Aida Mbaye v. Eric Holder, Jr.

369 F. App'x 688
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 15, 2010
Docket09-3396
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 369 F. App'x 688 (Aida Mbaye v. Eric Holder, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aida Mbaye v. Eric Holder, Jr., 369 F. App'x 688 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Ada Mbaye seeks review from a March 10, 2009, decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denying a motion to reopen her petition for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”), based on new evidence and to submit a second asylum application based on changed circumstances in Mauritania. For the reasons that follow, we deny the petition for review.

I.

On December 4, 2000, Mbaye filed an application for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the CAT, on the grounds that she feared persecution if returned to Mauritania due to her Wolof ethnicity and her participation in the local women’s group Boolo. She testified that she had lived and farmed in the village of Keur Madické in the Senegal River Valley until fleeing to Senegal on May 1, 2000, after white Moors threatened her life and took her land. She maintains that on October 1, 2000, she entered the United States by boat, without inspection, and with the help of a people smuggler.

In her original asylum application and testimony before the Immigration Judge (“IJ”), Mbaye claimed a well-founded fear of persecution if returned to Mauritania for the following reasons. She testified that she had suffered from the historic discrimination of black Mauritanians by the white Moor population. Athough not included in her asylum application, she testified that both her father and brother were killed because of this ethnic tension. 1 She stated that both were killed in 1998: her father was burned in his home after he and family members got into a fight with white Moors; her brother was stabbed by white Moors during a separate altercation. Mbaye stated that, following their deaths, she lived with her son and mother on the family farm until a white Moor claimed ownership of their land in 2000. Ater Mbaye contested the claim, the white Moor and several bodyguards beat Mbaye and her son. The Moor then returned with policemen twice in April 2000, at which point Mbaye was detained and raped before being taken to a military work camp for three weeks. She maintained that when she was released on April 25, 2000, authorities threatened to kill her if they saw her again. When she nevertheless returned to Keur Madické, her son and mother had left for another village; they have since relocated to Senegal. She hid at a neighbor’s home until leaving for Senegal on May 1, 2000. Mbaye testified that she then stayed in Senegal for four months until a smuggler arranged for her to go to the United States by ship. She allegedly arrived in Baltimore, Maryland, on October 1, 2000, and, after slipping off the boat dressed in some sort of uniform, traveled to Cincinnati. Mbaye also claimed that she feared persecution because of her involvement with Boolo, a women’s group in her village that promoted the education of women. She claimed that she joined Boolo in 1998 and helped to teach girls how to read. In testimony, Mbaye stated that the white Moors did not like the organization but did not detail any specific action taken against the organization or against her because of her membership in it. In her second asy *691 lum application, submitted with the motion to reopen, she asserted for the first time that the Moors wanted to eliminate her due to her association with this group and that the intimidation of her family began after and because of her activities with Boolo. Her description of Boolo as a group dedicated to women’s literacy in her asylum applications and testimony was in some tension with the representation of the group as a pro-democracy group in Mbaye’s brief to this court.

Mbaye supplemented her original application with many articles and documents-— most dated 1989-1994 — recounting the persecution of black Mauritanians by white Moors and describing forcible expulsions from and land expropriation in the Senegal River Valley beginning in 1989 and culminating in massacres of black Mauritanians in 1990-1991. That such atrocities took place at that time and location is undisputed. However, Mbaye did not provide evidence that such activity took place in the late 1990s or in 2000, when she claims that she was dispossessed of her property and her family members killed. Indeed, country reports submitted by both parties suggest that, although there are ongoing human rights abuses in Mauritania, claims on land and political disappearances have largely ceased since the mid-1990s. The reports further document that those black Mauritanians expelled during 1989-1991 have been returning to Mauritania since 1995. 2

At a preliminary hearing, Mbaye initially conceded removability but refused to designate a country of removal. The IJ designated Mauritania as the country of removal, but postponed the proceedings because Mbaye appeared without any identity documentation. As proof of her alleged date of entry, Mbaye later submitted affidavits from two individuals who swore that Mbaye arrived in Cincinnati, Ohio, in October 2000 and moved to Detroit, Michigan, in December 2001. The two individuals were unavailable to testify before the IJ, and their affidavits could not verify Mbaye’s whereabouts before her arrival in Cincinnati in October 2000.

At the final hearing, at which Mbaye and one witness testified, the IJ denied her application in its entirety. He first found that Mbaye failed to establish her identity, her nationality, or the time, place, and manner of her entry into the United States. Consequently, she had not demonstrated that her application for asylum was timely. He noted that the identity documents that she provided for the first time two weeks before the June 2, 2006, hearing — and that she argued she had when she arrived in the United States — were “somewhat questionable on the[ir] face.” Mbaye produced a certificate of nationality, which was based in part on a residency card for the city of Nouakchott, where Mbaye testified that she had never lived, and on which Nouakchott is misspelled at least once. A national identity card entered into the record also indicated residency in Nouakchott, and the uncertified birth certificate provided was issued nineteen years after Mbaye’s birth. The IJ also found that the witness who testified that he had known Mbaye when she was in Senegal in 2000 was not credible because his testimony was internally inconsistent and irrelevant because he could not prove that he was in Senegal in 2000.

However, despite his finding that Mbaye did not meet the threshold requirements of eligibility for asylum, the IJ addressed the *692 merits of her case. In doing so, he found that Mbaye was not credible. He noted that she offered no corroborating evidence of her experience in Mauritania, even though evidence was procurable from Senegal or even Mauritania. He also took note of several inconsistencies that went to the heart of Mbaye’s asylum claim, including, inter alia:

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Bluebook (online)
369 F. App'x 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aida-mbaye-v-eric-holder-jr-ca6-2010.