Ogiо seeks review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”). Becаuse we lack jurisdiction, we dismiss Ogio’s petition for review.
I
The BIA affirmed the immigration judge’s ordеr of deportation on January 13, 1992. On March 17, 1992, Ogio filed a motion for reconsideratiоn of this decision before the BIA. Subsequently, on April 9, 1992, Ogio filed this petition for review.
It is clearly established in this circuit that, if a petition for review is not already pending, the filing of a motion to reopen or to reconsider before the BIA renders the BIA’s prior decision nonfinal for purposes of review in this court. Thus, when a petition for review is filed
after
a motion to reopen or to reconsider has been made, there is no final deportation order for us to review, and we accordingly lack jurisdiction to heаr the merits of the petitioner’s case.
Chu v. INS,
II
The governmеnt maintains, however, that jurisdiction is proper, arguing that the
Chu
line of cases has not survived Congress’s passage of the Immigration Act of 1990, Pub.L. No. 101-649. This enactment added section 106(a)(6) to the Immigration and Naturalization Act (“INA”), which states: “whenever a petitioner seеks review of an order under this section, any review sought with respect to a motion to reopen or reconsider shall be consolidated with the review of the ordеr.” 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a)(6). The government points to a recent Seventh Circuit decision,
Akrap v. INS,
If adhering to the rule in Chu truly would deny all force and effect to section 106(a)(6), and frustrate its purpose, then the government’s position might give us pause. But this is not the case. The point of section 106(a)(6) appears to be to prevent thе courts of appeals from entertaining two separate petitions for review of a single underlying deportation order, presumably because of the delay and inefficiency occasioned by such a double review. Chu in no way interferes with this policy. Chu simply says that, if the alien seeks to reopen his case with the BIA before he files a petition for review, he must wait tо ask for his one hearing in the Ninth Circuit until after the BIA has ruled on his motion to reopen.
In addition,
Chu
does not mean that section 106(a)(6) is a nullity in this circuit. In
Berroteran-Melendez v. INS,
*961 In short, in this circuit it is not the ease that “the filing оf a motion to reopen ... render[s] any previous order non-final,” as the Seventh Circuit аssumed in deciding Ak-rap. In our circuit, the filing of a motion to reopen renders nonfinal only an order as to which a petition for review has not yet been filed. Given the way our law has dеveloped, Akrap’s reasoning is inapplicable here. 1
Ill
The government does not maintain that Congress intended to overrule the Chu line of cases when it added section 106(a)(6) to the INA. The only claim is that Chu is logically inconsistent with the regime envisioned by this enactment. It is not. Chu rested its analysis on sound general principles of administrative law. The amendments to which the government points do not east doubt on that analysis. This panel is therefore bound to follow the established law of the circuit.
PETITION DISMISSED.
Notes
. This is admittedly a complicated state of affairs. We note, however, that our en banc court in
Butros v. INS,
