Thе petitioner, Agust H. Pulisir, is an Indonesian national. He seeks judicial review of a final order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) approving the denial of his request for withholding of removal. Discerning no basis for overturning that order, we deny the petition.
The facts are straightforward (although reasonable minds can draw differing inferences from them). The petitioner entered the United States in 1994 and remained illegally for some nine years before the Department of Homeland Security instituted removal proceedings. See 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(1)(B). Before the immigration judge (IJ), the petitioner conceded remov-ability but cross-applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under *306 the United Nations Convention Against Torture (CAT).
The petitioner’s basic claim was that, as a Protestant Christian living in a predominantly Muslim nation, he had suffered persecution on account of his religion. Of the various events to which he testified in support of this claim, the three most salient involved alleged acts of persecution transpiring while he was in Indonesia. We chronicle them briefly.
In two instances, both occurring in 1987, vandals threw rocks at the church that the petitioner attended. When asked how he knew that the rock-throwers were Muslims, he explained that he assumed as much becаuse ninety-seven percent of the people who lived near the church were of the Muslim faith.
The third incident occurred in 1988, when the petitioner’s family was hosting a women’s prayer meeting at the family’s home. The meeting took place at the same time that the local mosque was playing Islamic prayers over a loudspeaker. Several uninvited individuals intruded and scolded the worshipers. Thе intruders stated that if a party was going to occur, the hosts needed to secure permission from the head of the neighborhood. The petitioner’s mother told the men that the gathering was not a party. A fight broke out and the petitioner lost a front tooth. Police eventually arrived but no arrests were made.
The petitioner, who claimed that he knew every Protestant in the neighborhood, could not identify the intruders. Consequently, he inferred that they were Muslims. Moreover, he expressed a disdainful belief that the police had treated the intruders with kid gloves.
The petitioner left Indonesia in 1990. Nevertheless, relying on anecdotal accounts he testified that, during 1991, his mother and four of her friends had been walking to church when a young man blocked their passage. Seeing that they held bibles in their hands, the man told them that thеy could not pass. When the petitioner’s mother tried to assert herself, she was roughed up and ultimately required medical attention.
The petitioner testified on cross-examination to a checkered travel history over the years 1990-1994. During that period, he worked for Carnival Cruise Lines and regularly returned to Indonesia for roughly two months at a stretch, typically at six to ten month intervals (either between assignments or on vacation). The petitioner made four such pilgrimages in all. He described no specific acts of harassment that occurred during any of these trips, although he made a vague allusion that there was “always a problem.”
For the most part, the petitioner’s testimony proceeded without incident. At one point, however, he attempted to testify concerning current cоnditions in Indonesia. The IJ cut off that line of inquiry when the petitioner tried to recount developments that had taken place in Indonesia from 1994 forward. 1 The IJ reasoned that the petitioner was incompetent to testify to recent country conditions in light of his eleven-year absence from the country. Relatedly, the IJ noted that substantial evidence about that subject already was in the recоrd, mainly in the form of State Department Country Reports.
When the hearing concluded, the IJ denied all three of the requested forms of *307 relief in a bench decision. Two of these initiatives were quickly dispatched: the IJ dismissed the asylum application as untimely and rejected the CAT claim for failure to show a threat of torture at the hands of governmental actors. Neither of those claims are рursued in this court, so we make no further mention of them.
As to the request for withholding of removal, the IJ discounted the petitioner’s testimony regarding the alleged events of 1987, 1988, and 1991. The IJ noted the conspicuous lack of specificity, detail, and corroboration, and gave significant weight to the pacific nature of the petitioner’s trips to Indonesia during the 1991-1994 time frame.
Turning to the likelihood of future persеcution, the IJ determined that while discrimination against Christians existed in Indonesia, it was neither widespread nor in most instances severe. Furthermore, the Indonesian government was committed to the principle of religious diversity and actively discouraged discrimination against non-Muslims.
When all was said and done, the IJ concluded that the petitioner had failed to carry his burden of proving that, more likely than not, he wоuld be persecuted if remitted to his homeland. Accordingly, he refused the request for withholding of removal.
