HIGH COURT OF
AUSTRALIA
SZFDV
Vs.
Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship
(Gummow, Kirby,
Hayne, Callinan and Crennan JJ.)
30.08.2007
JUDGMENT
- GUMMOW,
HAYNE AND CRENNAN JJ. This appeal from the Federal Court of Australia
(whose appellate jurisdiction was exercised by Madgwick J) was heard
together with SZATV v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship[1]
and the same counsel appeared on each appeal. These reasons should be read
with those in SZATV.
- Madgwick J
dismissed an appeal from the dismissal by the Federal Magistrates Court of
an application for certiorari to quash a decision of the Refugee Review
Tribunal ("the Tribunal") (the second respondent in this Court
and a submitting party), for prohibition directed to the Minister (the
first respondent in this Court), and for mandamus directing the Tribunal
to redetermine according to law the appellant's application for a
protection visa.
- The appellant
is an Indian national, born at Theni in the State of Tamil Nadu in 1977.
He arrived in Australia on 16 May 2004 and applied for a protection visa.
In his application the appellant gave his religion as "Hindu".
The application was refused by a delegate of the Minister on 11 June 2004
and the Tribunal subsequently affirmed the decision of the delegate.
- On 13 October
2004, the appellant attended a hearing conducted by the Tribunal and gave
evidence with the assistance of an interpreter. He had no legal or other
representation at the hearing.
- The appellant
claimed that his father and his family sympathised with the Communist
Party and that his brother had worked as a Party member in Tamil Nadu. The
appellant left school when he was 16 years of age and after the death of
his brother he was employed at the mill in Coimbatore where his father
worked. The appellant worked at the mill for approximately three and a
half years until the employer company ceased operations there in 2002. The
mill was situated some 200 km from the home where his mother still lived
and the appellant returned there after the closure of the mill.
- The country
information showed that according to the 1991 Census the population of
Tamil Nadu was more than 62 million, 88.67 percent of the population were
Hindus and Tamil was spoken by 86.7 percent of the population and Telugu
by 2.2 percent.
- The appellant
asserted that while his brother had been working as a member of the
Communist Party he had opposed the two major Tamil parties, the Dravida Munnetra
Kazhagam (the DMK) and the All-India Anna Dravida Munnetra Khazagam (the
AIADMK). He maintained that his brother had been killed by
"rowdies" from these parties at a Communist Party meeting in
1998. The appellant did not distinguish between the Communist Party of
India and the Communist Party of India (Marxist).
- The appellant
was elected a trade union leader of the employees at the mill and disputed
some payments to the workers by their employer. He believed that the mill
owners held him responsible for the subsequent closure of the mill by
government order in 2002. He claimed, among other things, that the mill
owners had used their influence as DMK members to procure the laying by
the police of false charges of murder of a DMK leader, and that he had
been assaulted by DMK "rowdies" in July 2003. Threats also were
made to his family. The appellant claimed that in August 2003 he had moved
to the capital of Tamil Nadu, Chennai (formerly Madras), where he had
continued to fear persecution by DMK "rowdies". He stayed in
Chennai until he left for Australia in May 2004, travelling on an Indian
passport issued in June 2003 and with an Australian business visa.
- The Tribunal
stated:
"As put to
the [appellant] at the Tribunal hearing, based on the country information
considered, I thought it plausible the mill owners, who were allegedly members
of the DMK, had used their influence to cause problems for the applicant; ...
That said I did not think it plausible the DMK or the mill owners would
continue to target him should he relocate within India."
In its statement
of findings and reasons the Tribunal said:
"For the
purpose of this decision, the Tribunal will accept the [appellant] was involved
in some kind of conflict with the employers of his former workplace [the mill].
It accepts the mill owners used their contacts in the DMK in Tamil Nadu to
cause the [appellant] some kind of problem in Tamil Nadu. The Tribunal accepts
the [appellant] also had problems after he moved to Madras [in Tamil Nadu], for
reasons of his activities for the local communist party there. However, as put
to the [appellant] at the Tribunal hearing, protection obligations in Australia
may not be owed if I was satisfied he could safely travel to and reside in
another location in India. Further, I may expect him to safely relocate if I
was satisfied it was reasonable in all the circumstances to expect him to do
so."
