Ai Chen v. Eric Holder, Jr. , 742 F.3d 171 ( 2014 )


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  •                                 PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 12-2279
    AI HUA CHEN; JIN XIU LI,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    ERIC H. HOLDER, JR., Attorney General,
    Respondent.
    On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration
    Appeals.
    Argued:   September 19, 2013                Decided:     February 5, 2014
    Before TRAXLER,    Chief   Judge,   and     MOTZ   and    KEENAN,   Circuit
    Judges.
    Petition for review granted in part and denied in part by
    published opinion.   Chief Judge Traxler wrote the opinion, in
    which Judge Motz and Judge Keenan concurred.
    ARGUED: Alexa Taiz Torres, LAW OFFICE OF RICHARD TARZIA, Belle
    Mead, New Jersey, for Petitioners.     Walter Bocchini, UNITED
    STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
    ON BRIEF: Gregory Marotta, LAW OFFICE OF RICHARD TARZIA, Belle
    Mead, New Jersey, for Petitioners. Stuart F. Delery, Principal
    Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division, Carl H.
    McIntyre, Jr., Assistant Director, Christina J. Martin, Office
    of Immigration Litigation, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
    Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
    TRAXLER, Chief Judge:
    Petitioners Ai Hua Chen and Jin Xiu Li, both natives of
    China’s Fujian Province, met and married in the United States
    and are the parents of two children born to them here.                         Chen and
    Li    admit   they    are   subject       to       removal,    but   seek   asylum    and
    withholding of removal on the basis that one or both of them
    will be persecuted for having violated China’s one-child policy.
    The couple also seeks asylum and withholding of removal on the
    grounds      that    they   will   face     persecution        for     their   Christian
    faith upon returning to China.                 Despite finding both Chen and Li
    to be credible witnesses, the immigration judge (“IJ”) and the
    Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”), relying on an often-cited
    2007 State Department report, China: Profile of Asylum Claims
    and   Country       Conditions     (“2007      China       Report”),    concluded     that
    neither       petitioner      established             a     well-founded       fear    of
    persecution.
    For    the   reasons   that    follow,         we    grant    the   petition   for
    review to the extent Chen and Li seek relief based on China’s
    one-child policy and remand that claim for further consideration
    by the agency.        We deny the petition for review to the extent it
    is grounded on the religious faith of the petitioners.
    2
    I.
    A.
    Li arrived in the United States in June 2001 without valid
    entry documents and was placed in removal proceedings by the
    Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”).                               Li sought political
    and    religious          asylum,       but    an       immigration     judge      denied    his
    application in 2003 and the Board affirmed in 2005.                                  In 2010,
    however, the Board granted Li’s motion to reopen.
    Chen       entered       the     United      States       in    January     2003     on   a
    nonimmigrant          K-1       visa.         A     K–1       nonimmigrant       visa,      known
    colloquially         as     a   “fiancé       visa,”         permits   the   foreign-citizen
    fiancé of an American citizen to travel to the United States to
    marry his or her citizen sponsor within ninety days of arrival.
    See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(15)(K)(i).                            Chen’s fiancé sponsor, as it
    turned out, decided not to marry her.                            Chen, however, remained
    in    the    United       States      after    the       expiration     of   the    ninety-day
    period.          Chen and Li eventually met in 2005 and married in 2007.
    Also in 2007, Chen gave birth to petitioners’ two children—
    the first in January and the second in December.                                 Chen did not
    have legal status in the United States, however, and she worried
    that if she were ever forced to return to China, she and Li
    would       be    considered       violators            of   China’s    infamous     one-child
    policy.          Thus, in August 2007, while pregnant with petitioners’
    second child, Chen applied for political asylum, which led to
    3
    the   DHS     initiating        removal       proceedings    against    her   for
    overstaying her visa.            In 2011, the proceedings against Chen
    were consolidated with Li’s reopened proceedings.
    Chen and Li seek asylum on two identical grounds.                   First,
    Chen and Li claim that even though their children were born
    abroad, Chinese family planning officials would still consider
    the pregnancies to have been “out-of-plan” pregnancies and in
    violation of China’s family-planning regulations.                  Chen and Li
    believe that they would face fines, imprisonment and involuntary
    sterilization upon their return to China.                   On this basis, they
    seek political asylum, which is potentially available for any
    person who establishes “a well founded fear that he or she will
    be forced to undergo [involuntary sterilization]” or will be
    “subject to persecution” for “other resistance to a coercive
    population control program.”           
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(42).
    Li    and   Chen   also   seek   religious     asylum.     As    practicing
    Christians, Li and Chen claim that, if removed, they would be
    compelled by their beliefs to attend a “house church,” which is
    illegal in China.        They fear that participation in such a church
    would result in their arrest and detention and that they would
    be coerced by the government to renounce association with the
    church.
    
    4 B. 1
    .
