Y-T-L

Court: Board of Immigration Appeals
Date filed: 2003-07-01
Citations: 23 I. & N. Dec. 601
Copy Citations
7 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
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                             In re Y-T-L-, Respondent
                                 Decided May 22, 2003
                            U.S. Department of Justice
                      Executive Office for Immigration Review
                          Board of Immigration Appeals

   Where an alien has established past persecution based on the forced sterilization of his
spouse pursuant to a policy of coercive family planning, the fact that, owing to such
sterilization, the alien and his spouse face no further threat of forced sterilization or abortion
does not constitute a “fundamental change” in circumstances sufficient to meet the standards
for a discretionary denial under 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1)(i)(A).

FOR RESPONDENT: Wai-Sim Cheung, Esquire, New York, New York

FOR THE IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE:1 John P. Marley,
Assistant District Counsel

BEFORE: Board En Banc: HOLMES, Acting Vice Chairman; HURWITZ, COLE,
        GUENDELSBERGER, GRANT, MOSCATO, MILLER, BRENNAN, OSUNA,
        and HESS, Board Members. Dissenting Opinions: FILPPU, Board Member,
        joined by SCIALABBA, Chairman; PAULEY, Board Member.

GRANT, Board Member:

   In a decision dated July 10, 2001, an Immigration Judge found the
respondent removable and denied his requests for asylum, withholding of
removal, and relief under Article 3 of the Convention Against Torture and
Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, adopted and
opened for signature Dec. 10, 1984, G.A. Res. 39/46, 39 U.N. GAOR Supp.
No. 51, at 197, U.N. Doc. A/RES/39/708 (1984) (entered into force June 26,
1987; for the United States Apr. 18, 1988) (“Convention Against Torture”).
The respondent has appealed from that decision. The appeal will be
sustained.

           I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
  The respondent is a native and citizen of the People’s Republic of China,
who entered the United States in 1993 without valid entry documents. He is
married and has three children. His family remains in China.

1
   We note that the functions of the Immigration and Naturalization Service have been
transferred to the Department of Homeland Security pursuant to the Homeland Security Act
of 2002, Pub. L. No. 107-296, 116 Stat. 2135.

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   The respondent testified that the Chinese Government imposed a large fine
after the birth of his second child and that he was only able to pay the fine
with the assistance of his younger brother, who helped him borrow money.
He indicated that his wife was forced to have an intrauterine device (“IUD”)
inserted after the birth of their second child. However, she was
simultaneously informed that she soon would have to undergo sterilization.
In February 1985 they paid to have the IUD removed in secret, because they
wanted additional children. The respondent’s third child, a son, was born in
December 1985. His wife was taken for sterilization in March 1986, and a
substantial fine was imposed in April 1986.
   Although the respondent and his wife were allowed to register their son in
the household registry after the payment of the fine, they were not allowed to
register him in school. He could attend school, but only with the payment of
very high tuition. Their two daughters were suspended from school for one
semester. The Government also confiscated land assigned to the family, from
which they earned their livelihood by farming. They survived by borrowing
money from friends and relatives to live and pay the fines, and eventually the
respondent was employed in a relative’s store.
   According to the respondent, every time the Government had a birth control
campaign they asked him and his wife to attend the study class, and they
actually used his family as a “bad example” to educate other people. The
respondent made plans to leave China in 1986 and made two unsuccessful
attempts in the late 1980s to obtain governmental approval for a passport. He
eventually left in 1993 with the aid of a smuggler and his relatives, who
pooled their money to help him leave.
   In his decision, the Immigration Judge accepted the respondent’s testimony
as credible, finding that he is married, that he and his wife have three children,
and that his wife was subjected to involuntary sterilization pursuant to a
coercive population control program. The Immigration Judge concluded that
these facts established past persecution under section 101(a)(42) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42) (2000), and Matter
of C-Y-Z-, 21 I&N Dec. 915 (BIA 1997).
   The Immigration Judge noted, however, that the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (“Service,” now the Department of Homeland Security,
DHS) could rebut the presumption of a well-founded fear of future
persecution resulting from this showing of past persecution by establishing a
fundamental change in circumstances.2 In this regard he observed that the
2
    In making this observation, the Immigration Judge apparently relied on 8 C.F.R.
§ 208.13(b)(1)(i)(A) (2001). As a result of the transfer of the functions of the Immigration and
Naturalization Service to the Department of Homeland Security, the regulations in chapter I
of the Code of Federal Regulations were transferred or duplicated to a new chapter V, and this
regulation is now codified at 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1)(i)(A). See Aliens and Nationality;
                                                                                (continued...)

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respondent remained in China for more than 7 years after his wife was
sterilized, and he found no evidence that “anything significant has happened
to either the respondent or his family in China” subsequent to his wife’s
sterilization and the payment of fines in 1986. He concluded that “with the
passage of time and the lack of evidence of any further persecution,” the
Service met its burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that
there had been a fundamental change in circumstances such that the
respondent no longer has a well-founded fear of persecution. The
Immigration Judge therefore denied the respondent’s applications for asylum,
withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture.

                                         II. ISSUE
  The sole issue on appeal is whether the Service has established a
fundamental change in circumstances under 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1)(i)(A),
such that the respondent no longer has a well-founded fear of persecution in
China.

                       III. STATUTORY AND CASE LAW
   Section 101(a)(42) of the Act was amended by section 601(a)(1) of the
Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996,
Division C of Pub. L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009-546, 3009-689
(“IIRIRA”). Pursuant to that amendment, the definition of a “refugee”
specifically includes the following:
    For purposes of determinations under this Act, a person who has been forced to abort a
    pregnancy or to undergo involuntary sterilization, or who has been persecuted for failure
    or refusal to undergo such a procedure or for other resistance to a coercive population
    control program, shall be deemed to have been persecuted on account of political opinion,
    and a person who has a well founded fear that he or she will be forced to undergo such a
    procedure or subject to persecution for such failure, refusal, or resistance shall be deemed
    to have a well founded fear of persecution on account of political opinion.

