Bouya Ngazala Ikama-Obambi v. Alberto R. Gonzales

470 F.3d 720, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 30272, 2006 WL 3545136
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 11, 2006
Docket06-1402
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 470 F.3d 720 (Bouya Ngazala Ikama-Obambi v. Alberto R. Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bouya Ngazala Ikama-Obambi v. Alberto R. Gonzales, 470 F.3d 720, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 30272, 2006 WL 3545136 (7th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

EVANS, Circuit Judge.

Bouya Ngazala Ikama-Obambi, a citizen of the Republic of Congo and the daughter of that country’s former Secretary of Health (and a director of the World Health Organization for Africa as well) applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture (CAT). The IJ denied her asylum application as untimely and denied her withholding application and request for relief under the CAT because he found that she did not adequately corroborate her testimony. The BIA adopted and affirmed the IJ’s decision. Ikama-Obambi now petitions for review of this order, and we grant her petition.

In January 2003, after overstaying her visitor’s visa, Ikama-Obambi applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the CAT based on her claimed fear of persecution on account of her political opinion and membership in a particular social group in Congo. She was 28 years old at the time. In her application Ikama-Obambi explained that in 1992 her father, uncle, and one of her brothers joined the newly formed party, Rally for Democracy and Development (RDD). That party supported Jacques-Joachim Yhombi-Opango, a former president of Congo. Though her father was an “important member” in the party, Ikama-Obambi did not join the party herself. According to articles attached to her application, the political situation in Congo began to deteriorate when violence erupted in 1993.

In her application Ikama-Obambi explains that her family, fearing for their safety because of the increased violence, split up and fled. Her parents sent her and her older brother Stephen to France; Ikama-Obambi lived with her aunt while Stephen attended boarding school. Her other brother, Offounga, who was actively involved with the RDD, fled to another city within Congo, while her mother fled to Kinshasa, the capital of the neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo. Only Ika-ma-Obambi’s father stayed in their home in Brazzaville.

Attached to Ikama-Obambi’s application are articles recounting that conditions in Congo worsened in 1997, when militia factions began warring for control of the country. By October 1997, Denis Sassou-Nguesso’s faction gained control, and he declared himself president of the country. However, the violence continued, and in December 1998 a guerilla group called the “Cobras,” which backed Sassou-Nguesso, began arresting members of the opposition. Ikama-Obambi alleges in her application that Offounga then returned to Brazzaville and reunited with his father. In 1999 Ikama-Obambi lost all contact with her parents. By then Stephen had obtained permanent residency in the United States through his marriage to a United States citizen, and he arranged for Ikama-Obambi to visit him so that they could discuss her future. Ikama-Obambi left *723 France, where she had been living continuously since 1993, and entered the United States on January 31, 2000, on a visitor’s visa. 1 This was not her first trip to the United States; she previously visited Stephen in August 1999.

In her asylum application Ikama-Obam-bi further states that, although she and Stephen also had lost contact with Offoun-ga in 1999, he eventually contacted them and explained that the Cobras had arrested him and their father but he managed to escape without their father. Offounga did not know the fate of either parent and emphasized that it would be dangerous for Ikama-Obambi and Stephen to return to Congo because the government was looking for them on account of their father’s involvement with the RDD. Prior to getting confirmation of her father’s arrest from Offounga, Ikama-Obambi had been relying on rumors that he had been captured and executed by government forces after hiding with other RDD members. Offounga received asylum in France in 2001.

During her removal hearing, Ikama-Obambi testified consistently with her asylum application and added that her father was the “head” of the RDD and that he gave directions to others in the party. She testified through a French interpreter, though she represented by checking a box on her asylum application that she was fluent in English. She also clarified that she no longer could return to France because her visa had expired. To support her claim, she submitted a French document verifying Offounga’s receipt of asylum. She also gave the IJ updated information regarding Congo, including a State Department report from 2003, which describes the country’s human rights record as “poor” and blames the government’s security forces for “unlawful killings, summary executions, rapes, beatings, physical abuse of detainees and citizens, arbitrary arrest and detention, looting, and solicitation of bribes and theft.” The report identifies the RDD as a major opposition party. Ikama-Obambi introduced other articles, including an April 2003 article from Amnesty International saying that Sassou-Nguesso’s government, like its predecessors, has “sought to perpetuate [its] power and build political stability against a background of grave human rights abuses.”

At the outset of the hearing the IJ noted the untimeliness of Ikama-Obambi’s asylum application. Counsel filed a brief and argued before the IJ that the one-year deadline for filing asylum applications, see 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a)(2)(B), should be waived in Ikama-Obambi’s case because of “extraordinary circumstances.” He explained that her purported lack of English fluency, her difficulty obtaining legal counsel, and her lack of knowledge regarding asylum law prevented her from filing sooner.

The IJ rejected this argument, finding her stated reasons for filing after the one-year deadline to be “routine obstacles,” not extraordinary circumstances. He then remarked that Ikama-Obambi provided no proof, other than her testimony, that her father was the head of the RDD or that Sassou-Nguesso’s government had a hand in his disappearance. He noted that Ika-ma-Obambi could have provided corroborating evidence, such as a statement from Offounga, testimony from Stephen, or documentation regarding her father’s leadership of the RDD. The IJ acknowledged that if Ikama-Obambi’s father “was disappeared and if her father was in prison and *724 seriously mistreated by the current government ... she would have at least a reasonable possibility of persecution.” But the IJ questioned the credibility of Ikama-Obambi’s contention that her father led the RDD, noting that “the real problem here is a lack of corroborative evidence to prove the essential facts in the case.” The IJ denied Ikama-Obambi’s application for withholding of removal and relief under the CAT for failure to meet her burden of proof but granted her request for voluntary departure.

Ikama-Obambi appealed, but the BIA adopted and affirmed the IJ’s decision. The BIA noted that her father’s leadership role in the RDD is the type of information that “should be subject to easy corroboration.” The BIA reasoned that, because Ikama-Obambi’s testimony “was not specific or detailed and because the requested corroboration was easy to obtain,” the IJ reasonably demanded corroborating evidence.

In her petition for review, Ikama-Obambi renews her argument that the one-year filing deadline for her asylum application should be overlooked based on extraordinary circumstances. But she faces a jurisdictional hurdle.

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Bluebook (online)
470 F.3d 720, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 30272, 2006 WL 3545136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bouya-ngazala-ikama-obambi-v-alberto-r-gonzales-ca7-2006.