Erney and John Freddy Tobon-Marin, brothers who are natives and citizens of Colombia, entered the United States in 2002 and 2003, respectively, without valid visas. The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) commenced deportation proceedings against the brothers, who conceded removability, but filed applications for asylum based on their allegations of *30 past persecution in Colombia relating to their political beliefs.
At their hearing before an immigration judge (IJ), Erney testified that before he left Colombia, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (aka Fuеrzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia or the FARC), a communist guerilla group seeking to bring about the forcible overthrow of the Colombian government, came to the house where Erney resided with his parents and three brothers, and asked him to join the FARC. Erney did not want to join the FARC beсause he disagreed with their political agenda. Because he was frightened, however, Erney did not respond, and the guerillas left. During the following week, Erney heard that the FARC had murdered a teenage boy from his neighborhood who had been invited to join the FARC but had refused. Concerned for Ernеy’s safety, his parents paid for his plane fare to the United States.
Later in 2002, the FARC sent a threatening letter to the Tobon-Marin home, asking Erney’s brother, John Freddy, to join the FARC or face serious consequences. Within the next few days, John Freddy also received three or four threatening рhone calls. John Freddy’s parents paid for his airfare to the United States to join his brother Erney. Petitioners’ parents and older brother, who was also approached by the FARC but refused to join, have remained at their home in Colombia without further incident.
The IJ denied petitioners’ аpplications for asylum, finding, inter alia, that: (i) petitioners were credible, and had established a subjectively genuine fear of returning to Colombia; (ii) petitioners had not established that their subjective fear was objectively reasonable; (in) the FARC’s threats against petitioners did not persist or еscalate into violence or physical harm; (iv) petitioners never told the FARC that their refusal to join was based on their political views, and thus they did not conclusively establish that the FARC threats were made on account of that statutorily protected ground; and (v) petitioners’ fаmily (and especially their older brother, whom the FARC had unsuccessfully attempted to recruit) had remained behind at the family home in Colombia without suffering any adverse repercussions from petitioners’ refusals to join the FARC. On appeal, the BIA affirmed on these same grounds, and the brothers submitted their consolidated petition for review.
I
DISCUSSION
Petitioners contend that the IJ and the BIA erred in denying their asylum applications on the grounds that the FARC’s previous attempts forcibly to conscript them into the guerilla group were neither sufficiently grievous to constitute “persecution” nor motivated by petitioners’ political opinions, and that petitioners failed to adduce sufficient evidence that their subjective fear of returning to Colombia was objectively reasonable.
As the BIA adopted and supplemented the IJ’s opinion with its own substantive gloss, wе evaluate both the IJ’s decision and the BIA decisions.
See Sunoto v. Gonzales,
In order to establish their entitlement to asylum, petitioners needed to prove they are “refugees,” in that they are “unable or unwilling to return to ... [their] country because of persecution or a well-founded *31 fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.” Id. § 1101(a)(42)(A) (emphasis added). The statute contemplates two approaches which petitioners might pursue to satisfy their burden of proof.
A. Past Persecution
First, petitioners may prove they suffered from past “persecution” on account of one or more of the five statutory grounds,
supra,
which would generate a rebuttable presumption that their fear of future persecution is well-founded.
See Nikijuluw v. Gonzales,
Petitioners wеre required to adduce sufficient evidence of a causal nexus between the FARC’s actions and petitioners’ political beliefs.
Fesseha v. Ashcroft,
Indeed, coercive conscription efforts might be motivated simply by the recruiters’ desire to fill their ranks with any available ablе-bodied individual, irrespective of their political sympathies, and the target of coerced recruitment might resist conscription for any number of nonpolitical motives, such as a fear of combat, or a reluctance to give up his civilian livelihood.
See Tapiero de Orejuela,
Further, even if petitioners had adduced evidence of a causal nexus, asylum applicants must also demonstrate that the actual harm inflicted on them reached “a fairly high threshold of seriousness, as well as some regularity and frequency,”
Alibeaj v. Gonzales,
B. Future Persecution
As petitioners failed to prove past persecution, they have generated no rebut-table presumption that their fear of future persecution is well-founded.
See Nikiju-luw,
The anecdotal evidence of the assassinated neighbor is of limited evidentiary weight because petitioners were unable to provide any further details about the circumstances surrounding that event, thus precluding an agency determination of the FARC’s motive for killing the neighbor
(viz.,
whether motivated solely by the victim’s refusal to join the FARC), and whether the killing suggested that petitioners might have provided the FARC with a similar retaliatory incentive. Whatever the “country conditions” report may have been regarding the FARC’s reputation for violent retribution against its political opponents, the record contains no evidence that the FARC has formed any such intention toward these petitioners.
Cf. Delgado,
Nor does the UNICEF report-that Colombia’s civil unrest “affects” about 17.5% of its child population-eompel an agency finding that the petitioners’ fear of future persecution is objectively reasonable. The term “affects,” standing alone, does not neсessarily connote that these children suffer effects which rise to the level of “persecution,” as that term is used in § 1101(a)(42). Civil war, and the pandemic violence which accompanies it, often have unfortunate collateral effects on much of a country’s populаtion, but these effects have no direct or necessary correlation with the victims’ political views.
See Harutyunyan v. Gonzales,
Thus, the agency’s determination that petitioners failed to establish an objectively reasonable fear of future persecution based on their political opinions is sufficiently supported by substantial record evidence.
II
CONCLUSION
However deplorable and regrettable the FARC’s forced conscription mеthods against petitioners and other Colombian youths, the asylum statute simply was not enacted to embrace cases wherein harmful *34 acts were not committed on account of one of the five enumerated statutory grounds, nor where they did not reach a minimum threshold of severity. As the IJ and the BIA had substantial evidence upon which to conclude that the petitioners’ unfortunate experiences were neither politically motivated nor sufficiently grave, and that it is unlikely that they will suffer serious reprisals at the hands of the FARC if they are repatriated to Columbiа, their petitions for review must be denied.
Denied.
Notes
. Petitioners specifically fault the BIA for citing
Guzman v. INS,