- The Tribunal
referred to country information showing that the adjoining State of Kerala
had a relatively large Tamil speaking community and that the Communist
Party, to which the appellant claimed to belong, had a significant
presence in that State.
- The
Tribunal's reasoning may be understood by regard to the following passages
in its reasons:
"I do not
think it plausible the mill owners or the DMK would have the capacity to cause
the [appellant] problems in Kerala ... [s]hould the [appellant] reside in eg
Kerala ... I am not satisfied his parents would continue to be questioned as to
his whereabouts.
...
At the Tribunal
hearing the [appellant] also confirmed he had received 8 years education in
Tamil Nadu, and that he had been employed there in inter alia a
political party as well as in a mill. The [appellant] also claimed to speak
'Telegu, Tamil, and a little English'. That said, the Tribunal noted the
appellant was able to respond to a number of its questions without recourse to
the interpreter during the course of the Tribunal hearing. The [appellant] has
shown himself capable of overcoming any language problem in Australia, and I am
satisfied should he relocate to eg Kerala, with a Tamil speaking community,
language difficulties would not constitute a problem for him. Accordingly, I am
not satisfied that for reasons of any claimed language, employment or lack of
family contact difficulties, it would be unreasonable to expect the applicant
to relocate within India.
Furthermore, no
evidence was provided that there were concerns with respect to infirmity,
health services or education. Neither did the country information considered in
this decision satisfy me that relocation on these grounds would be unreasonable
for this [appellant]. Accordingly, I am satisfied the [appellant] can be
reasonably expected to relocate within India and by so doing avoid any well founded
fear of persecution for a Convention reason.
Accordingly, I
am satisfied the [appellant] does not have a well founded fear of persecution
for a Convention reason in India."
- In this
Court, the three grounds of appeal which were pressed were that the
Federal Court had erred in failing to find jurisdictional error by the
Tribunal by reason of the Tribunal having:
(a) asked
whether the appellant might reasonably be expected to relocate within India in
order to avoid persecutory harm;
(b) treated the
reasonable availability of protection against persecutory harm within India as
determinative or conclusive of his refugee status; and
(c) failed to
make findings about, and to consider, whether requiring the appellant to
relocate would involve the abnegation of the attribute for which the appellant
was selected for persecution."
- None of
these grounds is made out.
- Grounds (a)
and (b) amounted to an attack upon the use of any notion of
"relocation" as a step in concluding that the appellant's fear
of persecution is not "well-founded". As indicated in the
reasons in SZATV, and as a general proposition to be applied to the
circumstances of the particular case, it may be reasonable for the
applicant for a protection visa to relocate in the country of nationality
to a region where, objectively, there is no appreciable risk of the
occurrence of the feared persecution.
- As to ground
(c) advanced by the appellant, the Tribunal did, as is demonstrated in the
passages from its reasons which have been set out, consider and make
findings about whether relocation to Kerala would involve abnegation of
the attribute for which the appellant had come into conflict with the mill
owners and members of the DMK. His agitation respecting the working
conditions at the mill and other activities as a Communist Party member
had brought the appellant into trouble in Tamil Nadu. But, for the reasons
given, the Tribunal concluded, as it was open for it to do, that the
appellant could safely relocate to Kerala and that it would not be unreasonable
to expect him to do so.
- This case
thus stands in contrast to SZATV.
- The appeal
should be dismissed with costs.
- KIRBY J.
This appeal was heard at the same time as the appeal in SZATV v Minister
for Immigration and Citizenship[2].
Like that appeal, this appeal, also from the Federal Court of Australia[3],
is designed to permit this Court to elucidate the internal relocation
alternative (or principle) ("the relocation test") in the
context of the Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, 1951[4]
as amended by the Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees, 1967[5]
(together "the Refugees Convention").
The
decisional background
- Many of the
facts relevant to the decision in the appeal are set out in the reasons of
Gummow, Hayne and Crennan JJ ("the joint reasons")[6].
Also stated there are passages from the reasons for decision of the
Refugee Review Tribunal ("the Tribunal"). In respect of the
Tribunal's reasons, the appellant, SZFDV[7],
sought judicial review on the basis of alleged jurisdictional error. Such
review was refused in the Federal Magistrates Court by Scarlett FM[8].