On appeal, the BIA upheld the IJ’s ukase. As to withholding of removal, it rested its decision on somewhat broader grounds, concluding that the record left unclear whether religious animus had sparked the incidents of which the petitioner complained (and, thus, that the petitioner had failed to carry his burden in this rеgard). The BIA also took special note of the fact that, since 1991, the petitioner’s family has lived tranquilly in Indonesia. It then cited cases such as
Susanto v. Gonzales,
The BIA also addressed the petitioner’s claim that the IJ’s truncation of his testimony abridged his due process rights. It rejected this claim, observing that the petitioner had not identified any relevant evidence that otherwise could have been presented to the trier.
This timely petition for judicial review followed. In it, the petitioner calumnizes the denial of his request for withholding of removal on a variety of grounds and characterizes the hearing before the immigration court as violative of due process.
As to the petitioner’s main group of arguments, our standard of review is familiar. When assessing findings of fact in immigration proceedings, we must respect those findings as long as they are supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole.
Pan v. Gonzales,
In immigration matters, judicial review normally focuses on the decision of the BIA as opposed to that of the IJ.
Stroni v. Gonzales,
Turning to the substantive law, an applicant for withholding of removal has the burden of proving that, more likely than not, he would be subject to persecution on account of a statutorily protected ground should he be repatriated.
2
See
8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3)(C); 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(b)(2);
Romilus v. Ashcroft,
Against this backdrop, the petitioner’s first claim of error is that neither the BIA nor the IJ made an express finding about past persecution. This claim neеd not occupy us for long: it overlooks the well-settled tenet that an implicit finding of past persecution will suffice to undergird a decree.
See Rotinsulu v. Mukasey,
To be sure, the decisions below may be slightly elliptical, but findings regarding pаst persecution are easily inferable. For example, both the BIA and the IJ discussed the alleged acts of persecution and found that those rather bland incidents failed to justify the relief requested. That reasoning necessarily subsumes and decides the question of past persecution. 3 See id. at 72.
The petitioner’s challenge to the definitions of “persecution” and “discrimination” used by the agency is more nuanced. He appears to acknowledge that, under prevailing case law in this circuit, the incidents that he described could plausibly be found to lack the requisite level of severity.
See, e.g., Awad v. Gonzales,
This case does not require us either to lay down a bright-line rule or to decide whether the Ninth Circuit’s “sliding scale” approach is compatible with our precedents. Common sense suggests that larger social, cultural, and political forcеs can
*309
lend valuable context to particular incidents and, thus, can influence the weight that a factfinder may assign to those incidents.
See Vatulev v. Ashcroft,
The line between persecution and discrimination is often tenebrous,
see Bucur v. INS,
The petitioner is unable to point to anything that suggests that the agency misconceived the conceptual nature of either “persecution” or “discrimination.” Nor is any other error of law apparent. Indeed, for aught that appears, the deсisions of both the BIA and the IJ reflect that, when assessing the net effect of the incidents of which the petitioner complained, they were well aware of general conditions in Indonesia. The mere fact that those decision-makers weighed the constituent parts differently and reached a conclusion not to the petitioner’s liking does not constitute a valid reason for overturning the agеncy’s judgment.
If more is needed — and we doubt that it is — the petitioner’s “general conditions” argument puts the cart before the horse. The BIA found explicitly that the petitioner had inadequately demonstrated any nexus between the incidents in question and his religion. Such a nexus is a necessary element of any claim for withholding of removal.
See
8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3)(A);
Hincapie,
The petitioner next alleges that the IJ (and, by implication, the BIA) read the State Department Country Reports so selectively as to run afoul of the rule in
Gomes v. Gonzales,
Gomes is not a fair congener. The record in this case, read objectively, does not support the claim of selectivity. The adverse finding regarding future persecution was made only after confronting and fully considering the petitioner’s direct testimony. Unlike in Gomes, the agency did not sidestep conflicting evidence but, rather, considered the record as a whole and reasonably concluded that it failed to show a nexus between the petitioner’s misadventures and his religion. On the same basis, the agency found that what the petitioner *310 had experienced did not sink to the level of persecution and that his family’s relatively serene existence for many years in Indonesia strongly suggested that he himself would not suffer persecution upon repatriation.
