The petitioner, Artur Harutyunyan, a native of Armenia, seeks review of a final order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) denying his application for asylum. 1 Concluding, as we do, that the BIA’s order is supported by substantial evidence, we deny the petition.
The facts are uncomplicated. In June of 2001, the petitioner, then twenty years old, entered the United States under a J-l visa to embark upon a work-study program. Having been lawfully admitted, he proceeded (again, lawfully) to acquire B-2 visitor status, which entitled him to remain until April 10, 2002.
The petitioner overstayed his departure deadline and, in June of 2002, applied for asylum. The Immigration and Naturalization Service responded by instituting a removal proceeding. The petitioner conceded removability.
At an ensuing hearing, an immigration judge (IJ) examined the petitioner’s asylum application and the supporting documents submitted therewith (including the affidavit of an expert in Armenian politics and the 2002 State Department country report on human rights practices in Armenia). These exhibits showed a long history of conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Those historic problems were exacerbated by a war that raged from 1988 to 1994. During the war, both Armenians residing in Azerbaijan and Azeris residing in Armenia were confronted with varying degrees of violence and discrimination. As a result, many of the Azeris who had resided in Armenia — upwards of 185,000 individuals' — fled to Azerbaijan. These ethnic tensions were heightened in 1998 following the election of a self-proclaimed chauvinist, Robert Kocharian, as president of Armenia. Notwithstanding these tensions, a few people of Azeri origin continue to reside in Armenia.
The petitioner testified against this general background. In his testimony, he noted that his mother is from Azerbaijan. *66 Building on that foundation, he alleged that, in early 2001, he began experiencing attacks upon his person and assaults upon his financial well-being due to his Azeri ethnicity. He further alleged that these intrusions constituted ethnic persecution.
The petitioner mentioned three specific events. In January of 2001, a group of men spouting anti-Azeri ethnic slurs assaulted him. The men told him that he did not have a right to live in Armenia. This assault occurred in Yerevan (where the petitioner lived). The petitioner responded to it by altering his daily routine; he left home earlier in the morning to travel to class and he returned from work later at night in order to avoid unwanted confrontations.
All was well until an evening in March, when a group of men accosted the petitioner and struck him with knives and sticks. The marauders told him that he had been forewarned that violence would occur unless he and his Azeri relatives left Armenia. This time, the petitioner suffered significant injuries, which required a two-day hospital stay.
This incident prompted the petitioner’s family to move to them summer home in rural Ashtarakh, approximately fifteen miles from Yerevan, in hopes of avoiding future trouble. The petitioner resided there from March until June of 2001 and regularly attended school. He experienced no further acts of violence against his person. On April 24, 2001, however, arsonists burned down his store in Yerevan. The petitioner testified that the same nucleus of individuals who had been involved in the two prior assaults also were involved in the arson.
The petitioner contemporaneously reported each of these incidents to the police. The incidents were all investigated; one case was closed for lack of evidence; and nothing has yet been resolved in connection with the other two incidents. The petitioner attributes this state of affairs to an unwillingness to prosecute based on his Azeri ethnicity. He concedes, however, that the police responded promptly to the news of the first incident, investigated it, filed a report, and told the petitioner that they would seek to find the miscreants and bring them to justice. He also concedes that, following the second incident, the police again responded promptly, interviewed the petitioner in his hospital room, tracked down the perpetrators, and initiated criminal proceedings against them. These proceedings were pending when the petitioner absconded. Criminal proceedings also were initiated against the persons accused of committing the arson.
The arson proved to be the last straw for several of the petitioner’s relatives. His brother and sister-in-law emigrated to Georgia and his parents moved to Russia. The petitioner claims that he was unable to accompany either set of relatives because he had not yet fulfilled Armenia’s requirement for military service (and, thus, could not obtain an exit stamp). 2 The petitioner further testified that he could not meet his military service obligation because he would be murdered by anti-Azeri army officers. Faced with this Hobson’s choice, the petitioner fled to the United States.
The IJ found the petitioner’s testimony credible as to the raw facts, but nevertheless denied the application for asylum. In the IJ’s view, the incidents that the petitioner described did not amount to past *67 persecution. 3 The IJ also determined that the petitioner had failed to demonstrate a well-founded fear of future persecution. The BIA upheld the IJ’s decision without authoring an independent opinion. This petition for judicial review followed. 4 We have jurisdiction under 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b).
