U.S. Denies Asylum for Persecuted Chinese Christian

2005-09-06 Thread Brad M Pardee

If the present administration expects to
be seen as an advocate for religious freedom, it had better intervene on
behalf of Mr. Li. This story is from Christianity Today.

Brad



U.S. Denies Asylum for Persecuted Chinese Christian
Court believes Christian's story, says China has the right to maintain
social order.
by Boaz Herzog | posted 09/06/2005 09:30 a.m.

For more than five years, Xiaodong Li and about half a dozen friends gathered
weekly in their hometown of Ningbo, China, to study the Bible and sing
hymns. Then one Sunday morning in April 1995, in the middle of one of the
services inside Li's apartment, three cops stormed in, handcuffed Li, and
escorted him to the local police station.

The officers grabbed his hair and kicked his legs, forcing him to kneel.
They hit and shocked him with an electronic black baton until he confessed
two hours later to organizing an underground church. Later, they locked
him inside a windowless, humid cell with six other inmates until his friend
and uncle bailed him out five days later. After his release, police forced
him to clean public toilets 40 hours a week without pay. He lost his job
as a hotel spokesman.

Li, 22 at the time, likely faced two years in prison. A court hearing was
set for later that year. Li began plotting an escape. He applied for a
visa. Unaware of Li's looming trial, a government agency issued him a passport.
And on November 4, 1995, Li left the country.

Two months later, a Carnival Cruise Lines ship docked in Miami. Li, a food
server on board, walked off and never returned. He moved to Houston, hoping
to go back to his homeland when China's government eased religious restrictions.
Instead, conditions worsened. His friend was imprisoned for participating
in their underground church. And police interrogated Li's family, who still
live in China, after receiving Bibles, religious magazines, and newspapers
that Li had sent them.

In 1999, Li applied for asylum on the grounds that the Chinese government
had persecuted him for his religious beliefs. He missed the application
deadline, but an immigration judge agreed with his arguments, granting
him a status that allowed him to remain in the United States until conditions
in China improved.

But in 2003, the Board of Immigration Appeals reversed the judge's decision.
It ruled that Li was punished for violating laws on unregistered churches
that it said China has a legitimate right to enforce. Li, the board concluded,
feared legal action or prosecution, not persecution.

In August, a three-judge panel of the federal Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals
affirmed the board's ruling. The decision has alarmed refugee and religious-freedom
advocates. They say the ruling, unless overturned, will make it much more
difficult for future asylum-seekers to prove religious persecution.

The appeals court decision sends a chilling message that the United
States is beginning to turn its back on people fleeing religious persecution,
said Dori Dinsmore, the former advocacy director for World Relief, an international
organization that assists refugees.

Last year, U.S. immigration courts completed
about 65,000 applications for asylum. Of those cases, about 20 percent
of the applicants were granted asylum, the plurality of which came from
China. Asylum allows refugees to work in the United States and later apply
for permanent residence. To gain asylum, applicants must prove they are
refugees escaping persecution because of their nationality, membership
in a particular social group, political opinion, race, or religion.

Ultimately, Dinsmore told CT, the Fifth Circuit's ruling means
that many more asylum applicants will be deported back into the hands
of the people persecuting them.

The ruling has broad implications for worshipers across the globe. Ann
Buwalda, founder and executive director of human-rights group Jubilee Campaign
USA, told CT that adherents of other faiths could soon be denied U.S. asylum
because some of their religious practices are considered illegal in their
homelands. For example, she pointed to persecuted practitioners of Falun
Gong exercises in China, and Muslims who convert to Christianity in Iran.

Essentially, Buwalda said of the Fifth Circuit ruling, you've
removed religion as a basis of gaining asylum.

Chris Bentley, a spokesman for the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
bureau, declined to comment on the impact Li's case could have on other
asylum applicants. The agency is reviewing the judges' decision,
and then we'll take appropriate actions, Bentley said.

Li's Houston-based attorney, Garrett White, said his client, now 32, plans
to appeal, both to the full ring of Fifth Circuit judges and to the U.S.
Supreme Court. The Alliance Defense Fund has joined Garrett as co-counsel.

