NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 20a0323n.06
No. 19-3859
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT Jun 03, 2020
DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
ISMAILA BA, )
) ON PETITION FOR REVIEW
Petitioner,
) OF AN ORDER OF THE
) BOARD OF IMMIGRATION
v.
) APPEALS
)
WILLIAM P. BARR, Attorney General,
)
Respondent. ) OPINION
)
Before: SILER, MOORE, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.
KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. Ismaila Ba petitions for review of the
decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denying his motion to reopen his removal
proceedings. Because the BIA erred in concluding that Ba’s motion was foreclosed by his failure
to demonstrate in his removal proceedings that he is Mauritanian and that he was enslaved, we
GRANT the petition for review, VACATE the BIA’s order, and REMAND for proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
Ba is a native and citizen of Mauritania. Administrative Record (“A.R.”) at 824 (Notice to
Appear). He entered the United States at or near Miami, Florida on or about July 11, 1998, and
was not admitted or paroled after inspection by an Immigration Officer. Id. On January 15, 1999,
Ba submitted an application for asylum and other relief from removal, claiming that he had been
No. 19-3859, Ba v. Barr
enslaved as a Black Mauritanian by an Arab master and feared returning to Mauritania because he
could be killed by his former master. Id. at 806, 808, 810 (First Asylum Appl. at 4, 6, 8). On
October 1, 1999, the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) issued a Notice to Appear in
removal proceedings to Ba, charging him as removable under 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(A)(i). Id. at
824 (Notice to Appear). Ba submitted an updated application for relief in April 2000. Id. at 787
(Second Asylum Appl. at 8). On May 4, 2000, Ba admitted the allegations in DHS’s Notice to
Appear and conceded the charge. Id. at 692–97 (Initial Hr’g Tr. at 1–6).
A. Ba’s Removal Proceedings
On October 23, 2000, Ba testified in support of his applications for relief to the following
information.1 He was born into slavery and his entire family was in the service of a master. A.R.
at 705 (Asylum Hr’g Tr. at 13). His family lived in “the regional city of Kaédi,” id. at 726, in a
separate house owned by the master, id. at 706. At the hearing, Ba identified his master by name
and described him as a “shepherd” who also owned a boutique. Id. at 705–06. Ba would lead his
master’s animals to the pasture, and afterwards he would wait on clients in the boutique, id. at 706,
in which he would sell and serve tea, id. at 722. The master provided “nothing” in compensation
for Ba’s labor, and Ba was permitted to eat only after the master had finished eating. Id. at 707.
Ba attended religious school from 1968 to 1970, id. at 723, and high school from 1970 to 1976,
until his master wanted him to stop, id. at 724. Ba’s sister eventually left the family by way of
marriage to the slave of another family, which Ba’s master arranged. Id. at 707.
1
Ba testified in French through an official interpreter. A.R. at 698 (Asylum Hr’g Tr.)
(Cover Page).
2
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Ba’s father died in 1990, which marked the beginning of Ba’s sexual abuse by his master.
Id. at 727. Ba stated that his master “performed sodomy on [him].” Id. at 708. The abuse happened
“frequently,” “[s]ometimes . . . twice a week.” Id. at 728. Ba never told his mother about the
abuse, both because “[t]here was nothing [his] mother could have done about it,” and because “[i]t
was shameful.” Id. at 728. After his mother’s death in 1992, id. at 707, “the abuse began to
intensify.” Id. at 708. When asked why he did not struggle against the sexual abuse, Ba responded:
“Resistance would have meant nothing. It wouldn’t have served any purpose. I had no rights. It
was within his.” Id. at 714.
