Viоleta Alibeaj petitions for review of a decision by the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) which affirmed an immigration judge’s denial of her asylum application. We deny the petition.
I
BACKGROUND
In February 2001, Alibeaj, a native and citizen of Albania, entered the United States illegally. During her removal proceedings, Alibeaj submitted an application for asylum, claiming that the Albanian Communist and Socialist Parties had persecuted her and her family for the last fifty-eight years, as follows: In 1943, the communist government arrested and executed her grandfather and an uncle, both leaders of the anti-communist National Party. During thе 1980s, the government arrested and tortured her future husband and a brother-in-law. In 1990, Alibeaj attended a pro-democracy demonstration in the capital city of Tirana, at which anti-riot police struck her in the head. In 1991, following the fall of the communist regime in Albania and a transfer of governmental pоwer to the Democratic Party, Alibeaj *190 joined a support group for persons who had been victims of political persecution by the communist government.
In 1997, the Socialist Party, which included many former communists, won the national election and regained control of the government. When Alibеaj went into labor with her first child that year, the hospital did not dispatch an ambulance to her home, and refused to attend to her medical needs or treat her pain during sixteen hours of labor. Consequently, her baby was born with serious mental defects. Alibeaj contends that her government-appointed gynecologist — the daughter of a political opponent of her husband’s family whose father had raped Alibeaj’s mother-in-law — was the instigator of this denial of adequate medical treatment. Thereafter, Alibeaj sought medical assistance for her ailing son, but was refused treatment when she informed the doctors and hospitals that she was a supporter of the Democratic Party. Alibeaj traveled to Italy for two years to obtain medical treatment for her son, while her husband remained in Albania. Alibeaj’s son subsequently died of birth defects while in Italy.
In 1997, members of SHIK, the Albanian secret police organization, arrested and tortured Alibeaj’s sister-in-law after she wrote a history of Alibeaj’s husband’s family, which was critical of the former communist regime’s repressive tactics against its political opponents. When the sister-in-law was released after five days, she was so psychologically shell-shocked that she was unable to speak. Eventually, she emigrated to Italy, where she committed suicide. The government unsuccessfully continued its search for copies of the sister-in-law’s book, at Alibeaj’s residence and elsewhere.
In 2000, following two years in Italy, Alibeaj returned to Albania, whereupon SHIK agents stalked Alibeaj and threatened to kill her and her family if they did not leave Albania. On one occasion, SHIK agents physically assaulted her husband and stole all of his construction tools, thereby depriving him of his livelihood. Thereafter, Alibeaj left Albania for the United States.
In September 2004, an immigration judge (“IJ”) orally rejected her asylum application, stating as follows:
I’m going to deny the application [for asylum] because I’m just not seeing any connection here between any of the five enumerated grounds in what she’s related. And I’m not sure that what she’s related amounts to past persecution to her. And I don’t see that she has a well-founded fear of future persecution on account of any of the five enumerated grounds if she returns to Albania.
Alibeaj filed a timely appeal of the IJ’s decision to the BIA. The BIA adopted and affirmed, thus signifying that its “conclusions upon review of the record coincide with those which the [IJ] articulated in his or her decision.” The BIA added:
We agree with the [IJ] that the respondent failed to establish that she suffered persecution. Despite the regrettable actions that have befallen the respondent and her family, we cannot find that thе incidents described rise to the severity to constitute persecution. We further are unable to find that the respondent has a well-founded fear of persecution if she returns to Albania. We cannot identify any particular factors that would cause us to conclude that the respondent’s fеar of persecution on account of an enumerated ground is well-founded based on current political conditions in Albania. In addition, an asylum applicant does not have a well-founded fear of persecution if the applicant could avoid persecution by relocating to another part of the appli *191 cant’s country of nationality or, if stateless, another part of the applicant’s country of last habitual residence, if under all the circumstances, it would be reasonable to expect the applicant to do so. The respondent has not established that internal relocation is not a viable option. The decision of the [IJ] is also affirmed for the reasons provided herein.