    Although     the    IJ    found   both   Li    and     Chen   to   be    credible
    witnesses, he concluded that they failed to prove that their
    genuine   fear      of    future   persecution        under    the   family-planning
    policy was objectively reasonable.                 The IJ’s reasoning was two-
    fold.     First, he determined that Li and Chen failed to prove
    they    are    in     violation     of   China’s      family-planning          policies.
    According to the 2007 China Report, upon which the IJ heavily
    relied, each married couple in the Fujian Province “is allowed
    to have one child without a birth permit.”                     J.A. 419.       A second
    child, therefore, is not allowed unless the government grants
    permission ahead of time by issuing a birth permit.                        But the IJ
    found   that    children        born   abroad   are    not    counted     against    the
    number of children allowed unless the returning parents choose
    to register them as part of the household registration.                              The
    2007 China Report states that
    U.S. officials in China are not aware of the alleged
    official policy, at the national or provincial levels,
    mandating the sterilization of one partner of couples
    that have given birth to two children, at least one of
    whom was born abroad.
    . . .
    . . . [T]he Population and Family Planning
    Commission of Fujian Province stated in an October
    2006 letter that children born abroad, if not
    registered as permanent residents of China (i.e., not
    entered into the parents’ household registration), are
    5
    not considered as permanent residents of China, and
    therefore are not counted against the number of
    children allowed under China’s family planning law. .
    . .
    J.A. 421-22.
    Second, the IJ found that even if petitioners’ children
    “counted” for purposes of China’s family-planning law, Li and
    Chen would merely face fines or other economic penalties that do
    not rise to the level of persecution.                  Again, the IJ rested his
    factual determination on the 2007 China Report, which states
    that    “[a]ccording     to      the    Fujian     Provincial        Birth    Planning
    Committee (FPBPC), there have been no cases of forced . . .
    sterilization in Fujian in the last 10 years.”                          The Report,
    however, also acknowledges that “[i]t is impossible to confirm
    this claim” and cited reports of forced sterilizations in 2006.
    J.A. 418.      The 2007 China Report notes that the FPBPC claims
    provincial     officials       impose     only     economic        penalties—“social
    compensation     fees”—upon          violators,     not      physically       coercive
    sanctions.      J.A.   419.          According    to   the    2007    China     Report,
    however, for returning Chinese nationals who are the parents of
    U.S.-born    children,        even     such    economic      penalties       would   be
    triggered    only   if     the       parents     decided     “to     register    their
    children as Chinese permanent residents in order to gain free .
    . . educational and other social benefits.”                  J.A. 422.
    6
    The IJ noted some of the contradictory evidence submitted
    by Li and Chen, but indicated without explanation that the 2007
    China Report was simply “more persuasive.”                                  The contradictory
    evidence       from     Chen       and     Li     included          (1)    an     affidavit       (and
    supporting documents) from Renzun Yuan stating that immediately
    after    removal        to   the     Fujian       Province,         he     was    sterilized       for
    having violated China’s family-planning law even though his sons
    were    born     in     the       United     States;          (2)    a     200-page       scholarly
    critique        of     the     2007       China        Report       from    Dr.       Flora       Sapio
    concluding           that    it     was     outdated,             inaccurate       or     based     on
    anecdotal or unverifiable evidence; (3) written certifications
    issued    by     the        applicants’         respective          local        family     planning
    officials in Mei Hua Town, Chang Le City, and Ma Wei District of
    Fuzhou City indicating that Li and Chen would be sterilized upon
    returning       to     China      under     the    circumstances;               and   (4)     written
    affirmations from Chen’s father and Li’s mother stating that the
    certified       statements          from    the        family-planning            officials        were
    issued     at        their    request.            The        IJ    also     dismissed         written
    affirmations          from     two    of     the       petitioners’          cousins        and    two
    friends,    all        of    whom     attested          to    having       undergone        forcible
    sterilization after having unauthorized children in China.                                          The
    IJ found such evidence lacking in probative value because the
    children were not born abroad.
    7
    Finally, as described in greater detail below, Li and Chen
    submitted     evidence         that    the    IJ     either     failed        to    mention     or
    ignored     altogether.          This     evidence         included      the       2009     Annual
    Report      from    the    Congressional-Executive                   Commission       on    China
    (“2009 CECC Report”).              The CECC Report states that, as of 2009,
    forced abortions and sterilizations were still occurring.                                   While
    acknowledging           that    Chinese        law     prohibits         official          abuses
    relating to population control, the 2009 CECC Report notes that
    the   law    also       requires      local    officials        to     carry       out    regular
    pregnancy     tests       on    married       women    and      administer          unspecified
    “follow-up     services”         to    the     extent      needed       to    meet        planning
    goals.       More specifically, local family-planning officials in
    the Fujian Province are authorized to take “remedial measures”
    for   out-of-plan          pregnancies,            which       the     2009        CECC    Report
    interprets         as      a     euphemism           for       compulsory            abortions.