Ba decided to flee. Id. at 716. Although he did not receive compensation for his labor
from his master, he gradually saved up small amounts of money that he was given by suitors of
his master’s daughters when they would come to court the daughters. Id. at 716–17. “[L]ittle by
little,” Ba benefitted from this keep-the-change routine: A young man would come to the house
to court the master’s daughter and to serve her tea; the man would give Ba money to go next door
and purchase water, sugar, spoons, and other “accoutrements”; and when Ba would return to give
the man the leftover money, the man would not take it, in order to “make a good impression in
front of the woman.” Id. at 716–17. Ba put this money in a satchel, dug a hole, and hid it there.
Id. at 717.
In March 1998, he left the house when it was empty, took a taxi to the train station, and
then took a car to the city of Nouakchott. Id. at 717–18. After arriving the next day, he took a car
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with other passengers to Nouadhibou2, arriving the following day. Id. at 718. Ba used the money
he had saved up to pay for these transportation expenses. Id. at 729–30. He decided to go to
Nouadhibou because it was “very far away,” “[s]omewhere where one of [the master’s] relatives
or a friend of his could not recognize [him].” Id. at 719. If he had been recognized, the master
“would have had the right . . . either to . . . kill [him] or to . . . commit even worse atrocities than
he had.” Id. In Nouadhibou, Ba walked to Cansado,3 where he eventually secured a job on a
fishing boat and spent five months working without pay. Id. at 719–20. He “felt liberated” on this
boat. Id. at 744. At the advice of the boat’s captain, Ba thereafter boarded another boat on May
5, 1998 that took him to the United States, and because the prior boat’s captain had “arranged the
affair,” Ba did not have to pay for the transatlantic journey. Id. at 719–20. Ba did not remain in
Nouadhibou because he “wanted to go very, very, very, very far from [his] master[,] [s]o when
[he] had the occasion to get on a . . . fishing boat, [he] took it.” Id. at 731–32; id. at 744
(“Mauritania is large. But the population is not very big. And we can recognize one another very
easily. I could have been recognized by a member of my master’s family, a friend of my master.”).
With respect to identity documents, Ba was not able to secure a Mauritanian passport. Id.
at 720. When asked why he had submitted a nationality certificate with his asylum application
that indicated that he resided in Nouakchott, despite testifying that he resided in Kaédi for his
2
The name of his town is spelled incorrectly in the asylum hearing transcript. See, e.g.,
A.R. at 730 (Asylum Hr’g Tr. at 38) (“Nouadhibon”); Oxford Concise Dictionary of World Place
Names (John Everett-Heath ed., 3d ed.) (“Nouadhibou”).
3
The name of his town is spelled incorrectly in the asylum hearing transcript. See A.R. at
719 (Asylum Hr’g Tr. at 27) (“Kasando”); Oxford Concise Dictionary of World Place Names
(John Everett-Heath ed., 3d ed.) (“Cansado”).
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entire life, he responded that he “received that document [from] [his] father when he was on his
death bed” and “c[ouldn]’t say why it says that [he] lived in Nawacha.” Id. at 726–27.4 The IJ
noted that she “d[id]n’t see any document saying that [he] w[as] a slave.” Id. at 751. Ba stated
that he did not know “why the word slave isn’t indicated on [his] identity card.” Id.
Ba testified that he did not know that under current Mauritanian law, adults could not be
forced to remain with former masters. Id. at 738. “[W]hat I do know,” he stated, “is that there are
still adults who are slaves.” Id. He testified that he possessed non-notarized documents from
Mauritanian friends in Columbus, Ohio indicating that individuals are forced to return to their
masters in Mauritania. Id. at 738–39.
The IJ then questioned Ba about his language abilities and his nationality. Ba testified that
his “best language”—and the national language of Mauritania—was French. Id. at 739–40. The
IJ countered that the submitted Country Reports indicated that Arabic was the national language
of Mauritania. Id. at 740. Ba explained that French was “our first language.” Id. The IJ asked,
“[W]hy [are you] speaking in French when you were the slave of an Arabic -- of an Arab -- of an
Arab-speaking Arab?” Id. Ba replied that at his master’s home they spoke Hassaniya, an Arabic
dialect, but once his master took him out of school, Ba “decided that [he] wanted to keep as much
as [he] could from what [he] had been learning in French,” so he spoke French as often as possible.
