Shkplqim. Haxhiu, a native and citizen of Albania, applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention against Torture (CAT), alleging that he had been persecuted on account of his political opposition to government corruption. 1 The Immigration Judge denied the *688 requested relief, and the Board of Immigration Appeals summarily affirmed the IJ’s decision. Because substantial evidence does not support the IJ’s findings that Haxhiu’s persecution was not on account of his political opinion and that state actors were not responsible for the harm alleged, we grant his petition for review, vacate the order of removal, and remand for further proceedings.
Background
The facts of this case are undisputed because the IJ credited Haxhiu’s testimony in full.
See Hernandez-Baena v. Gonzales,
In another episode in his fight against corruption, Haxhiu protested the sale of a military building to private purchasers in 2000. Haxhiu testified that a group of corrupt Ministry of Defense officials conspired to reduce the sale price of the building from its true market value of approximately $1,000,000 to a mere $20,000 in exchange for remuneration in a later sale. These same individuals solicited Haxhiu’s cooperation in their scheme — offering him an apartment as a bribe — but Haxhiu refused and exposed their efforts in a letter to the Defense Minister at that time. The building was never sold despite repeated attempts; whether Haxhiu’s efforts made the difference is unclear, but his resistance did provoke immediate threats of termination from a director in the Ministry of Defense. Haxhiu also received phone calls from unknown individuals who threatened to kidnap his children unless he kept quiet about the sale of the building. These threats intensified after Ismail Lleshi, a particularly corrupt individual according to Haxhiu, became the Minister of Defense in 2000 and continued to push for the sale. 2
Ultimately, Haxhiu was fired because of his efforts to resist government corruption. Although Haxhiu’s job was admittedly to eliminate certain forms of corruption, his new superiors under Lleshi, themselves corrupt, were unhappy with his efforts. Upon termination in 2001, a group of Defense Ministry officials told Haxhiu, “This is just the beginning. We can do to you whatever we want because you are not in uniform now. You will see our power.”
Unsurprisingly, Haxhiu’s situation deteriorated further after he was fired. First, he challenged his termination in a letter to Albania’s Supreme Court, although he did not file a formal complaint or enlist the help of an attorney, which perhaps explains why he did not receive a response. “[AJggravated by this politician [Lleshi] *689 and by this kind of politics,” Haxhiu next approached a newspaper editor and a radio journalist with an offer to assist them in exposing corruption. But before anyone could publish or broadcast his accounts, Haxhiu withdrew his offer because of new threats against him and his family. For example, Haxhiu received word from Lleshi that if he talked to journalists, Haxhiu would end up “worse than [Gjeneral. Aqif Cikalleshi,” a former military official who narrowly escaped an assassination attempt and had to flee to Italy after speaking to journalists on television.
Haxhiu responded to these threats by reiterating that Lleshi was a source of shame for Albanians and that Haxhiu was determined to expose various ongoing abuses to the press. Haxhiu reconsidered his position, though, after the' threats turned to attacks on his family: On February 7, 2002, strangers beat his son badly and told him, “Tell your father to shut up his mouth or we will shut it for him for ever.” And in May 2002 a group of men tried to kidnap Haxhiu’s daughter. Fearing for the safety of his family, Haxhiu sent his son to England and fled to the United States in August 2002, where his wife and daughter joined him one month later.
After three months in the United States, Haxhiu returned to Albania alone to see “if things had changed.” But shortly aftér his return, Haxhiu was attacked while driving home with a friend from a nearby restaurant. Two gunmen cut off Haxhiu’s car, got out of their vehicle, and began shooting at Haxhiu, shattering the windshield. Haxhiu and his friend were not hurt, though, and the gunmen ran away after firing all of their bullets. Still, the experience confirmed Haxhiu’s fears about his homeland, and he decided to settle permanently in the United States in January 2003. Six months after re-entering the United States, Haxhiu sought asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT protection.
Following an immigration hearing in Chicago, Illinois, the IJ denied Haxhiu’s applications. After determining that Haxhiu’s testimony was credible and consistent with the record, the IJ turned to the more difficult question of whether the evidence demonstrated that Haxhiu had suffered persecution on account of a protected ground. The IJ began by noting that political agitation against state corruption can support an asylum claim, but to qualify Haxhiu needed to show that he took “active steps to fight [systemic] corruption in Albania” outside of his official duties. The IJ observed that Haxhiu’s activities lacked a public aspect; his political activities were confined to the performance of his military function' — -his job, after all, was to stamp out corruption in the local office. Furthermore, the IJ determined that Haxhiu had not shown that the corruption of which he complained encompassed the government at large, as opposed to a few rogue individuals whose exposure could not .be considered an expression of political opinion. For these reasons, the IJ concluded that the harm suffered by Haxhiu was not on account of his political opinion. Even if there was a connection between his harm and his political opinion, the IJ continued, Haxhiu could not demonstrate that the Albanian government was responsible for his treatment, either directly or by failing to protect him.
