Su Qing Chen petitions for review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’ (BIA) decision upholding the Immigration Judge’s (IJ) denial of her application for asylum and withholding of removal under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). Chen argues the BIA erred in upholding the IJ’s finding that Chen assisted in persecution and was therefore ineligible for relief. For the reasons set forth in this oрinion, we DENY the petition for review.
I. BACKGROUND
According to her undisputed testimony before the IJ, Chen began working at a governmental family planning office in her hometown of Changle City in Fujian Province, China in January 2003. She procured this employment through her uncle’s influence and took it voluntarily. Chief among her duties was her responsibility to watch over pregnant women detained by Chinese authorities for violating the country’s family planning policies. The authorities would detain these women in locked rooms at the facility until their scheduled forced abortions. Chen guarded the women at the facility. Authorities provided her with a rod or baton to use during her duties, although she never actually used the weaрon against the detained women. She had access to the keys to the rooms in which the women were confined. When she accepted employment, Chen testified she knew the facility housed pregnant women scheduled for abortions, but she thought the forced abortion program was limited to women who were one or two months рregnant.
On the evening of February 14, 2003, Chen was on duty when a group of eight women were brought into the facility and placed in locked rooms. One of the women was crying, and Chen approached her to investigate. The woman explained to Chen she was upset because she was eight months pregnant with a boy but already had another child. She begged Chen to release her so she would not have to undergo a forced abortion. Chen said she was surprised to see the family planning policy enforced on a woman so close to full term. Chen retrieved the keys to the woman’s room, unlocked it, and released her. Chen then left the facility.
She returned home, and the nеxt day family planning officials brought her to their office. They terminated her position and scolded her for releasing the detained female. Chen was told to return home, and her activities would be watched. Chen stayed with her parents for a ten days but left their home out of fear of reprisal. From February 2003 until January 2005 she stayed in China but hid from the government, staying first with her aunt and later living on her own while holding sundry jobs at factories and restaurants. She then fled China for Thailand. Still afraid of retaliation by the gov
Chen arrived in the United States on May 21, 2005, and quickly was served with a Notice to Appear. She filed an application for аsylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture (CAT), claiming she had a well-founded fear of persecution if sent back to China on account of her opposition to the family planning policy. The IJ held a hearing and, in a written opinion, denied her application. Finding Chen credible, the IJ ruled her termination by the family plаnning authorities did not constitute persecution. Additionally, the IJ found she had assisted in persecution and was ineligible for relief.
The BIA upheld the IJ on his finding that Chen was a persecutor and therefore ineligible for asylum and withholding of removal. 1 Relying on the statutory disqualification for those who assist in persecution, the BIA found Chen’s participation as a guard at the family planning facility rose to the level of “assistance” required under the statute. Chen timely filed a petition for review of the BIA’s decision.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The BIA’s determinations on questions of law are reviewed de novo.
See Assa’ad v. U.S. Att’y Gen.
III. DISCUSSION
This case concerns the statutory exclusion disqualifying those who assist or participate in persecution from receiving asylum or withholding of removal. The Department of Homeland Security may grant asylum to an alien present in the United States if such alien establishes status as a refugee. 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(A). An alien is a refugee if he is unable or unwilling to return to his country of origin on account of past persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution based on his race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion. See 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42); 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b). Persecution fоr “resistance to a coercive population control program,” like China’s family planning policies, can constitute persecution based on political opinion. 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42). Additionally, an alien subject to removal may be withheld from removal if the alien’s life or freedom would be threatened on grounds similar to those fоr demonstrating well-founded fear of persecution. See 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3)(A).
An alien is ineligible for both asylum and withholding of removal if “the alien ordered, incited, assisted, or otherwise participated in the persecution of any person on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political оpinion .... ” 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(2)(A)®; id. § 1231(b)(3)(B)®. If there is evidence indicating grounds for mandatory denial of an application apply, the alien must demonstrate “by a preponderance of the evidence that such grounds do not apply.” 8 C.F.R. § 1240.8(d).
[A]n individual who did no more than cut the hair of female inmates before they were executed cannot be found to have assisted in the persecution of civilians. On the other hand, there can be no question that a guard who was issued a uniform and armed with a rifle and a pistol, who was paid a stipend and was regularly allowed to leave the concentration camp to visit a nеarby village, and who admitted to shooting at escaping inmates on orders from the commandant of the camp, fits within the statutory language about persons who assisted in the persecution of civilians.
Id.
at 512 n. 34,
All fellow circuits that have addressed this issue have used Fedorenko’s language to establish the standard for defining whether conduct amounts to assistance in persecution. The Eighth Circuit, in interpreting
Fedorenko,
requires “a particulаrized evaluation ... to determine whether an individual’s behavior was culpable to such a degree that he could be fairly deemed to have assisted or participated in persecution.”