Id. The IJ then asked, “What’s the national language of Senegal?” to which Ba responded, “I think
it must be French.” Id. at 740–41. The IJ replied, “It is French. Are you from Senegal?” and Ba
4
“Nawacha” appears to be a phonetic spelling of the word “Nouakchott.” Compare A.R.
at 727 (Asylum Hr’g Tr. at 35) (referring to “nationality certificate” that states that Ba lived in
“Nawacha”), with id. at 791 (Second Asylum Appl., Translated Nationality Certificate) (issued by
“Nouakchott Court of the First Instance”).
5
No. 19-3859, Ba v. Barr
stated that he was “not Senegalese.” Id. at 741. The IJ stated that, “[t]he Court finds that it is
highly unusual that you would have been enslaved from infancy in an Arabic family and be
speaking French here today in Court.” Id. Ba explained that “after having seen and felt the
atrocities that were committed against my family and myself, I decided to make French my -- a
language.” Id. The following colloquy ensued:
[IJ]: Well, we have an Arab interpreter this afternoon. If -- would you be able to
speak to that Arab interpreter?
[Ba]: But that would be going backwards. I, I couldn’t do it.
[IJ]: You wouldn’t be able to speak in Arabic to an Arabic interpreter? You
wouldn’t be able to hold a conversation in Arabic, would you?
[Ba]: I’m not saying that I’m incapable. But the Hassaniya that we speak is a
derivative of Arabic. So there, there are words that I could understand. But in
general, we couldn’t communicate.
[IJ]: Well, what about if this may be a Hassaniya interpreter. Will you be able to
carry on a conversation this afternoon?
[Interpreter]: A little bit. But he’s asking that the Judge not force him to return to
memories that he would, he would rather not reinvoke.
Id. at 741–42. The IJ later stated that she “believe[d] [that Ba] is Senegalese, quite frankly. Based
on his language here today. French. Education.” Id. at 751.
The IJ then noted that Ba had fled to Nouakchott and Nouadhibou, “where 60% are
Senegalese.” Id. at 743. She further stated that “[i]t doesn’t sound like [Ba] w[as] a disadvantaged
class” because Ba was “high school educated” and “was able to save up enough money to pay [his]
way to the United States.” Id. at 745. The IJ remarked, “[O]ne principle of slavery is don’t educate
them, I would think. This whole thing is implausible.” Id. at 748. She also remarked that it would
be “really unusual” for Ba to have been enslaved in a city, when the Country Reports stated that
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slavery “still exists in rare cases in the countryside,” id. at 749, and that he was “quite a different
kind of slave” given his level of education, id. at 750.
B. IJ’s Decision
The IJ denied Ba’s application for relief in an oral decision. Id. at 671 (IJ Decision at 1).
The IJ found that Ba “ha[d] not presented a credible claim for relief” for several reasons. Id. at
675; id. (“Court finds respondent not credible because based on the elicited acts cited below, such
claim is implausible.”). First, Ba spoke French—not Hassaniya Arabic—as his preferred
language, and could “only speak a little” of the latter. Id. at 675–76. It was “therefore . . . totally
implausible that . . . he and his family have been slaves to Arabs.” Id. at 676. The IJ found Ba’s
explanation for speaking French to be “totally incredible.” Id. Second, Ba was “relatively
educated,” based on educational statistics in Mauritania, leading to the IJ to “discount[] [Ba]’s
claim for asylum based on being a slave.” Id. There was also an “inconsistency” in Ba’s testimony
about his menial labor duties versus his master’s decision to send him to school. Id. at 677. Third,
Ba’s keep-the-change anecdote was “implausible with the whole concept of being a slave and
providing free labor.” Id. Fourth, Ba was “unable to explain why he could not have adopted safe
haven in Nouadhibon and Nouakchott . . . since he testified that he was unharmed there and he felt
liberated.” Id. Fifth, the combination of Ba’s “unreliable identity records” (which did not indicate
that he was a slave), “his fluent French” (the national language of Senegal), and the Country
Reports statistic that 60% of Mauritanian small boat fishermen were Senegalese (when Ba had
acknowledged that other individuals on his fishing boat were Senegalese) “strongly suggest[ed] to
the Court that [Ba] is, in fact, Senegalese.” Id. Sixth, his certificate of nationality stated that he
resided in Nouakchott, but his testimony was “that he had always lived in Kaédi.” Id. at 677–78.