These findings are impervious to the petitioner’s attack. State Department Country Reports, though not normally conclusive, are generally deemed authoritative for purposes of immigration proceedings.
See Waweru v. Gonzales,
Nor does it matter that the BIA and the IJ did not dissect every scrap of proof. The law is pellucid that “each piece of evidence need not be discussed in a decision.”
Morales v. INS,
The petitioner’s challenge to the finding that, should he be repatriated, he would be able to improve his lot by relocating within Indonesia requires little comment. The issue of relocatiоn typically becomes relevant only after a presumption of future persecution arises.
See, e.g., Singh v. BIA,
In all events, even were we to reach the issue, the challenge would fail on the merits. As framed, it depends on the notion that the trier misallocated the burden of proof on this issue (which, in the petitioner’s view, should have rested with the government). That notion is incorrect.
The burden of proving that relocation is not a feasible alternative normally rests with the alien and shifts to the government only if the alien adequately establishes either past persecution or a likely basis for fearing future government-sponsored persecution. See 8 C.F.R. §§ 1208.16(b)(l)(i)(B), (b)(1)(h), (b)(3). As we already have explained, neither of those conditions was satisfied here.
This leaves the petitioner’s swan song: his claim that the IJ violated due process by excluding his testimony concerning general conditions in Indonesia long after his 1994 departure from that country. This ruling, the petitioner asserts, was prejudicial because conditions in his hоmeland deteriorated greatly from 1997 until the time of the hearing, and his testimony would have enlightened the trier about the gravity of the situation.
*311
We review de novo a claim that an immigration judge’s conduct violated an alien’s due process rights.
Teng v. Mukasey,
When a due process challenge is aimed at a trial-management ruling, a reviewing court must keep in mind the tension that exists between a trial judge’s right to regulate the course of a hearing and an alien’s right to present evidence to his own behoof. Compare 8 C.F.R. § 1240.1(c) with 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(b)(4)(B). Balancing these rights, we see no hint of a due process transgression here.
In this instance, the IJ afforded the petitioner considerable latitude, inviting testimony about specific events in Indonesia involving the petitioner’s family and friends even if the petitioner himself lacked first-hand knowledge of those events. The IJ drew the line, however, when the petitioner attempted to testify about general country conditions from 1994 forward. By the time of the hearing, the petitioner had been away from Indonesia for eleven years and had no special qualifications to speak to general conditions there.
It is true, of course, that evidentiary standards are applied more loosely in administrative hearings than in court сases.
See 8
C.F.R. § 1240.7;
see also Niam v. Ashcroft,
Nor were the petitioner’s rights offended in any related way. The record shows no indication that the IJ denied him the opportunity to introduce competent evidence of current country conditions (say, by expert testimony or reports from recognized authorities). By the same token, the IJ did not prevent the petitioner from testifying as to any matter within his ken (whether or not he had first-hand knowledge thereof). Given this overall picture, the petitioner cannot be heard to complain that his right to due process was infringed.
We need go no further. To the extent that the petitioner has alluded to other arguments, they are patently meritless, insufficiently developed, or both. It suffices to say that, for the reasons elucidated above, the petition for judicial review must be denied.
So Ordered.
Notes
. The petitioner last visited Indonesia in 1994. He entered the United States later that year and never left. He did not return in 2003 to attend his father’s funeral because he was illegally in the United States and feared that he would be unable to reenter. As an aside, he also mentioned that the journey would have been costly.
. Religion is one such protected ground. See 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3).
. The BIA's citation to the line of authority headed by
Susanto,
. The petitioner testified that he was attacked by persons he thought were Muslims, but did not specifically identify his attackers. Moreover, he put forth only speculation to support the claim that those people attacked him (or, in one instance, his mother) on account of religious animus. The BIA was not bound either to accept that conjecture or to credit the petitioner’s self-serving conclusions.
See Hincapie,
. This conclusion renders it unnecessary for us to review the BIA’s holding that, even if a violation occurred, no cognizable prejudice flowed from it.
