Petitioner Melencio Legui Lim petitions from the dismissal by the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) of his appeal from an immigration judge’s (“IJ”) denial of asylum and denial of withholding of deportation. We hold that the BIA erred in denying asylum eligibility, but we affirm the BIA’s denial of withholding of deportation.
BACKGROUND
Melencio Lim entered the United States in August of 1991 and voluntarily approached the INS in September of 1992 to apply for asylum. At his asylum hearing before the IJ, he conceded deportability and testified to the following account. From 1972 until 1987, Lim served as a police officer for the government of the Philippines. In 1978 he joined the intelligence unit, for whom he infiltrated Communist student groups and subsequently investigated the dissident New People’s Army (“NPA”), the military arm of the local Communist Party.
As an intelligence officer, Lim investigated NPA “Sparrow Units,” which specialize in the propaganda killings of public officials, and which were suspected in the deaths of several police officers over a two-month span in 1980-81. During a dragnet, Lim participated in a fire fight with a Sparrow Unit and its leader, Mario Subo-na. Lim’s participation contributed to the arrests of Subona and several leaders of Subona’s organization, and Lim subsequently revealed his own identity when he took their statements and confessions. Lim remained with the intelligence unit, and from 1984-87 he investigated assassinations allegedly committed by the NPA. In 1985, Lim testified in open court against Subona and other subversive leaders, who apparently avoided conviction due to the trial judge’s exclusion of the confessions.
Shortly thereafter, Lim appeared on an NPA death list and began receiving death threats. In response, Lim received police *933 protection and limited his public travel. Still, over the next years, Lim continued to receive threatening phone calls as well as threatening letters tied with a black ribbon, which signifies an NPA death threat. In 1987, to escape the threats, Lim left the police department and began practicing law in the Philippines. The threats continued, however, and Lim hired a personal bodyguard.
Then, from 1990-91, three of Lim’s former colleagues in the Mario Subona investigation were murdered one-by-one. Although neither Lim nor his family was ever confronted or attacked, in May of 1991 Lim began to notice that he was being followed by unidentified men. In August of 1991, Lim left his wife and four children in the Philippines and fled to the United States. As noted, Lim then voluntarily approached the INS and requested asylum.
At his hearing before the IJ, Lim testified and offered two affidavits from men purporting to be supervising officers in the Philippines. These affidavits confirm Lim’s role in the Subona investigation and Lim’s subsequent appearance on the NPA death list.
Without questioning Lim’s credibility or the validity of the affidavits, the IJ rejected Lim’s claims for asylum and withholding of deportation. The IJ found no past persecution, because “nothing ever happened to [Lim] on account of these threats.” The IJ further found that Lim demonstrated no well-founded fear of future persecution, because Lim lived in the Philippines without harm for six years after receiving the threats, and because “the strength of the NPA has been substantially diminished in the Philippines” and thus “there would appear to be no reason why [Lim] might not be able to relocate in another area of the Philippines.”
On appeal, the BIA noted (1) that the IJ correctly recognized Lim’s six-year period of no harm; (2) that former policemen, “as a social group,” are not subjected to reprisals; (3) that Lim’s family remains in the Philippines unmolested; and (4) that there was “no reason to disturb” the IJ’s finding that Lim could internally relocate. In response to these mitigating factors, the BIA affirmed the IJ and held that Lim’s fear was not well founded and that Lim did not risk a clear probability of future persecution.
JURISDICTION & STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court has jurisdiction under § 106(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (the “Act”), 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a). On petition for review, we determine whether substantial evidence supports the BIA’s determinations.
See
8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a)(4);
Acewicz v. INS,
Our review is limited to the BIA’s opinion, except where the BIA adopted the IJ’s reasoning.
See Castillo v. INS,
DISCUSSION
A. Sufficiently Raised Issue on Appeal
We hold that Lim sufficiently raised issues on appeal, and thus we decline to dismiss. Read liberally, Lim’s pro se opening brief, although unburdened by authority, suggests that Lim seeks asylum because he suffered past political persecution and fears future political persecution by an armed and aggressive anti-government group. His supplemental brief, with which he was assisted by counsel, contains citations to authorities and more tradition *934 al legal argument. The Government does not suggest that the issues on appeal are unclear and, indeed, the Government has fully and capably briefed those issues.
It is true that Lim’s opening brief fails to fulfill several formal requirements, including failing to provide either a jurisdictional statement or citations to authority.
See
Fed. R.App. P. 28(a)(4), (9). Courts, however, frequently refuse to dismiss
pro se
appeals for formal defects where the opposing party suffers no prejudice.
See, e.g., Balistreri v. Pacifica Police Dept.,
B. Asylum
Under § 208(a) of the Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a), Lim is eligible for asylum if he is a “refugee,” i.e., if he is unable or unwilling to return to his home country “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);
see Elias-Zacarias,
1. On Account of Political Opinion
Assuming that Lim risks persecution
(see infra
§ B.2), such persecution would be “on account of political opinion” imputed to him by his persecutors. In
Briones v. INS,
Oür en banc companion opinion in
Borja v. INS,
2. Well-Founded Fear of Future Persecution
We further hold that the evidence compels the conclusion that Lim’s fear of persecution is “well founded.” For a fear to be well founded, it must be both subjectively genuine and objectively reasonable.
See INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca,
To effect a well-founded fear, a threat need not be statistically more than fifty-percent likely; the Supreme Court has suggested that even a one-tenth possibility of persecution might effect a well-founded fear.
