We have consolidated for decision four petitions to review orders by the Board of Immigration Appeals denying petitions to reopen removal proceedings. The petitions to review present overlapping and to a degree identical issues.
In
Kucana v. Mukasey,
The category of reviewable determinations is illustrated by a case this court decided the day after the
Kucana
decision.
Lin v. Mukasey,
*621 One of the cases before us today, Li’s case, No. 07-3840, is almost identical to Lin, but with the critical difference that rather than suggesting that forced sterilization is not persecution as long as it just backs up the “social compensation fee,” the Board found that there was no indication that the fee to which Li might be subjected if she were returned to China and punished for violating the one-child policy would be so stiff as to place her in danger of being forced to undergo sterilization as a sanction for failing to pay it. The Board did not intimate, as it had in Lin, that so long as forced sterilization is used merely against people who fail to pay the fee for having more than one child, it is not persecution. Li is in the position therefore of merely disagreeing with the weight that the Board placed on the various items of evidence (country reports, provincial regulations, an unauthenticated notice from the government of Li’s village, etc.) en route to its discretionary denial of the petition to reopen. No question of law is presented. We therefore have no jurisdiction to decide whether the petition should have been granted.
In contrast, Zheng’s case, No. 07-3673, involves an arguable error of law. He had come to the United States from China in 1999 and had sought asylum on the ground that he had been persecuted for belonging to an underground Catholic church and for opposing China’s “one child” policy; he claimed that his wife had been forced to have an abortion when she became pregnant a second time. (Whether the husband of a woman forced to have an abortion is automatically entitled to asylum, or must show that he opposed the one-child policy, has divided the circuits. Compare
Shi Liang Lin v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
In 2007 Zheng moved to reopen the removal proceeding, primarily on the ground of changed country conditions— China’s more vigorous enforcement of the one-child policy after 2001, which we discussed in Lin. In support Zheng presented affidavits from himself and his wife, along with purported letters from an underground Catholic church in China and his village government that indicate that if returned to China he will be punished for having joined the church. The affidavits state that his wife, who. remains in China, has been beaten in an effort to induce him to return to China to face the music. The Board discounted the evidence presented in support of the petition because the claim of persecution had been rejected by the immigration judge in the removal proceeding.
*622
The fact that evidence presented in support of a claim of asylum is rejected as noncredible has been held not to foreclose the reopening of the removal proceeding on a separate ground.
Gebreeyesus v. Gonzales,
Since Zheng had been found to have lied at the hearing about both his claims, religious and population-policy persecution, he would have had to present evidence in support of reopening that was in no way dependent on his discredited credibility in order to establish a well-founded fear of persecution on the same grounds if he is returned to China.
Guo v. Ashcroft, supra,
We turn to Huang’s case, No. 07-2961. Huang, a Chinese woman, entered the United States in 1999 on false documents. In 2002 she applied for asylum, claiming that she had fled China because the government, in an effort to induce her to marry a man whom she didn’t want to marry, had forced her to have an abortion (she was pregnant by her boyfriend) and had seized her family’s land. She failed to appear at her hearing before an immigration judge and was ordered removed. In 2006 she filed a motion to reopen, arguing that she had missed the hearing because she had not known when and where it would be held; earlier, however, she had said that she had not attended because she was afraid that she would be arrested and removed if she did. Later she changed her story back to the original one. The Board denied the petition, and the following year she filed a second petition to reopen, this one on the ground that she had received ineffective assistance at her first hearing. She claimed that she had missed her hearing because of a stomach ache and that her then lawyer had failed to explain this to the immigration judge.
The Board denied the second petition as untimely. The deadline for the filing of a petition to reopen (180 days in Huang’s case, 8 U.S.C.
*623
§§ 1229a(b)(5)(C)(i), (c)(7)(C), from the date of the final order of removal,
Pervaiz v. Gonzales,
Had the Board refused to reopen the removal proceeding because it did not think that Huang had received ineffective assistance from her lawyer, rather than because the petition to reopen had been untimely, the petition for review might be thought to present a question of law. Or might not; the issue is treated inconsistently in our cases. Compare
Sanchez v. Keisler,
That leaves Dung’s case, No. 07-3322. It is another one-child case, indistinguishable from
Li
except that Dung further argues that he should be allowed file a second asylum application after the first is denied, without having to file a petition to reopen. As he recognizes, we rejected the identical contention in
Cheng Chen v. Gonzales,
The petition in
Li
and
Huang
are dismissed for want of jurisdiction. The petitions in
Zheng
and
Dung,
which complain about both the Board’s exercise of its discretion to deny a petition to reopen and alleged errors of law committed by the Board, are dismissed in part and denied in part.
Saintha v. Mukasey,
