Tesfamichael v. Gonzales

469 F.3d 109, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 26432, 2006 WL 3012865
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 24, 2006
Docket04-61180
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 469 F.3d 109 (Tesfamichael v. Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tesfamichael v. Gonzales, 469 F.3d 109, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 26432, 2006 WL 3012865 (5th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

EDITH H. JONES, Chief Judge:

Petitioners seek review of the decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denying them asylum, individually and as a married couple, from Eritrea and Ethiopia. Finding no reversible error, we DENY the petition for review.

BACKGROUND

Comprising Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia, and Sudan, the region known as the Horn of Africa has a troubled history. After World War II, Italy relinquished control of its African colonies, including Eritrea. In 1952, the United Nations federated Eritrea with Ethiopia. In the early 1960s, Ethiopia dissolved the federation and annexed Eritrea as a province. Factions in the Eritrean province began clamoring for independence almost immediately and fought a brutal thirty-year war with the Ethiopian government. These factions later joined forces with Ethiopian groups seeking political reform to secure the overthrow of the Marxist regime of Mengistu Haile Mariam in 1991.

Once the Mengistu regime was overthrown, Ethiopian leaders permitted a national referendum on Eritrean indepen *112 dence in 1993. Registration to vote in the referendum was tied to verification of Eritrean nationality through a detailed form with information about a voter’s religious affiliation, parents and grandparents, and references from three Eritrean citizens. More than one million voters, living in over forty different countries, selected independence by a huge majority. Eritrea, supported by the new Ethiopian government, declared independence in May 1993.

Relations between Ethiopia and its new neighbor proved cordial. After several years, however, border disputes led to war in May 1998. At the outbreak of war, the legal status of the approximately 75,000 voters in the Eritrean independence election who continued to live in Ethiopia remained uncertain, and in June 1998 Ethiopia began forcibly removing to Eritrea people who had voted in the election. The “deportations” occurred without due process. The deportees were often forced to stay in detention camps briefly, and Ethiopia regularly scheduled the deportations piecemeal to break up families. 1

Petitioner Senait Kidane Tesfamichael and her family were among those forcibly removed from Ethiopia. Senait’s parents were originally from the Eritrean region, but Senait was born and lived in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, until the deportations. At her asylum hearing, Senait testified credibly that she heard of the deportations in 1998 and feared removal. Shortly after the deportations began, Senait and her Ethiopian husband, Petitioner Dawit Tessema-Damte, attempted to escape out of Ethiopia, possibly to Kenya. Their escape plans were foiled, however. On a bus near the Kenyan border, police asked the passengers for identification. Senait could not produce any, as authorities had stripped her of her Ethiopian ID following her vote in the Eritrean referendum. 2 Dawit intervened on Senait’s behalf, but his intervention led to both his and Se-nait’s arrest and detention.

As he credibly testified, Dawit spent a month in jail for the purported crime of “smuggling Eritreans.” Until his mother secured his release through a bond, he slept in one room with up to forty men, received little food, and saw other detainees with bruises caused, he believed, by beatings. While in jail, Dawit was interrogated generally once or twice a day, for one or two hours, about how many people he had smuggled and how much he charged.

Dawit was able to secure Senait’s release one week after his own by bribing officials. Back in Addis Ababa, Dawit was twice stopped by police; both times Dawit cooperated and was released. Fearing reprisal for his help to Senait, and without reporting to court on the pending smuggling charges, Dawit fled alone to Kenya, then South Africa, where he lived from 1998 to 2003.

Ethiopian authorities found Senait in June 2000 and removed her to Eritrea. 3 Senait testified that she spent three days in a detention center without food or water, then was forced to walk nine kilome *113 ters in an area filled with land mines on the way to Eritrea. There, Senait reconnected with her family and worked part-time at a gas station. She testified that she was occasionally taunted or told to go back to Ethiopia. She also claims that she was denied full Eritrean citizenship and an exit visa, and that she feared military conscription.

In 2002, two years after Senait had been removed to Eritrea, and after the war ended, 4 Dawit sent for her. Without an exit visa, Senait had to be smuggled out of Eritrea. She traveled through Sudan and Swaziland before reuniting with Dawit in South Africa. There, the couple stayed for a year until they were robbed and burglarized, crimes which scared Senait, and they decided to leave. After traveling through Cuba, Nicaragua, Guatemala, and Mexico, the couple arrived in the United States in March 2004.

Senait and Dawit entered the United States without visas, and they conceded removability pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(A)(I). An Immigration Judge (“IJ”) found them ineligible for asylum, withholding of deportation, and relief under the Convention against Torture (“CAT”). A single judge of the BIA affirmed.

DISCUSSION

The Ethiopian-Eritrean conflict precipitated a rash of asylum seekers entering the United States. 5 Although Petitioners are sympathetic victims of this conflict, the BIA and this court must analyze their claims statutorily. If petitioners do not qualify for asylum, the BIA correctly rejected their claims. 6

This court reviews the BIA’s legal conclusions de novo. Girma v. I.N.S, 283 F.3d 664, 666 (5th Cir.2002); Lopez-Gomez v. Ashcroft, 263 F.3d 442, 444 (5th Cir.2001). We will defer to the BIA’s interpretation of immigration regulations if the interpretation is reasonable. Lopez-Gomez, 263 F.3d at 444. The BIA’s factual findings are upheld if supported by substantial evidence, Long v. Gonzales, 420 F.3d 516, 519 (5th Cir.2005), that is, unless the evidence is so compelling that no reasonable factfinder could fail to find otherwise. Id.

To qualify for asylum, an alien must be a “refugee.” See 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(a). The Immigration and Naturalization Act defines a refugee as a person unable to return to his or her country “because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.” 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A).

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Bluebook (online)
469 F.3d 109, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 26432, 2006 WL 3012865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tesfamichael-v-gonzales-ca5-2006.