See id.
at 430,
In
Briones,
under similar facts, we held that a “reasonable factfinder would be compelled by this scenario to conclude that Briones’s fear is ... certainly objectively well-founded.”
Briones,
First, Lim’s failure to leave the Philippines for six years after the first death threat does not render his fear unreasonable. Although relevant, a post-threat hai’mless period need not vanquish an asylum claim, particularly where significant evidence suggests that the threats are becoming more menacing.
Cf. Reyes-Guerrero v. INS,
Second, Lim’s exit from the police force does not eliminate any reasonable fear. That Lim was followed and continued to receive threats after retirement only confirms the natural assumption that the NPA did not forgive him upon his retirement.
Third, we hold here that, although relevant, “the fact that the [Lim] family is safe does not refute his claims of persecution.”
Ceballos-Castillo v. INS,
Fourth and finally, substantial supporting evidence is not provided by the BIA’s alternative finding that, “at any event,” Lim could safely relocate within the Philippines due to the recent weakening of the NPA. In
Briones
we addressed the same country and the same time frame, and we wrote that “the NPA, although somewhat weaker than before, remains capable of killing its opponents.”
*936 3. Past Persecution
Although the events in Lim’s case trigger a well-founded fear of future persecution, we hold that the record does not compel the conclusion that those threats, in and of themselves, constituted
past
persecution. We have defined persecution as an “extreme concept” that includes the “infliction of suffering or harm.”
Korablina v. INS,
Our court generally treats unfulfilled threats, without more, as within that category of conduct indicative of a danger of future persecution, rather than as past persecution itself.
See, e.g., Briones,
Threats standing alone, however, constitute past persecution in only a small category of cases, and only when the threats are so menacing as to cause significant actual “suffering or harm.”
Sangha,
In the context of the case before us, substantial evidence supports the BIA’s finding that the threats here did not constitute past persecution, but better fit “within that category of past experience more properly viewed as indicative of the danger of future persecution.”
Boykov,
Nothing in
Garrovillas v. INS,
Lim’s case offers certain mitigating factors absent in our Garrovillas opinion. Lim’s case offers clear indication of both family safety and Lim’s own safety in the Philippines for several years. These mitigating factors weaken his claim that he suffered “suffering or harm” constituting actual persecution, even if those factors do not obviate Lim’s reasonable fear under his particular circumstances. Accordingly, under the facts here we prefer the route taken by the more recent Briones en banc opinion to that suggested by the Garrovil-las dicta.
Moreover, to the extent that
Garrovillas
might be read to fashion a blanket rule qualifying past threats as past persecution, we decline to embrace that view for the reasons set forth above. For its suggestion that threats constitute past persecution,
Garrovillas
relies almost entirely on language from
Sangha,
a case in which we addressed conduct far exceeding in ferocity anything proved here, and in which we actually denied asylum.
See Garrovillas,
Our view avoids a definition of “persecution” that would render as mere surplusage the separate “well-founded fear” ground of asylum. The Act and the case law interpreting the Act make clear that there are two general methods of becoming eligible for a discretionary grant of asylum: (1) “persecution” in the past or (2) a “well-founded fear of persecution” in the future. 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A);
see Elias-Zacarias,
We also find instructive the dichotomy between
Briones
and its companion case
Borja.
As mentioned above, in
Briones,
C. Withholding of Deportation
An alien is not entitled to mandatory withholding of deportation under
*938
§ 243(h) of the Act unless there is a “clear probability” — i.e., unless “it is more likely than not” — that he will be subject to persecution.
INS v. Stevic,
Evidence may compel a finding that a fear of persecution is well-founded, even where that same evidence does not compel a finding that persecution will be more likely than not to occur — in the same way a player of Russian Roulette would reasonably fear death, even though only one of six chambers would in fact be fatal.
See id.
(“[Although the alien’s evidence may fall short of establishing a ‘clear probability’ of persecution, the same evidence may qualify the alien for a discretionary grant of asylum.”). Consequently, we have held that even where evidence compels a finding of asylum, the BIA may still reasonably find that the petitioner failed to show a clear probability of persecution, and therefore the BIA may justifiably deny withholding of deportation.
See Barraza Rivera v. INS,
Although we hold the BIA findings to be insufficient to overcome all reasonable fear of persecution, we cannot say that those findings offer insubstantial evidence supporting the denial of withholding of deportation. Lim retired from the police force and lived in the Philippines for six years without harm. His family remains there unharmed, and the dissident NPA has weakened. Despite these facts, Lim has a reasonable fear of persecution; he might indeed suffer persecution upon return to the Philippines. However, we cannot say that such persecution
will
happen, in the sense of being more likely than not.
Cf. Bolanos-Hernandez v. INS,
We take guidance from our opinion in
Barraza Rivera,
We recognize that our cases often grant both asylum and withholding of deportation, or deny both. Such a practice, when it is warranted, provides the court with a convenient and helpful shortcut— for example, several times we have held petitioners eligible for withholding of deportation, and thus
a fortiori
eligible for
*939
asylum.
See, e.g., Gomez-Saballos,
To require that asylum and withholding of deportation must always walk together would be to render the distinction between the two standards mere empty words. We hold that, under the facts of this case, asylum and withholding of deportation can be treated separately.
CONCLUSION
Lim sufficiently raised an issue on appeal, and he qualifies for asylum on the grounds that he has a well-founded fear of future persecution on account of imputed political opinion. We affirm the denial of withholding of deportation, and we remand so that the Attorney General may exercise her discretion under § 208(a) of the Act.
See Blanco-Comarribas v. INS,
PETITION GRANTED IN PART, REMANDED.