    Additionally,           this    report        states       that        local        authorities
    continued to require sterilization as a means of enforcing birth
    quotas.
    The IJ also ignored or failed to mention evidence of a
    webpage maintained by the Fuzhou City (Fujian) Family Planning
    Committee     which       apparently      provides         a    forum    for       citizens    to
    submit questions about the family-planning policy and receive
    responses from the government.                  Li and Chen submitted a copy of
    a screenshot from this website, dated June 16, 2010, showing an
    8
    April      2008   inquiry      from    “Robert     Lin”    about   the    consequences
    faced by Chinese nationals who have out-of-plan children abroad
    and the Committee’s response that “sterilization is mandatory”
    for violators of the one-child policy in this situation.                            J.A.
    824.
    2.
    The BIA adopted and affirmed the IJ’s decision that the
    petitioners did not meet their burden of proving that there is
    an “objectively reasonable possibility” that Li or Chen would be
    “forcibly sterilized, excessively fined, or otherwise persecuted
    for having two children without permission while in the United
    States.”          J.A.   4.      The    BIA    offered     additional     reasons    for
    discounting the evidence offered by Li and Chen.                          For example,
    the    BIA   observed         that    the   certifications      issued     by     family-
    planning officials in Mei Hua Town, Chang Le City, and the Ma
    Wei    District     of     Fuzhou     City,   were   entitled      to    little   weight
    because they were unauthenticated, unsigned, did not identify
    the     author,      and      were     procured      for    litigation      purposes. 1
    1
    The BIA also dismissed these certifications on the basis
    that the 2007 China Report indicates that village committees are
    “not authorized to make any decisions pertaining to family
    planning issues.”   According to the BIA, such documents should
    therefore “be deemed ineffective.” JA 5. This conclusion badly
    misses the mark.   The relevant question for asylum purposes is
    not what local authorities are authorized to do; the question,
    particularly given the pressure local authorities face to meet
    birth targets, is what they actually do.        As discussed in
    (Continued)
    9
    Likewise, the BIA found the statements from the petitioners’
    family     and     friends       claiming        to     have     suffered        forcible
    sterilization to be unworthy of extended consideration because
    the     statements       contained     unsworn        assertions       from     typically
    biased    witnesses       and   lacked    sufficient       detail       to    demonstrate
    that the witnesses were subject to persecution.                          And, like the
    IJ, the BIA was unpersuaded by the documents related to the case
    of    Renzun     Yuan    because     they    were       submitted      to     support    an
    unrelated       asylum     applicant      and     the     applicants         offered    no
    explanation as to how their attorney obtained the documents.
    Relying     exclusively        on   the    2007     China       Report,    the    BIA
    concluded that there was no basis for believing that government
    officials in the Fujian Province use coercive measures rising to
    the level of persecution in circumstances such as these.                                The
    BIA acknowledged that “there undoubtedly have been instances of
    forced    abortion       and    sterilization         imposed    on    the    parents    of
    children conceived and born [out-of-plan] in China,” J.A. 6, but
    the BIA distinguished the petitioners’ claim on the basis that
    their children were born abroad in the United States.                            The BIA
    found    that    “[t]he     evidence      submitted      in     this    case    does    not
    greater detail below, petitioners’ evidence highlights the
    importance   of  this   distinction,  demonstrating   that local
    practice does not always correspond with national policy.
    10
    document any instance where enforcement measures rising to the
    level    of   persecution    have   been    imposed       on   the    parents   of
    children who are United States citizens.”                  
    Id.
           Finally, the
    BIA, relying on the 2007 China Report, restated the IJ’s finding
    that the only scenario in which sanctions might be imposed for
    unauthorized      overseas   births   would       arise    from   the    parents’
    registration of their children as members of their households
    upon returning to China in order to secure free public benefits.
    Even then, the BIA found, the parents would face only economic
    penalties.
    The BIA did not mention the 2009 CECC Report or the Fuzhou
    City (Fujian) Family Planning Committee’s response to Robert Lin
    on its webpage that sterilization is mandatory for violators of
    the one-child policy even when the out-of-plan children were
    born abroad.
    II.
    Because the BIA “adopted and affirmed” the decision of the
    IJ but supplemented that decision with its own opinion, “the
    factual findings and reasoning contained in both decisions are
    subject to judicial review.”          Niang v. Gonzales, 
    492 F.3d 505
    ,
    511 n.8 (4th Cir. 2007).        And, because the denial of asylum was
    based on the conclusion that Li and Chen failed to satisfy their
    burden of proving a well-founded fear of future persecution, we
    review    these     decisions    under      the     “substantial        evidence”
    11
    standard.     Dankam      v.    Gonzales,       
    495 F.3d 113
    ,    119   (4th    Cir.