Section 101(a)(42) of the Act (emphasis added).
   We have held that this statutory amendment superseded prior
administrative interpretations holding that coerced abortions and sterilizations
do not constitute persecution on account of a protected ground. See Matter
of X-P-T-, 21 I&N Dec. 634 (BIA 1996) (holding that an alien who was
forced to undergo an abortion or sterilization procedure can establish
persecution on account of political opinion); see also Matter of C-Y-Z-, supra

2
    (...continued)
Homeland Security; Reorganization of Regulations, 68 Fed. Reg. 9824, 9834 (Feb. 28, 2003),
2003 WL 553495. References in this decision to the current version of the regulations will
therefore be cited according to their new designation.

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(holding that the refugee definition can include an individual whose spouse
was forced to undergo such a procedure).

        IV. REGULATORY PRESUMPTION AND CONDITIONS
                      FOR REBUTTAL
   In Matter of C-Y-Z-, supra, we found that the applicant had suffered past
persecution because his wife was forced to undergo an involuntary
sterilization, and we noted the resulting regulatory presumption that the
applicant had a well-founded fear of future persecution. The regulation at
issue in Matter of C-Y-Z- provided in relevant part:
       If it is determined that the applicant has established past persecution, he shall be
    presumed also to have a well-founded fear of persecution unless a preponderance of the
    evidence establishes that since the time the persecution occurred conditions in the
    applicant’s country of nationality or last habitual residence have changed to such an extent
    that the applicant no longer has a well-founded fear of being persecuted if he were to
    return.

8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(1)(i) (1997).
   Based on this language, we determined that the regulatory presumption
could be rebutted only by a showing that conditions in the applicant’s country
had changed to such an extent that the applicant no longer had a well-founded
fear of persecution if returned to his home country. Matter of C-Y-Z-, supra,
at 919. We noted that the Service had not presented any evidence of such
changed conditions. We also rejected the Service’s argument that a spouse
who has established past persecution in this manner bears the further burden
of “demonstrating that the involuntary sterilization was carried out in such a
way as to amount to an ‘atrocious form’ of persecution.” Id.3
   The regulation at issue in Matter of C-Y-Z-, supra, however, along with the
regulation governing the effect of past persecution on an application for
withholding of removal, was amended through the publication of a final rule,
which became effective on January 5, 2001. See Asylum Procedures,
65 Fed. Reg. 76,121, 76,133 (Dec. 6, 2000), 2000 WL 1780075. The final
rule amended 8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(1) to provide, in pertinent part, as
follows:
    An applicant who has been found to have established such past persecution shall also be
    presumed to have a well-founded fear of persecution on the basis of the original claim.
    That presumption may be rebutted if an asylum officer or immigration judge makes one of
    the [following] findings . . . .


3
   This argument was based on a memorandum from the Service General Counsel asserting
that the “atrocious” standard must be met if the applicant “does not have a well-founded fear
of future persecution.” Matter of C-Y-Z-, supra, at 918. The Service argument in C-Y-Z-,
therefore, implied that a respondent in the position presented in this case does not have a well-
founded fear. Since the Service offered no evidence of changed country conditions, see id.
at 919, its position in C-Y-Z- appears to be consistent with its position here: that the act of
sterilization obviates the possibility of future persecution along these lines.

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      (i) Discretionary referral or denial. [A]n immigration judge, in the exercise of his or
  her discretion, shall deny the asylum application of an alien found to be a refugee on the
  basis of past persecution if any of the following is found by a preponderance of the
  evidence:
      (A) There has been a fundamental change in circumstances such that the applicant no
  longer has a well-founded fear of persecution in the applicant’s country of nationality, or
  if stateless, in the applicant’s country of last habitual residence, on account of race, religion,
  nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion . . . .
      (ii) Burden of proof. In cases in which an applicant has demonstrated past persecution
  under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the Service shall bear the burden of establishing by
  a preponderance of the evidence the requirements of paragraphs (b)(1)(i)(A) or (B) of this
  section.

  The supplementary information that accompanied the publication of the
amendments to the regulations describes the intended meaning of the new
regulatory language. It provides as follows:
  In §§ 208.13(b)(1)(i)(A) and 208.16(b)(1)(i)(A), the regulatory language for overcoming the
  presumption of a well-founded fear of persecution and a threat to the applicant’s life or
  freedom because of past persecution is changed to state that the Service must show a
  “fundamental change in circumstances” in order to overcome the presumption. . . . By
  adopting that language rather than that requiring a showing of changed country conditions
  to overcome the presumption, other changes in the circumstances surrounding the asylum
  claim, including a fundamental change in personal circumstances, may be considered,
  so long as those changes are fundamental in nature and go to the basis of the fear of
  persecution.

65 Fed. Reg. at 76,127 (emphasis added).

                                      V. ANALYSIS
   We disagree with the Immigration Judge that the passage of time since the
forced sterilization of the respondent’s wife, coupled with the lack of
enforcement of coercive family planning measures during that period,
constitutes a “fundamental change” in the respondent’s personal
circumstances which, when considered in light of the 1996 amendments to
section 101(a)(42) of the Act, is sufficient to meet the Service’s burden under
8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1)(ii). The Immigration Judge’s conclusion fails to
take into account the continuing nature of the persecution inflicted on the
respondent and his wife. Moreover, the principal reason that the respondent
and his wife no longer fear a coerced sterilization or abortion, or future fines
for “over-birth,” is the fact that they have been rendered incapable of having
children. Thus, the Immigration Judge’s rationale could lead to the
anomalous result that the act of persecution itself would also constitute the
change in circumstances that would result in the denial of asylum to persons
such as the respondent. It is highly unlikely that Congress contemplated such
an interpretation when it deemed forced involuntary sterilization to be
persecution on account of political opinion.
   We recognize that the Immigration Judge premised his finding of changed
circumstances primarily on the passage of time, and not on the act of
sterilization itself. The logic of his analysis, which is amplified by the