Alibeaj petitions for review of the BIA decision.
II
DISCUSSION
Alibeaj contends that the IJ’s and BIA’s finding that she did not suffer past persecution in Albania was not supported by the evidence, which showed serious political retribution by the communists and socialists in the form of executions, torture, beatings, death threats, and denials of essential medical care.
Eligibility for asylum requires that the alien prove her status as a “refugee,” 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(A), (b)(1)(B)®;
see Mehilli v. Gonzales,
Should the alien meet her burden of establishing past persecution, howevеr, a presumption arises that her fear of future persecution is well-founded.
See Bollanos v. Gonzales,
A. “Past Persecution ”
“[Establishing past persecution in a daunting task,” and Aibeaj “bears а heavy burden.”
Guzman v. INS,
Moreover, the post-1992 incidences werе too sporadic or causally tenuous to compel the IJ to find politically-motivated persecution. Although Alibeaj suspected that her gynecologist sabotaged her 1997 delivery, she herself noted also that the hospital staff neglected her need for pain medication beсause they were watching the television reports regarding Princess Diana’s death.
See Toloza-Jimenez v. Gonzales,
Although the 1997 arrest and torture of Alibeaj’s sister-in-law arguably shows that the sister-in-law was persecuted, Socialist Party sympathizers targeted the sister-in-law for a reason that does not pertain to Alibeaj: she wrote and threatened to publish a “tell-all” book critical of the former communist regime. Alibeaj acknowledges that she has never been a member of the Democratic Party, nor taken any concrete political actions comparable to those of her sister-in-law which unduly might antagonize Communist or Socialist Party sympathizers.
The nature of the death threats, beating, and misappropriation of property that Ali-beaj and her husband suffered upon her return from Italy in 2000 is also plainly insufficient to compel a finding of persecution. The allegations are serious indeed, but police misdeeds even more egregious or sustained have failed to clear the persecution hurdle.
See, e.g., Susanto,
B. Changed Circumstances
Even if we were to conclude that the IJ and BIA erred in finding that the exрeriences described by Alibeaj did not rise to the level of past “persecution,” and that Alibeaj therefore met her burden to establish past persecution, the government had the opportunity to rebut the presumption of a well-founded fear of future persecution by proving by a prеponderance of the evidence that the circumstances in Albania had changed so fundamentally since Alibeaj left in 2001 as to obviate her otherwise well-founded fear of future persecution. See 8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(l)(i). Indeed, the BIA specifically held that the government had met its burden, stating that it could not “identify any particular factors that would cause us to conclude *193 that the respondent’s fear of persecution on account of an enumerated ground is well-founded based on current political conditions in Albania.” (Emphasis added.) The record amply supports this factual finding.
The agency adduced the 2003 United States State Dеpartment Country Report on Human Rights Practices for Albania (dated 2/25/04), which discloses that the climate for political oppositionists in Albania has fundamentally improved since 2001.
See Tota v. Gonzales,
Alibeaj cites only one report that police used excessive force: at a May 2003 rally in Tirana of former political prisoners seeking government compensation for their enforced hard labor under the former communist regime. However, this isolated reference would not compel the IJ’s fact-finding, given that (i) Alibeaj has never contended that she wished or intends to petition the government for redress, and/or that she is even eligible for such compensation; and (ii) the Report simultaneously states that the Albanian government condemned this police malfeasance and took immеdiate legislative steps to prevent its recurrence.
Thus, the BIA’s conclusion that the political circumstances in Albania have changed fundamentally in Albania over the past six years is entirely consistent with its recent precedent.
See Bollanos v. Gonzales,
As the agency record does not compel а finding that Alibeaj would suffer politically-motivated persecution if removed to Albania, the BIA decision must stand.
The petition for review is denied.
Notes
. In her petition for review, Alibeaj does not challenge the alternative BIA holding that she failed to prove that she could not reasonably have located to another part of Albania to avoid future persecution, and therefore, we neither review nor comment on that aspect of its holding.