    2007). 2      Under     this         deferential      standard,      “administrative
    findings    of     fact        are     conclusive       unless       any    reasonable
    adjudicator would be compelled to conclude to the contrary.” 
    8 U.S.C. § 1252
    (b)(4)(B).              In other words, we cannot disturb the
    agency’s “decision that an applicant is ineligible for asylum
    unless we determine that the applicant’s evidence ‘was such that
    a   reasonable     factfinder          would    have     to   conclude      that    the
    requisite fear of persecution existed.’”                  Djadjou v. Holder, 
    662 F.3d 265
    , 273 (4th Cir. 2011) (quoting INS v. Elias-Zacarias,
    
    502 U.S. 478
    , 481 (1992)).
    In    order   to    establish       eligibility      for    asylum     under    the
    Immigration      and    Nationality       Act    (“INA”),       an   applicant      must
    2
    The IJ also held that petitioners’ asylum claim was time-
    barred because they filed their applications after the usual
    one-year deadline of arriving in the United States.         See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1158
    (a)(2)(B).    The BIA did not address this holding,
    and neither party briefed the issue on appeal. To be brief but
    clear: the IJ’s timeliness determination was wrong.             An
    application for asylum is still timely if, after the one-year
    deadline has passed, “changed circumstances [] materially affect
    the   applicant’s    eligibility    for   asylum.”       
    8 U.S.C. § 1158
    (a)(2)(D).      “Changed   circumstances”   include  changed
    conditions in the applicant’s country of nationality and
    “changes   in    the   applicant’s    circumstances.”    
    8 C.F.R. § 1208.4
    (a)(4)(1).    Chen filed her asylum application while
    pregnant with the couple’s second child.      In light of China’s
    family-planning    policy,    this    second   pregnancy   plainly
    constitutes a change in the couple’s circumstances that
    “materially affects” their eligibility for asylum. See Qiu Yun
    Chen v. Holder, 
    715 F.3d 207
    , 208 (7th Cir. 2013) (concluding
    for same reason that an asylum application was timely).
    12
    demonstrate that he or she is entitled to refugee status.                      See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1158
    (b)(1)(A).            Under the INA, a refugee is someone
    “who is unable or unwilling to return to . . . [his or her]
    country   because     of    persecution         or    a    well-founded    fear     of
    persecution     on    account        of     race,         religion,    nationality,
    membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.”
    
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(42)(A).           Petitioners “may satisfy this burden
    by showing either that they were subjected to past persecution
    or that they have a well-founded fear of future persecution on
    account of” one of the enumerated grounds.                   Djadjou, 
    662 F.3d at 272
     (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted).                     The INA
    specifically    permits         victims    of    China’s      population    control
    policy to seek political asylum:
    [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.
    
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(42).
    Li and Chen do not claim to have suffered past persecution,
    but seek asylum based on their fear of future persecution.                        The
    “well-founded    fear      of    persecution”        standard    set   forth   in    §
    1101(a)(42)     has   subjective          and    objective      elements.         The
    13
    subjective component requires the alien to “present[] candid,
    credible, and sincere testimony demonstrating a genuine fear of
    persecution.”       Ngarurih v. Ashcroft, 
    371 F.3d 182
    , 187 (4th Cir.
    2004)     (internal       quotation         marks     omitted).            “The    objective
    element      requires     a    showing      of      specific,      concrete       facts    that
    would lead a reasonable person in like circumstances to fear
    persecution.”           
    Id. at 187-88
    .         Li    and    Chen’s    asylum       claim
    faltered on the objective component.                       Although the IJ found both
    Chen and Li to be credible witnesses, he concluded that they did
    not prove their fear of future persecution was an objectively
    reasonable possibility.
    III.
    Chen and Li contend that the IJ’s decision, as supplemented
    by the BIA’s order, lacked substantial evidence.                            In their view,
    the denial of asylum was unsupported by substantial evidence
    because      the   IJ   and     BIA    relied       almost    exclusively         on   cherry-
    picked       statements       from    the   2007      China       Report    and   failed     to
    consider       compelling        contradictory             evidence    suggesting         that
    forced sterilizations are still a reality for Chinese nationals
    such as Chen and Li.
    Typically, we have approved of the BIA’s proclivity for
    finding State Department Country Reports to be the definitive
    word    in    asylum    cases.         After     all,      such    reports    are      rightly
    considered to be “highly probative evidence in a well-founded
    14
    fear case.         Reliance upon these reports makes sense because this
    inquiry is directly within the expertise of the Department of
    State.”      Gonahasa v. U.S. INS, 
    181 F.3d 538
    , 542 (4th Cir. 1999)
    (citations         and    internal    quotation         marks    omitted).          In    the
    context      of     substantial-evidence            review,       “[a]bsent         powerful
    contradictory        evidence,       the    existence      of    a     State      Department
    report supporting the BIA’s judgment will generally suffice to
    uphold the Board’s decision.”               
