENTATION
Counsel for the
Applicant:
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Mr G Barns
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Solicitors for the Applicant:
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Refugee Legal Service Tasmania
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Solicitors for the First Respondent:
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Australian Government Solicitor
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ORDERS
(1) The application be dismissed.
(2) The applicant pay the respondents’ costs fixed in the sum of
$7373.00.
FEDERAL CIRCUIT COURT
OF AUSTRALIA
AT HOBART
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LNG 45 of
2018
Applicant
And
MINISTER FOR HOME AFFAIRS
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First Respondent
IMMIGRATION ASSESSMENT
AUTHORITY
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Second Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
As corrected
(Delivered extempore)
- This
is an application for judicial review of a decision of the Immigration
Assessment Authority (‘the IAA’) made on 12
June 2018. The
applicant is a citizen of Afghanistan who arrived in Australia in July 2013 as
an unauthorised maritime arrival when
he was only 16 and a half years of
age.
- In
July 2016, some three years later, the applicant was invited to apply for a
temporary protection visa which he ultimately did in
June 2017. The following
month the delegate refused to grant the visa, concluding that the applicant
could reasonably relocate to
Kabul where he would not face a real chance of
serious harm. The decision was then referred to the IAA in August 2017. The
IAA
affirmed the delegate’s decision in June 2018.
The Applicant’s Claims
- The
IAA summarised the applicant’s claims (at [10]) of its decision. The
substantive basis for the applicant’s claim
was that he was at risk as a
Shia Hazara in his home district in Kunduz Province in Afghanistan. The
applicant relied upon a number
of matters including racism, harm, and an
abduction of his father prior to his family moving to Kabul.
- The
substantive claim was accepted by the IAA, as appears from its reasons (at
[49]), resulting in the real issue before the IAA being
one of whether or not
the applicant could relocate within Afghanistan or whether he ought to be
granted a protection visa.
- The
focus of the relocation reasoning was the city of Mazar-e-Sharif. This had been
the subject of specific submissions by the applicant’s
advisers (the
Refugee Advice and Case Work Service) on 7 February 2018. In particular that
service submitted (at CB p.301):
- We submit
that the spate of recent targeted attacks against Hazaras and Shia Muslims in
Mazar-e-Sharif and surrounding areas further
evidences that the Applicant will
face a real chance of persecution and significant harm if he was forced to
relocate there. We note
that the Department has previously used out-dated
information on the security situation in Mazar-e-Sharif, based on a reporting
period
of 2012 to the end of 2013. This information fails to take into account
any incidents and developments in the more than three years
since the
information was gathered and is no longer a fair or accurate depiction of the
current security situation in Mazar-e-Sharif.
We highlight to the IAA attacks in
Mazar-e-Sharif which could not have been put forward to the Minister before the
decision:
- In December
2017, one civilian was killed and two others wounded in a magnetic bomb blast in
Mazar-e-Sharif, the capital of northern
Balkh province. [FN omitted].
The attack targeted the vehicle of the commander of Maimana-Almar motorway
commander Sakhi Mohammad Qateh. Local officials said
as the result nine
civilians and two military personnel were wounded. [FN omitted]. Sources
report this is evidence that militant insurgents are working to destabilize the
province by targeting travel ports in the
region, and expand their influence in
Mazar-e-Sharif. [FN omitted].
- In November
2017, a local tribe elder was killed in a suicide attack in Mazar-e-Sharif city.
Three guards were also wounded. It was
reported that the anti-government armed
militants have stepped up their efforts to destabilize part of the province.
[FN omitted].
- In August
2017 the Afghan police discovered mass grave containing the bodies of at least
36 victims of a recent militant attack on
a village near Mazar-e-Sharif. Most of
the victims were beheaded; all were men, except for three boys between the ages
of eight and
15. Islamic State issued a statement claiming it had led the attack
and killed about 54 Shi‘ite Muslims, a minority group in
Afghanistan that
has often come under attack from Islamic State. Villagers who escaped from Mirza
Olang told reporters they saw fighters
carrying both the white banner of the
Taliban and the black banner of Islamic State. [FN omitted].
