Abraham Brima Bah v. Alberto Gonzales

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 15, 2006
Docket05-2152
StatusPublished

This text of Abraham Brima Bah v. Alberto Gonzales (Abraham Brima Bah v. Alberto Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abraham Brima Bah v. Alberto Gonzales, (8th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 05-2152 ___________

Abraham Brima Bah, * * Petitioner, * * Appeal from the Board of v. * Immigration Appeals. * Alberto Gonzales, Attorney General of * the United States, * * Respondent. * ___________

Submitted: January 13, 2006 Filed: May 15, 2006 ___________

Before LOKEN, Chief Judge, McMILLIAN1 and MELLOY, Circuit Judges. ___________

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Abraham Brima Bah seeks review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’ (BIA) denial of his application for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture. In denying asylum, the BIA held that Bah failed to demonstrate past persecution. As a result, the BIA placed the burden on

1 The Honorable Theodore McMillian died on January 18, 2006. This opinion is being filed by the remaining judges of the panel pursuant to 8th Cir. Rule 47E. Bah to prove a well-founded fear of future persecution based on existing country conditions. We find that the record compels a finding of past persecution based upon a protected status. Accordingly, there exists a presumption of a well-founded fear of future persecution, and we remand with the burden on the government to establish changed conditions.

I.

Bah was born in the city of Kakata, Liberia, in 1968. He is Muslim and a member of the Mandingo tribal group. In 1989, Charles Taylor and his rebel forces started a war against the government of Liberia. In July 1990, Taylor’s rebel forces reached the Mandingo quarter of Kakata and killed Mandingos based on the belief that the Mandingos supported the government. Mandingo men like Bah’s father wore traditional gowns and were easily recognizable by the rebel forces. Bah hid on the roof of his father’s house and watched the rebels kill his father with a machete-like sword called a cutlass. The rebels proceeded to loot and ransack the home. The rest of Bah’s family, including his mother, three brothers, and one sister, escaped. Bah’s mother was from the Grebo ethnic group and was not Mandingo. Bah eventually fled to Sierra Leone where he lived as a refugee for six years.

During a cease fire in 1996, Bah returned to Liberia and found his mother and three brothers in Monrovia. He did not find his sister, whose fate remains unknown. He returned to the house in the Mandingo quarter of Kakata where a predominately Mandingo rebel group was in control. However, violence continued at that location, and he did not stay. An election was scheduled for 1997. He joined the All Liberia Coalition Party (ALCOP) and became the assistant secretary general for a youth wing of ALCOP. In this capacity, he organized meetings and a rally and encouraged people to vote against Charles Taylor.

-2- Taylor won the 1997 election and supporters of the Taylor government began persecuting members of ALCOP. The leader of ALCOP fled the country, but Bah could not afford to leave Liberia at that time. Taylor’s forces threatened to kill Bah if he continued to oppose Taylor. The forces also threatened other Mandingos, including Bah’s family. In 1998, Taylor’s forces burned the family’s Kakata house.

Bah then found a job working for the German Technical Corporation. The company worked with the United Nations to return Liberian refugees to Liberia from Guinea, Sierra Leone, and other places. The company also distributed relief supplies to refugees. Fighting between the Taylor government and resistance forces continued. In 1999, while Bah was in a convoy relocating refugees, police from Taylor’s government stopped him at a checkpoint to look for dissidents or rebels. The police arrested Bah and placed him in prison where they interrogated him and threatened him with death in an effort to obtain information about dissidents. The police accused Bah of transporting rebels and confined him for two days without food or water in a cell that was too small to permit him to stand. While squatting in the cell for these two days, Bah injured his spine. The company was able to secure his release by working with the Taylor government’s defense ministry. After release from this first incarceration, Bah learned that three of his Mandingo relatives, one aunt and two cousins, had been murdered.

Bah temporarily stopped moving refugees, but the Taylor government reached an agreement with the United Nations regarding the repatriation of refugees, and Bah was told that it would be safe to resume work transporting refugees. Fighting between rebels and Taylor’s government intensified, however, and, in early 2001, Taylor’s police again stopped Bah at a checkpoint. Again, they imprisoned and threatened Bah and accused him of transporting rebels. A colonel in Taylor’s forces was the father of one of Bah’s childhood friends. The friend’s father was able to obtain Bah’s release, but the colonel warned that Bah would be killed if he stayed in Liberia. The

-3- colonel told Bah that Taylor’s police removed prisoners under the auspices of transporting them to Monrovia but killed the prisoners along the way.

Bah then went to a suburb of Monrovia where he stayed with his mother, who was not Mandingo. Bah had a cousin on his mother’s side of the family who was a colonel with Taylor’s police force in Monrovia. The cousin said that Bah’s name was on a blacklist of persons to be eliminated. Bah then disguised himself and hid. Taylor’s forces raided the home but did not find Bah. They destroyed Bah’s property and beat his brother. Two of Bah’s coworkers were arrested, and Bah decided to leave the country. The German company wrote to the American embassy on Bah’s behalf, and Bah obtained a visa. Bah did not encounter difficulty obtaining a passport. Bah’s cousin in the police force moved Bah through government checkpoints and helped Bah get on a flight out of Liberia.

Bah was married by the time he left Liberia. His wife and mother remain in Liberia.2 His wife, like his mother, is not Mandingo, and neither of them have been harmed. At the time of the hearing before the immigration judge, Charles Taylor was in exile in Nigeria, and a different government was in place. Soldiers from Taylor’s security forces continued to pose a danger in Liberia, however, because many remained in the security forces and others formed roving gangs. Bah testified that he feared returning to Liberia because he believed the security forces were still headed by former Charles Taylor supporters and because he feared reprisal from the gangs of former Charles Taylor supporters.3

2 While it is generally true that the presence and safety of family members in a country may suggest an absence of danger, in this case it is important to note that neither Bah’s wife nor his mother are Mandingo, and there is no evidence to suggest that either woman was at any time politically active or involved in activities likely to draw the ire of Charles Taylor supporters. 3 The record contains substantial additional testimony and documentation regarding conditions in Liberia between the time of Bah’s departure and the final

-4- Bah entered the United States in 2001 as a non-immigrant visitor for pleasure. His visa permitted him to remain in the United States until October 2, 2001. On September 4, 2001, while still legally present in the United States under the visa, he filed an application for asylum. Ultimately, he overstayed his visa and the Immigration and Naturalization Service (now the division of Immigration and Customs Enforcement within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)) commenced removal proceedings. Bah conceded removability but sought asylum under 8 U.S.C. § 1158, withholding of removal under 8 U.S.C. §

Related

Mohamed El-Sheikh v. John Ashcroft
388 F.3d 643 (Eighth Circuit, 2004)

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