That refusal was, in turn, confirmed by Madgwick J, exercising the
appellate jurisdiction of the Federal Court.
- In
dismissing the appeal to the Federal Court and affirming the approach of
the Tribunal, Madgwick J referred to his earlier dissenting reasons
in the Full Court of the Federal Court in NALZ v Minister for
Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs[9].
In those reasons, Madgwick J had raised a question as to whether the
previous elaboration of the Australian test for decisions in cases where
"refugee" status has been refused, on the footing that the
applicant could reasonably relocate to a different part of the applicant's
country of nationality or habitual residence ("country of
nationality")[10],
needed to be reconsidered in light of the decision of this Court in Appellant
S395/2002 v Minister
for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs[11].
However, conforming in this case to the majority approach in NALZ,
Madgwick J proceeded on the basis that he was bound to accept the
conclusion that the conventional assessment of relocation was unaffected
by the reasoning in S395.
- Deciding the
appeal on that basis, Madgwick J held that the appeal should be
dismissed. He added[12]:
"Having
regard to the way the Tribunal member found the facts in this case, it might
well be that, even should another test be applied (namely what would the
appellant do if actually returned to India by way of possible relocation), the
factual findings would, in any event, mandate the conclusion that he would
relocate."
Common issues
about internal relocation
- In this
appeal, I shall follow the same course as has been adopted in the joint
reasons[13].
My reasons too should be read together with those in SZATV. I shall
not set out again an analysis of the origins of the relocation test. Nor
will I repeat the competing theories that have been offered to suggest a
textual foundation, in the Refugees Convention definition of
"refugee"[14],
for importing consideration of whether the refugee applicant should
(before resorting to a claim upon Australia for surrogate
"protection" from persecution) reasonably relocate in his
country of nationality, India, to a part of that country where he could
safely secure that country's "protection".
- Additionally,
I shall omit the explanations that have been offered directed to the other
principal way of looking at the problem, on a textual basis, by reference
to whether the refugee applicant in Australia lacks the "well-founded
fear" of persecution that is necessary to establishing entitlements
under the Refugees Convention definition of "refugee", on the
footing that, were the appellant now returned to India, he could safely
relocate and suffer no persecution. All of these considerations are
explained in SZATV[15].
It is unnecessary for me to repeat them here.
- The
appellant could not succeed in this appeal in a frontal attack on the
relocation test as being inconsistent with the text and purposes of the
Refugees Convention. Whatever may be the difficulties of reconciling the
notion of internal relocation with the language, history and purposes of
the Refugees Convention, an internal relocation test is now well established
in international State practice (and also accepted by the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees).
- In judging
an applicant's claim to refugee status it is therefore permissible to
consider the reasonableness of the applicant's relocation to another place
within the applicant's country of nationality. If, reviewing all the
facts, it is concluded that the applicant, acting reasonably, will
relocate if returned to that country, it will be open to the
decision-maker in Australia to conclude, where the source of the fear of a
Refugees Convention-related persecution is localised in the country of
nationality, that the propounded fear of persecution is not
"well-founded". On that ground, the claim of "refugee"
status, in accordance with the Refugees Convention, could properly be
refused.
The
applicable authority to be observed
- Nevertheless,
in Australia, where the decisions of the Tribunal are subject to the
possibilities of judicial and constitutional review, the courts that
perform such review are obliged to conform to the instruction of this
Court on the requirements to be observed in discharging their function.
Relevant to that instruction, in a case such as the present, is the
decision of this Court in S395[16].
- The decision
in S395
was subsequently distinguished by a later decision of the Court,
constituted differently, in Applicant NABD of 2002 v Minister
for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs[17].
Although that decision is, in some respects, difficult to reconcile with S395
(and although McHugh J and I, who sat in both cases, considered
that the outcome in NABD of 2002 was governed by the holding in S395)
the majority in the later NABD did not overrule or expressly
qualify S395[18].
It follows that the binding principles of law established by S395
still operate in those cases to which those principles apply.
