Saizhu Wang v. U.S. Attorney General

591 F. App'x 794
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 24, 2014
Docket13-13262
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 591 F. App'x 794 (Saizhu Wang v. U.S. Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saizhu Wang v. U.S. Attorney General, 591 F. App'x 794 (11th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

HULL, Circuit Judge:

Saizhu Wang, a native and citizen of China, petitions for review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’s (“BIA”) dismissal of her appeal from the Immigration Judge’s (“IJ”) denial of her application for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the United Nations Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punish *796 ment (“CAT”). See 8 U.S.C. §§ 1158, 1231. The BIA found that Wang failed to establish that she has a well-founded fear of persecution based on her conversion to Christianity or that she is likely to be tortured when she returns to the Fujian Province in China. After careful review, and with the benefit of oral argument, we deny Wang’s petition.

I. BACKGROUND FACTS

In Decémber 1998, Wang illegally entered the United States without inspection. In 2010, the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) issued a notice to appear, charging Wang as removable pursuant to Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) § 212(a)(6)(A)(i), 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a) (6) (A) (i), for having entered the United States without being admitted or paroled by an immigration officer. Wang does not challenge her removability.

A. Application for Asylum, Withholding of Removal, and CAT Relief

In August 2010, Wang filed an application for asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT relief based on her religion. Wang attached a personal statement in which she attested that she feared persecution in China based on her Christian belief and her intent, if she returned there, to attend an illegal underground “house church” rather than a state-controlled public church. She was afraid the government would detain her if she was caught attending a house church because her sister-in-law, Chunmei Liu, had been arrested after she was caught attending a house church, was kept for several days, and was warned not to attend underground churches. In support of her application, Wang submitted: (1) a certificate of baptism, (2) a church attendance certificate from the church where she was baptized, (3) photographs of Wang taken at her baptism, and (4) photographs of Wang taken at church.

Wang also submitted two affidavit letters from Liu, her sister-in-law in China. In the first letter, Liu stated that she and Wang were from the same village in the Fujian Province. In March 2010, government officers caught Liu in a house church, detained her for several days, and warned her not to attend a house church again. Moreover, the government recently had strengthened its efforts to suppress house churches. In the second letter, Liu recounted that in June 2010, three days after sending her first letter, she was again arrested for attending a house church after someone reported her for gathering church members in her home. The police asked her to name the people who attended the gathering, but she refused. The police kept her in a “separate room” and “[a]t first” did not give her food or water or allow her to contact her family. The police detained her for about two weeks until her husband and other church members paid her bail.

B. Hearing before IJ

At the removal hearing, Wang, represented by counsel, testified that she was from Lianjiang City in the Fujian Province. Wang started attending Christian services in the United States after her mother became ill and a friend introduced her to the church. At the time of the hearing, she attended a Chinese Presbyterian church in Florida. Wang testified that she would continue to practice her religion if she returned to China by spreading the Gospel and attending an underground church. Although public Christian churches were legal in China, she did not consider these churches “real Christian” churches because the pastors’ messages must be approved by the government. Wang feared that she would be *797 arrested and beaten for her participation in an underground church based on Liu’s arrests.

Wang also testified that her two older brothers (including Liu’s husband), one older sister, her mother, and her father lived in China and attended underground churches. Wang was not aware of any instance in which these family members had been arrested or detained for attending underground churches.

A friend of Wang and the wife of Wang’s pastor both testified that Wang was a devout Christian who attended church almost every week. The pastor’s wife also testified that she and the pastor had been in the United States for eleven years, and the pastor went back to China on mission trips almost every year. The pastor had never been arrested on these mission trips because the house churches were very secretive. Prior to moving to the United States, the pastor’s wife practiced Christianity in China for nearly twenty years, and she had only a single incident in which she was almost arrested for spreading the Gospel.

In addition to Wang’s application and the above-described testimony, the record before the IJ included letters from family members and a friend that vouched for Wang’s sincere belief in Christianity and her regular attendance at church.

The record also included several annual reports on China from 2007 through 2011 by the U.S. Department of State, the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, and the China Aid Association. The reports generally indicated that the Chinese government sought to restrict religious practices to registered places of worship and to. repress unregistered Protestant churches but that the restrictions on unregistered religious groups differed in degree and varied significantly from region to region. Religious repression was most severe in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region and Tibet. However, certain parts of China, like Hong Kong, protected and respected religious freedom. One report included a list of reported persecution cases by region and province, and the Fujian Province had only one case of detention.

According to another report, the degree of government interference in unregistered churches ranged from minimal supervision to raids to arrests and imprisonment for unauthorized religious activity. The reports detailed specific incidents of religious freedom restriction, including cases in which the Chinese government had shut down unregistered churches and detained or physically abused individuals, in particular church leaders, involved with unregistered churches. Unregistered religious adherents were among those housed in high security mental hospitals where patients were forced to take medicines and subjected to shock treatment. Activists who were in administrative detention reported that they were beaten, force-fed medications, and denied food.

The reports also reflected that, although generally the Chinese government’s respect for religious freedom had declined and religious persecution had escalated in recent years, freedom to participate in religious activities had increased in several areas, underground church communities had grown over the past few decades, and religious participation had grown overall. An estimated 50 to 70 million people practiced Christianity in unregistered churches in China.

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591 F. App'x 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saizhu-wang-v-us-attorney-general-ca11-2014.