Hernandez v. Reno,
We agreе with these circuits. The standard for determining whether an asylum applicant is ineligible for asylum and withholding of removal due to assistance or participation in persecution is a particularized, fact-specific inquiry into whether the applicant’s personal conduct was merely indirect, peripheral and inconsequentiаl association or was active, direct and integral to the underlying persecution.
In reviewing the cases from the other circuits, we are struck by the similarities between Chen’s situation and the facts described in the Second Circuit’s opinion in
Xie.
3
In
Xie,
the asylum applicant, also an employee of the Changle City Department of Heath, was a driver for the department.
The Second Circuit held the BIA did not err in determining Xie’s conduct amounted to assistance in persecution. Id. at 144. Xie’s conduct was essential to the acts of persecution: “By driving the van in which the women were locked, Xie ensured that they were delivered to the place of their рersecution .... Xie played an active and direct, if arguably minor, role.” Id. at 143. Nor was Xie’s redemptive act sufficient to protect him from the “assistance” provision of the INA. Nothing in the statute indicated Xie’s particular behavior — even if admirable — negated his assistance. Id. at 143-44.
Chen’s situation resembles that in Xie in several relevant ways. In both cases, the applicant’s own testimony indicated he or she played a pivotal role in the persecution: Xie drove the detained women to the forced abortions, while Chen prevented women from escaping the confinements holding them for identical purposes. Both held jobs with non-persecuto-ry aspects and did help a woman esсape the persecution. The only significant difference is not particularly salient: while Xie’s employment (over a year) was longer than Chen’s (around six weeks), Xie’s assistance was infrequent and occurred only a handful of times throughout the course of his employment.
Applying the standard articulated above for determining whether сonduct amounts to assistance in persecution, our own analysis leads us to a conclusion similar to that in
Xie.
We hold the BIA’s finding that Chen assisted in persecution was supported by substantial evidence. There is no question the forced abortions performed by the Changle City family plan
Chen’s single redemptive act, while laudatory, is not sufficient to alter this analysis. She chose to save one person from persecution only after two months spent working at the facility and supervising other women. In light of the fact that Chen voluntarily took on the employment, was paid for her work, аnd fully understood the policy called for forced abortions to be performed on some women, her later decision to release one person who was eight months pregnant does not absolve her of the consequences of her personal culpability for the previous assistance. 4 Chen’s actions, when viewed in their entirety, amounted to assistance in persecution.
IV. CONCLUSION
Under the facts of this case, the BIA did not err in finding Chen assisted in persecution and was ineligible for relief. Chen’s conduct — voluntarily overseeing the confinement of women scheduled for forced abortions — clearly was direct and integral to the ultimate acts of persecutiоn performed, and her act of assisting in one woman’s escape does not sufficiently mitigate the participation.
5
Chen falls square
DENIED.
Notes
. Chen failed to appeal the IPs denial of CAT relief before the BIA and does not attempt to challenge the finding here.
. We note we have previously construed identical "assistance” language found in a section of the INA commonly referred to as the Holtzman Amendment.
See Dailide v. U.S. Att’y Gen.,
Dailide
involved Algimantas Dailide, who voluntarily joined the Lithuanian Secret Police under Nazi control in the early 1940s. The Secret Police generally were responsible for enforcement of Jewish curfews and ghettos, along with other various anti-Jewish laws.
Dailide,
Wе found the BIA's determination that Dailide participated in persecution was clearly supported by the record. Id. at 1343. Dailide both assisted in persecution and actually persecuted several people during his association with the Secret Police. Id. at 1344. While the case is factually distinct from Chen’s, we note our decisiоn today under §§ 1158(b)(2)(A)(i) & 123 l(b)(3)(B)(i) is wholly consistent with the view of identical language under the Holtzman Amendment expressed in Dailide.
. We note the Ninth Circuit has applied the assistance language on facts somewhat analogous to Chen’s, although not nearly as striking as the similarities to
Xie. See generally Im,
. Our analysis of this case should not be viewed as a holding that an act of redemption is never sufficient to overcome other participatory acts and save an individual from the disqualifying effect of §§ 1158(b)(2)(A)(i) & 123 l(b)(3)(B)(I). We merely hold, under Chen's facts, her redemption does not dispel the effect оf her participation. Nor do we mean to imply that voluntariness is a requirement for finding assistance or participation in persecution. As the Second Circuit noted,
Fedorenko
specifically disclaimed any notion that the DPA’s language included a voluntariness requirement, and there is little reason to believe the INA’s similar exclusionary language requires the assistance or participation be voluntary.
See Xie,
. In her brief, Chen disputes the IJ’s characterization of her testimony. Chen argues her testimony could be intеrpreted to suggest she never intended to assist in persecution and planned from the beginning to help the pregnant women at the first opportunity. To the extent she disagrees with the IJ’s findings of fact, those findings can be reversed only when the record compels it.
See Ruiz v. U.S. Att’y Gen.,