    Id.
    On    the    other    hand,    the   BIA     should      avoid      treating      these
    Country Reports “as Holy Writ” immune to contradiction.                               Galina
    v.    INS,   
    213 F.3d 955
    ,    959    (7th    Cir.     2000)      (Posner,      C.J.).
    Although “our job as a reviewing court is not to reweigh the
    evidence,” we must “ensure that unrebutted, legally significant
    evidence is not arbitrarily ignored by the factfinder” and that
    the    agency      does     not    “base    [its]    decision        on    only     isolated
    snippets of [the] record while disregarding the rest.”                              Baharon
    v. Holder, 
    588 F.3d 228
    , 233 (4th Cir. 2009).                             The BIA may not
    “selectively         consider      evidence,       ignoring      that      evidence      that
    corroborates        an    alien’s     claims      and    calls    into      question      the
    conclusion the judge is attempting to reach.”                               Tang v. U.S.
    Att’y   Gen.,       
    578 F.3d 1270
    ,    1280    (11th       Cir.      2009)    (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    In order for us to discharge “our responsibility to ensure
    that unrebutted, legally significant evidence is not arbitrarily
    15
    ignored by the factfinder,” Baharon, 
    588 F.3d at 233
    , we require
    the IJ and the BIA to “offer a specific, cogent reason for
    rejecting evidence, whether testimonial or documentary, because
    it lacks credibility,” Tassi v. Holder, 
    660 F.3d 710
    , 720 (4th
    Cir. 2011).    We recognize that the BIA and IJ are not required
    to discuss every piece of evidence in the record, but they must
    “announce   their   decision[s]   in       terms   sufficient   to   enable   a
    reviewing court to perceive that they have heard and thought and
    not merely reacted.”       Ayala v. U.S. Att’y Gen., 
    605 F.3d 941
    ,
    948 (11th Cir. 2010) (internal quotation marks and alterations
    omitted); see Seck v. U.S. Att’y Gen., 
    663 F.3d 1356
    , 1368 (11th
    Cir. 2011).
    We   believe   Chen   and   Li    offered     “powerful    contradictory
    evidence,” Gonahasa, 
    181 F.3d at 542
    , for which the BIA and the
    IJ failed to adequately account.             As previously noted, Li and
    Chen submitted the 2009 CECC Report. 3               The BIA’s failure to
    account for the reports of the CECC is not unprecedented.                See,
    e.g., Qiu Yun Chen v. Holder, 
    715 F.3d 207
    , 209 (7th Cir. 2013)
    (“We note with disapproval that the Board without explanation
    3
    Congress     established    the   Congressional–Executive
    Commission on China in 2000 “as a bipartite body, consisting of
    federal   legislators   and   executive-branch  officials,   whose
    purpose in part is to ‘monitor the development of the rule of
    law in the People’s Republic of China.’” Jiali Tang v. Synutra
    Int’l, Inc., 
    656 F.3d 242
    , 247 n.4 (4th Cir. 2011) (quoting 
    22 U.S.C. § 6912
    (c)).
    16
    systematically ignores the annual reports of the Congressional–
    Executive Commission on China, several of which we have cited,
    even    though    they    are     pertinent        official     publications         of    the
    federal government.”); Ji Cheng Ni v. Holder, 
    715 F.3d 620
    , 627
    (7th     Cir.    2013)        (“The    Board’s      ongoing         refusal   to    respond
    meaningfully to [CECC reports] is difficult to understand.”);
    see also Zhu Ying Dong v. U.S. Atty. Gen., No. 12-13673, 
    2013 WL 6511992
    , at *1 (11th Cir. December 13, 2013).                              The 2009 CECC
    Report     states    that        “[t]he      use     of   [coerced         abortions       and
    sterilizations]          in     the    enforcement        of        population     planning
    policies        remains       commonplace          despite      provisions         for     the
    punishment of official abuse outlined in the PRC Population and
    Family Planning Law.”                 J.A. 759.        According to this report,
    population       planning       officials      in     the      Fujian      Province       “are
    authorized to take ‘remedial measures’ to deal with ‘out-of-
    plan’    pregnancies”;         “remedial      measures”        is    “synonymous[]        with
    compulsory abortion.”            
    Id.
           In 2008 and 2009, moreover, “[l]ocal
    authorities      continue[d]          to   mandate    surgical        sterilization        and
    the use of contraception as a means to enforce birth quotas.”
    J.A. 215 (emphasis added).
