Case Name:
Subramaniam v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
Between
Gowry Subramaniam, Applicant, and
The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, Respondent
[2015] A.C.F. no 1494
2015 FC 1405
Docket: IMM-6935-14
Federal Court Judgments
Federal Court
Toronto, Ontario
Diner J.
Heard: November 18, 2015.
Judgment: December 21, 2015.
(23 paras.)
Immigration law — Removal and deportation — Removal from Canada — Pre-removal risk assessment — Application by Subramaniam for judicial review of adverse pre-removal risk assessment allowed — Applicant, age 30, was Tamil woman from northern Sri Lanka — She fled country after year of sexual harassment by army EPDP and LTTE, and sexual assault by two soldiers — Refugee claim refused on credibility grounds — PRRA officer determined applicant faced no undue risk if returned to Sri Lanka — Officer’s decision overlooked material new documentary evidence expressly supporting applicant’s claim of risk of sexual violence — Decision was unreasonable and was returned for reconsideration.
Application by Subramaniam for judicial review of an adverse pre-removal risk assessment (PRRA). The applicant, age 30, was a Tamil from Northern Sri Lanka. She alleged her brother refused requests for financial support from both the Eelam People’s Democratic Party and the Liberation Tamil Tigers of Eelam. He fled the country for Australia in 2006 following his arrest and torture. The applicant alleged that she took over the family business following the brother’s departure. She alleged she was regularly sexually harassed and assaulted throughout 2007 until she closed the business. In 2009, she was hospitalized following a sexual assault by two soldiers. She used a student visa to enter the United Kingdom in 2010 and traveled to Canada in 2011 on her sister’s passport, claiming refugee protection. In 2013, the applicant’s refugee claim was rejected on credibility grounds. In 2014, a PRRA officer determined that the applicant would not face an undue risk if returned to Sri Lanka. The applicant sought judicial review.
HELD: Application allowed.
The PRRA officer made a reviewable error by failing to address material evidence. New documentary evidence contradicted key findings regarding the risk of sexual assault faced by young female Tamils from the north. The conclusion that the new evidence supported an unchanged country conditions portrait was unreasonable given the content of the documents. In fact, the new evidence described instances of widespread sexual assault, supporting the applicant’s claim she was at risk of sexual violence. The finding that the applicant faced nothing more than a mere possibility of persecution overlooked the new evidence. The decision was therefore unreasonable and was returned for reconsideration.
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27, s. 72(2), s. 112(1), s. 113(a),
Counsel:
Max Berger, for the Applicant.
Modupe Oluyomi, for the Respondent.
II. Facts
III. PRRA Decision
IV. Parties’ Positions
V. Analysis
North of Sri Lanka who may have been perceived to have ties with individuals opposed to the government. The Applicant based her PRRA on being a woman who fit this profile.
VI. Conclusion
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that
DINER J.
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Barristers & Solicitors
1033 Bay Street, Suite 207
Toronto, Ontario, M5S 3A5, Canada
Phone: (416) 969-9263