Persecution a 'Moral Judgment, Not a Legal One'

That an immigration judge on up to the Fifth Circuit found Li's story of
prosecution credible makes it all the more

Re: U.S. Denies Asylum for Persecuted Chinese Christian

2005-09-06 Thread Mark Tushnet




Or, it had better halt the proceeding that it (at the very least)
continued after the initial determination favorable to Mr. Li, and
resisted on Mr. Li's appeal to the Fifth Circuit.

Brad M Pardee wrote:

  If the present administration expects to
be seen as an advocate for religious freedom, it had better intervene
on
behalf of Mr. Li. This story is from Christianity Today.
  
Brad
  

  
  U.S. Denies Asylum for Persecuted Chinese Christian
  Court believes Christian's story, says China has the right to
maintain
social order.
  by Boaz Herzog | posted 09/06/2005 09:30 a.m.
  
For more than five years, Xiaodong Li and about half a dozen friends
gathered
weekly in their hometown of Ningbo, China, to study the Bible and sing
hymns. Then one Sunday morning in April 1995, in the middle of one of
the
services inside Li's apartment, three cops stormed in, handcuffed Li,
and
escorted him to the local police station.
  
The officers grabbed his hair and kicked his legs, forcing him to
kneel.
They hit and shocked him with an electronic black baton until he
confessed
two hours later to organizing an underground church. Later, they locked
him inside a windowless, humid cell with six other inmates until his
friend
and uncle bailed him out five days later. After his release, police
forced
him to clean public toilets 40 hours a week without pay. He lost his
job
as a hotel spokesman.
  
Li, 22 at the time, likely faced two years in prison. A court hearing
was
set for later that year. Li began plotting an escape. He applied for a
visa. Unaware of Li's looming trial, a government agency issued him a
passport.
And on November 4, 1995, Li left the country.
  
Two months later, a Carnival Cruise Lines ship docked in Miami. Li, a
food
server on board, walked off and never returned. He moved to Houston,
hoping
to go back to his homeland when China's government eased religious
restrictions.
Instead, conditions worsened. His friend was imprisoned for
participating
in their underground church. And police interrogated Li's family, who
still
live in China, after receiving Bibles, religious magazines, and
newspapers
that Li had sent them.
  
In 1999, Li applied for asylum on the grounds that the Chinese
government
had persecuted him for his religious beliefs. He missed the application
deadline, but an immigration judge agreed with his arguments, granting
him a status that allowed him to remain in the United States until
conditions
in China improved.
  
But in 2003, the Board of Immigration Appeals reversed the judge's
decision.
It ruled that Li was punished for violating laws on unregistered
churches
that it said China has a legitimate right to enforce. Li, the board
concluded,
feared legal action or prosecution, not persecution.
  
In August, a three-judge panel of the federal Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals
affirmed the board's ruling. The decision has alarmed refugee and
religious-freedom
advocates. They say the ruling, unless overturned, will make it much
more
difficult for future asylum-seekers to prove religious persecution.
  
The appeals court decision "sends a chilling message that the United
States is beginning to turn its back on people fleeing religious
persecution,"
said Dori Dinsmore, the former advocacy director for World Relief, an
international
organization that assists refugees.
  
  
  Last year, U.S. immigration courts
completed
about 65,000 applications for asylum. Of those cases, about 20 percent
of the applicants were granted asylum, the plurality of which came from
China. Asylum allows refugees to work in the United States and later
apply
for permanent residence. To gain asylum, applicants must prove they are
refugees escaping persecution because of their nationality, membership
in a particular social group, political opinion, race, or religion.
  
"Ultimately," Dinsmore told CT, the Fifth Circuit's ruling means
that many more asylum applicants "will be deported back into the hands
of the people persecuting them."
  
The ruling has broad implications for worshipers across the globe. Ann
Buwalda, founder and executive director of human-rights group Jubilee
Campaign
USA, told CT that adherents of other faiths could soon be denied U.S.
asylum
because some of their religious practices are considered illegal in
their
homelands. For example, she pointed to persecuted practitioners of
Falun
Gong exercises in China, and Muslims who convert to Christianity in
Iran.
  
"Essentially," Buwalda said of the Fifth Circuit ruling, "you've
removed religion as a basis of gaining asylum."
  
Chris Bentley, a spokesman for the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services
bureau, declined to comment on the impact Li's case could have on other
asylum applicants. The agency is "reviewing the judges' decision,
and then we'll take appropriate actions," Bentley said.
  
Li's Houston-based attorney, Garrett White, said his client, now