Hafeez Ahmed v.
Ashcroft
United States Court
of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
2004 U.S. App. LEXIS
6473
The Petitioner,
Hafeez Ahmed, appeals from a decision denying him asylum based upon
past persecution and fear of future persecution due to his family’s
political affiliation. The
Immigration Judge (“IJ”) found that the Petitioner did not
establish evidence of persecution and the Board of Immigration Appeals
(“BIA”) affirmed. The
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit remanded, finding that
the Petitioner did present credible evidence of political persecution.
The Petitioner, a
citizen of Pakistan, alleges that he was kidnapped, stabbed and beaten
in 1992 because of his family’s affiliation to the People’s
Pakistan Party (“PPP”). The
injuries he sustained hospitalized him for three weeks.
After being released, he did not leave Pakistan because the
politically-motivated violence subsided when the PPP re-took power.
When the PPP’s power began to erode, the Petitioner fled to
the U.S. for fear that the he would again suffer from
politically-motivated abuse.
The IJ found that the
Petitioner’s testimony was not credible because he did not leave
Pakistan immediately after the kidnapping incident and that the abuse
did not rise to the level of persecution because he was able to
receive medical attention. The
Seventh District Court found that the IJ’s conclusions were not
supported by substantial evidence.
It disagreed with the IJ’s determination because it felt that
the Petitioner gave a credible explanation of why he did not attempt
to leave immediately. Furthermore,
the fact that the Petitioner was hospitalized for three weeks
demonstrates that the injuries were severe.
In
remanding the case, the Court of Appeals stated that the burden of
establishing past persecution had shifted and the Government assumes
the burden of rebutting the presumption of future persecution based
upon the past history of persecution.