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Seventh, it was unlikely that Ba was a slave because Kaédi was not in the countryside, which is
where “one would reasonably expect a slave to be.” Id. at 678. Eighth, slavery had been outlawed
in Mauritania since 1980, and contrary to Ba’s testimony, adults could not be forced to remain
with their masters or to return if they left. Id. Alternatively, the IJ noted that even if Ba were
credible, “changed conditions in his country show that he has no reasonable fear of being recovered
by his master.” Id. at 678–79.
Having denied Ba’s application for relief, the IJ ordered Ba removed to Mauritania. Id. at
679 (IJ Order). Ba timely filed a notice of appeal. Id. at 662 (Notice of Appeal).
C. Appeal and Present Motion to Reopen
The Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) summarily affirmed the IJ’s decision without
opinion. Id. at 366 (BIA Summary Order). Ba thereafter filed multiple motions to reopen, based
on an approved I-130 visa petition, which were denied and are not relevant to this case. See id. at
281–82 (First Mot. to Reopen); id. at 276 (First BIA Order Denying Mot. to Reopen); id. at 255
(Mot. to Reconsider and Second Mot. to Reopen); id. at 250–51 (Second BIA Order Denying Mot.
to Reopen).
On October 22, 2018, Ba filed the motion to reopen that is at issue in this case. A.R. at 33
(Third Mot. to Reopen at 10). In it, he explained that since the time he had been ordered removed,
“[d]ue to the unavailability of travel documents from Mauritania; the fact that his country has
stripped him of his citizenship; DHS’s priority scheme for deportations; and the unsafe conditions
in Mauritania, [he] was allowed to remain in the U.S. for almost two decades.” Id. at 26. Ba stated
that “he complied with DHS’s requests for regular check-ins with ICE, and continued to live his
life in the United States,” including raising two children who are United States citizens. Id. The
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motion asserts that Ba’s removal proceedings should be reopened because conditions in Mauritania
have worsened, “particularly for a Christian of Afro-Mauritanian descent like [him],” and that
Mauritania’s “recent actions to jail political opponents” and to subject activists to detention and
torture threaten his safety. Id. at 28. Ba appended to his motion a proposed application for relief,
in which he stated, inter alia, that “the government would detain and torture me for my political
beliefs in opposition to slavery,” and that “you will be put to death if you denounce the religion of
Islam: I am Christian.” Id. at 241 (Proposed Asylum Appl. at 5).
The BIA denied Ba’s motion, A.R. at 3 (Third BIA Order Denying Mot. to Reopen)
(hereinafter “BIA Decision”), providing the following reasoning for its denial:
The respondent avers that conditions in Mauritania have harshened for
Christians of “Afro-Mauritanian descent” like himself, rendering him likely to
return to the “slave caste” in that country (Motion at 6-10). However, the
respondent has not addressed the adverse credibility findings of the Immigration
Judge, which this Board summarily affirmed (IJ at 5).[] In rendering this finding,
the Immigration Judge found the respondent’s claim that he had been a slave in
Mauritania was implausible, citing various reasons (IJ at 5-9). The Immigration
Judge also cited the fact that French was the respondent’s preferred language, and
the lack of reliable identity documents, in finding that the respondent is actually
Senegalese, rather than a native and citizen of Mauritania, as he claims (IJ at 7-8).[5]
Therefore, the respondent has not shown that his proffered evidence,
relating to conditions in Mauritania, reflects any materially changed country
conditions showing that he is now eligible for relief from removal. The respondent
also has not demonstrated any material change in Senegal. Accordingly, the
respondent’s motion is not exempt from the above-noted statutory bars on motions
to reopen, and reopening is not warranted.
