Dragan Miljkovic asks us to reverse an order by the Board of Immigration Appeals denying him asylum and directing that he be deported to Yugoslavia (recently renamed “Serbia and Montenegro”). His wife’s claim for asylum is derivative from his; see our earlier opinion,
Miljkovic was born in Croatia, which at the time was part of Yugoslavia, and although both his parents were originally from Serbia and moved back to Serbia and he grew up there, he claims without contradiction to be perceived by Serbians to be Croatian because he was born in Croatia and speaks Serbo-Croatian with a Croatian accent. As an adult in Serbia he participated in demonstrations against the Milosevic regime. In retaliation he was demoted by his employer, the national airline, and later was fired; his supervisor explained that the airline “would not feed Croats in the future.” In June of 1991, Croatia seceded from Yugoslavia, precipitating a war between the two countries that raged throughout the year. In November, at the height of the war, Miljkovic received a draft notice. According to his uncontradicted testimony, draft notices were sent only to persons who were either opposed to the Milosevic regime or had been born in a part of Yugoslavia other than Serbia; Miljkovic satisfied both criteria. Upon receiving the notice he fled to the United States and applied for asylum. He presented evidence from a human-rights group and a qualified expert on Yugoslavia that the regime had made a practice of dealing with its opponents by sending them to fight against Croatia and that members of ethnic groups to which Serbia (the dominant entity in Yugoslavia) was hostile, which of course included Croatians, were targeted for hazardous military duties.
Regarding Miljkovic’s claim that he fled to avoid persecution as a consequence of being drafted into the Yugoslav army, the immigration judge stated only that “persecution for failure to serve in the military *756 may be established in those rare cases where a disproportionately severe punishment would result on account of one or more of the statutorily enumerated grounds or where the alien as a result of military service required by his government would necessarily be required to engage in .inhuman conduct condemned by the international community as contrary to the basic rules of human conduct. There has, however, been no such showing in this record” (citation omitted). The Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed without opinion.
The immigration judge missed the boat. The issue was not whether Miljkovic would have been punished with disproportionate severity had he defied the draft notice and been arrested for evading military service. It was not whether he would have been required to engage in “inhuman conduct.” The issue (and there is no contention that he failed to present it to the immigration judge and the Board of Immigration Appeals) was whether he had received a draft notice because he was deemed a Croatian and an opponent of Milosevic and whether if drafted he would have been assigned to hazardous military duties. The government argues that Miljkovic is complaining only about “discrimination,” not persecution. Since the immigration judge did not mention the issue, central though it was to Miljkovic’s claim of asylum, of whether picking on members of a hated minority to perform hazardous military duties is persecution, we could affirm on the basis of the government’s argument only if the immigration judge would have committed an abuse of discretion had he found that, no, it was not merely discrimination; it was persecution. On the contrary, we held in
Begzatowski v. INS,
Of course, since Miljkovic fled upon receiving the draft notice, he never did serve in the army and so was not exposed to the hazards of military duty. But as the government acknowledged at argument, a person can still be a victim of persecution even if he manages to elude his persecutors. A Jew who succeeded in escaping from Germany on the eve of being deported to an extermination camp would still have been counted as a victim of Nazi persecution.
Hengan v. INS,
The government argues that even if Miljkovic was a victim of persecution, since Milosevic is gone and Serbia is not at war with anyone, it is unlikely that Miljkovic will be persecuted if he is sent back. The argument may well be correct but it is made in the wrong forum. Once an appli
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cant for asylum establishes that he has been a victim of persecution, the burden shifts to the government to convince the immigration judge that, nevertheless, because of changed country conditions the applicant has no well-founded fear of being persecuted should he return.
Capric v. Ashcroft,
The petition for review is granted, the order of removal vacated, and the case remanded to the Board of Immigration Appeals for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
