On April 16,1997, an Immigration Judge (“IJ”) denied petitioner Wei Guang Wang’s request for asylum and withholding of removal, finding that he was not credible. He was granted voluntary departure, which was to take place on or before May 16, 1997. Petitioner appealed from that decision. On May 30, 2000, the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirmed the IJ’s decision, and granted petitioner voluntary departure within 30 days of the Board’s order. More than four years later, petitioner was still in the United States. Since being ordered to depart, petitioner had married and fathered two children. He sought to reopen his deportation proceedings, alleging changed country conditions and changed personal circumstances. On January 26, 2005, the BIA denied petitioner’s motion to reopen on the grounds that he had not established changed conditions in China. He now appeals that decision, arguing that the BIA failed properly to consider evidence of changed country conditions.
For the reasons set forth below, we deny the petition for review.
I. Background
Petitioner is a citizen of the People’s Republic of China. According to petitioner’s application, while he was living in China, his girlfriend, Yan Wei Li, became pregnant with his child. The two were denied a marriage license because petitioner was only twenty-one years old and thus too young to marry legally. Their child, Yuan Hua Wang, was born on April 27, 1992. Petitioner claimed that under China’s family planning policies only legally married couples are permitted to have children, and as a result of these events he was ordered by the Chinese government to undergo a sterilization procedure. Petitioner subsequently fled to the United States in April 1994, apparently leaving Li and their child behind. He applied for asylum asserting that he had a well-founded fear of persecution. On April 16, 1997, the IJ denied petitioner’s request for asylum, based on his lack of credibility. The BIA affirmed the IJ’s decision on May 30, 2000, and, as the IJ had done, granted petitioner voluntary departure within 30 days of the Board’s order. Petitioner apparently did not appeal the BIA’s decision to this Court.
Wang never left the United States, opting instead to remain here well beyond the time he was told to depart. Four and a half years later, he filed the instant motion to reopen his deportation proceedings. 1 In those intervening four years, petitioner met and married Xiu Lan Wang, also a Chinese citizen. The couple had two children. In August 2003, Mrs. Wang was granted asylum. Unlike petitioner, however, there is no indication that she was ever previously denied asylum and ordered to leave the United States prior to having her children.
Petitioner bases his motion to reopen, which is filed well outside of the 90-day time limit provided in 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(2), on alleged changed conditions in China. Specifically, he asserts that a more severe Family Planning Law, enacted in China in 2002, was only recently implemented in his hometown. He claims that the new law increases, from mere economic sanctions to the imposition of *273 criminal penalties, the punishment of couples who have more than one child. Petitioner also asserts that a change in his own personal circumstances, namely the birth of his two children, will subject him to persecution in the form of forced sterilization upon his return to China. In support of this motion, petitioner offered, inter alia, the birth certificates of his two children born in the United States; an affidavit from Dr. Guang Wu (“Wu affidavit”), setting forth alleged incidents dating back to 1995 of forced sterilization being performed on Chinese citizens who gave birth to multiple children abroad; and an affidavit from Dr. John S. Aird (“Aird affidavit”), a retired U.S. Census Bureau demographer and immigration expert, discussing China’s new Family Planning Law, including the treatment of Chinese couples who have had children abroad. The BIA denied petitioner’s motion to reopen. Petitioner filed a timely petition for review in this Court.
II. Discussion
We review the BIA’s denial of a motion to reopen for abuse of discretion.
Kaur v. BIA,
“The statutory framework governing asylum proceedings does not provide for motions to reopen or reconsider, and the right to make such motions depends entirely on the administrative regulations.”
Kaur,
Here, the BIA correctly held that the birth of petitioner’s two children in the United States is evidence of his changed personal circumstances, as opposed to changed conditions in China.
See Li Yong Zheng v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
On the issue of changed country conditions, the BIA had three pieces of evidence before it presented by petitioner’s motion to reopen: the Wu affidavit, the Aird Affidavit, and the 2004 State Department Country Report for China. The Wu affidavit provides anecdotal evidence from 1995 of forced sterilizations being performed on the parents of children born outside of China. It appears that Dr. Wu, who himself had an asylum case pending before the BIA, left China in 1999, so it is unclear how his affidavit would ever be relevant to whether conditions in China have changed since that time. Even assuming that the acts described in the Wu affidavit occurred, they took place well before the BIA denied petitioner’s initial application for asylum. The affidavit would thus form no basis to prove that conditions in China have changed since 2000. See 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(3)(ii) (requiring that motions to reopen be based on evidence that “is material and was not available and could not have been discovered or presented at the previous hearing”). The 2004 State Department Country Report for China indicates that there is no known national policy regarding the treatment of parents with children born in the United States. The Country Report states that although there have been reports of forced sterilizations in some rural areas, central government policy prohibits it. The Aird affidavit, dated September 30, 2004, offers evidence that seemingly contradicts the State Department Country Report with respect to petitioner’s claim in this case. However, it was not prepared specifically for petitioner and is not particularized as to his circumstances. For that reason, its relevance is also limited.
Although the petitioner, when asserting changed country conditions, presented the BIA with this evidence, the BIA failed to discuss it in any particular detail in its decision denying the relief requested. Rather, the BIA tersely rejected petition *275 er’s assertion that conditions in China have changed, implicitly acknowledging the contents of petitioner’s offerings, and ruling:
The respondent’s personal circumstances may have changed ... but he has not established that conditions in China have changed so that he has a reasonable fear of persecution. Nor does the evidence show that the respondent has a prima facie claim for relief pursuant to the Convention Against Torture, so we find no reason to remand on that basis. While the respondent may face a fine and harassment for having multiple children, we are not persuaded that he will face more severe punishment including, as he claims, forced sterilization.
Given the brevity of the BIA’s decision on this point, questions arise as to its sufficiency. On the one hand, the BIA abuses its discretion if it fails completely to address evidence of changed country conditions offered by a petitioner.
See Poradisova v. Gonzales,
On the other hand, we do not hold, and in fact we reject any implication that
Anderson
so holds, that where the BIA “ ‘has given reasoned consideration to the petition, and made adequate findings,’ ” it must “expressly parse or refute on the record” each individual argument or piece of evidence offered by the petitioner.
Xiao Ji Chen v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
Even if we were tempted to remand to the BIA here, finding that its limited analysis amounted to an abuse of discretion, we would not do so under the circumstances presented in this case because to do so would be futile.
See Xiao Ji Chen,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we DENY the petition for review.
Notes
. Although petitioner is, of course, primarily responsible for his unlawful actions, one cannot help but question why the Department of Homeland Security has failed to ensure petitioner’s removal from the country. Despite the BIA's order of removal issued more than four years ago, petitioner was able to remain in the United States, marry, and father two children.