5
Here, footnote 3 of the BIA’s decision reads: “The respondent has not submitted any
evidence with his motion showing that he is a national and/or citizen of Mauritania. Absent such
basic, yet significant, evidence, he has not demonstrated the materiality of any of the evidence
relating to conditions in Mauritania.” Id. at 4 n.3.
9
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Id. at 3–4 (citation omitted). Ba timely petitioned this court for review. We have jurisdiction to
review the BIA’s decision pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(1).
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“This Court reviews the BIA’s denial of a motion to reopen for abuse of discretion.” Alizoti
v. Gonzales, 477 F.3d 448, 451 (6th Cir. 2007). “The BIA abuses its discretion when it acts
arbitrarily, irrationally, or contrary to law.” Id.; Balani v. I.N.S., 669 F.2d 1157, 1161 (6th Cir.
1982) (“In determining whether the Board abused its discretion, this Court must decide whether
the denial of Petitioner’s motion to reopen deportation proceedings was made without a rational
explanation, inexplicably departed from established policies, or rested on an impermissible basis
such as invidious discrimination against a particular race or group.”). “The Supreme Court has
made clear that reopening is discretionary with the BIA and that the BIA retains broad discretion
to grant or deny such motions.” Alizoti, 477 F.3d at 451.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Limited Scope of Review
Before assessing whether Ba’s petition has merit, we must clarify the limited scope of our
review, which requires some background on the statutory framework for motions to reopen.
Generally, “a party may file only one motion to reopen [removal] proceedings (whether before the
Board or the Immigration Judge) and that motion must be filed no later than 90 days after the date
on which the final administrative decision was rendered in the proceeding sought to be reopened.”
8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(2). But when an applicant applies or reapplies for asylum “based on changed
circumstances arising in the country of nationality or in the country to which deportation has been
ordered, if such evidence is material and was not available and could not have been discovered or
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presented at the previous hearing,” these time and numerical limitations do not apply. 8 C.F.R.
§ 1003.2(c)(3)(ii). The question here is whether these limitations apply.
In concluding that these limitations did apply to—and thus precluded—Ba’s motion to
reopen, the BIA reasoned that he had failed to “address[] the adverse credibility findings of the
Immigration Judge,” specifically with respect to his claims that he was Mauritanian and that he
was a slave. A.R. at 3–4 (BIA Decision at 1–2). Because “the Board’s denial of relief may be
affirmed only on the basis articulated in the decision and this Court may not assume that the Board
considered factors that it failed to mention in its opinion,” Daneshvar v. Ashcroft, 355 F.3d 615,
626 (6th Cir. 2004), we review only what the BIA actually said in its order. See Burlington Truck
Lines, Inc. v. United States, 371 U.S. 156, 168–69 (1962) (“The courts may not accept appellate
counsel’s post hoc rationalizations for agency action; [we] require[] that an agency’s discretionary
order be upheld, if at all, on the same basis articulated in the order by the agency itself.”). The
“basis articulated in the [BIA] decision,” in this case, was Ba’s failure to submit evidence “showing
that he is a national and/or citizen of Mauritania,” A.R. at 4 (BIA Decision at 2 n.3), or otherwise
rebutting the credibility finding of the IJ with respect to his prior asylum claims, id. at 1–2.