- It remains,
in the present case, to apply to the reasoning of the Tribunal, as it
concerned the appellant SZFDV's submissions, not only the conclusions
expressed by this Court in SZATV (that an internal relocation test
might, as a matter of principle, properly be applied), but also the
holdings that this Court had earlier laid down in S395
(that the search is for what the particular applicant will in fact do
if returned and it cannot be hypothesised that he will surrender the basic
rights which the Refugees Convention is specifically intended to protect).
- The
essential question in this appeal is not, therefore, whether it was
permissible for the Tribunal to consider the hypothesis of internal
relocation by the appellant within India at all. So much is not now in
doubt. The question is whether, in proceeding to consider that hypothesis,
the Tribunal conformed to the approach which this Court's majority
established by its holding in S395.
- Whereas in SZATV[19],
non-compliance by the Tribunal with this Court's decision in S395
might have been understandable, because the Tribunal's decision in
that case was given before the publication of this Court's reasons in S395,
the circumstances of the proceedings involving SZFDV are different. In his
case, the decision of the Tribunal was reached in October 2004 and handed
down in the following month. This was therefore well after this Court's
reasons in S395
became available. Although those reasons were not referred to by the
Tribunal in this case, by the time of its decision, they were undoubtedly
available to it. In any case, they represented (and continue to represent)
the law, binding on the Tribunal, until this Court, or the Parliament
within its powers, alters the principles stated in S395.
Three
important principles in S395
- There are
three important principles for which S395/2002
stands:
(1) Focus on
the particular applicant: The first is that the focus of attention in
refugee applications is not, as such, upon what it might be reasonable, in an
abstract sense or as part of a theoretical taxonomy, for the appellant, if
returned to the country of nationality, to do in order to escape persecution[20].
This is not the correct approach, whether the case involves the suggestion of
"living discreetly" as a homosexual man in Bangladesh (as in S395),
or moving to another part of the country of India to avoid the claimed
persecution for political opinion (as in the present case). The question,
described there as the "central question in any particular case"[21],
is, as Gummow and Hayne JJ explained in S395[22]:
"how this
applicant may be treated if he or she returns to the country of
nationality. Processes of classification may obscure the essentially individual
and fact-specific inquiry which must be made".
- The same
point of specificity and individuality, addressed to "this individual
applicant", was made by McHugh J and myself in the other joint
majority reasons in S395[23].
(2) Focus on
well-foundedness of fear: Secondly, the focus of attention, provided by the
Refugees Convention definition of "refugee", is on the
well-foundedness of the fear which the particular applicant for refugee status
possesses. This point was also made clear in S395.
The joint reasons of Gummow and Hayne JJ point out that the issue must be
addressed against the background of the fact-specific inquiry of what the
particular individual applicant will do if returned[24]:
"If an
applicant holds political or religious beliefs that are not favoured in the
country of nationality, the chance of adverse consequences befalling that
applicant on return to that country would ordinarily increase if, on return,
the applicant were to draw attention to the holding of the relevant belief. But
it is no answer to a claim for protection as a refugee to say to an applicant
that those adverse consequences could be avoided if the applicant were to hide
the fact that he or she holds the beliefs in question."
- In the
present instance, the proposition that the appellant should relocate
within India amounts, in effect, to an hypothesis that it would be
reasonable for the appellant to "hide" his political beliefs
from those who, it is postulated, have persecuted him in his home State of
Tamil Nadu. By inference, he would not be safe from persecution in his
home State but, it is suggested, he could be free of persecution if he
were to move to another and different State of India (Kerala). In that
State there would be no need to "hide" his beliefs because the
government of that State includes participation by members of a local
communist party. They would not continue the persecution. Because he could
return to Kerala, and there be free of persecution, any "fear of
persecution" he feels in Australia at the prospect of being returned
to India is not "well-founded". There is no evidence that this
is the way the Tribunal considered the appellant's case. Yet it is the
only way that would conform to the Refugees Convention definition as
explained in S395.
(3) Acquiescence
in persecution is not reasonable: Most importantly, the joint reasons in S395
each emphasised that it would not be a "reasonable" adaptation of
the behaviour of an applicant for refugee protection in Australia to expect the
applicant to return to the country of nationality and to abdicate, or
repudiate, a fundamental right of the kind included in the list of Refugees
Convention-related grounds of "persecution"[25].