- These are
only some examples of the most recent attacks carried out in Mazar-e-Sharif and
they demonstrate the ability for insurgents
to break through into all areas with
devastating consequences illustrating that Mazar-e-Sharif is not safe.
- The
IAA concluded that there were exceptional circumstances to justify considering
the new information and set that out (at [4] and
[7]), where they said:
- 4. The IAA
received written submissions from the applicant’s representative, dated 12
September 2017, 17 November 2017, 7 February
2018 and 25 May 2018. The IAA
received a further undated submission on 25 May 2018. The submissions in part
comprise argument on
issues before the delegate, and also refer to claims and
evidence that were before the delegate and are part of the review material.
I
have had regard to this information.
- ...
- 7. The
majority of the new information not before the Minister post-dates the
delegate’s decision, and on that basis, I am
satisfied that this
information could not have been provided before the delegate made his decision.
The information predominately
relates to issues before the delegate, including
the security situation in Kunduz Province (the applicant’s home region),
Kabul
and Mazar-e-Sharif, about the reasonableness of relocation to Kabul and
Mazar-e-Sharif, about the risks faced by Hazaras and Shias
across Afghanistan
from insurgent groups, and about the risks to those who return to Afghanistan as
failed asylum seekers from western
countries. Insofar as the new information
relates to the situation in Afghanistan for Hazaras and Shias, the security
situation in
Kunduz Province, Kabul and Mazar-e-Sharif, and the situation faced
by those who return to Afghanistan as failed asylum seekers from
western
countries, I am satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances to justify
consideration of this information. The new
information is from credible reports
that relate to events that postdate the delegate’s decision and that are
material to the
issues under consideration.
- The
IAA ultimately rejected the applicant’s claim, saying:
- 53. There
have been reports of occasional insurgent attacks near Kabul airport in past
years. [FN omitted]. I have further taken into account the information
above about mass-casualty attacks in Kabul in recent years. While serious, I am
not satisfied these attacks are indicative of a threat of harm to the applicant
in reaching Mazar-e-Sharif. Relevantly, I consider
that any period of time he
would need to spend transiting would be brief, and that the government and
security forces maintain effective
control in Kabul, including at the airport
and I am satisfied that this will not change in the reasonably foreseeable
future. I am
not satisfied that the applicant would now, or in the reasonably
foreseeable future, face a real chance of serious harm during any
transit
period. Accordingly, I am not satisfied the applicant faces a real serious
chance of harm in accessing Mazar-e-Sharif.
- ...
- 62. As
noted above, Mazar-e-Sharif is home to several universities including Balkh
University, the second largest in Afghanistan.
Country information indicates
that Balkh province has a tradition of high educational standards and has a
comparatively high literacy
rate. [FN omitted]. I am not satisfied the
applicant would be denied to opportunity to continue his education in Mazar-e-
Sharif if he so chooses.
- 63. The
delegate considered whether the applicant faced harm in Afghanistan due to the
general security situation in Afghanistan.
Country information before me
indicates that the population in Afghanistan are exposed to generalised and
indiscriminate violence
relating to conflict in the country. In terms of the
general security situation in Afghanistan, I accept that the government does
not
exercise uniformly effective control over all parts of the country, particularly
in rural areas. [FN omitted] Mazar-e-Sharif is a large urban centre under
effective government control. The evidence before me does not support that the
Afghan
government or security forces are losing control of Mazar-e-Sharif. While
I accept that civilians have been victims of attacks from
time to time, taking
into account the general security situation, and the size and diversity of the
city, I find the chance that
the applicant would be harmed as a bystander, or
inadvertently caught up in an attack, or otherwise harmed through generalised
violence
is remote. I am also satisfied that any harm the applicant may possibly
face in relation to generalised violence would not be for
the essential and
significant reason or reasons of his race, religion, nationality, membership of
a particular social group or political
opinion, but rather a consequence of any
ongoing insurgency or insecurity present in the country overall. Accordingly,
s.5J(1)(a) and 5J(4)(a) of the Act would also not be satisfied.
