Lead Opinion
Tomas Briones, a professional artist from the Philippines, asks us to grant his petition for review of a decision by the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denying his request for political asylum and withholding of deportation under sections 208(a) and 243(h) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. §§ 1158(a), 1253(h) (1982 & Supp.1998). He claims the evidence he presented to an Immigration Judge (“IJ”) compels the conclusion that he has a well-founded fear of being persecuted in the Philippines by the New Peoples Army (“NPA”) should he be required to return, and that he has carried his burden of demonstrating that he is a refugee within the meaning of INA § 101(a)(42)(A); 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A).
After reviewing the entire administrative record, we conclude that if one accepts at face value the gist of his testimony, Briones has indeed made a compelling case that he faces future persecution on account of his past activities as a government informer against the NPA. However, the IJ hearing his case made a specific finding that his story was “neither reliable nor credible.” The Board hearing his appeal took note of this important credibility finding, which Briones appealed, but declined to address it, stating, “[W]e do not reach the question of credibility because we find that the facts as alleged by [Briones] do not demonstrate a well-founded fear of persecution.” Because we disagree with the BIA on the compelling nature — if trustworthy — of Briones’s facts, we remand this case to the Board for credibility findings as to his claim. See Damaize-Job v. INS,
I
If one believes -Briones, he acted as a confidential informer for the armed forces of the government of the Philippines and against the insurgent Communist NPA on at least three occasions. He did so because he found repulsive the NPA’s infliction of damage upon his village. The information he says he turned over to his cousin Lieutenant Rey Briones in the military allegedly led to two combat victories over the NPA, to the deaths of NPA operatives, and to the capture by the government of an important NPA leader, Commander Ligaya. Briones says the NPA can be proved to have discovered his role in their troubles because (1) he ended up on their death list, and (2) he received on his doorstep in Santo Domingo a package wrapped with a black ribbon and emblazoned with the political insignia of the Communists' — a hammer and a sickle— which to Briones “meant only one — one thing. Death.” He testified that his cousin showed him a military intelligence report listing the people the NPA planned to assassinate and told him that the NPA had uncovered his role as a government informer. Briones’s name was seventh on the list. The package he received at his home may or may not have contained a note that said he would “be killed next.” On this point, Briones’s testimony is hazy. The information he learned from his cousin caused him to leave his hometown and eventually to seek asylum in the United States.
The BIA concluded that retaliation by the NPA against an informer working for the very government the NPA was seeking to overthrow is not persecution on account of a protected status. The BIA said,
[Briones] does not claim that the NPA wants to harm him because of any political opinion he might hold, but because he cooperated with the military. We glean from the testimony that the NPA’s interest is retaliation against a former informer, which would not be persecution on account of a protected status. It is reasonable to assume that any retaliation by the NPA would occur regardless of what political opinion, if any, the respondent held.
We respectfully disagree. Briones’s active involvement in a fiercely ideological dis
We are fully aware of the BIA’s conclusion that even if one were to assume a mixed motive on the part of the NPA, which included a cognizable political component, Briones’s claim would nevertheless fall short. The Board said that Briones’s “high profile professional life in Manila and the fact that his fear of persecution was localized to his hometown undercut his claim of a well-founded fear of retribution. We reject this analysis for four reasons.
First, this analysis is fatally colored by the Board’s erroneous view of the necessarily political nature of Briones’s conduct, conduct which provoked an intention on the part of the NPA to kill him. The Board’s error seems fundamental to its mistaken view of this case. Second, and if Briones is to be believed, the information he gave to the Philippine military not only thwarted tactical plans of the NPA, but resulted in the deaths of NPA operatives on at least two occasions plus the arrest of one of its commanders. This is not the usual case of attempted extortion. It is a case of threatened retaliatory death for causing death. A reasonable factfinder would be compelled by this scenario to conclude that Briones’s fear is not only subjectively real, but certainly objectively well-founded. If the NPA will kill business people who do not contribute to their cause, it takes little imagination to understand what they would do to a successful informer for the Phillipine military. Third, any element of conjecture or speculation about the NPA’s intention evaporates if one credits Briones’s testimony (1) that his name was on a military intelligence report referencing the NPA’s assassination list, and (2) that Lt. Briones told him that the NPA knew about his activities as a government informer. Fourth, given information in the State Department Country Report and evidence submitted by Briones, the NPA, although somewhat weaker than before, remains capable of killing its opponents.