Those grounds do not cover the whole gamut of individual human rights
guaranteed by international law. They single out only those basic grounds of
persecution that the Refugees Convention treats as central; that have been a
common source of persecution leading to the flight of those who are victims of
it; and that those who are the subjects of it are not expected to tolerate, if
it happens in their country of nationality. The joint reasons of Gummow and
Hayne JJ in S395
make this clear in the passage just cited[26].
The
jurisdictional errors of the Tribunal
- Failure
to address the correct question: In the present case, the Tribunal
offended against each of the three foregoing principles laid down by this
Court in its decision in S395.
First, it did not ask whether the particular applicant would, as a matter
of fact, relocate from Tamil Nadu if he were returned to India[27].
Instead, it asked whether the Tribunal could itself impose such an
obligation on the appellant[28]:
"As put to
the applicant at the Tribunal hearing, protection obligations in Australia may
not be owed if I was satisfied he could safely travel to and reside in another
location in India. Further, I may expect him to safely relocate if I was
satisfied it was reasonable in all the circumstances to expect him to do
so."
- Making it
absolutely plain that the Tribunal was not addressing whether, if the
appellant were returned to India he would in fact relocate from
Tamil Nadu to the State of Kerala, the Tribunal's reasons proceed[29]:
"Therefore,
I am satisfied that if the applicant relocated from Tamil Nadu to Kerala he
would not have a well-founded fear of persecution for a Convention
reason."
Internal
relocation was simply a postulate conceived of by the Tribunal. No
consideration was given to whether it would in fact have had any
ultimate application in the appellant's case.
- Failure
to address well-foundedness: Secondly, because of the way in which the
Tribunal approached the matter (contrary to the requirement of individual
factual prediction established in S395),
it failed to address the issue of reasonable relocation within India in
the only way that is permissible under the Refugees Convention.
Specifically, it failed to examine the "well-foundedness" of the
appellant's current fear of persecution, based on the reality of
what in fact he would reasonably do if he were returned to India.
- This was not
a hypothetical or theoretical problem in the case which the appellant
propounded. Relocating from Tamil Nadu to Kerala is not the same thing as
relocating from Victoria to Tasmania or relocating within Ukraine. The
appellant's family, upbringing, language, culture, cuisine, tradition,
friends, political colleagues and other links were all with the Tamil
speaking people in the State of Tamil Nadu. The postulate that the
appellant would move to a significantly different linguistic, cultural,
political and familial environment of Kerala, simply because it is within
the country of his nationality, portrays not only a naïve ignorance of the
diversity of India but also a failure to address the relocation test in
the correct way, as explained in SZATV.
- The
Tribunal's analysis of the appellant's case, given effectively in three
pages of reasoning, is extremely slim[30].
However, if a want of real attention to the foregoing considerations might
amount to an error within jurisdiction, the failure to address the
postulate of internal relocation in a manner anchored to the Refugees
Convention text is an error of jurisdiction requiring correction by
this Court.
- Failure
to uphold Refugees Convention rights: Thirdly, I now reach the most
serious error on the part of the Tribunal. It betrays a failure to address
the correct question for decision and is thus a clear jurisdictional
error. The reasons of the Tribunal indicate no attention at all to whether
it would be inconsistent with the purpose of the Refugees Convention to
require the appellant to relocate within India, given that his asserted
fear of persecution is claimed as being on the basis of his expressions of
his political opinion. In the appellant's case, that political opinion was
not addressed to changing the government and political culture in the
State of Kerala. Rather, it was addressed to changing the power structures
(including the government) of the appellant's native state of Tamil Nadu,
a distinct society within India.
- Although
relocation within a country of nationality may sometimes be reasonable,
and in a given case may deprive an applicant for refugee status of the
"well-founded fear of persecution" for a reason expressed in the
Refugees Convention necessary to attract "refugee" status, such
relocation cannot be "reasonable" (and thus cannot be imposed by
the Tribunal) where to relocate would effectively destroy the very
protection which the Refugees Convention-related reason is designed to
afford to the individual.