Accordingly, we do not address whether Ba has made a prima facie showing of eligibility for relief,
as is required in motions to reopen, because the BIA did not address this requirement. Alizoti, 477
F.3d at 451–52 (citing 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)). Nor do we assess whether the voluminous evidence
that Ba appended to his motion to reopen does, in fact, demonstrate a relevant change in country
conditions and whether it was “not available and could not have been discovered or presented at
the previous hearing,” 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(3)(ii), because the BIA has not yet had the opportunity
to engage in this analysis.
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B. Ba’s Nationality and Past Enslavement
The BIA concluded that Ba’s motion was not exempt from the statutory bars on motions
to reopen because (1) he did not address the IJ’s findings that he was neither Mauritanian nor a
slave, and “therefore” (2) he had failed to show that his now-proffered evidence about Mauritania
“reflects any materially changed country conditions showing that he is now eligible for relief from
removal.” A.R. at 4 (BIA Decision at 2). We address the first link in this syllogism. Assuming
that the IJ did, in fact, find that Ba was Senegalese and not Mauritanian, and that he was not a
slave,6 it is unclear how Ba’s failure to rebut these findings would foreclose his present motion to
reopen, which is based on changed circumstances that have to do with his religion and political
beliefs, not his nationality or past enslavement. The BIA’s decision denying Ba’s motion to reopen
faulted him for failing to “demonstrate[] the materiality of any of the evidence relating to
conditions in Mauritania,” id. (BIA Decision at 2 n.3), but did not acknowledge that regardless of
his nationality, the country to which Ba—who is allegedly a Christian and an opponent of
6
Ba makes the additional argument in Part IV of his brief that “the IJ did not ‘find’ [that]
Mr. Ba was from Senegal.” Pet. Br. at 22. The government does not directly contest this assertion,
but responds that “the record makes clear that the agency did not believe Ba credibly showed that
he is Mauritanian.” Resp. Br. at 17. It is true that in order to discredit testimony, the BIA or IJ
“must make the determination that a declaration is ‘inherently unbelievable,’” and neither entity
did so explicitly here. Trujillo Diaz v. Sessions, 880 F.3d 244, 253 (6th Cir. 2018) (quoting
Haftlang v. INS, 790 F.2d 140, 144 n.2 (D.C. Cir. 1986)); see A.R. at 751 (Asylum Hr’g Tr. at 59)
(“I believe respondent is Senegalese, quite frankly. Based on his language here today. French.
Education.”); id. at 49 (A.R. at 741) (“The Court finds that it is highly unusual that you would
have been enslaved from infancy in an Arabic family and be speaking French here today in
Court.”); IJ Decision at 7 (A.R. at 677) (finding that statistic about percentage of Mauritanian
small-boat fisherman who were Senegalese, Ba’s “unreliable identity records,” and his French
fluency “strongly suggest to the Court that he is, in fact, Senegalese”). But see IJ Decision at 6
(A.R. at 686) (“Respondent’s explanation for speaking French . . . is totally incredible.”). But
because we resolve Ba’s petition on other grounds, we do not address this argument.
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slavery—will be removed is Mauritania, see A.R. at 664 (IJ Order) (“Respondent’s application for
voluntary departure was denied and respondent was ordered removed to Mauritania.”), which
apparently persecutes Christians and opponents of slavery, see id. at 68–235 (evidence of changed
country conditions). Although Ba specifies that he is a “Christian of Afro-Mauritanian descent,”
nowhere in his motion to reopen or in his proposed asylum application does he allege that he will
be targeted on the basis of his nationality. A.R. at 28 (Third Mot. to Reopen at 5). Put simply, the
IJ’s suspicions that Ba was not Mauritanian and had not been enslaved need not be revisited on a
motion to reopen in order to assess whether he will be persecuted if removed to Mauritania.
