In re G-C-L-, Respondent
Board of Immigration Appeals
April 10, 2002
23 I&N Dec. 359 (BIA 2002)
Interim Decision #3470
U.S. Department of Justice
Executive Office for Immigration Review
Board of Immigration Appeals
The Board of Immigration Appeals withdraws from its policy of granting untimely motions to reopen by applicants claiming eligibility for asylum based solely on coercive population control policies, effective 90 days from the date of this decision. Matter of X-G-W-, Interim Decision 3352 (BIA 1998), superseded.
FOR RESPONDENT: Stephen P. Gleit, Esquire, New York, New York
BEFORE: Board En Banc: SCIALABBA, Acting Chairman; DUNNE, Vice Chairman; SCHMIDT, HOLMES, HURWITZ, VILLAGELIU, COLE, GUENDELSBERGER, ROSENBERG, GRANT, MOSCATO, MILLER, BRENNAN, ESPENOZA, OSUNA, OHLSON, and HESS, Board Members. Dissenting Opinion: PAULEY, Board Member, joined by FILPPU, Board Member.
SCHMIDT, Board Member:
The applicant has filed an untimely motion to reopen exclusion proceedings seeking to apply for asylum under section 208(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act,
I. ISSUES PRESENTED
The issues presented are the following: (1) whether we should grant the applicant’s untimely motion to reopen under our decision in Matter of X-G-W-, supra; (2) whether the applicant qualifies for asylum based on punishment for violating China’s coercive population control policies; and (3) whether we should continue our policy of granting such untimely motions.
II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The applicant is a native and citizen of China who arrived in the United States on March 4, 1992. On July 13, 1992, he applied for asylum, claiming persecution on account of China’s coercive population control policies. The applicant testified that he and his wife had their first child in 1986, that his wife underwent a forced abortion in 1987, and that they had their second child in 1989. In order to have the second child registered, his wife had to be sterilized. The applicant stated that he and his wife were required to pay fines on two occasions. In addition, he offered into evidence receipts showing payment of the fines, along with radiological reports of an x-ray film verifying that his wife was sterilized.
In a decision dated March 8, 1995, the Immigration Judge found that the applicant presented credible testimony that, as punishment for violating China’s “one couple, one child” policy, his wife was forced to undergo an abortion and was subsequently sterilized, and that both he and his wife were fined on two separate occasions. The Immigration Judge denied the applicant’s asylum application, however, pursuant to our decision in Matter of Chang, 20 I&N Dec. 38 (BIA 1989), wherein we held that enforcement of China’s family planning policy does not, in itself, create a well-founded fear of persecution based on race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion. See also Matter of G-, 20 I&N Dec. 764 (BIA 1993). In a decision dated December 4, 1995, we dismissed the applicant’s appeal on the same basis.
On November 20, 2001, the applicant moved to reopen these proceedings based on changes to the law enacted by the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, Division C of Pub. L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009-546 (“IIRIRA”). Specifically, section 601(a)(1) of the IIRIRA, 110 Stat. at 3009-689, amended the definition of a “refugee” by adding the following language:
[A] person who has been forced to abort a pregnancy or to undergo involuntary sterilization, or who has been persecuted for failure or refusal to undergo such a procedure or for other resistance to a coercive population control program, shall be deemed to have been persecuted on account of political opinion, and a person who has a well founded fear that he or she will be forced to undergo such a procedure or [be] subject to persecution for such failure, refusal, or resistance shall be deemed to have a well founded fear of persecution on account of political opinion.
III. MATTER OF X-G-W-
Because of the foregoing change in asylum law, we announced in Matter of X-G-W-, supra, that we would allow reopening of proceedings to pursue
IV. ANALYSIS
At the outset, we accept the Immigration Judge’s positive credibility finding. See Matter of A-S-, 21 I&N Dec. 1106 (BIA 1998). We find further that, under the definition of a “refugee” in
This presumption may be rebutted by a showing that there has been a fundamental change in circumstances such that the applicant no longer has a well-founded fear of persecution if returned to China.
The applicant meets the criteria set forth in Matter of X-G-W-, supra. Moreover, his motion satisfies the regulatory requirements for reopening and is supported by evidence of prima facie eligibility for asylum based on the definition of a “refugee” articulated in section 601(a)(1) of the IIRIRA. See
V. CHANGE IN POLICY
Effective 90 days from the date of this decision, we withdraw from the policy we announced in Matter of X-G-W-, supra, and will no longer grant reopening on our own motion under
The policy we stated in Matter of X-G-W-, supra, arose from the dilemma that resulted following a marked change in asylum law, which was intended to provide relief to those suffering persecution on account of coercive population control policies, but which was seriously (if unintentionally) impeded by regulations designed to bring finality to immigration proceedings. See
More than 5 years have passed since the enactment of section 601(a)(1) of the IIRIRA, and the interest of finality in immigration proceedings now takes precedence. Individuals with final orders of exclusion or deportation have had a very reasonable period of time in which to seek relief. Accordingly, we now find it appropriate to discontinue the policy we announced in Matter of X-G-W-, supra. However, to allay any concerns regarding notice to potential applicants for relief who may have relied on our precedent decision, we will continue to apply the policy stated in Matter of X-G-W- to motions to reopen filed within 90 days of the date of this decision.