- In this
important respect, this case is analogous to SZATV. There, the
Tribunal contemplated the return of the appellant to Ukraine, but under
conditions not only of physically moving his residence but of abandoning
his political opinions expressed as a journalist, and getting work in the
construction industry that would not involve him in expressing his
political opinions. This Court has concluded (correctly in my view) that,
to impose such a requirement amounted to jurisdictional error entitling
SZATV to relief from the Court.
- Here, the
Tribunal also contemplated the appellant's abandonment of his political
opinions in India in the only place where it was relevant and important to
the appellant to hold and express these political opinions, namely in the
State of Tamil Nadu[31].
In effect, the Tribunal's approach in this case therefore amounts to the
type of demand upon the appellant to "live discreetly" by
reference to a ground stated in the Refugees Convention. Yet that is a
demand that this Court's decision in S395
rejected. Where the "discreet living" (moving to Kerala and
opting out of the relevant political discourse) amounts to a negation or
abdication of the relevant basic right expressed in the Refugees
Convention, it is an error of jurisdiction effectively to impose that
requirement in an applicant's case[32].
Yet that is what the Tribunal did in the case of SZFDV.
The real
issues and discretionary relief
- Requirement
to decide merits: The claim by SZFDV of fear of persecution for a
Refugees Convention reason on return to India appears rather thin on its
evidentiary merits. Country information would demonstrate the existence of
an active multi-party opposition movement in Tamil Nadu, including in the
city of Chennai where the appellant lived. It would also establish the
presence there of independent courts, including the High Court of Bombay,
able to uphold the rights of individuals expressing minority political and
industrial opinions.
- Instead of
approaching the appellant's claim in an orthodox manner, and determining
that claim by reference to the evidence of the basis, or absence, of a
"well-founded fear" of the kind specified in the Refugees
Convention, the Tribunal took what has increasingly become an all too easy
exit from the hard decisions required in evidentiary adjudications of this
kind.
- If the
present appeal is dismissed, that "easy exit" will be invoked in
even more cases in the future. This will be especially so where a country
is large and diverse and where the refugee claim adjudicator or the
Tribunal simply postulates their own view as to the reasonableness of an
applicant's internal relocation. That postulate should never be allowed to
undermine the important rights expressed in the Refugees Convention. Least
of all should this occur by reasoning which fails in the three relevant
respects to conform to the instruction of this Court in S395.
- Discretionary
withholding of relief?: Finally, I must consider whether the appeal
should be dismissed in the exercise of the Court's discretion to withhold
relief in the form sought by the appellant[33].
The provision of that relief is always discretionary. In his reasons,
Madgwick J postulated the possibility that the Tribunal member's
factual findings "would, in any event, mandate the conclusion that he
would relocate"[34].
- I do not
read such a conclusion into the Tribunal member's reasons. This is because
the Tribunal omitted to ask what the appellant would do in fact, if
returned to India. Instead, it concerned itself with what the Tribunal
itself should, and could, notionally require of him. This is the type of
jurisdictional error on the part of the Tribunal that must be nipped in
the bud. Otherwise, the Tribunal will continue to ask whether the refugee
applicant should relocate rather than whether, acting reasonably,
the applicant on return will relocate. In effect, this is the error
of asking the question "what an individual is entitled to do
as distinct from what the individual will do". And that was
correctly identified by Gummow and Hayne JJ in S395
as jurisdictional error warranting the intervention of this Court[35].
The error does not become more acceptable by becoming more common. Nor is
it more tolerable because the error is expressed by reference to a country
like India rather than Ukraine.
- If the
Tribunal had not looked for an easy way out (by considering internal
relocation) but had addressed the question of whether, in fact, the
appellant's propounded fear of persecution if returned to Tamil Nadu in
India was "well-founded", a negative conclusion on the merits
would not have been at all surprising. But because the Tribunal avoided
that issue and reached instead for the internal relocation option, and
then stumbled, its decision cannot stand. Consistent with what this Court
has said and done in S395
and in SZATV, the appellant is entitled to relief.
Orders
- The appeal
should be allowed with costs. The orders of the Federal Court of Australia
should be set aside. In place of those orders, this Court should order
that the appeal to the Federal Court be allowed with costs and the orders
of the Federal Magistrates Court of 16 June 2005 set aside with
costs. In respect of the decision of the Tribunal made on 18 October
2004, there should be orders for certiorari to quash that decision;
prohibition directed to the Minister to restrain his giving effect to that
decision; and mandamus requiring the Tribunal to reconsider, according to
law, the appellant's application for review made on 3 June 2004.