    The 2009 CECC Report appears to contradict the 2007 China
    Report upon which the IJ and BIA rely so heavily in concluding
    that    compulsory       sterilization        for    violators        of   the     one-child
    policy is rare.           Yet, neither the IJ nor the BIA explains why
    17
    the   2009    CECC     Report,    a    more        recent      official      government
    publication, is less persuasive than the 2007 China Report, nor
    was there any attempt to reconcile these reports.                       There may be
    a perfectly reasonable explanation for favoring one report over
    the other, or there may be a way to reconcile these seemingly
    contradictory       documents.        But    the    BIA     has   not   revealed       its
    reasoning, and we are not permitted to guess what the BIA or the
    IJ were thinking.        See SEC v. Chenery Corp., 
    332 U.S. 194
    , 196
    (1947) (“[A] reviewing court . . . must judge the propriety of
    [agency] action solely by the grounds invoked by the agency.”).
    Second, Li and Chen submitted a copy of a screenshot from a
    Fujian     Province     government      webpage        dated      May   6,    2008,    as
    evidence     that    Fujian   family        planning      officials     consider       all
    couples who have multiple unauthorized births to be in violation
    of the one-child policy, even if such births occurred overseas.
    See www.fjjsw.gov.cn:8080/html/5/383/9626_200856322.html.                             This
    evidence     suggests    that    the    Fujian       Province       “Population        and
    Procreation Planning Committee” provided a forum for citizens to
    submit questions and receive responses about the family planning
    policy.       J.A.    824.       In    response        to    a     query     about     the
    consequences a returning Fuzhou couple would face after having
    two children in the United States, the committee indicated that
    they were in violation of provincial family planning regulations
    and that “sterilization is mandatory.”                  J.A. 825.       This evidence
    18
    is significant in that it purports to come directly from the
    same Fujian “Population and Procreation Planning Committee” that
    is referenced in the 2007 China Report, but it upends the BIA’s
    conclusion that there is no danger of sterilization where the
    would-be      violator’s        children    were   born    abroad.       See   Qiu   Yun
    Chen, 715 F.3d at 212 (explaining that the same Fujian webpage
    “cuts the ground out from under what the Board called the ‘key
    aspect of this case’—that because [petitioner’s] children were
    born abroad, she is in no danger of being forced to undergo
    sterilization”).           To be sure, this document may not expressly
    contradict the BIA’s finding that “the evidence submitted in
    this       case    does   not    document    any   instance      where    enforcement
    measures rising to the level of persecution have [already] been
    imposed       on    the   parents    of     children      who   are   United    States
    citizens.”          But it certainly portends forced sterilization of
    the inquiring couple and suggests that other parents of U.S.-
    born children have faced similar persecution. 4
    4
    Moreover, the affidavit of Renzun Yuan does flatly
    contradict the BIA’s characterization of the record evidence, as
    it documents an instance of forced sterilization of the father
    of U.S.-born children. We also note that the BIA has used this
    precise language before when relying on the 2007 China Report to
    reject an asylum application from a similarly situated applicant
    on the grounds that the record “does not document any instance
    where enforcement measures rising to the level of persecution
    have been imposed on the parents of children who are United
    States citizens.”   Li Ying Zheng v. Holder, 
    722 F.3d 986
    , 989
    (7th Cir. 2013) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    19
    In   our     opinion,      the   foregoing       contradictory         evidence    is
    strong enough that it requires the agency to account for it in a
    meaningful way.           The boilerplate language used by the BIA in
    discounting       Li     and    Chen’s        evidence       was     insufficient       to
    demonstrate       that    the   agency     gave       it    more    than     perfunctory
    consideration.           Presented     with    a    record    containing          virtually
    identical     contradictory           documentary          evidence,        the    Seventh
    Circuit     has    on    more   than     one       occasion    rejected       the    BIA’s
    exclusive reliance on the 2007 China Report and remanded for the
    BIA to offer an explanation that accounts for such evidence.
    See Li Ying Zheng, 722 F.3d at 991; Qiu Yun Chen, 715 F.3d at
    214; Ji Cheng Ni, 715 F.3d at 630-31; see also Zhu Ying Dong v.
    U.S. Atty. Gen., 
    2013 WL 6511992
    , at *1.                           We agree with the
    thrust of these decisions that petitioners are “entitled to have
    the expert agency, the BIA, evaluate in a transparent way the
    evidence that [they have] presented” and that “[s]imply stating
    that a 2007 document defeats a claim . . . will not do.”                                Ji
    Cheng Ni, 715 F.3d at 631.
    IV.
    Chen and Li also seek asylum and withholding of removal
    based on their Christian faith.                    Again, both Li and Chen were
    found to be credible witnesses.                 Their task, therefore, was to
    establish    that       their   genuine       subjective      fear     of    persecution
    based on their religious faith is objectively reasonable, i.e.,
    20
    that    “[t]here        is    a   reasonable          possibility       of     suffering       such
    persecution,”           
    8 C.F.R. § 1208.13
    (b)(2)(B),              and     that    “a
    reasonable person in like circumstances” would fear religious
    persecution.           Ngarurih, 
    371 F.3d at 187-88
    .
