Okwoukei Okonmah v. U.S. Immigration & Naturalization Service

7 F.3d 225, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 32443, 1993 WL 361922
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 17, 1993
Docket92-1630
StatusUnpublished

This text of 7 F.3d 225 (Okwoukei Okonmah v. U.S. Immigration & Naturalization Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Okwoukei Okonmah v. U.S. Immigration & Naturalization Service, 7 F.3d 225, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 32443, 1993 WL 361922 (4th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

7 F.3d 225

NOTICE: Fourth Circuit I.O.P. 36.6 states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Fourth Circuit.
Okwoukei OKONMAH, Petitioner,
v.
U.S. IMMIGRATION & Naturalization Service, Respondent.

No. 92-1630.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.

Argued: February 1, 1993.
Decided: September 17, 1993.

On Petition for Review of an Order of the Immigration and Naturalization Service.

ARGUED: Thanos Kanellakos, for Petitioner.

Stewart Deutsch, Office of Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT of Justice, for Respondent.

ON BRIEF: Stuart M. Gerson, Assistant Attorney General, Richard M. Evans, Assistant Director, Office of Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT of Justice, for Respondent.

E.D.Va.

AFFIRMED

Before MURNAGHAN and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges, and PAYNE, United States District Court Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation.

PER CURIAM:

OPINION

Okwoukei Okonmah ("Okonmah"), seeks review of an order of the Bureau of Immigration Appeals ("BIA") holding that he is not a "refugee" within the meaning of 8 U.S.C. § 110(1)(42)(A) and that therefore he is eligible neither for asylum under 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a) nor to have his deportation withheld under 8 U.S.C. § 1253(h). We affirm.

I.

On May 3, 1989, Okonmah entered the United States as a nonimmigrant business visitor with permission to remain until June 2, 1989. Okonmah stipulated that he had overstayed his visa and that, as a consequence, he was deportable. He sought to establish, however, that he was a refugee and that therefore he should be granted asylum or, alternatively, that his deportation should be withheld.

Following a hearing at which Okonmah and two witnesses testified, an immigration judge found that Okonmah was deportable under 8 U.S.C. § 1251(a)(2) as a nonimmigrant who had remained in the United States longer than permitted by law. Finding that Okonmah was not a refugee, the immigration judge denied Okonmah's request for asylum and his alternate request for withholding of deportation. On appeal, the BIA affirmed these determinations.

To establish that he was a refugee Okonmah was obligated to prove that he was unable or unwilling to return to, or to avail himself of the protection of, his native Nigeria "because of persecution or a wellfounded fear of persecution on account of ... membership in a particular social group, or political opinion." See 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A). Okonmah claims that he fears persecution for political reasons which have their genesis in an April 15, 1989, meeting of the Alumni Association of the University of Nigeria, Lagos, from which Okonmah claims to have graduated in 1987. According to Okonmah, he was a member of the Alumni Association and the secretary of the Correspondence and Open Studies Institute ("COSI") at the university. During the April 15, 1989 meeting, Okonmah and nine other individuals purportedly wrote a letter to the military government of Nigeria urging it to step down and hold democratic elections (the "April 15 letter"). Five of the signatories, including Okonmah, were members of the Alumni Association, and five were students then enrolled in the university. Okonmah testified that he was unsure of the date that this letter was mailed to the military government, and that he could only identify by name three of the other nine signatories.

On May 3, 1989, Okonmah travelled to the United States on a business visa which he had received before he signed the April 15 letter. Very shortly after his arrival in the United States, Okonmah claims to have received several alarming phone calls from Nigeria. None of the callers testified at the hearing, but Okonmah testified that one of them, Les Godwin, informed him that five members of the Alumni Association had been arrested and that, as a result of the arrests, students throughout Nigeria had participated in a strike and several students had been killed by the police. Godwin allegedly warned Okonmah that he would be arrested if he returned to Nigeria because he had signed the April 15 letter and because he was a member of the Movement for the Restoration of Democracy, an organization not further identified in the record.

Okonmah also testified that his wife was arrested in December 1990; that she was released; and that she then was fired from her teaching job at the university because of her political beliefs. At the time of his deportation hearing, Okonmah was unaware of the whereabouts of his wife, but he suspected that she was in hiding.

Bernard Akinsia ("Akinsia"), one of Okonmah's witnesses testified that when he visited Nigeria on June 4, 1989 the universities were closed because of rioting. Akinsia questioned his brother, Billy, who was a student at the University of Nigeria, about the riots and during that conversation:

[Okonmah's name] came up because they [Okonmah and Billy Akinsia] were both attending the university of Lagos and they were both in the student government consulate association that has written a letter to the federal government protesting their military rule that resulted in the student riots.

Billy Akinsia provided his brother, Bernard, with Okonmah's telephone number in the United States and asked Bernard to warn Okonmah not to come back to Nigeria "because they were looking for him." According to Bernard Akinsia, his brother also explained that the government was seeking Okonmah because he had signed a letter which had precipitated student riots, and which in turn had led to student deaths and the closing of universities in Nigeria.

Akinsia explained that he feared for the safety of his brother and thus took him to Ghana. When Akinsia returned to the United States in July 1989, he telephoned Okonmah and told him"about what happened in Nigeria, and that his lift [sic] is in danger, he should not make any attempt to come to Nigeria at this time."

Okonmah's other witness was Robert Onorche ("Onorche"), who met Okonmah in Nigeria before moving to the United States in 1988 and who served as Okonmah's host when Okonmah came to the United States on May 3, 1989. According to Onorche, approximately three weeks after Okonmah's arrival, Okonmah received a telephone call from Nigeria at three o'clock in the morning and which made Okonmah quite "unhappy." Okonmah received two subsequent calls and Onorche pressed him for details:

A. So, I asked him what was going on. And then he told me he is being sought for back home in Nigeria.

Q. Sought for what?

A. The police are looking for him back home in Nigeria. That's what the person who calls told him on the phone. And, I asked him what for. He said, the student body wrote a letter to the government for the government to step down and he was a signature to that letter and all those who wrote the letter they are looking for them to arrest them. So, he was one of them.

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