VI. CONCLUSION
The applicant’s motion to reopen under Matter of X-G-W-, supra, will be granted, as will his applications for relief. However, the discretionary policy of reopening announced in Matter of X-G-W- will expire 90 days from the date of this decision.
ORDER: The motion to reopen is granted.
FURTHER ORDER: The applicant is granted asylum, conditioned upon an administrative determination by the Immigration and Naturalization Service that a number is available for such a grant under
FURTHER ORDER: The applicant is granted withholding of deportation.
In re G-C-L-, Respondent
Board of Immigration Appeals
April 10, 2002
23 I&N Dec. 359 (BIA 2002)
Interim Decision #3470
DISSENTING OPINION: Roger A. Pauley, Board Member, in which Lauri Steven Filppu, Board Member, joined
The Board is to be commended for determining to end its once-but-no-longer-salutary policy or practice, first announced in Matter of X-G-W-, Interim Decision 3352 (1998), of (assuming the alien was and is found credible) granting untimely motions to reopen asylum proceedings based on claims of coercive population control arising from the change in the
In 1996, Congress amended the definition of a “refugee” in
Under implementing regulations, the Attorney General has interpreted the “changed circumstances” provision to include, among others, “changes in applicable U.S. law” that materially affect an applicant’s eligibility for asylum.
It is instructive to compare the situation of this class of aliens, whose “reasonable period” presumably expired long ago, with the situation of the alien before us and others like him who waited years after the same change in law to file a motion to reopen asylum proceedings (in which, not surprisingly, their claims had been denied for failure to establish the “on account of” nexus required by the definition of a “refugee” as it existed prior to the change in law in 1996). No reason is evident why the latter class of aliens, who invoke the Board’s discretion with respect to a motion to reopen, should be treated more generously than, or any differently from, the former class of aliens who reasonably withheld bringing an unavailing asylum claim that was predicated solely on opposition or resistance to coercive population control programs and who, under the regulations, were afforded only a “reasonable period” to do so after enactment of the IIRIRA.
Inasmuch as Congress indicated generally in the IIRIRA that an appropriate period for instituting an asylum application is within 1 year of an alien’s arrival in this country, I would be inclined (though the issue need not be resolved here with exactitude) to hold that a “reasonable period” for bringing an asylum claim based on “changed circumstances” is also 1 year from the point at which the circumstances changed, barring extraordinary reasons. The alien in this case, in contrast, filed his motion to reopen based on the amended definition of a “refugee” on November 20, 2001, more than 5 years after the change in law that he relied upon.2 This is not a “reasonable period” by any stretch of the imagination. Accordingly, I would deny relief.
The question remaining to be addressed, in light of the majority’s contrary disposition, is whether denial of the instant motion is fair, or whether, by contrast, aliens should be given notice of the Board’s intent to end its practice, given that the Board, in a series of nonprecedent decisions after Matter of X-G-W-, supra, has generally opted to grant such untimely motions. I believe denial of relief at this time is proper and that no further period in which to file such motions (under the expectation they will be granted) is appropriate. The practice heretofore followed by the Board finds no purchase in the X-G-W- decision, the only precedent the Board has issued on this question, which strongly implied that promptness in filing the motion would
As an adjudicative body, the Board’s duty, in my view, is to apply the laws that it has been entrusted to interpret in an appropriate manner. I cannot subscribe to the implicit rationale undergirding the majority’s opinion that only commencing 90 days hence (an arbitrary interval adopted in regulation-like fashion) will the granting of such motions be inappropriate. Aliens in the position of this movant have been the recipients, for approximately 4 or 5 years by my reckoning (see supra note 2), of a policy that, although right and proper when announced in 1998 in Matter of X-G-W-, supra, long ago lost its reasonable underpinnings with the passage of time. In this context, for the majority to continue that practice for 90 additional days, thereby possibly encouraging an unknown number of aliens to submit more such untimely claims before the deadline, is neither required nor wise. I am aware of no court decision that holds in abeyance a correction of an outdated practice in order that an affected class of potential litigants, who previously might have benefitted from the practice, may have a further period in which to attain relief. The majority should act to end the practice now, not to extend it.
I therefore respectfully dissent.