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dissenting opinion of Board Member Filppu, is that persecution in this context
must be addressed in a prospective fashion. As noted by the dissent, this
prospective view is not only unobjectionable, but is a bedrock principle of
refugee law, codified in the redrafted provisions of 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1).
In this particular context, however, a purely prospective view, focusing on a
well-founded fear of persecution in the future, would appear to limit relief
under the amended refugee definition to those cases where involuntary
sterilization has been threatened, but not carried out. While the dissent
suggests that the finding of “changed circumstances” might not occur in cases
where the involuntary sterilization has been carried out more recently, the fact
remains that a completed sterilization removes any reasonable, objective
basis on which to fear a future act of coerced abortion or sterilization. Fines
for family planning violations could still be imposed, but our decisions in this
area suggest that such fines rarely rise to the level of persecution.
   To some extent, therefore, this case presents a dilemma. The respondent
has, without question, sustained past persecution, which makes him eligible
for asylum under the amended statute and our decisions in Matter of X-P-T-,
supra, and Matter of C-Y-Z-, supra. On the other hand, the respondent has
no reasonable basis to fear this form of persecution in the future, based on the
very fact that he has already been persecuted. The keys to resolving this
dilemma are to recognize the special nature of the persecution at issue here,
and to give full force to the intent of Congress in extending asylum to those
who have sustained such persecution. We consider these issues in reverse
order.
   First, our application of 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1)(i)(A) must take into
account the mandates of Congress with regard to this specific factual
scenario. It is manifestly clear that Congress intended to make eligible for
asylum those who were victims of China’s coercive family planning policy,
not simply those who could be victims if returned to China. See, e.g.,
142 Cong. Rec. H2629, H2633 (daily ed. Mar. 21, 1996) (statement of Rep.
Christopher Smith). Our administrative decisions, and those of the various
Immigration Courts, have granted asylum to significant numbers of persons
who themselves, or whose spouses, have suffered involuntary sterilization
within the meaning of the Act.
   It is equally clear that our treatment of claims of this type, both before and
after the enactment of the 1996 amendments, has been a well-recognized issue
of asylum law. At the time 8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(1)(i) was amended in 2000,
the amendment made to the Act by section 601(a) of the IIRIRA was well in
place, and hundreds if not thousands of applicants, including many in a
position comparable to this respondent, had been granted relief under its
provisions. Were it the intention of the Attorney General to compel a
different paradigm for deciding such cases, based on the theory that past
sterilization constituted a “fundamental change in circumstances” that could
preclude the granting of asylum, we expect that the regulation, or the
supplementary information accompanying it, would have so stated. However,
nowhere in these materials is there any discussion of, or expression of

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dissatisfaction with, the adjudication of such claims in the Immigration Courts
or before this Board.
   Second, in light of Congress’s specific intent regarding the eligibility for
asylum of past victims of coercive family planning practices, we cannot
conclude that such an act of persecution can constitute a “change in
circumstances” for purposes of the regulation. The act of forced sterilization
should not be viewed as a discrete, onetime act, comparable to a term in
prison, or an incident of severe beating or even torture. Coerced sterilization
is better viewed as a permanent and continuing act of persecution that has
deprived a couple of the natural fruits of conjugal life, and the society and
comfort of the child or children that might eventually have been born to them.
In the long course of administrative rulings, Presidential directives, proposed
regulations, and congressional action that has marked the consideration of
asylum claims based on coerced sterilization, the profound and permanent
nature of such harm has rarely, if ever, been called into question. 4 The
principal issue of contention, rather, was whether such harm was on account
of a ground protected under the Act. See Matter of G-, 20 I&N Dec. 764
(BIA 1993); Matter of Chang, 20 I&N Dec. 38 (BIA 1989). Congress has
definitively answered that question and done so in such a way that, in our
view, precludes the result urged by the Service.
   Finally, while this issue is not before us, it is fair to assume that if the
respondent’s spouse was subjected to a forced abortion, as opposed to a
forced sterilization, the possibility of the spouse becoming pregnant and being
subject to another forced abortion would preclude the argument that the
forced abortion constitutes a “fundamental change” in circumstances for
purposes of the regulation. We do not believe that it would be consistent
with the intent of Congress for us to grant asylum to those subjected to a
forced abortion, while denying relief to those subjected to a forced
sterilization, simply because only the former act of persecution is one capable
of repetition.

                                  VI. CONCLUSION
   In view of the foregoing, we find that the respondent has established
statutory eligibility for asylum on account of past persecution and that the

4
   See IIRIRA § 601(a)(1), 110 Stat. at 3009-689 (amending the definition of a “refugee”);
Matter of G-, 20 I&N Dec. 764 (BIA 1993); Matter of Chang, 20 I&N Dec. 38 (BIA 1989);
Exec. Order No. 12,711, 55 Fed. Reg. 13,897-98 (Apr. 13, 1990), 1990 WL 385033 (issued
on April 11, 1990, directing the Secretary of State and the Attorney General to give enhanced
consideration to the asylum and withholding claims of individuals who express a fear of
persecution related to a policy of forced abortion or coerced sterilization); 8 C.F.R.
§ 208.13(b)(1)(i)(1997); Refugee Status, Withholding of Deportation, and Asylum; Burden of
Proof, 55 Fed. Reg. 2803 (Jan. 29, 1990), 1990 WL 343903 (interim regulations promulgated
by the Attorney General, which were never finalized); Continued Viability of the Doctrine of
Imputed Political Opinion, 93 Op. Gen. Counsel 1 (Jan. 19, 1993) (legal opinion of the General
Counsel of the Service, essentially finalizing the January 1990 interim rules that had previously
been superseded).

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regulatory presumption of a well-founded fear of persecution arising from
such past persecution has not been rebutted. Moreover, the facts cited are
sufficient to support a conditional grant of asylum in the exercise of
discretion. We further find that the respondent is eligible for withholding
of removal. Because of our favorable disposition of the respondent’s claims
for asylum and withholding of removal, we need not address his eligibility for
relief under the Convention Against Torture. Accordingly, the appeal will be
sustained and the respondent’s request for asylum and withholding of removal
will be granted.
   ORDER: The appeal is sustained. The respondent’s request for asylum
is granted, conditioned upon an administrative determination by the Service
that a number is available for such a grant under section 207(a)(5) of the Act,
8 U.S.C. § 1157(a)(5) (2000).
   FURTHER ORDER: The respondent’s request for withholding of
removal to the People’s Republic of China is granted.