- CALLINAN J.
Subject to what I have said in SZATV v Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship[36],
I agree with the conclusions of Gummow, Hayne and Crennan JJ in this
appeal. I do not read the Tribunal here to have assumed or expected, on
relocation or otherwise, the silencing of the appellant's political views.
Indeed, the Tribunal's reasons focussed upon, and correctly identified,
the activities in which he was involved and the controversy to which they
gave rise as effectively exclusively local.
- I would join
in the orders proposed by Gummow, Hayne and Crennan JJ.
[1] [2007]
HCA 40.
[2] [2007]
HCA 40.
[3] [2005] FCA 1312.
[4]
Done at Geneva on 28 July 1951: 189 UNTS 150; [1954] ATS 5.
[5]
Done at New York on 31 January 1967: 606 UNTS 267; [1973] ATS 37.
[6]
Joint reasons at [3]-[10].
[7] The
name of the applicant is anonymised in accordance with the Migration
Act 1958 (Cth), s
91X.
[8] [2005] FMCA 908.
[9]
(2004) 140 FCR 270. See consideration in SZATV [2007]
HCA 40 at [91]-
[94].
[10] As
expressed in Randhawa v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and
Ethnic Affairs [1994] FCA 1253; (1994) 52 FCR 437.
[11] [2003]
HCA 71; (2003) 216 CLR 473.
[12] [2005] FCA 1312 at [8].
[13]
Joint reasons at [1]. See also reasons of Callinan J at [50].
[14]
Included in Australian municipal law by the Migration
Act 1958 (Cth), s 36(2).
[15] [2007]
HCA 40 at [53]-
[63].
[16] [2003]
HCA 71; (2003) 216 CLR 473.
[17] [2005]
HCA 29; (2005) 79 ALJR 1142; 216 ALR 1.
[18]
See [2005] HCA 29; (2005) 79 ALJR 1142 at 1143 [2]; [2005]
HCA 29; 216 ALR 1 at 2 per Gleeson CJ; [2005]
HCA 29; 79 ALJR 1142 at 1170 [168];
[2005] HCA 29; 216 ALR 1 at 40 per Hayne and Heydon JJ.
[19] [2007]
HCA 40.
[20] S395
[2003] HCA 71; (2003) 216
CLR 473 at 490-491 [43]
per McHugh and Kirby JJ.
[21] S395
[2003] HCA 71; (2003) 216
CLR 473 at 500 [78]
per Gummow and Hayne JJ.
[22] S395
[2003] HCA 71; (2003) 216
CLR 473 at 500 [78]
(emphasis in original).
[23] [2003]
HCA 71; (2003) 216 CLR 473 at 490 [43].
[24] [2003]
HCA 71; (2003) 216 CLR 473 at 500 [80].
[25] [2003]
HCA 71; (2003) 216 CLR 473 at 489 [40]
per McHugh and Kirby JJ, 500 [80] per Gummow and Hayne JJ.
[26]
Above these reasons at [32]. See [2003]
HCA 71; (2003) 216 CLR 473 at 500 [80].
[27] [2003]
HCA 71; (2003) 216 CLR 473 at 500 [80].
[28]
Refugee Review Tribunal, decision and reasons of the Tribunal, 18 October 2004
("Reasons of the Tribunal") at 8.
[29]
cf SZATV [2007]
HCA 40 at [93]
citing NALZ v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous
Affairs (2004) 140 FCR 270 at 281 [46].
[30]
Reasons of the Tribunal at 8-10.
[31]
cf reasons of Callinan J at [50].
[32] S395
[2003] HCA 71; (2004) 216
CLR 473 at 491 [47],
500 [79].
[33]
cf SZBYR v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2007]
HCA 26 at [27]-
[29], [88], [91]-[92]. See above, these reasons at [21].
[34] [2005] FCA 1312 at [8].
[35] [2003]
HCA 71; [2003] 216 CLR 473 at 500 [80].
[36] [2007]
HCA 40.
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