- 64. After
having regard to the applicant’s claims individually and cumulatively, I
find that he does not have a well-founded
fear of persecution within the meaning
of s.5J.
Grounds of Judicial Review
- The
application for judicial review in its amended form relies upon one ground as
follows:
- 1. The IAA
constructively failed to exercise its jurisdiction, or failed to carry out its
statutory task, in that it failed to consider
a claim made by the Applicant or,
alternatively, significant evidence in support of the claim that:
- The
Applicant faced a real chance of harm in relocating to Mazar-e-Sharif in
Afghanistan.
- In
substance the applicant argues that the material put forward in the submissions
as quoted above was not adequately considered or
dealt with by the IAA in
considering the applicant’s claim. The significant difficulty that the
applicant faces is that there
is discussion about these issues in the reasons of
the IAA. The IAA said:
- 47. I have
considered whether the applicant would be at risk of serious harm on the basis
of his imputed political opinion, or other
relevant characteristic, elsewhere in
Afghanistan. For the reasons given below, I am not satisfied that the applicant
faces a real
chance of persecution in Mazar-e-Sharif. Having regard to the
applicant’s circumstances, I am not satisfied that the threat
of harm he
may face on return by the Taliban in Khan Abad extends beyond his localised
region.
- 48. The
city of Mazar-e-Sharif is a major urban area, is home to one of the
country’s largest commercial and financial centres,
and is the third
largest city in Afghanistan. [FN omitted]. The city has a large security
presence and its population is ethnically diverse, comprising a number of
different ethnic groups including
Hazaras, Tajiks, and Pashtuns. [FN
omitted]. It is home to several universities including Balkh University, the
second largest in Afghanistan. In April 2017, the UN Special Rapporteur
highlighted positive progress underway in Mazar-e-Sharif, with projects securing
landownership or occupation rights, providing homes,
essential services and
livelihoods. [FN omitted].
- 49. In
September 2017, Anand Gopal, a program fellow with the International Security
Program at New America Foundation, reported
that insurgents lack a presence in
Mazar-e-Sharif and stated that it was difficult for insurgents to penetrate and
target the city.18
The UK Home Office reported that during the 2015-2016 period
the majority of security incidents (around 93 per cent) in Balkh Province
occurred outside of Mazar-e-Sharif19. While information before me indicates that
there have been attacks in Mazar-e-Sharif in recent
years,20 the attacks have
been primarily against persons and targets associated with the government and
international community,
rather than Shias or Hazaras. In October 2016, around
18 Shiite worshippers were killed when a bomb exploded outside a mosque in
the
Khojagholak area of Balkh district, near the city of Mazar-e-Sharif, although
there was no claim of responsibility.21 On the
evidence before me, there have
been no attacks in Mazar-e-Sharif targeted at Shias (or Hazaras) since
Lashkar-e-Jangvi carried out
coordinated attacks on locations in Mazar-e-Sharif,
Kabul and Kandahar in 2011.22 While I accept there have a number of incidents
in
Mazar-e-Sharif in recent years and that civilians have been harmed in several of
these incidents, the incidents have been infrequent
and the attacks are almost
exclusively directed against national security forces, and international and
government targets.