DISSENTING OPINION: Lauri Steven Filppu, Board Member, in which
Lori L. Scialabba, Chairman, joined.
                             I. INTRODUCTION
   I respectfully dissent because I believe the majority misreads both the
scope of the statute and the import of the regulation at issue here. The
majority fails to recognize that this is a case of past harm, where an alien’s
eligibility for relief is governed by specific regulatory provisions focusing
exclusively on either the “severity of the past persecution” or the “reasonable
possibility” that the alien may suffer “other serious harm upon removal” that
does not technically qualify as persecution. Aliens and Nationality;
Homeland Security; Reorganization of Regulations, 68 Fed. Reg. 9824, 9834
(Feb. 28, 2003), 2003 WL 533495 (codified at 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1)(iii));
Matter of Y-T-L-, 23 I&N Dec. 601, 602 n.2 (BIA 2003); see also Matter of
Chen, 20 I&N Dec. 16 (BIA 1989) (granting relief because of the severity of
past persecution).
   Instead of following the regulatory tests governing relief when a
well-founded fear of future persecution is absent, the majority construes the
statute to preclude a denial of relief to the respondent. The majority,
however, never actually focuses on the language of the statute in ruling that
changed circumstances cannot exist for the spouse of a sterilization victim.
Instead, it simply announces a new theory treating the respondent’s past harm
as a “permanent and continuing act of persecution.” Matter of Y-T-L-, supra,
at 607. The majority’s new perpetual persecution doctrine is not supported
by our past case law, and it certainly is not reflected in the regulatory
structure controlling asylum determinations.
   The majority’s ruling has the effect of preventing adjudicators from
considering particular facts bearing on traditional refugee determinations,
specifically, the effect of past sterilization on the risk of future harm or the

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severity of past harm. Not only is that ruling at odds with the existing
regulatory structure, but it is inconsistent with basic precepts of refugee law.
Those precepts involve protecting persons from future persecution and
providing humanitarian relief to select individuals with severe past harm, even
absent a risk of future persecution. The statute does not foreclose an
application of the regulation in this case, and the majority’s rationale turns our
traditional asylum law on its head.

                             II. BACKGROUND
   The respondent and his wife had three children in China, a daughter born
in February of 1983, a second daughter born in November of 1984, and a son
born in December of 1985. The latter two children were in violation of
China’s population control program, leading to significant fines, employment
difficulties, occasional public embarrassment, school tuition payments for the
son, and the forced sterilization of the respondent’s wife in 1986. I agree with
both the Immigration Judge and the majority that the respondent has shown
past persecution within the meaning of the coercive population control
amendment to the definition of a “refugee” in the Immigration and Nationality
Act, as construed in Matter of C-Y-Z-, 21 I&N Dec. 915 (BIA 1997).
   As a result of this persecution, the respondent formed an intention to leave
China in 1986 and succeeded in leaving in 1993, which was 7 years after his
wife’s sterilization and the imposition of the last fine. By that time, the fines
had been paid and the relatives who loaned funds to pay the fines were
evidently also repaid or had forgiven the debt. The respondent had found
new employment and was able to make the tuition payments for his son. His
wife had recovered from the infections she experienced after the sterilization.
Further, at the time of the respondent’s 2001 removal hearing, his family was
continuing to live in China in the family home and his children were in school.
His continuing concerns pertained to the tuition payments for his son and his
son’s ability to pursue a high school and college education.
   The Immigration Judge found that there was “no evidence that since the
sterilization and the payment of fines in 1986 that anything significant has
happened to either the respondent or his family in China.” The Immigration
Judge also found that there had been no showing that the respondent was
economically “worse off” by virtue of working at a relative’s store in China
in comparison to his prior employment as a farmer. Importantly, the
Immigration Judge determined that the respondent had not been “persecuted”
subsequent to his wife’s 1986 sterilization, that there was no evidence that
China would be inclined to harm the respondent or his wife today, and that the
Immigration and Naturalization Service (the “Service,” now the Department
of Homeland Security, DHS) had met its burden under the amended asylum
regulations to show that there had been a “fundamental change in
circumstances” such that the respondent currently lacked a well-founded fear
of persecution in China. Finally, the Immigration Judge found that the
respondent would not suffer any other serious harm upon return to China and

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that he lacked compelling reasons for not returning, even in the absence of a
threat of any future serious harm, particularly when his wife and children had
remained in China “without incident” for 15 years following the sterilization.
    Neither the respondent on appeal nor the majority seriously disputes any
of the Immigration Judge’s factual determinations. Neither makes any
attempt to show how the respondent might actually experience any meaningful
harm beyond that which has already occurred to him and his wife, and the
majority acknowledges that “the respondent has no reasonable basis to fear
. . . persecution in the future.” Matter of Y-T-L-, supra, at 606.

                    III. THE MAJORITY’S DECISION
   The majority does not attack, as a matter of fact, the Immigration Judge’s
determination that there has been a “fundamental change in circumstances”
within the meaning of 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1)(i)(A). Instead, the majority
rules that such a finding cannot be made as a matter of law.
   The majority reaches this conclusion for several reasons. It is concerned
that a forced sterilization might never qualify an alien for relief and “could
lead to the anomalous result that the act of persecution itself would also
constitute the change in circumstances” eliminating the fear of future
persecution. Matter of Y-T-L-, supra, at 605. It believes the regulatory
history would be more specific if a change in our ruling in Matter of C-Y-Z-
had been intended, and that persons suffering forced sterilizations should be
treated the same as persons only suffering forced abortions. Perhaps most
significantly, the majority finds sterilization to be a “permanent and continuing
act of persecution” that deprives a couple of future children, such that the
statute itself actually “precludes the result urged by the Service.” Id. at 607.
   There is, no doubt, some uneasiness in accepting the notion that an act of
persecution, here the sterilization of the respondent’s wife, can be the primary
basis for denying relief on grounds that future acts of persecution will not
take place. But, except for its “continuing persecution” theory, neither the
majority nor the respondent points to any meaningful new harm that might
befall the respondent on return to China. So, as unsettling as the notion might
seem initially, it is borne out to be factually accurate on this record.
   But the evidence supporting a fundamental change in circumstances is not
confined to the act of sterilization. After that sterilization and the
contemporaneous fine, the respondent remained in China for 7 years, paying
only tuition for his son and occasionally being pointed to as an example of
past “bad” behavior. The same is true for the rest of his family, except that
they have remained in China and have been free from harm constituting
persecution for over 15 years.
   We would not likely find a fundamental change in circumstances, despite
the sterilization, had China periodically imposed meaningful imprisonment on
the respondent for his past population control violations, instead of merely
pointing to him as an example for others not to follow. The sterilization is