Contrary logic would have doomed many of history’s most desperate asylum applicants. For
example, a Jewish asylum applicant fleeing Nazi persecution in the 1930s who both (a) claimed
German nationality and (b) failed to convince the Board that he was German would have been
removed to Germany, even if it was undisputed that he was Jewish and that the Nazi regime
persecuted members of the Jewish faith. Such a result—focusing on disbelieved nationality when
nationality itself was irrelevant—would have been “without a rational explanation.” Balani,
669 F.2d at 1161. For Ba, it is his religion and political beliefs, not his nationality—be it
Senegalese or Mauritanian—or his past enslavement that allegedly expose him to persecution.
The irrelevance of Ba’s alleged nationality and past enslavement to his present motion is
even clearer when considering why these things were relevant to his past asylum application. For
Ba’s 2000 asylum claim, he was obligated to present a coherent, credible claim of past persecution.
The fact that he spoke better French than Arabic “suggest[ed] to the Court that he is, in fact,
Senegalese,” IJ Decision at 7, which in turn meant that his claim of past persecution in Mauritania
was not credible. See id. at 8 (discussing the “plausibility of his being an educated French-speaking
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slave to an Arab master in Kaédi”). In other words, if Ba was lying about being Mauritanian, it
was less likely that his claim about being enslaved in Mauritania was true. The same is not true
for his present claim. Whereas Ba’s application for relief in 2000 hinged on the plausibility of his
backward-looking claim that he had been enslaved in Mauritania, Ba’s present asylum claim
hinges on the plausibility of the forward-looking possibility that he will be persecuted in
Mauritania.7 Only for the former claim was Ba’s credibility in describing his Mauritanian roots
relevant.
This is unlike, for example, the scenario we addressed in Ahmed v. Holder, 495 F. App’x
605 (6th Cir. 2012). In Ahmed, the petitioner first failed to testify credibly that he had been targeted
for political persecution in Mauritania. Id. at 606–07. Several years later, he filed a motion to
reopen his removal proceedings based on new evidence supporting his initial claim of political
persecution. Id. at 608. When the BIA denied his motion to reopen, it relied on the prior adverse
credibility determination. Id. at 612. We found no error in this reliance, explaining: “While
Ahmed’s appeal does not directly challenge the agency’s adverse credibility determination, his
motion to reopen is, essentially, a motion to reconsider his credibility: he relies on the same story
7
A change in personal circumstances alone, such as a conversion to Christianity, does not
constitute changed country conditions for purposes of 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(3)(ii). See Haddad v.
Gonzales, 437 F.3d 515, 517 (6th Cir. 2006); see also 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(c)(7)(C)(ii). But if the
petitioner can demonstrate that a change in country conditions would lead to his persecution based
on a corresponding change in his own personal circumstances, this is permissible. See Chandra v.
Holder, 751 F.3d 1034, 1039 (9th Cir. 2014). “Personal conversion to a group does not foreclose
the possibility that a country can ‘for its own reasons, become[ ] more hostile towards an alien or
his group’ at the same time.” Yu Yun Zhang v. Holder, 702 F.3d 878, 880 (6th Cir. 2012) (alteration
in original) (quoting Tan Wu Zhang v. Holder, 385 F. App’x 546, 547 (6th Cir. 2010)). For reasons
discussed above, supra Part III.A, we leave it to the BIA to determine whether Ba has demonstrated
either a change in country conditions or a corresponding change in his personal circumstances.
