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HCAL 1051/2019

[2022] HKCFI 1568

IN THE HIGH COURT OF THE


HONG KONG SPECIAL ADMINISTRATIVE REGION
COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE
CONSTITUTIONAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE LAW LIST No. 1051 of 2019

BETWEEN
Siti Romlah Applicant

and

Torture Claims Appeal Board/ Putative


Non-refoulement Claims Petition Office Respondent

and

Director of Immigration Putative


Interested Party

Application for Leave to Apply for Judicial Review


NOTIFICATION of the Judge’s decision (Ord. 53 r. 3)

Following;

 consideration of documents only; or

 consideration of documents and Applicant being absent in open court;

Order by Deputy High Court Judge K.W. Lung:

Leave to apply for Judicial Review be refused.

Observations for the Applicant:

THE APPLICATION
1. The applicant applies for leave to apply for judicial review of the Notice of Decision
dated 20 July 2018, the Decision of the Director of Immigration (“the Director’s Decision”),
which had been dealt with by the Decision dated 15 April 2019 of the Torture Claims Appeal
Board/Non-refoulement Claims Petition Office (“the Board’s Decision”). The application also
covers the Notice of hearing dated 13 November 2018, which is not amenable to judicial review.
Form 86 will be rectified below.

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2. The applicant did not request an oral hearing. Pursuant to Order 53, rule 3(3) of the
Rules of the High Court (“RHC”), the Court will deal with her application on paper.
3. Pursuant to Order 20, rule 8 and Order 53, rule 3(6) of the RHC, Form 86 is amended to
the effect that the Board is the proposed respondent, the Director of Immigration (“the Director”)
is the interested party and the relief sought is the Board’s Decision.
The applicant
4. The applicant is a national of Indonesia. She last entered Hong Kong in 2005 as a
foreign domestic helper. Her employment contract was terminated on 2 January 2008 and she
had to leave Hong Kong by 16 January 2008. She overstayed and was arrested for possession of
identity card relating to another person and for unlawful overstaying in Hong Kong. She was
convicted and sentenced. She lodged torture claim by a written representation on 9 April 2009
and was rejected on 20 January 2012. By a written signification on 11 June 2013, she lodged
non-refoulement claim. Her claim is on the basis that, if refouled, she would be killed by her
stepfather.
5. According to the applicant, she lived with his stepfather together with her step-sister and
her brothers. In 2003, she was 19 years old. Her mother went to work in Singapore. Her step-
father had attempted to rape her 3 times. He took off her clothes and attempted to rape her. She
refused and screamed. He stopped. He threatened to kill her if she reported the matter to police
or other relatives. She did not report the matter to police. In 2005, through the agent, she came
to Hong Kong and work as a domestic helper. Since then, she had never returned to Indonesia.
Details of her story are set out in paragraph 8 of the Director’s Decision described below.
The Director’s Decision
6. The Director considered the applicant’s claim in relation to the following risks:
(1) risk of violation of the right of life under Article 2 of section 8 of the Hong Kong Bill of
Rights Ordinance (“BOR 2 risk”);
(2) risk of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment (“CIDTP”) under
Article 3 of section 8 of the HKBOR (“BOR 3 risk”); and
(3) risk of persecution by reference to the non-refoulement principle under Article 33 of the
1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol (“Refugee
Convention”) (“Persecution risk”).
7. By way of the Director’s Decision, the Director refused the applicant’s claim. The
Director found that the level of risk of harm upon her refoulement was assessed to be low
because (i) the events happened long ago, there was no reasonable basis of fear of the same in
future [15]; (ii) state protection would be available to her [17-21], and (iv) internal relocation
was an option open to her [22 & 23].
The Board’s Decision
8. The applicant appealed the Director’s Decision to the Board and appeared before the
Board on 8 February 2019 at a hearing.
9. The Board accepted that the applicant’s step-father attempted to rape her three times in
late 2003 [46]. However, the Board considered that there was not a real chance that her step-
father would harm her or try to kill her because there was no reason for him to suppose that she
told anyone that he had previously tried to rape her [48]. It was satisfied that internal relocation

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was an option open to her [49 & 50]. Thus, the Board rejected the applicant’s claim and
dismissed her appeal.
Application for leave to apply for judicial review of the Board’s Decision
10. The applicant has filed Form 86 dated 17 April 2019 for leave to apply for judicial
review of the Board’s Decision.
11. In her affirmation in support of her application, the applicant enclosed the hearing
bundle without setting out any specific ground.
DISCUSSION
12. The role of this Court is supervisory, meaning that it ensures that the Board complied
with the public law requirements in coming to its Decision on the applicant’s appeal. The Court
will not usurp the fact finding power vested in the Director and the Board. See TK v Michael C
Jenkins Esq and Director of Immigration [2013] 1 HKC 526 CA, §40 and Nupur Mst v
Director of Immigration [2018] HKCA 524, §14 (1).
13. The Court will bear in mind that the Board’s Decisions should be examined with
rigorous examination and anxious scrutiny.
14. In Re: Kartini [2019] HKCA 1022, 9 September 2019, the Court of Appeal held:
“13. (1) … …Assessment of evidence and COI materials and risk of harm, state
protection and viability of internal relocation are primarily within the province of the
Board (and the Director). The court will not intervene by way of judicial review unless
there are errors of law or procedural unfairness or irrationality in the decision of the
Board.”
15. There is no valid ground from the applicant to challenge the Board’s Decision.
16. The Court does not find any error of law or procedural unfairness in the Board’s
Decision. The findings of the Board are not in any respect open to challenge as Wednesbury
unreasonable or irrational.
17. The applicant fails to show that she has any realistic prospect of success in her proposed
judicial review.
CONCLUSION
18. I refuse to grant leave for the applicant to apply for judicial review of the Board’s
Decision. Accordingly, I dismiss her application.

Dated the 13th day of June 2022

(M.O. WONG)(Ms)
for Registrar, High Court

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Where leave to apply has been granted, Applicants and their legal advisers are reminded of their
obligation to reconsider the merits of their application in the light of the Respondent’s evidence

Notes for the Applicant:

If leave has been granted,


the Applicant or the
Applicant’s solicitors must:

a) serve on the respondent Sent to the Applicant Sent to the Putative Respondent /
and such interested parties on 13 June 2022 the Putative Respondent’s solicitors
as may be directed by the / such Putative Interested Parties as
Court the order granting Siti Romlah may be directed by the Court / the
leave and any directions Putative Interested Parties’
given within 14 days after Applicant’s ref. no: solicitors on 13 June 2022
the leave was granted Nil.
(Order 53, rule 4A); Torture Claims Appeal
Board/Non-refoulement Claims
b) issue the originating Petition Office
summons within 14 days Putative Respondent’s ref. no.:
after the grant of leave and USM 12650/18/7/400/I1404
serve it in accordance with
Order 53, rule 5; and Director of Immigration
Putative Interested Party’s ref. no.:
c) supply to every other QA T/C 2225/18 (Formerly
party copies of every RBCZ/2000591/14)
affidavit which the
Applicant proposes to use Department of Justice,
at the hearing, including Senior Assistant Law Office
the affidavit in support of (Civil Law)
the application for leave (Civil Litigation Unit 2)
(Order 53, rule 6(5)).

Form CALL-1

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