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obviously significant, but the case and the Immigration Judge’s ruling are
about much more than that one persecutory act.
   Further, unless there is a bar to their consideration, the sterilization, the
payment of all fines, and the subsequent treatment of the respondent and his
family fit the literal “fundamental change in circumstances” language of the
regulation. Under the governing regulations, this fundamental change, coupled
with the absence of any reasonable fear of future persecution, means that we
should assess the respondent’s eligibility for relief on the strength of past
persecution alone. See Matter of Chen, supra; 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1)(iii)
(requiring “compelling reasons” arising from the severity of past persecution
or a reasonable possibility of other serious harm for a grant of relief where
only past persecution exists). The majority does not claim that the
respondent’s harm is sufficient for a grant of relief on this basis alone.

                             IV. THE STATUTE
   I agree with the majority that the statutory language reflects an intention to
accord benefits to some persons who have been sterilized. As such, it would
be inconsistent with the population control amendment to the definition of a
“refugee” to construe the revised regulation in such a way as to categorically
deny relief to everyone who has been forcibly sterilized. But that is not what
the Immigration Judge held.
   The statute is intended to accord refugee status each year to 1,000 victims
of certain coercive population control practices, including “a person who has
been forced to abort a pregnancy or to undergo involuntary sterilization, or
who has been persecuted for failure or refusal to undergo such a procedure
or for other resistance to a coercive population control program.” Section
101(a)(42) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)
(2000) (defining “refugee”); see also section 207(a)(5) of the Act, 8 U.S.C.
§ 1157(a)(5) (2000) (limiting asylum grants and refugee admissions based on
coercive population control methods to 1,000 each fiscal year).
   Persons who have themselves been forcibly sterilized fall directly under the
terms of the statute. As to those actual victims of forced sterilization, I
understand the statute to treat their level of persecution as sufficiently severe
to be considered for inclusion among the 1,000 who may get asylum, even if
based on that past harm alone. Thus “a person who has been forced . . . to
undergo involuntary sterilization” qualifies as a “refugee” and may well
warrant, by virtue of the very nature of that past harm, one of the 1,000
refugee numbers, if available. Section 101(a)(42) of the Act.
   The majority’s concern that the regulation might lead to “anomalous
result[s]” is easily dispelled by recognizing that the actual victims of forced
sterilizations may qualify for relief on the strength of their past persecution,
particularly when they flee soon thereafter or continue to experience




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additional serious sanctions.1 Matter of Y-T-L-, supra, at 605. This, also,
should dispel the majority’s concern about the treatment of victims of forced
abortions and sterilizations. Both fall within the statute, but that does not
mean all the asylum considerations are identical for both groups. Recognizing
that sterilization victims may mainly be able to point to past persecution does
not dictate a denial of relief.
   Relief, however, should not be automatic, even for the actual victims of
forced sterilizations. Traditional asylum considerations are appropriate.
There are differences between a person who departs immediately after a
forced sterilization, while perhaps still facing significant unpaid fines, and one
who remains for many years leading an otherwise normal life and whose
eventual departure is motivated mainly by economic or family reunification
concerns. Victims of other forms of severe persecution, who face little
likelihood of future harm, are not guaranteed asylum when they have
remained for decades in the country of persecution and have been able to
enjoy generally normal lives after the events leading to the past persecution.
   Under the regulations governing all cases of past persecution, the Service
bears the burden to show that the alien does not currently have a well-founded
fear of future persecution by virtue of changed circumstances or that internal
relocation is reasonable. I am unwilling to assume that the Service will
invariably be able to meet this burden in cases where there has been a forced
sterilization. Even recognizing that a forced sterilization may frequently
greatly aid the Service in meeting this burden, relief is still warranted if the
applicant can show compelling reasons arising from the severity of the past
persecution or sufficiently qualifying “other serious harm.” 8 C.F.R.
§ 1208.13(b)(1)(iii). And this would be true even for an alien such as the
respondent, who was not sterilized, but who may suffer because of the
sterilization of his spouse.
   The statute, thus, does not present a legal obstacle to recognizing the fact
that changed circumstances virtually have eliminated this particular
respondent’s fear of future persecution for population control reasons.
Recognizing that a spouse’s sterilization severely reduces or eliminates the
risk of future “population control” persecution for the person who was not
sterilized simply does not render the statute without meaning or lead to
anomalous results when the claim for relief is based on a forced sterilization. 2
1
   In this respect, the majority simply misunderstands this dissent as advocating a “purely
prospective view, focusing on a well-founded fear of persecution in the future,” or implying
that a sterilization victim could never qualify for relief on the basis of past persecution alone.
Matter of Y-T-L-, supra, at 606. But I do acknowledge that the spouse of a victim may often
not qualify for relief when the actual victim remains in the country of persecution, when
circumstances reflect a “fundamental change,” and when many years have passed since either
the victim or the spouse have experienced anything approaching what we would deem to be
“persecution.”
2
   A person who has not been sterilized does not qualify literally as “a person who has been
forced . . . to undergo involuntary sterilization.” Section 101(a)(42) of the Act. The
respondent suffered fines, the loss of his agricultural plot, the sterilization of his wife, and other
                                                                                     (continued...)

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  The majority is correct that the statute equates persecution arising from a
coercive population control program as being persecution “on account of
political opinion.” The statute, however, does not direct that persons
suffering such persecution be exempt from the normal rules that apply to all
persons who have suffered past persecution on account of political opinion
but who lack a reasonable fear of future persecution. Instead, it is the
majority that concocts a new theory of perpetual persecution to justify that
exemption.