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now that he relied upon then, and that story was deemed incredible.” Id. (emphasis added); see
also Yan Xia Zhang v. Mukasey, 543 F.3d 851, 855 (6th Cir. 2008) (BIA did not abuse its discretion
in declining to credit new evidence of China’s population-policy persecution when the petitioner
made “no attempt . . . to rehabilitate her credibility” after testifying incredibly, in the initial asylum
proceeding, about her persecution under this policy). Here, by contrast, Ba does not rely on the
same story, or even the same bases of persecution.8
Alternatively, the government appears to argue that the BIA more generally “rejected Ba’s
credibility.” Resp. Br. at 20. It is unclear whether the government means to suggest that apart
from the substance of his incredible testimony in the prior asylum hearing, Ba has been found to
lack credibility in general. Regardless, in this case, the BIA did not deny Ba’s motion to reopen
on the basis that he generally lacked credibility; the BIA’s decision does not regard his motion to
reopen or proposed asylum application as inherently unbelievable because of some history of
fraudulent conduct. Cf. Gafurova v. Sessions, 712 F. App’x 540, 546 (6th Cir. 2017) (upholding
the IJ’s and BIA’s consideration of the petitioner’s prior adverse credibility findings, when “under
the circumstances,” she “had a history of providing false statements under oath and of submitting
fraudulent documents”); Yan Xia Zhang, 543 F.3d at 852 (IJ deemed “fraudulent” a “written
document meant to confirm the forced abortion episode [that] was signed by her father and brother
even though the official Chinese household identity card Zhang provided to the court indicated
both men had been living in the United States for years prior to the incident”).
8
There is yet another aspect of illogic to the BIA’s consideration of Ba’s nationality: It
results in the conclusion that Ba should be removed to Mauritania because he has not demonstrated
that he is Mauritanian. See IJ Order (A.R. at 664).
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No. 19-3859, Ba v. Barr
The BIA here did not conclude that, for example, Ba had an established lack of credibility,
and that therefore his claim that he converted to Christianity was unbelievable. On this issue,
compare Ba’s case to Gafurova, in which the asylum applicant’s motion to reopen based on
changed circumstances was denied because “[t]he only evidence that the Respondent attached to
her new I-589 to support her contention that she is now Christian is her own affidavit,” and “[d]ue
to her history of fabricating information, the Court will give no weight to the Respondent’s
affidavit as she has no credibility.” Gafurova A.R. at 46 (IJ Decision at 3) (emphasis added); see
also id. at 4–5 (Gafurova BIA Decision at 2–3) (“The respondent also asserts that the Immigration
Judge inappropriately prejudged her credibility. However, the Immigration Judge was fairly
considering the respondent’s lack of credibility as it has been a continuous issue [in] her
proceedings, and the initial adverse credibility finding by the Immigration Judge has been upheld
by this Board and the federal court of appeals.”) (emphasis added). In Gafurova, we affirmed the
IJ and BIA’s decisions, because they relied on the petitioner’s general lack of credibility. 712 F.
App’x at 546. Here, the BIA did not conclude that Ba’s motion to reopen must fail because he
generally lacks credibility. Rather, as discussed above, it held that his failure to rebut the prior
adverse credibility determination was dispositive because it established that he was not
Mauritanian and was not a slave. Absent any indication in the BIA’s decision that it regarded Ba
as generally untrustworthy or fraudulent, its reliance on the past, claim-specific credibility
determination was “without a rational explanation.” Balani, 669 F.2d at 1161.
***
As discussed above, supra Part III.A, we will not proceed to analyze whether Ba has
adequately demonstrated a material change in country conditions that he could not have presented
16
No. 19-3859, Ba v. Barr
at his initial asylum hearing or, even further, a prima facie case for relief. See Daneshvar, 355 F.3d
at 626; I.N.S. v. Orlando Ventura, 537 U.S. 12, 16–17, (2002) (“Generally speaking, a court of
appeals should remand a case to an agency for decision of a matter that statutes place primarily in
agency hands. This principle has obvious importance in the immigration context. . . . The agency
can bring its expertise to bear upon the matter; it can evaluate the evidence; it can make an initial
determination; and, in doing so, it can, through informed discussion and analysis, help a court later
determine whether its decision exceeds the leeway that the law provides.”). “[I]t is for the BIA to
address th[is] matter[] in the first instance.” Torres-Vaquerano v. Holder, 529 F. App’x 444, 449
(6th Cir. 2013).
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we GRANT the petition for review, VACATE the BIA’s
decision, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
17