Petitioner, a native and citizen of Sudan, challenges an order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) affirming the decision of the Immigration Judge (IJ) denying his application for asylum or withholding of deportation.
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The IJ held that petitioner had failed to meet his burden of showing either past political persecution or a well-founded fear of such persecution sufficient to warrant asylum and that, a fortiori, petitioner could not satisfy the stricter “clear probability of persecution” standard for withholding of deportation.
See Castaneda v. INS,
Petitioner’s administrative appeal from the IJ’s decision was initially dismissed as untimely. However, after petitioner moved for reconsideration, the BIA vacated its dismissal order and affirmed the decision on the merits. The BIA agreed with the IJ that the evidence of political persecution was insufficient to justify withholding of deportation (the BIA did not consider this evidence under the less onerous standard for asylum) and that asylum was precluded by petitioner’s firm resettlement in the UAE. We review this second order of the BIA and affirm for the reasons stated below.
First, though, we must resolve a jurisdictional question arising out of the BIA’s successive, divergent dispositions of petitioner’s administrative appeal. Before the BIA had a chance to reconsider its initial dismissal of the appeal, petitioner sought review of its dismissal order in this court by filing the petition for review assigned No. 93-9590. After the BIA vacated the order and issued its superseding decision on the merits, petitioner filed a “Motion to Correct Pleadings” with this court, seeking to perpetuate his existing petition from the first BIA order while at the same time substituting the second order as the decision under review.
The only authority cited by petitioner in support of this novel motion is 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a), which deals with consolidating review of final BIA orders with subsequent orders on motions to reopen or reconsider. However, as the terms of petitioner’s motion (seeking substitution rather than consolidation) tellingly reflect, the real issue here is not whether the BIA’s later order on the merits may be consolidated with the petition for review from its earlier order of dismissal, but the analytically prior question of the continuing viability of that initial petition for
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review itself. Because the petition was mooted by vacatur of the sole order it sought to challenge,
see Battle v. Anderson,
We must affirm the administrative denial of an application for withholding of deportation so long as that disposition is supported by substantial evidence.
See Nguyen v. INS,
As for the BIA’s ruling on asylum, current regulations mandate the denial of such relief to any alien — whatever his refugee status — who had been firmly resettled in a third country before entering the United States. 8 C.F.R. § 208.14(c)(2). Prior to recent regulatory amendments, a finding of firm resettlement was not a mandatory bar to asylum, though it normally had that effect.
Farbakhsh v. INS,
On the merits, we uphold the BIA’s finding that petitioner was firmly resettled in the UAE prior to his arrival in this country. Once the government presents some evidence indicating that asylum is unavailable on grounds of firm resettlement pursuant to § 208.14(c)(2), the petitioner bears “the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that such grounds do not apply.” 8 C.F.R. § 208.14(b);
see, e.g., Chinese Am. Civic Council v. Attorney General,
Petitioner did not meet this evidentiary obligation. Indeed, the record discloses additional circumstances, particularly the existence of longstanding and significant family ties in the UAE, supporting the BIA’s finding of firm resettlement.
See Farbakhsh,
Finally, petitioner requests an extension of his now-expired voluntary departure date. We lack jurisdiction to grant such an extension, which we therefore deny without prejudice to a request properly addressed to the INS district director.
See Castaneda,
Accordingly, with respect to the petition for review in No. 94-9530, the order of the BIA affirming the denial of petitioner’s application for asylum and withholding of deportation is AFFIRMED. As noted in the text above, the petition in No. 93-9590 is DISMISSED as moot, petitioner’s motion for correction of the record is GRANTED, and petitioner’s request for an extension of voluntary departure is DENIED without prejudice for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
. After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of these petitions for review. See Fed.R.App.P. 34(a); 10th Cir.R. 34.1.9. The cases are therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
. Noting a significant misstatement of the evidence relating to the nationality of petitioner's passport — the only pertinent evidence indicates the passport was issued by Sudan from its embassy in Abu Dhabi, R. at 92, not by the government of Abu Dhabi itself (or the UAE), as the IJ and BIA both erroneously stated, R. at 3, 59 — • petitioner has moved to correct the appellate record pursuant to Fed.R.App.P. 16(b). Specifically, petitioner seeks to supplement the record with copies of his passport, which clearly shows its issuance by the Sudanese embassy in Abu Dhabi. We grant the motion.
. The point made here should be distinguished from the situation where the alien may be subject to actual persecution for seeking asylum in the United States. Cf. 8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(2)(ii).