When the BIA summarily affirms, this court reviews the IJ’s decision “as if it were the decision of the BIA.”
Olujoke v. Gonzales,
In order to establish eligibility for asylum, an alien first must demonstrate that he is a refugee.
See id.
§ 1158(b)(1); 8 C.F.R. § 208.13(a);
see also Makhoul,
Here, the petitioner claims that he experienced bodily injury and property damage due to his Azeri ethnicity. That allegation, on its face, satisfies the “protected ground” element. Still, it is not enough for an asylum applicant' to show that he has suffered harm on account of a protected ground; he also must satisfy the “well-founded fear” requirement. This entails either (i) a showing of past persecution (which establishes a rebuttable presumption of a well-founded fear of future persecution) or (ii) independent proof of a well-founded fear of future persecution.
See Da Silva,
Here, the IJ held that the petitioner had not successfully traveled either route. In so holding, she emphasized that the petitioner’s antagonists were not government actors, that the Armenian government was responsive to and protective of Azeris during the relevant time frame, that the violence of which the petitioner complained was localized in nature, that the petitioner could return to Armenia free of an objectively reasonable fear of future attacks, and that his Azeri heritage posed no spe *68 cial danger in connection with future service in the Armenian military.
Against this mise-en-seene, we first address the petitioner’s claim of past persecution. This claim rests on the three incidents recounted above. Because the IJ found the petitioner credible, we accept that those incidents occurred as described.
Importantly, however, the IJ found that all three incidents involved the same nucleus of individuals, under the hegemony of a single ringleader, and that the authorities responded appropriately on each occasion. These findings are supported by substantial evidence in the record. Indeed, they are supported by the petitioner’s own testimony. These facts, in turn, adequately ground the IJ’s ultimate conclusion that the three incidents did not add up to a showing of past persecution.
It is apodictic that, for asylum purposes, “not all horrific experiences translate into persecution.”
Rodriguez-Ramirez,
Although persecution is a term of art that lacks precise definition in the immigration context,
Negeya v. Gonzales,
The most telling datum is that (as the petitioner admitted) the local authorities responded immediately to each incident. Following the initial brouhaha, the police “promised [the petitioner] that they [would] definitely find and bring to justice [the] people who beat [him] up.” After the second incident, the police succeeded in tracking down the malefactors and initiated criminal proceedings against them. And when the arson occurred, the police commenced an investigation, identified the alleged ringleader, and again instituted criminal proceedings.
To be sure, the petitioner complains that these endeavors did not pan out more favorably because of his Azeri ethnicity. But that complaint is woven entirely out of the gossamer strands of speculation and surmise. From aught that appears, the authorities made strong efforts to bring those responsible to justice and the absence of any convictions may have had more than a little to do with the fact that the petitioner — presumably the government’s star witness — fled the jurisdiction.
*69
To cinch matters, the petitioner experienced no violence while residing at his family’s summer home. The IJ rejected the petitioner’s proffered explanation for that phenomenon' — that he was “in hiding” — because the petitioner, duiing his stay in Ashtarakh, made frequent public appearances, attended classes, and sat for final examinations at the university. Noting that the incidents were confined to a particular area (Yerevan), the IJ support-ably found that the violence was localized and carried out solely by a small band of local hoodlums. That is significant because a finding that violence is localized supports a determination that the violence does not constitute persecution.
See Galicia v. Ashcroft,
In sum, the IJ concluded that the incidents affecting the petitioner, though regrettable, did not as a matter of law constitute persecution at the hands of government officials, but, rather, abuse at the hands of a coterie of local hooligans. Given the lack of any connection between the incidents and any discernible governmental action or inaction, we deem this conclusion supported by substantial evidence. Consequently, we must uphold it.
See INS v. Elias-Zacarias,
The supportability of the “no past persecution” determination brings us to the existence vel non of a well-founded fear of future persecution. On that issue, as on the issue of past persecution, the petitioner bears the burden of proof.
See Negeya,
A successful showing of a well-founded fear of future persecution must survive scrutiny from both subjective (genuine fear) and objective (objectively reasonable fear) standpoints.