- 50. The
recent mass casualty attacks against Shias in parts of Afghanistan23 have not
been insignificant and I do not downplay the
complexity, seriousness and gravity
of recent attacks and I accept that Shias will likely be the subject of further
attacks in parts
of Afghanistan. DFAT assesses that Shias are particularly
vulnerable when assembling in large and identifiable groups, such as during
demonstrations or when attending mosques during major Shia religious
festivals.24 However, DFAT does not specify a level or threshold
of such risk,
nor whether it exists consistently throughout the country. I have taken into
account the scale, frequency and locations
of attacks against Shias, Hazaras,
and other profiles held by the applicant in recent years, as well as the wider
conflict formations
and the patterns of insurgent activity across the country. I
give weight to the overall security presence and actions in Balkh Province
and
the fact that the government maintains effective control of Mazar-e-Sharif and I
am not satisfied that state institutions are
weakened such that this will
change, or that the city will otherwise fall to the control of the Taliban,
Islamic State or other insurgents
in the reasonably foreseeable future. Further,
I give weight to the fact that Shias have not been targeted in Mazar-e-Sharif
city
since 2011 and even taking into account the October 2016 attack outside the
city, I am not satisfied on the evidence before me that
sectarian attacks by
Islamic State (nor any other actor) against Shias in or in proximity to
Mazar-e-Sharif will extend beyond sporadic
incidents. When having regard to
these factors, the applicant’s lack of other profile or proximity
connected to those in government,
international community or other high profile
groups, and the nature and extent of the attacks perpetrated in Mazar-e-Sharif
in the
recent past, the country information relating to the reach of insurgent
groups, and given that I do not accept that the applicant
is a person of adverse
interest to Islamic State or the Taliban, I am not satisfied that there is a
real chance he will suffer harm
in Mazar-e-Sharif from an insurgent group, like
Islamic State or the Taliban, for reason of his religion, his ethnicity, or due
to
him being a Shia Hazara, now or in the foreseeable future. I find the
applicant does not face a real chance of harm in Mazar-e-Sharif
for these
reasons.
- Importantly,
(at [49] in the middle of the paragraph), the IAA clearly identifies by footnote
various incidents that had occurred
which were referred to by the applicant.
- The
applicant complains that inferences should be drawn from the material submitted
that there were real risks to the applicant and
members of his ethnic or
religious group. It does seem clear that to the extent that the IAA made
findings they were largely in
accordance with the evidence before them, albeit
that other inferences could have been drawn. For example, the first of the dot
points in the submission (quoted above) refers to a commander of the motorway
being the subject of an attack and such attacks upon
officials are noted by the
IAA: see [49]. Whilst a tribal elder would not be a formal official within the
context of the circumstances
in Afghanistan, it seems to me that it is quite
reasonable to describe a tribal elder as being in the category of an official or
at least a person of significance on an official or political basis.
- The
third dot point relates to an attack upon a village. Firstly, it should be
noted that it is not an attack in Mazar-e-Sharif itself
but a village nearby;
secondly, it relates to Shiite Muslims; and, thirdly, it does not appear to set
out a date when that attack
occurred, only the date when the graves of those who
were sadly killed was located. This does not seem to run contrary to the
specific
findings that the IAA have made in [49].
- On
the material before the IAA, it appears that it was open to them to make the
findings that they did as to the safety or otherwise
of the applicant if living
within Mazar-e-Sharif and this is what they did.
- I
do not accept that the reasons are such as to indicate that the IAA have failed
to consider or engage with the submissions that
were quoted above, nor that they
have failed to carry out their task by failing to consider a claim that the
applicant has made.
- The
IAA discussed the evidence before it as to the risks in Mazar-e-Sharif and from
that material drew inferences available to the
IAA. The IAA is not required to
set out in full all of the submissions made to it, nor to summarise in detail
all of the material
before it. The reasons are to explain the reasonable
process to reach a decision.
- On
the material before me I am not persuaded that the applicant has made out the
ground for judicial review.
- In
the circumstances I must therefore dismiss the application.
[Further argument ensued]
Costs
- The
applicant has been unsuccessful. It’s appropriate the respondent have
their costs. The scale fee, I’m told, that’s
sought in this matter
is $7373. It seems to me that that amount is reasonable given the nature of the
matter and the submissions
that were made.
I certify that the
preceding eighteen (18) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment
of Judge Riethmuller
Date: 7 August 2019
Correction
The Applicant’s pseudonym has been amended
from DLQ18 to DQL18.
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