                     V. THE MAJORITY’S NEW THEORY
   The majority’s deviation from long-standing principles of asylum law, and
from the analysis directed by the regulations, is most pronounced in its
declaration that forced sterilization “is better viewed as a permanent and
continuing act of persecution.” Matter of Y-T-L-, supra, at 607. The
majority’s perpetual persecution analysis is simply not consistent with either
the case law or basic precepts of asylum law.
   For example, in Matter of Chen, supra, at 20, we accepted the alien’s
account that, because of his past experiences in China, he was “physically
debilitated, must wear a hearing aid due to his head injury, [was] always
anxious and fearful, and [was] often suicidal.” We nonetheless found that
Chen lacked a well-founded fear of future persecution, but granted relief
because of the severity of the past persecution. Importantly, in doing so, we
did not declare that Chen’s ongoing physical disabilities and continuing
psychological trauma amounted to “a permanent and continuing act of
persecution,” although the daily manifestations of his past persecution could
easily have been so described.
    I am also not aware that we find perpetual persecution from the death of
a family member who was killed to inflict harm on the asylum applicant or
even from permanent physical injuries to the applicant himself, such as loss
of sight or loss of a limb. Certainly, severe injuries from persecution can
give rise to relief for past persecution. The majority’s perpetual persecution
approach, however, would confine our traditional past persecution analysis
to cases where the past injury had no lingering effect, or the majority will
need to explain why a deprivation of the ability to procreate is to be given
special treatment in comparison to other permanent injuries that can arise
from acts of persecution.
   Indeed, the majority’s continuing or perpetual persecution concept would
seem to override even the type of change in country conditions (such as an
abandonment of population control measures by China) that we recognized as
sufficient to meet the prior regulatory test that we found to govern our ruling
2
    (...continued)
lesser problems. It is far easier to treat the respondent as someone “who has been persecuted
. . . for other resistance to a coercive population control program” as a result of the steps he
and his wife took to continue to have children despite the various enforcement efforts of, and
the sanctions leveled by, Chinese authorities.

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in Matter of C-Y-Z-. Furthermore, this new theory means there can be no
country of refuge for the respondent. He will experience his “permanent and
continuing persecution” in the United States, in China, or anywhere he may
go. Yet the majority simply fails to grapple with the anomaly it creates from
the standpoint of traditional asylum law.
   This anomaly is also apparent in the majority’s grant of withholding of
removal to the respondent. As is relevant to this case, the regulations
governing withholding of removal parallel those applicable to asylum. Taken
to its logical, but I would submit absurd, conclusion, the majority’s continuing
persecution theory would seem to require us to grant withholding of removal
to countries other than China. For example, if the respondent had been a
landed immigrant in Canada before coming to the United States, he would
likely be denied asylum because he had “firmly resettled.” See section
208(b)(2)(A)(vi) of the Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(2)(A)(vi) (2000); 68 Fed.
Reg. at 9834 (codified at 8 C.F.R. § 1208.15). Under the majority’s theory,
however, Canada is unable to prevent China’s “continuing” persecution of the
respondent, and neither firm resettlement nor discretionary considerations
form a basis for denying withholding of removal when persecution continues
for the victim.
   Asylum law is primarily about protecting people from future harm and, in
select cases, providing humanitarian relief for severe past harm by itself. The
goal of protection is not served by providing protection to someone who is
not actually in need of protection. The goal of providing humanitarian relief
in select cases is not served if the individual is not actually deserving of
humanitarian relief.
    As serious as forced sterilization is, the majority offers no sound reason
to give it special treatment among the range of atrocities having permanent
and ongoing consequences that victims of persecution may be forced to
endure their entire lives. The continuing nature of past harm is certainly
appropriate to weigh as a factor in a traditional Chen, past persecution
assessment. The continuing nature of past harm, however, is not a basis for
circumventing the regulations requiring a past persecution assessment when
there is little or no likelihood of future persecution as a matter of fact.

                             VI. THE REGULATION
   This brings us to the heart of what this case is really about, specifically, the
proper interpretation of the current regulation. The respondent has suffered
past persecution on account of a protected ground. The respondent therefore
benefits from a presumption of future persecution pursuant to 8 C.F.R.
§ 1208.13(b)(1). This presumption, however, is rebuttable. In Matter of
C-Y-Z-, supra, we found that the presumption was not rebutted under the test
then contained in the regulations. The regulation at issue in Matter of C-Y-Z-,
supra, 8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(1)(i) (1997), provided in relevant part:
  If it is determined that the applicant has established past persecution, he shall be presumed
  also to have a well-founded fear of persecution unless a preponderance of the evidence

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  establishes that since the time the persecution occurred conditions in the applicant’s country
  of nationality or last habitual residence have changed to such an extent that the applicant
  no longer has a well-founded fear of being persecuted if he were to return.