See id.
at 82;
Laurent v. Ashcroft,
The petitioner rests his fear of future persecution principally on the fact that he will have to undergo compulsory military service should he return to Armenia (without performing military service, he would be unable to join his family in Russia). 5 The IJ disagreed that the petitioner had succeeded in showing that he would be unable to fulfill his military commitment safely. On that basis, she concluded that the petitioner’s professed fear was not objectively reasonable. We test the validity of that conclusion.
Determining whether a fear of future persecution is objectively reasonable turns on “whether a reasonable person in the asylum applicant’s circumstances would fear persecution on account of a statutorily protected ground.”
Aguilar-Solis v. INS,
The IJ did not consider the petitioner’s expert to be an expert on Armenian military conditions. She nonetheless allowed him to testify, on the petitioner’s behalf, that the Armenian army is a rough-and-tumble environment, in which a whole host of individuals, not just those of Azeri descent, are routinely harassed. Harassment occurs based on a wide variety of infelicitous causes, such as religion, sexual preference, failure to pay bribes, and a perceived lack of patriotism. The expert also testified that he had no knowledge of any Azeris being killed in the course of such harassment.
The evidence anent the petitioner’s brother is not helpful to the petitioner’s case. For two years, at the height of the hostilities between Armenia and Azerbaijan (1991-1993), the petitioner’s brother served in the Armenian military without any untoward incident. This fact is some evidence that the petitioner could do the same. 6
On these facts, the IJ found that the petitioner could keep his military commitment without an objectively reasonable fear of persecution on account of his Azeri heritage. Given the evidentiary tapestry of the case as a whole, we cannot say that a reasonable factfinder would be compelled to reach a contrary conclusion. When the threat of violence afflicts all persons in a given situation, not just a particular social group or class, that threat will not support a finding of a well-founded fear of future persecution.
See Ravindran v. INS,
Our journey is not yet complete. In his brief to this court, the petitioner laments that his testimony was improperly interpreted. Despite his generalized claim that improper interpretation occurred “throughout the [asylum] hearing,” his brief specifically mentions only one instance of allegedly improper interpretation — the petitioner’s statement that “the case didn’t get any closure” — and does not suggest a more precise translation.
When examining a claim of improper interpretation, we must ask whether a more proficient or more accurate interpretation would likely have made a dispositive difference in the outcome of the proceeding.
See Singh v. Ashcroft,
The fact that the BIA adopted the IJ’s opinion without addressing the petitioner’s improper interpretation claim does not alter our conclusion. The BIA is free to take such a stance when it reasonably concludes that “any errors in the decision under review were harmless or nonmaterial,” 8 C.F.R. 1003.1(e)(4)(i). That principle applies here.
We need go no further. After careful evaluation of the briefs, the record, and the petitioner’s claims, we conclude that the IJ’s decision (and, thus, the BIA’s af-firmance of that decision) is both sup *71 ported by substantial evidence and not otherwise infected by reversible error.
The petition for judicial review is denied.
Notes
. The petitioner originally sought withholding of removal as well as asylum. The IJ and the BIA ruled against him with respect to both claims. In this venue, the petitioner disputes only the adverse ruling on asylum. His claim for withholding of removal is, therefore, waived.
See Makhoul v. Ashcroft,
. It is undisputed that Armenian citizens who wish permanently to relocate outside of Arme-aia must obtain such an exit stamp.
. The parties’ briefs indicate that the IJ determined that past persecution did occur. This interpretation is flawed. While the IJ stated preliminarily that the described acts “can” be deemed to be past persecution, she ultimately concluded that "the harm being investigated by the authorities does not appear to constitute persecution.”
. Alberto R. Gonzales was sworn in as United States Attorney General on February 3, 2005. We have therefore substituted Attorney General Gonzales as the respondent in this matter. See Fed. R.App. P. 43(c)(2).
. It would not profit the petitioner to switch the focus of his "well-founded fear” argument from his obligation to perform military service to the incidents of violence that transpired in 2001. For one thing, as we have just explained, the IJ supportably found that those incidents did not amount to persecution. For another thing, the IJ’s supportable finding that the violence was localized would itself refute such an argument, as it would mean that the petitioner retained a viable option of avoiding harassment by relocating elsewhere within Armenia.
. The fact that the petitioner's brother may have been assisted by his father’s officer-friend while in the army does not alter this conclusion. There has been no showing that the petitioner could not benefit from such family connections as well.