    Chen testified that when she met Li in 2005, he indicated
    he   was    a    practicing           Christian    and     he    invited       her    to   attend
    church services with him.                 Chen did not convert to Christianity,
    however,        until        2009      after      talking        to     her     neighbors        in
    Greensboro, North Carolina.                   Chen was baptized in 2010 and began
    regularly        attending        a    Chinese    Christian           Church    in    Greensboro
    with Li and their children.                       Chen testified that if she is
    removed     to    China,       she      would    be    compelled        by     her    beliefs    to
    attend an unsanctioned “underground” or “house” church rather
    than an “official registered church” that “preach[es] about the
    . . . government’s policies.”                     J.A. 139, 140.              Chen fears that
    her participation in such a church would be discovered by the
    government, subjecting her to arrest, torture, and fines.                                       She
    also fears that the government would force her to renounce her
    participation in any unsanctioned church.                             Chen’s fear is based
    to a great extent on the experience of her mother, who Chen
    testified        was    persecuted        based       on   her    church       affiliation       in
    2009.      According to Chen, her mother was one of eight members of
    an underground church to be arrested.                            Chen testified that her
    mother was detained for six days, during which time she was
    21
    slapped in the face and forced to sign a written guarantee that
    she would cease participating in her church.                          Chen indicated the
    government      also   imposed         on   her    mother     a     significant     fine    of
    2,500 renminbi (RMB).
    Li testified that he was a practicing Christian before he
    left   China     and   attended        an    unsanctioned         house    church      in   the
    Fujian Province.            Li testified that in March 2001, officials
    from the Public Security Bureau came to his home to arrest him
    for participating in the church but that he was able to elude
    arrest.        Li left China shortly thereafter and arrived in the
    United States in June 2001.                   He testified that he subsequently
    learned from his sister that authorities looked for him after
    the 2001 incident, but that he did not have any information
    suggesting      that   they    have         looked      for   him    recently.      Li      was
    baptized in September 2001 after arriving in the United States,
    and    he   verified    that      he    attends         church    with    Chen   and    their
    children.
    Like Chen, Li indicated that his fear of being persecuted
    on account of his religion was made real because of what he and
    Chen were told happened to his mother-in-law in 2009 as a result
    of her affiliation with an unsanctioned church.                           And, like Chen,
    Li    stated    that   if    he    returns         to    China,     he    will   attend     an
    unsanctioned house church, for which he believes he will suffer
    official retribution including arrest and torture.
    22
    Li    and    Chen       also   called     their     pastor,   Steven       Chang,    to
    testify at the hearing.              Chang confirmed that he is the pastor
    of a non-denominational Chinese Christian church in Greensboro
    and that, as of the date of the asylum hearing, Chen and Li had
    been attending the church for approximately one year.                               Chang
    indicated       that    he    was   generally      familiar    with   the       plight    of
    Christian house churches because Chang had visited in China with
    missionaries financially supported by his church.                       Based on his
    experience,       Chang      indicated    that      government      interference         and
    harassment       of     unsanctioned      congregations        tended      to    increase
    proportionally with the visibility of the congregation.                           Thus, a
    house church with fifty congregants or fewer might conduct its
    services relatively unimpeded by the government, especially if
    it operated in a large metropolitan area.                          In less populated
    areas,    Chang        observed,     it   is      more   difficult    to    congregate
    without attracting attention.                Chang noted additionally that the
    zealousness with which government officials police unsanctioned
    religious activities varies by location.                    Chang indicated he had
    never been to Chen and Li’s native Fujian Province, and he did
    not offer observations specifically regarding the treatment of
    Christians who attend unsanctioned churches there.
    The IJ found that the applicants failed to establish that
    their fear of future persecution on account of their Christian
    faith     was    objectively         reasonable.           Relying    on    background
    23
    materials published by the State Department, the IJ found that
    “while participation in unsanctioned Christian churches, such as
    house churches, is not approved by the Chinese government, those
    that do participate are not generally persecuted.”                         J.A. 83.
    The IJ noted that according to the 2007 China Report, house
    churches,      though      not     officially          approved,     are    “quietly
    tolerated” as long as they remain “small and unobtrusive.”                       J.A.
    83.      Citing        estimates     from        the   State   Department’s     2010
    International Religious Freedom Report, the IJ observed there
    are as many as 50-70 million Christians in China who practice
    their   faith    in     connection    with        unsanctioned     house   churches.
    Additionally, the IJ was unconvinced that the treatment suffered
    by    Chen’s    mother    reflected     widespread        persecution      of   house
    church congregants in Chen’s home town because, according to the
    IJ, Chen’s mother continued to attend a house church after her
    arrest and experienced no further trouble.
    Relying     on    the   same    background        materials    reporting    on
    religious freedoms in China, the BIA affirmed the IJ’s finding
    that Li and Chen failed to establish a reasonable possibility
    that they would be persecuted because of their Christian faith.
