Hanaj, Donald v. Gonzales, Alberto

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 3, 2006
Docket05-1836
StatusPublished

This text of Hanaj, Donald v. Gonzales, Alberto (Hanaj, Donald v. Gonzales, Alberto) 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
Hanaj, Donald v. Gonzales, Alberto, (7th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 05-1836 DONALD HANAJ, Petitioner, v.

ALBERTO R. GONZALES, Respondent. ____________ Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals. No. A77-839-228 ____________ ARGUED NOVEMBER 28, 2005—DECIDED MAY 3, 2006 ____________

Before KANNE, ROVNER, and WOOD, Circuit Judges. ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Petitioner, Donald Hanaj, entered the United States without admission, parole or inspection through Canada, and applied for asylum in 1999. The asylum application was also considered as a request for withholding of removal and for protection under the United Nations Convention Against Torture. The immigration judge denied his application, and ordered him removed, and the BIA summarily affirmed. Hanaj now seeks relief from this court. 2 No. 05-1836

I At the hearing, the immigration judge was presented with the testimony of Hanaj, as well as that of numerous wit- nesses. We turn first to Hanaj’s testimony. Hanaj testified that he is an ethnic Albanian who was born in Gjilan, Kosovo, on May 19, 1980, and resided there until April 1998 when he was forced to leave due to persecu- tion by Serbian officials. His father was an active member in the League Democratic of Kosovarian (“LDK”), a political party opposed to Serbian rule over Kosovo, and Hanaj and his brother later became members as well. When Hanaj was ten or eleven years old, his father moved to Germany because the Serbian special police sought to kill him for his political activities. Hanaj’s brother, Eduard, was later forced to leave as well, and he ultimately obtained asylum in England. The police searched Hanaj’s home on several occasions for evidence relating to the departure of his father and brother, and threatened to burn down the home if they found anything incriminating. Hanaj formally joined the LDK in 1996 when he was sixteen, and received a member- ship card. At the hearing, Hanaj was questioned as to why his membership card contained the dates of 1992 to 1995. He testified that the LDK used old cards because they lacked the means to make new ones. In 1996, several police officers approached Hanaj on the street, speaking to him in Serbian. When he responded to them in Albanian, they became angry and hit and kicked him for ten minutes, leaving scars on his lip and shin. Hanaj went to the Serbian-run hospital, but was refused treatment because he was Albanian. A few months later, a vehicle Hanaj was driving was stopped at a police roadblock and searched, and LDK leaflets were found under the car seat. Hanaj and his friends were then transported to the police station, where they were separated. Hanaj was then questioned about LDK and his father. He denied any No. 05-1836 3

involvement with LDK, and foreswore knowledge of his father’s whereabouts. Hanaj also refused to identify LDK members whose pictures he was shown. During this interrogation, he was first struck repeatedly on his head. The police then handcuffed him and chained the handcuff to a hook on the wall, leaving him hanging by the chain. He was then beaten with a whip and a wooden stick. When he began to fade in and out of consciousness, the police removed him from the wall and beat the soles of his feet with a wooden stick until they were bleeding and swollen. He was subsequently placed in a cell which contained water and salt on the floor to exacerbate those wounds. Three days later, Hanaj found himself at a hospital, but had no recollection as to how he got there or what transpired in the interim. It took a month of care at home before Hanaj recovered from those injuries. Hanaj had yet another violent encounter with the police when he was about seventeen years old, after a search at a roadblock again yielded banned materials including LDK leaflets and a book about Kosovo. He was interrogated, hit with wooden sticks and a riding crop, and once again placed in a basement cell. This aggravated his prior injuries. In November 1997, Hanaj and approximately 1,000 other ethnic Albanians gathered in a demonstration led by the leader of the local LDK, to celebrate Albanian flag day. When the Serbian police tried to break up the demonstra- tion, the Albanians responded by throwing rocks, and the Serbian police then shot into the crowd. One of Hanaj’s close friends, Naim Frasheri, was hit by a bullet. Hanaj and his friends took Naim to Hanaj’s house, where Naim died shortly thereafter. The final event precipitating Hanaj’s departure occurred in April 1998, when his father unexpectedly returned home. Shortly after his arrival, Hanaj’s mother responded to a knock at the door. Upon opening the door, she encountered 4 No. 05-1836

the Serbian police, who struck her on the head with the butt of a gun, and she fell to the ground unconscious. The police kicked Hanaj’s father and then searched him, finding an Albanian flag and a book by a national LDK leader. When Hanaj’s father spit on the police, they shot and killed him. At that time, Hanaj fled to his uncle’s house, where his uncle gave him some money and sent him to a cousin in Macedonia. Because many Serbs lived in Macedonia, his cousin recommended that Hanaj continue on to Greece. After arriving in Greece, Hanaj contacted his uncle and learned that his parents had both died and that a warrant for Hanaj’s arrest had been left at Hanaj’s home. Eventually, Hanaj traveled to Canada by ship. Once there, he climbed under a truck and hid in the space where a spare tire is normally kept. The truck crossed the border into the United States, and when it slowed to a near stop, Hanaj jumped out. He made his way by bus from that location in Plattsburg, New York, to Chicago. In support of his asylum application, Hanaj introduced his birth certificate, the arrest warrant that his uncle mailed to him in Greece, his LDK membership card, and the international driver’s license that he had with him when he fled Kosovo. He further presented the testimony and affidavits of many witnesses to corroborate his claim of torture and persecution. Among those was the affidavit of Dr. James Sanders, who documented scars on Hanaj’s heel, head, shoulder, back, palms and leg consistent with his allegations of the beatings. Dr. Sanders is a board-certified family physician, who has worked at the Center for Victims of Torture in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and established the Advocates of Survivors of Trauma and Torture in Baltimore, Maryland. He received post-graduate education in the examination, diagnosis and treatment of torture survivors at Harvard and Columbia universities. He also served as a program officer for a large international relief operation in Kosovo in 1996-97. Hanaj further submitted an affidavit of No. 05-1836 5

Alison Duncombe, a physical therapist who spent four sessions with Hanaj to treat him for back, leg, and neck pain and frequent headaches. Hanaj also presented testimony from Julie A. Mertus, a human rights professor and a specialist on country condi- tions in Kosovo. Mertus testified that Hanaj’s description as to the type of torture he experienced was consistent with the descriptions provided during that time period by numerous ethnic Albanians in Kosovo who Mertus had interviewed, especially his experience in being beaten on the bottom of the feet and placed in wet cells. Mertus testified as to her belief that the Serbian police were trained to act in a specific way and that there was a pattern and practice to the type of torture Hanaj experienced. Her testimony further detailed her extensive experience in Kosovo, including as the author of a book on Kosovo based on ten years of study and extensive field work. She was asked to participate on a task force convened by the White House on the future of Kosovo, and visited Kosovo on a NATO-sponsored trip. In addition, Hanaj introduced the testimony of Dr.

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