   Based on this language, we determined that the regulatory presumption
could be rebutted only by a showing that overall conditions in the applicant’s
country had changed. Matter of C-Y-Z-, supra, at 919. Our ruling would not
permit the presumption to be rebutted through a showing of changes in the
personal circumstances of the applicant. Id.
   The regulation at issue in Matter of C-Y-Z-, supra, however, and the
regulation governing the effect of past persecution on an application for
withholding of removal, were amended through the publication of a final rule
on December 6, 2000, which became effective on January 5, 2001. See
Asylum Procedures, 65 Fed. Reg. 76,121, 76,133 (Dec. 6, 2000), 2000
WL 1780075. The regulatory history of the current provision supports use
of any and all evidence in assessing the risk of future persecution and points
to the need for a “past persecution” focus in cases such as that of the
respondent.
   The majority is correct that the actual outcome in Matter of C-Y-Z-, supra,
was not specifically disavowed during the rule-making process. But its
rationale was discussed and criticized in the supplementary information
accompanying the notice of proposed rule making.
   The proposed rule would have required a discretionary denial of asylum
if the Immigration Judge found by a preponderance of the evidence simply
that “the applicant does not face a reasonable possibility of future persecution
in the applicant’s country” because of a qualifying ground. Executive Office
for Immigration Review; New Rules Regarding Procedures for Asylum and
Withholding of Removal, 63 Fed. Reg. 31,945, 31,949 (proposed June 11,
1998), 1998 WL 302672. The supplementary information in the proposed
regulatory package explained:
      This rule also makes clear that, in determining whether there is a reasonable possibility
  of future persecution, the asylum officer or immigration judge may rely on any evidence
  relating to the possibility of future persecution against the applicant. This is an important
  change in light of the recent Board decision in Matter of C-Y-Z[-], [Interim] Decision
  #3319 (BIA 1997), which raises questions about how the existing regulation should be
  interpreted. In that decision, the Board addressed the case of an applicant who had
  suffered past persecution and was therefore entitled under the existing regulation to the
  presumption of a well-founded fear of future persecution. [T]he Board interpreted 8 CFR
  208.13(b)(1)(i) to preclude the consideration of any factors other than changed country
  conditions in determining whether the presumption of a well-founded fear was rebutted.
  In Matter of Chen, however, which the existing regulatory provisions were intended to
  codify, the Board stated that, in cases where an applicant establishes past persecution,
  asylum may be denied as a matter of discretion if there is little likelihood of future
  persecution. To avoid any uncertainty about whether there is tension among the existing
  regulation, Matter of Chen, and Matter of C-Y-Z[-], we are changing the regulation so that
  it clearly allows consideration of any evidence, or lack thereof, bearing on future
  persecution in such cases.

63 Fed. Reg. 31,946-47 (notice of proposed rule making).


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   The proposed change in the regulations and the accompanying explanation
were not aimed particularly at population control cases, such as the one now
before us. Rather, both the proposed rule and the final rule are aimed at all
asylum cases, regardless of the type of past persecution experienced by the
victim. The need for a regulatory revision covering all cases of past
persecution arose because Matter of C-Y-Z- construed the former regulation
to narrowly focus a “changed circumstances” assessment exclusively on
changed country conditions, and thus was seen as not being in keeping with
Matter of Chen, supra. Under the regulatory interpretation followed in
Matter of C-Y-Z-, for example, an alien’s switch in political parties which
resulted in his no longer being persecuted could not be taken into account in
determining whether the past persecution presumption had been rebutted.
   The final rule did not adopt the precise regulatory language of the proposed
rule in relation to the regulation at issue here. But nothing in the final
rule-making package reflects a retreat from the explanation accompanying the
proposed rule as to the reasons why a change was generally needed. The
majority, in my view, seriously misstates the history of this regulatory change
in its assertion that the Attorney General did not intend a “different paradigm
for deciding” cases of the sort we now confront. Matter of Y-T-L-, supra, at
606.
   Rather, a different, or at least a modified paradigm was intended for all
cases. Nowhere in that regulatory history is there a suggestion that “forced
sterilization” cases are exempt from the new rules.
   The final rule amended 8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(1)(i) (2001) to provide, in
pertinent part, that
  an immigration judge . . . shall deny the asylum application of an alien found to be a refugee
  on the basis of past persecution if any of the following is found by a preponderance of the
  evidence:
     (A) There has been a fundamental change in circumstances such that the applicant no
  longer has a well-founded fear of persecution . . . on account of race, religion, nationality,
  membership in a particular social group, or political opinion . . . .

  The supplementary information, as the majority acknowledges, explains in
part:
  [T]he regulatory language for overcoming the presumption of a well-founded fear of
  persecution and a threat to the applicant’s life or freedom because of past persecution is
  changed to state that the Service must show a “fundamental change in circumstances” in
  order to overcome the presumption. . . . By adopting that language rather than that
  requiring a showing of changed country conditions to overcome the presumption, other
  changes in the circumstances surrounding the asylum claim, including a fundamental
  change in personal circumstances, may be considered, so long as those changes are
  fundamental in nature and go to the basis of the fear of persecution.

65 Fed. Reg. at 76,127 (emphasis added). The respondent’s change in
circumstances has significantly affected his prospects for being persecuted
in the future in China. Taking account of that change, thus, is consistent both
with the stated purpose behind the proposed change of allowing the
consideration of “any evidence,” 63 Fed. Reg. at 31,947, and with the final

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rule’s specific explanation that changes in personal circumstances may be
considered.
   Nevertheless, there is a difference in language between the proposed rule
and the final rule. And, the regulatory history does not explain the import of
that change specifically in relation to coercive population control cases
involving sterilizations. The proposed rule had focused simply on whether
the applicant would currently face “a reasonable possibility of future
persecution” and did not require that there be any change in circumstances
since the past persecution. 63 Fed. Reg. at 31,946. The language of the final
rule, however, was adopted to ensure that it “complies with our international
obligations” and to track one aspect of the statutory language respecting
termination of asylum. 65 Fed. Reg. at 76,127; see also section 208(c)(2)(A)
of the Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1158(c)(2)(A) (2000) (providing for termination of
asylum to an alien who was no longer a refugee “owing to a fundamental
change in circumstances”).
   The significance of this change appears to lie in its preservation of asylum
eligibility for persons who themselves have experienced actual past
persecution, even when most members of their affected group, such as their
religious denomination, may not be able to show a “reasonable possibility of
future persecution” by virtue of long-standing and unchanged conditions in
their homeland. See, e.g., Matter of O-Z- & I-Z-, 22 I&N Dec. 23 (BIA
1998) (granting asylum to Jewish victims of past persecution in the Ukraine
where country condition evidence showed no change in circumstances, but
may not have independently supported a “reasonable possibility of future
persecution” generally for Jewish residents of the Ukraine).
   The change between the proposed and final rule was not undertaken with
the announced purpose of affecting the result in coercive population control
cases or any other case where an act of past persecution may be relevant to
a changed circumstances assessment. Rather, as with the proposed rule itself,
which was not limited to population control cases, the change in language
contained in the final rule was intended to apply to all cases of past
persecution. The stated goal of the regulatory change, as set forth in the
notice of proposed rule making, of “allow[ing] consideration of any evidence,
or lack thereof, bearing on future persecution,” was not retracted or even
called into question. 63 Fed. Reg. at 31,947.
   The majority’s ruling effectively precludes consideration of important
evidence respecting the likelihood of future persecution. The language of the
current regulation, however, was not adopted to preclude the consideration of
some evidence bearing on the possibility of future persecution. It was not
adopted to achieve a purpose contrary to, or despite, the traditional
“protection” and “humanitarian” goals of asylum law.
   In sum, the point of a change in the old regulation was to shift away from
the approach we had taken in Matter of C-Y-Z- when the core of any claim is
in actuality based on past persecution. Instead of a limited focus on
“changed country conditions,” the revised regulation directs that the
examination extend to the full range of considerations and the use of any

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evidence bearing on whether there has been a fundamental change and
whether there currently exists a well-founded fear of future persecution.
Importantly, the regulatory history does not reflect an intention to prohibit
consideration of any particular fact that may bear on these questions.

