Mamoudou Diakite v. Michael Mukasey

306 F. App'x 902
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 2009
Docket08-3500
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 306 F. App'x 902 (Mamoudou Diakite v. Michael Mukasey) 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
Mamoudou Diakite v. Michael Mukasey, 306 F. App'x 902 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge.

Mamoudou Diakite, a native and citizen of Guinea, applied for withholding of removal and protection under the Convention Against Torture (CAT). He claims that the Guinean police beat and tortured him on account of his political activities. After a hearing, the immigration judge (IJ) assigned to Diakite’s case found that he was not credible and that he had failed to provide sufficient corroboration of his claim. The IJ therefore denied his application, and the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) affirmed. Diakite timely petitioned for review. For the reasons set forth below, we DENY his petition.

I. BACKGROUND

Diakite illegally entered the United States in December 1999, when he was 30 years old. In September 2003, the Department of Homeland Security served Diakite with a Notice to Appear, which alleged that Diakite was an alien present in the United States without being admitted or paroled, and therefore was removable under 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(A)(i). Diakite was ordered to appear before an IJ to explain why he should not be removed to Guinea. He conceded removability and applied for withholding of removal and for protection under the CAT. See 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3); 8 C.F.R. §§ 208.16(c) and 208.18.

*904 A. Merits heax'ing

1. Direct examination

The following factual allegations were elicited from Diakite, primarily on direct examination during the merits hearing. Diakite was born in KanKan, Guinea. A teacher introduced him to a political group known as the Rally for the People of Guinea (RPG), but the record does not indicate the teacher’s name or when the introduction took place. In November 1991, when Diakite was 22 years old, he assumed the role of president of the RPG’s youth bureau in KanKan. He organized a peaceful march in May 1992 protesting excessive student fees imposed by the government. Soldiers descended on the protestors and a physical confrontation ensued. The soldiers shot and killed Diakite’s best friend, Mamadi Mate. Like Diakite, Mate had been an active member of the RPG. Six other people died during the protest.

The day after Guinean soldiers killed Mate, Diakite allegedly traveled to Mate’s home with other people to express his condolences to the Mate family. Believing that Diakite and his associates were on their way to another protest, government authorities arrested him and several women, and took them to jail. Diakite was subsequently taken to the Sendoeta Military Camp, where officials beat him, doused him with cold water, and tortured him to elicit the names of key members of the RPG involved in the May 1992 protest. He did not reveal any names. Diakite was released two days after his detention because the national deputy of the RPG, Aminata Mady, intervened on his behalf. The government released him on the condition that he not engage in further marches against the government or commit any violent acts. They threatened to kill him if he broke the terms of his release.

Diakite claims that he relocated from KanKan to Conakry to study at the University of Conakry in 1997. He resumed his involvement with the RPG, acting as a liaison between students and the pax’ty. On October 28, 1999, with the help of his friend Ibrahim Kalil Conde and other members of the RPG, Diakite organized a public demonstration to protest the high cost of transportation. The protestors blocked traffic on a highway to make their point. Soldiers arrived on the scene to break up the blockade, and a confrontation between the soldiers and the protestors led to violence. Three soldiers and four students were killed during the clash. Conde was shot in the leg. The Conakry blockade was pux’portedly one of many road blockades that took place countrywide on that date.

Men that Diakite referred to as “policemen” allegedly arrested Diakite dux'ing the clash. They beat him up, pistol-whipped him, and stomped and kicked his testicles, stomach, and other parts of his body. The officials then placed him in a truck to take him to a neighborhood of Conakry called Amdalaye.

Upon arriving in Amdalaye, Diakite claims that the officials threw him into a dark prison cell and proceeded to beat him, seeking information about the RPG movement. The cell was filled with excrement. As a result of the severe beatings, he lost vision in his left eye. Diakite received no medical assistance while detained in the Amdalaye pxison. A doctor in the United States signed a letter in August 2006 confirming that Diakite is blind in his left eye, concluding that the damage was likely caused by the trauma that Diakite allegedly suffered seven years earlier.

Diakite alleges that he left the px'ison on November 4, 1999. He claims that he escaped with the help of his cousin, Bakari Diakite, who was a member of the military. His cousin had to physically help Diakite *905 out because he was not able to walk, was very weak, could not see well, and felt ill. Upon his escape, Diakite went into hiding at the home of Sekou Camara, a businessman and active member of the RPG who lived in Conakry. While in hiding, Diakite stayed in periodic contact with his uncle, Amadou Diakite. Authorities arrested Diakite’s mother twice in order to find out Diakite’s location. Camara purportedly helped Diakite escape to America from Guinea by providing him with a fraudulent passport and by making “arrangements” with airport officials to assure his safe passage. Diakite fears that he will be killed by Guinean authorities if he is returned to Guinea.

2. Cross-examination

The government’s cross-examination focused largely on the lack of documentation to support Diakite’s various factual claims. Diakite had no documents establishing that he was in Guinea in 1999. Nor could he produce documents corroborating his enrollment at the University of Conakry. Diakite proffered no evidence showing that the PRG even existed in 1992, that he was a member of the group, or that he was a member of its youth branch. There were no documents supporting his claim that a protest occurred in May 1992 in KanKan. Diakite believed that the May 1992 protests — which led to the deaths of six people — might have garnered international press coverage. But he did not submit any news reports to the immigration court. Diakite noted, however, that the Guinean press likely did not cover the protests because the government suppresses unflattering information.

He was also questioned regarding his failure to produce corroborating evidence to show that the “massive” Conkary traffic blockade ever took place. Diakite claimed that he did not know what was required to prepare for “this situation,” likely referring to the merits hearing, and that he had a problem with “the language,” presumably describing his inability to speak English very well. He further stated that he considered going back to Guinea after arriving in the United States, but decided not to in light of the risk that he would be killed there.

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306 F. App'x 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mamoudou-diakite-v-michael-mukasey-ca6-2009.