II
Nevertheless, we do not order the Board to grant relief. The record is susceptible of the conclusion that the IJ was correct when he said, “for all the reasons stated, the court has concluded that
The remedy under circumstances where the Board has expressly declined to rule on the issue is to remand to the Board for credibility findings. As we said in Damaize-Job, “It is our practice ■ to remand to the Board for credibility findings whenever we reverse a Board decision in which the Board has expressly abstained from deciding the credibility issue.”
REMANDED for further proceedings.
Notes
. Although the Board is certainly free to determine its own method of processing these claims, we suggested in Canjura-Flores that it might want to consider addressing rather than bypassing credibility problems.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Of course the majority is correct in concluding that the discrepancies in Briones’s testimony suggest that his story is incredible; the immigration judge so found. The problem is that the purported facts in the record, if taken to be true, do not compel the conclusion that Briones was persecuted on account of political opinion. Therefore, we need not reach the issue of credibility, remand is unnecessary and, for these reasons, I must respectfully dissent.
Let us recall the standards established by the Supreme Court in INS v. Elias-Zacarias,
Briones sought asylum because of threats made against him by the NPA due to his service as a confidential informant for the Philippine government. As Briones stated in his opening brief, the NPA “is out to kill him because of his
Indeed, in a similar case, the Sixth Circuit held that the BIA’s “determination that Petitioner’s persecution was not on account of his political opinion” was supported by substantial evidence. Id. at 268. Adhiyappa, an Indian Tamil working at a Sri Lankan university, acted as a government informant by passing on information about student activists who supported the Tamil separatist cause. When the Tamil separatists threatened Adhiyappa, Adhi-yappa fled to the United States and claimed asylum based on political opinion. In affirming the denial of Adhiyappa’s asylum petition, the court explained that “the evidence would support a conclusion ... that it was his status as an informant, not his political opinion, that spurred their hatred.” Id. The court noted that 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A) “provides protection for individuals who are persecuted on account of their political opinion, but it does not include all individuals who are persecuted because their actions tend to obstruct the activities of politically-motivated organizations, even where those activities may be in part motivated by political opinion.” Id.
The attack on Briones can easily be analogized to the attack on Elias-Zacarias. In Elias-Zacarias, the Court held that a guerilla organization s attempt to conscript a Guatemalan native into its military forces did not necessarily constitute “persecution on account of political opinion.” Elias-Zacarias,
Likewise in Adhiyappa, as in Briones’s case, it is doubtful that the petitioners’ political opinions played any role at all. “One might undertake to inform government officials of the names of members of a militant separatist group for reasons other than political opinion.” Adhiyappa,
The majority interestingly ignores the BIA’s finding that Briones failed to present evidence that the Philippine government would be either unable or unwilling to protect him or that he ever sought such protection. This court has held that persecution may be “inflicted either by the government or by persons or organizations which the government is unable or unwilling to control.” Sangha v. INS,
The record in this case does not compel a conclusion that the findings of the BIA were wrong. The record presents no evidence to suggest that the NPA threatened Briones’s life because he held political opinions antithetical to its own. Rather, the evidence shows that the NPA was attempting to shut off an information source that was exceedingly damaging to its operations and to retaliate against a man who had wreaked so much havoc to its plans. Indeed, even the majority acknowledges that “[i]t is a case of threatened retaliatory death for causing death.” On these facts, I simply cannot say that “no reasonable factfinder could fail to find” that the persecution was on account of Briones’s political opinions.
I would deny the petition for review and affirm the decision of the BIA in this case.