                                 VII. CONCLUSION
   The statute does not foreclose application of the regulations in cases of
forced sterilizations, and the regulations themselves reflect that they were
intended to apply to all cases, without exemption. As I agree with the
Immigration Judge’s rulings, I would dismiss the appeal.

DISSENTING OPINION: Roger A. Pauley, Board Member
   The majority hold that, under Matter of C-Y-Z-, 21 I&N Dec. 915 (BIA
1997), the forced sterilization of one’s spouse cannot constitute a
“fundamental change in circumstances” under 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1)(i)(A).
See Aliens and Nationality; Homeland Security; Reorganization of
Regulations, 68 Fed. Reg. 9824, 9834 (Feb. 28, 2003), 2003 WL 553495;
Matter of Y-T-L-, 23 I&N Dec. 601, 602 n.2 (BIA 2003). On the dual
assumptions that Matter of C-Y-Z- was correctly decided and that, if so and
properly applied, it extends to this respondent, I join the dissenting opinion of
Board Member Filppu, which convincingly exposes and explains the flaws in
the majority’s reasoning and result.
   However, I dissent, as well, on other grounds. I would not reach the narrow
issue of the meaning of the above regulation without first seeking additional
briefing and/or oral argument from the parties on the threshold questions of
the continued viability of Matter of C-Y-Z- and its scope.1 As is well known,
Matter of C-Y-Z- was certified to the Attorney General in 1998, but no
decision has yet been rendered at that level.
   The continued viability of Matter of C-Y-Z-, and its rationale, are
inextricably involved in the outcome of this case. I understand our ruling in
Matter of C-Y-Z- to be based on the theory that the persecution of one spouse
by forced sterilization is imputed to the other. I would ask the parties to
address the question whether this rationale is consistent with the statute and,
if not, bearing in mind considerations of stare decisis, whether that decision
should be overruled.
   In briefly adumbrating some of the issues on the merits on which I would
expect further briefing, I note a pivotal, but heretofore insufficiently
appreciated, fact that Congress, in adding the coercive population control

1
     I recognize that the Immigration and Naturalization Service (the “Service,” now the
Department of Homeland Security, DHS) chose not to raise these questions. But, as an
appellate adjudicatory body, the Board has discretion not to accept the case in the strategic
litigative posture presented to it, in an apparent attempt to isolate a particular question for
resolution, and instead to raise, and seek enlightenment from the parties on, other threshold
and potentially dispositive issues.

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provisions to section 101(a)(42) of the Immigration and Nationality Act,
8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42) (Supp. II 1996), elected not to create a new protected
ground. Instead, it provided that a “person who has been forced to abort a
pregnancy or to undergo involuntary sterilization . . . shall be deemed to have
been persecuted on account of political opinion.” Id. That statutory choice
would seem a strong indication that Congress anticipated and intended that
such coercive population control claims would be adjudicated on the same
basic principles that apply to other “political opinion” claims. Yet Matter of
C-Y-Z- is (at least arguably) at odds with such notions of equivalent treatment
and analysis.
   For example, suppose a political “odd couple” who are legally married in
China; the wife is a rabid anticommunist, while the husband is a staunch
supporter of communism and the regime. Suppose further that the wife one
day makes a widely disseminated anticommunist speech, is tried and
convicted therefor, and sentenced to imprisonment for 30 years. But the
husband’s loyalty is not questioned and he is not personally harmed. If the
husband later, while on a business trip to this country, decides to seek asylum
on the basis of his wife’s persecution, we would not find “past persecution”
or grant his claim. It is fundamental that, unless persecution of another on
account of political opinion is directed at an asylum applicant, which is not
the situation in my example, such persecution must be personal to the
applicant, although the harm to the persecuted individual may also result in
grievous harm to the applicant, in my hypothetical the loss of consortium of
his spouse (including the opportunity to have children) for 30 years. I would
ask the parties to explain why they believe or don’t believe that Congress
intended that Chinese population control claims should constitute an
exception to this principle.
   Assuming that Matter of C-Y-Z- would survive such reconsideration, I
would also seek further briefing and/or oral argument on the scope of that
ruling as it affects this respondent’s eligibility for asylum. The salient facts
in this case show that the respondent and his spouse entered into a traditional
marriage in 1981, and then had three children, the last being born in 1985.
Thereafter, the respondent registered his marriage in 1991. In order to find
that, on these facts, Matter of C-Y-Z- applies to enable the respondent to
assert past persecution successfully, that case must be construed as extending
either (1) to persons whose marriages are evidenced only by a traditional
ceremony in China (without a requirement that such marriages be legally
recognized by that country) or, if not, (2) to persons who ultimately registered
their marriage with the forcibly sterilized spouse, but who were not legally
married at the time that persecutive act occurred. I regard both of these
important issues as unresolved2 and have seen plausibly reasoned decisions
of Immigration Judges taking opposite positions with respect to each.
2
   Our opinion in Matter of C-Y-Z- did not make clear whether the alien’s registration of his
marriage occurred before or after his wife’s forced sterilization. See Matter of C-Y-Z-, supra,
at 915-16. Whatever the record in that case might show, it is clear that we never focused on
the issue and cannot be deemed to have resolved it.

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Accordingly, I would not grant asylum in this case without resolving the
underlying question whether the respondent is eligible to assert past
persecution under Matter of C-Y-Z-.
  I therefore respectfully dissent.




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