On December 15, 2006, the BIA adopted and affirmed, without opinion, the IJ’s decision, which became the agency’s final determination.
Discussion
Where the BIA summarily affirms the IJ’s decision, as is the case here, this court will review the IJ’s factual findings and analysis for substantial evidence.
*690
Boci v. Gonzales,
The Attorney General has discretionary authority to grant asylum to aliens who meet the refugee requirements of 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A). 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(A). That statute defines a refugee as one who is unable or unwilling to return to his country of origin “because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.” 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A). One way an applicant may demonstrate eligibility for asylum is by proving that he suffered past persecution, which entitles him to a rebuttable presumption of a well-founded fear of future persecution.
Tesfu v. Ashcroft,
The Attorney General does not dispute that Haxhiu has. suffered persecution; rather, the first question in this case is whether Haxhiu suffered persecution
on account of his political opinion.
And since at least some of the harm alleged by Haxhiu was due to his fight against corruption, the main inquiry is whether Haxhiu’s anticorruption activities constituted an expression of a political opinion. This court has defined a political opinion as “one that is expressed through political activities or through some sort of speech in the political arena.”
Li v. Gonzales,
Haxhiu’s military duties are no obstacle to his asylum claim because his anticorruption activities persisted beyond
*691
his employment with the Albanian Army.
See Musabelliu,
However, Haxhiu still must establish that the Albanian government was either complicit in his persecution or unwilling or unable to protect him from private parties who persecuted him.
See Garcia v. Gonzales,
Petitioner’s treatment of the government-responsibility issue is quite thin, and the decision not to file a reply brief on this point is puzzling, yet his opening brief contains a semblance of an argument that is supported by legal authority. Haxhiu emphasizes that the IJ found him credible; reiterates his testimony that the “economic mafia” and the government were at that time “married” and thus indistinguishable; and concludes by comparing his case to another in which the alleged harm was perpetrated by government officials. Moreover, the two issues in this case— whether Haxhiu was targeted for combating government corruption and whether the government bears responsibility — overlap significantly, a point that Haxhiu makes in his brief. If the IJ believed Haxhiu’s testimony that the government and the “economic mafia” were essentially one entity, it would follow that the government . perpetrated, or at least permitted, the harm Haxhiu suffered. Haxhiu also refers this court to a Ninth Circuit opinion in which that court determined that opposition to government corruption is a political opinion for which an individual can be persecuted so long as the opposition is directed
towards
— and
the harm flows from
— a governing institution as opposed to aberrant individuals.
See Mamouzian v. Ashcroft,
Even if waiver were found in this case, such a conclusion would work a manifest injustice given Haxhiu’s claim that he may be assassinated upon return to Albania, a claim that the IJ found credible. We may review issues not adequately briefed in this court if failure to do so would result in manifest injustice.
See McCarthy v. SEC,
The waiver argument to one side, we consider whether the IJ erred in finding that Haxhiu did not demonstrate government complicity in his persecution. The IJ determined that Haxhiu attributed his treatment solely to the private “economic mafia” that stood to gain from the sale of his building. Accordingly, the IJ looked to whether Haxhiu ever filed a complaint with the police or government about the threats he received and the attacks his family suffered. Finding none—which is problematic because the record contains extensive documentation of a police investigation into the attempted kidnapping of Haxhiu’s daughter—the IJ concluded that Haxhiu had failed to establish that the government was either unwilling or unable to protect him. But this analysis belies Haxhiu’s testimony and the record, which provides ample evidence that agents of the Ministry of Defense persecuted him in tandem with private actors. Thus, Haxhiu was under no obligation to seek government protection from private actors, although he did report his daughter’s attack. Because Haxhiu demonstrated government complicity in his persecution, the IJ erred in finding to the contrary.
See Garcia,
Finally, Haxhiu has waived judicial review on his remaining claims for withholding of removal and protection under the CAT by failing to address them in his brief before this court (other than to rehearse the legal standards for both) or in his brief before the BIA.
See Huang v. Gonzales,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we believe that substantial evidence does not support the IJ’s decision. The record compels the conclusion that Haxhiu suffered past persecution and thus was entitled to a rebut-table presumption of a well-founded fear of future persecution. Accordingly, we Grant the petition for review, Vacate the order of removal, and Remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. His wife, Dudije Haxhiu, seeks relief derivatively through Haxhiu, although she is not a party to this appeal.
See
8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(3)(A);
Bace v. Ashcroft,
. Haxhiu does not claim that every threat he received during this period came from a government actor, although some he can attribute to specific government officials. Instead, Haxhiu explains that the parties to the sale— ' corrupt officials on one side and private interests, which he labels an "economic mafia,” on the other — were very much intertwined and even jointly responsible for orchestrating his treatment.
. We note that Haxhiu raised this claim before the BIA and therefore exhausted his administrative remedies.
See
8 U.S.C. § 1252(d)(1);
Margos v. Gonzales,
