Sever Vaduva was 25 years old when he left Romania in August 1993 and entered the United States on a crewman’s visa. He later applied for asylum. Although the Board of Immigration Appeals denied asylum, he has a leg up on most petitioners seeking review because the Board found that on at least one occasion Vaduva had experienced persecution while in Romania. Under the law, that finding created a rebuttable presumption in favor of granting Vaduva asylum.
See Skalak v. INS,
We will affirm the Board’s decision denying asylum if it is supported by “reasonable, substantial, and probative evidence.”
Sivaainkaran v. INS,
Having demonstrated his eligibility for asylum by proving past persecution, the question becomes whether the Board erred in denying asylum on the ground that Vadu-va reasonably could not fear persecution if he returned to Romania. As it does in many cases, the INS asked the State Department for its opinion as to the likelihood of persecution if asylum is denied. The State Department issued a letter doubting that Vaduva had ever been persecuted, and further dismissing any claim that he could fear persecution upon his return to his homeland. “Even if we were to accept [that he was beaten in 1992], there does not, in our view, appear to be a basis on which he can plausibly maintain that he would face new mistreatment pertinent to our asylum legislation on his return to his own country.” The Department referenced its June 1995 profile on Romania, in which it acknowledged that Romania had been one of the most oppressive Communist regimes under the dictatorship of Ceausescu. But the report noted that the Ceausescu regime was overthrown in 1989, and since then Romania has had two democratic national elections (in 1990 and 1992) in which the country elected Ion Iliescu president. (There has since been a third; in 1996, Ilies-eu was defeated.) The report concluded that “the democratic process and protection of individual rights have taken hold” since the *691 1992 elections; in fact, “country conditions have so altered in the six years since the overthrow of Communism as to remove any presumption that past mistreatment under Ceausescu or in the chaotic first year after his death will lead to future mistreatment.”
The Board relied heavily on the State Department’s report; it is the only documentary evidence cited to rebut Vaduva’s presumption of persecution. It was reasonable for the Board to place weight on a report issued by an expert in the field, which the State Department is, even if the Department may have a “tendency to downplay human-rights violations by governments with which the United States wants to have friendly relations.”
Gramatikov v. INS,
The State Department’s report does not necessarily mean that Vaduva loses, but he “had. better be able to point to a highly credible independent source of expert knowledge if he wants to contradict the ... Department’s evaluation of the likelihood of his being persecuted if he is forced to return home, an evaluation to which courts inevitably give considerable weight.” Id. Vaduva amassed an impressive record before the Board (this is not a case of “self-serving and insufficiently grounded testimony,” id.). The problem is that the vast majority of Vaduva’s evidence predates the State Department’s June 1995 report on Romania. For example, Vaduva offered a 1993 letter from a former U.S. Ambassador to Romania decrying conditions there. Not only is the letter dated two years prior to the State Department’s report, it even predates Vaduva’s departure from the country. So it is hardly probative of present conditions in Romania, and therefore of the risk Vaduva presently faces if he were to return, to his native country. The most probative evidence in the record (supporting Va-duva) comés from a 1995-Amnesty International Report (dated one month before the State Department’s report); the Amnesty report contains anecdotal evidence of human rights violations and concludes that reform in Romania has not been entirely successful.
If it is reasonable to suspect the State Department has a tendency to soft-pedal human rights violations,
Gramatikov,
Ultimately the question in a case such as this one is whether there is substantial evidence that Vaduva lacks a “well-founded fear” of future persecution. -
See
8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(l)(i). Romania apparently is now democratic enough to vote an incumbent president (Iliescu) out of office. The 1996 election and the more recent conditions in Romania are not in the record, nor was the record supplemented by either party to reflect them. But in addition to the State Department’s report, we note that the Board limited its finding of past persecution to a single incident (the Christmas 1992 beating) rather than a campaign of mistreatment, and Vaduva apparently , felt comfortable enough to remain in Romania until he obtained a job
*692
on a cruise ship in August 1993. In addition, he does, not claim that he was physically assaulted after the December 1992 incident. Having been beaten once, it might seem severe to conclude that any fear of future mistreatment could not be “well-founded.” But our conclusion is dictated by the standard for asylum under .our immigration laws. We already have expressed concern over “what is threatening to become an avalanche of groundless asylum appeals by citizens of the formerly communist nations.”
Gramatikov,
No doubt Romania is a less, probably much less, desirable place to live than the United States. The record nevertheless reveals that conditions have improved substantially since the regime of Ceausescu, and also since the defeat of Iliescu. While past events, including one incident found to be persecution, surely leave a sour memory, there is substantial evidence that Vaduva lacks a wellfounded fear of future persecution in Romania. For all of these reasons, we affirm the Board’s decision in all respects.
AFFIRMED.