    The BIA noted that the record did not support the IJ’s statement
    that Chen’s mother had continued to attend a house church in
    China, but it concluded that this error “[did] not undercut the
    [IJ]’s reasoned conclusion that the respondents do not have an
    24
    objectively reasonable fear of persecution in China based on
    their religion.”            J.A. 7.
    Chen    and     Li       argue   that   they       established     an   objectively
    reasonable         fear     of     religious        persecution      through    both      the
    general background materials published by the State Department
    and    specific        evidence         that   they       will   risk     persecution     by
    attending home churches in their respective home towns in the
    Fujian Province.                Because the BIA denied asylum based on the
    conclusion that Chen and Li failed to carry their evidentiary
    burden, we must not only conclude that the evidence presented
    sufficed to prove an objectively reasonable fear of religious
    persecution,         but     also       that   the       “evidence   presented      was    so
    compelling that no reasonable factfinder could fail to find”
    that    a     reasonable         possibility        of    such   persecution       existed.
    Dankam, 
    495 F.3d at 119
     (emphasis added) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    While Chen and Li presented some contrary evidence, that
    evidence      is    not     so    compelling        that    we   cannot    defer    to    the
    agency’s factual determinations.                     First, we disagree with Chen
    and Li that the State Department’s 2010 International Religious
    Freedom Report and 2007 China Report support their claim for
    religious asylum.                Although these materials certainly reported
    isolated       cases       of    official      harassment,       the    general     picture
    presented by both reports was simply that official treatment of
    25
    Christians    who      attend      unregistered      house     churches     varies
    substantially based on locale and that such Christians in many
    regions practice their religion without interference.                     As noted
    by both the IJ and the BIA, Steve Chang, the applicants’ pastor
    who testified on their behalf at the asylum hearing, agreed with
    the general assessment that house churches are able to operate
    undisturbed in many areas of China.                Moreover, Chen and Li have
    not   directed    us   to   any    portion    of    these    reports   suggesting
    widespread persecution of Christians attending house churches in
    the Fujian Province.
    There was scant evidence presented specifically showing the
    persecution of Christians attending house churches in the Fujian
    Province.        Primarily,       this   included     the    testimony     of   the
    petitioners themselves regarding the arrest and abuse of Chen’s
    mother, as well as her mother’s written statement regarding the
    incident.     Chen’s mother, however, attended a house church in
    Chen’s hometown of Mei Dong Village in the Mei Hua Town area of
    Chang Le City; Chen testified that if she and Li are removed,
    they will live in and attend a house church in Li’s hometown of
    Shangdao    Village    of   the    Mawei   District    of    Fuzhou    City.     Li
    testified that officials unsuccessfully attempted to arrest him
    in 2001 for attending a house church while he still lived in
    China.     Li provided no testimony indicating that house church
    congregants in the Mawei District were persecuted regularly or
    26
    even intermittently, and he conceded that he had no reason to
    believe that government officials were still looking for him.
    In sum, viewing the record as a whole, we cannot say that
    the evidence compels us to conclude that there is a reasonable
    possibility that either Chen or Li will suffer persecution on
    account of their religious faith if they return to China.                  Thus,
    we cannot disturb the BIA’s conclusion that Li and Chen failed
    to    establish     a   well-founded         fear    of   future    persecution.
    Consequently, Chen and Li are not entitled to relief on the
    BIA’s denial of religious asylum.
    On a final note, having found substantial evidence supports
    the agency’s denial of religious asylum, we necessarily uphold
    the   denial   of   Chen   and   Li’s    application      for   withholding    of
    removal on account of their religious faith.                    See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1231
    (b)(3).       “Because the burden of proof for withholding of
    removal is higher than for asylum—even though the facts that
    must be proved are the same—an applicant who is ineligible for
    asylum   is    necessarily   ineligible        for    withholding    of   removal
    under § 1231(b)(3).”       Camara v. Ashcroft, 
    378 F.3d 361
    , 367 (4th
    Cir. 2004).
    V.
    For the foregoing reasons, we grant the petition for review
    as it relates to the BIA’s denial of asylum and withholding of
    removal based on the petitioners’ fear of being subjected to
    27
    involuntary sterilization under China’s one-child policy, and we
    remand that particular claim for the agency to reevaluate it in
    accordance with this opinion.            In conducting its analysis on
    remand, the BIA should account for, at a minimum, (1) the 2009
    CECC   Report,   (2)   the   evidence    relating   to   the   “Robert   Lin”
    inquiry on the website of the Fujian Province Population and
    Planning Committee, and (3) the affidavit of Renzun Yuan.                  We
    deny the petition for review, however, as it relates to the
    BIA’s denial of relief based on petitioners’ claim that they
    will be persecuted on account of their Christian faith if they
    return to China.
    PETITION FOR REVIEW GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART
    28