Mohammad Arif Shardar v. John Ashcroft, Attorney General of the United States

382 F.3d 318, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 17980, 2004 WL 1879797
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 2004
Docket03-2110
StatusPublished
Cited by140 cases

This text of 382 F.3d 318 (Mohammad Arif Shardar v. John Ashcroft, Attorney General of the United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mohammad Arif Shardar v. John Ashcroft, Attorney General of the United States, 382 F.3d 318, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 17980, 2004 WL 1879797 (3d Cir. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

CHERTOFF, Circuit Judge.

Mohammad Arif Sardar appeals the decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA), affirming the Immigration Judge’s (IJ) denial of his application for asylum and withholding of deportation, and denying his motion to reopen the proceedings for consideration under Article 3 of the United Nations Convention Against Torture (CAT). For the reasons elaborated below, we will deny the petition for review in its entirety.

I.

Shardar is a native and citizen of Bangladesh who entered the United States on August 26, 1992, using a false passport. Shardar applied for asylum in 1992, alleging he was persecuted on the basis of his political opinion for his membership in the Jatiyo political party. Jatiyo is the party of Army Chief of Staff General H.M. Er-shad, who seized power and declared himself President in December 1983. In the face of widespread opposition, Ershad was forced to resign in December 1990, and in a February 1991 election the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) won a parliamentary plurality and formed the government.

The primary basis for Shardar’s asylum claim stems from events surrounding his participation, on January 6, 1992, in an allegedly peaceful demonstration in Jatra-bari Square 1 in Bangladesh. Shardar was arrested and charged with having weapons and explosives, allegations that Shardar stated were “[c]ompletely false.” A.R. at 174. Shardar testified that following his arrest, he was held in jail and beaten with canes and kicked in the face. While he was beaten his interrogators shouted, “Er-shad time is over. Now is, is BNP time.” Id. at 168. Shardar claimed he was forced to confess that he had weapons and explosives, and to proclaim that he would never be with the party again, in order to stop the beatings and “save [his] life.” Id. at 169.

After three days in the police station and almost six days in jail, Shardar went before a judge. Shardar’s father paid for a lawyer. The judge, whom Shardar described as “pretty nice,” id. at 170, released him on bail of 50,000 local taka, which his father paid. Following his release, Shardar’s father took him to a private medical clinic for nineteen days.

Shardar then went to work for a Chinese restaurant in Dhaka, Bangladesh. He testified that the police came looking for him on several occasions, and therefore he “had to leave the job,” his home, and his wife. Id. at 171. Shardar conceded, however, that the police came after a war *321 rant was issued for his arrest because of his failure to appear in court. Id. at 176-77.

In addition to Shardar’s testimony, documentary evidence was introduced, including a police report and “charge sheet” pertaining to his arrest, the record of proceedings in the Court of Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, and an arrest warrant issued on May 20, 1992, providing that Shardar “after having [posted] bail[,] ... abseond[ed],” id. at 284. Shardar also submitted letters from the clinic where he was treated following his release, his lawyer, an associate from the Jatiyo Party, and an accounting firm. See id. at 274-77.

Of particular relevance is the police report, which characterizes the protestors as violent and suggests Shardar was a leader in the hostile activities. The report explains, in pertinent part:

[T]hey were delivering defamatory, de-tractive and slanderous slowgans [sic] against the present Government].... We then and there made an importunate entreaty to them not to deliver such types of slowgans [sic] for which they got infuriated and being armed with deadly weapons made a sudden invasion on us. They exploded some bombs at the spot one after another. Many pad-estrians [sic] were lethally injured. We to control this predicament [sic] situation used tear gas to disperse them but they became more furious and begun [sic] to throw brickbats on us. We having found no other way advanced with fortitute [sic] to arrest them and Md. Arif Sardar [sic] accussed No. 1 arrested by us, under whose Leadership this occurrence was occurred and the other skedaddled from the spot....

Id. at 279-80.

On July 22, 1998, 2 the Immigration Judge (IJ) denied Shardar’s application for asylum and withholding of removal, while granting the application for voluntary departure. The IJ concluded that “although the respondent is credible, he has in no way met his burden of proof.” Id. at 89. The IJ explained that “[t]here is a complete grand canyon of difference between persecution and a fear of prosecution.” Id. The IJ rejected the suggestion that “the only reason he was arrested was because he was a supporter of the Jatiya Party.” Id. at 91. Rather, the IJ pointed to the documentary evidence that the demonstration was violent. Noting that Shar-dar had failed to file newspaper articles or other objective evidence supporting his account of the demonstration, the IJ explained that “[i]t is equally plausible, in fact more plausible than not given the evidence supplied by the respondent, that the respondent had been involved in inciting a demonstration that turned violent and that the police were mad as could be.” Id. at 92.

The IJ noted that Shardar did not provide evidence that the judicial process might be corrupted; rather, the State Department report indicates that members of the Jatiyo Party enjoy the same judicial rights as other Bangladeshis. The State Department’s 1997 Bangladesh Profile of Asylum Claims and Country Conditions (“1997 State Department Profile”) provides, in pertinent part:

*322 There is some evidence that prominent Jatiyo Party members and/ or supporters ... were harassed by the BNP Government between 1991 and 1996. These individuals were able to defend themselves in court actions and have the same judicial rights as other Bangladeshis. The harassment experienced by some high level Jatiyo party members is not sufficient to justify the conclusion that Jatiyo Party membership in itself accounted for severe mistreatment.

Id. at 257.

The IJ concluded that while arguably Shardar was persecuted in the past when he was beaten at the police station, “the changed circumstances ... rebut or defeat any potential presumption of a well-founded fear of future persecution.” Id. at 97. The IJ elaborated that “[t]he obvious and evident changed circumstances are that the respondent was released on a bond and obviously the police did respect the respondent and left him alone.... The fact that the police came by later in time looking for the respondent ... is clearly all because the respondent failed to appear in court and the police were executing a warrant. ...” Id. The IJ also referenced the “1997 State Department Profile” for the proposition that “country conditions for people who are in the Jatiya Party have radically changed.” Id. at 95. 3

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382 F.3d 318, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 17980, 2004 WL 1879797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohammad-arif-shardar-v-john-ashcroft-attorney-general-of-the-united-ca3-2004.