Jibril v. Gonzales ( 2005 )


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  •                      FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    MUSTAFE MUSE JIBRIL,                        
    Petitioner,            No. 03-72118
    v.
            Agency No.
    A75-596-958
    ALBERTO R. GONZALES,* Attorney
    General,                                              OPINION
    Respondent.
    
    On Petition for Review of an Order of the
    Board of Immigration Appeals
    Argued and Submitted
    May 5, 2005—Pasadena, California
    Filed September 19, 2005
    Before: Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain and Johnnie B. Rawlinson,
    Circuit Judges, and Robert H. Whaley,* District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge O’Scannlain
    *Alberto R. Gonzales is substituted for his predecessor, John Ashcroft,
    as Attorney General of the United States, pursuant to Fed. R. App. P.
    43(c)(2).
    *The Honorable Robert H. Whaley, United States District Judge for the
    Eastern District of Washington, sitting by designation.
    13437
    JIBRIL v. GONZALES                 13441
    COUNSEL
    Salvador Colon, Fong & Associates, Houston, Texas, argued
    the cause for the petitioner. Ali. M. Onan was on the briefs.
    Teal Luthy Miller argued the cause for the respondent. Peter
    D. Keisler, Assistant Attorney General, Robert M. Loeb and
    Deborah Ruth Kant, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington,
    D.C., and Terri J. Scadron, Assistant Director, Office of
    Immigration Litigation, were on the briefs.
    OPINION
    O’SCANNLAIN, Circuit Judge:
    We must decide whether, under our case law, an immigra-
    tion judge’s adverse credibility finding is supported by the
    alleged implausibilities and inconsistencies in an asylum
    applicant’s testimony and by his purportedly evasive and
    unresponsive demeanor while testifying.
    I
    Mustafe Muse Jibril is a member of the Yibir, a disfavored
    minority clan without land or power in Somalia, who has
    applied for asylum in the United States. According to his
    application, his clan is “the lowest clan,” “scattered all over
    the country but . . . in the minority everywhere,” they “hold
    no territory” and “have no militias to protect [them].” The
    13442                  JIBRIL v. GONZALES
    Yibir are “considered outcasts even though [they] share the
    same language, culture and traditions and look the same as
    every one else in Somalia” and “cannot marry outside [the]
    clan because [they] are beneath the other clans.” These facts
    are supported by the Department of State’s Country Report.
    Before the civil war that toppled the government of Presi-
    dent Siad Barre, Jibril’s father was a lieutenant-colonel in the
    army. President Barre promoted members of minority clans
    because they had no natural loyalties to the more powerful
    tribes and could be trusted to serve the regime loyally in
    exchange for government protection. After the Barre govern-
    ment collapsed, Jibril and his family feared retribution from
    majority clan militia because of his father’s position under the
    former regime. The Country Report describes the risk of
    revenge attacks against “senior security or military officials of
    [Barre’s] regime.”
    In March of 1991, after the fall of the government and in
    the face of imminent attacks from the United Somali Con-
    gress (“USC”) militia, ten members of Jibril’s family packed
    their belongings into a pick-up truck and fled to Kenya.
    Because of the limited room in the truck, Jibril and his brother
    stayed behind to collect more belongings with the intention of
    following two days later.
    The next night, however, Jibril and his brother heard gun-
    fire in the street and saw a vehicle flying the USC flag pull
    up outside their house. They hid behind the front door, but the
    USC opened fire on the house, killing Jibril’s brother and
    wounding Jibril in the stomach area. He fell inside the
    entrance, bleeding from his stomach, with his brother’s body
    over his legs. When the militia soldiers entered the house, he
    closed his eyes and feigned death while he was kicked several
    times in the side. Satisfied that he was dead, the militia looted
    the house, taking bags of clothes, jewelry and money that the
    family had not taken with them. Jibril observed that the mili-
    tia wore civilian clothes—one wearing a traditional Somali
    JIBRIL v. GONZALES                 13443
    skirt—and carried Kalashnikov rifles. One solider carried a
    rocket launcher. He also overheard their accents and some of
    their conversation.
    After about half an hour to an hour, the militia left, giving
    him two final, hard blows to the head, during which he again
    refrained from responding. The next morning, about seven
    hours after he was shot, Jibril was found by neighbors who
    took him to a local school, which had been converted to a
    hospital by western volunteer doctors. Jibril was given a
    blood transfusion and operated on under anesthetic. The doc-
    tor told Jibril that the bullet had not damaged any organs and,
    after two weeks in hospital, he was released.
    While he was recuperating, Jibril directed a neighbor to go
    back to his house to recover some money that he had hidden
    behind a cupboard before the militia attacked, which he used
    to pay for his transportation to Kenya. After he arrived in
    Mombasa, he found his family in the Otanga (or Utange) refu-
    gee camp. Jibril’s family lived in the refugee camp until 1995,
    when it was closed for health and security reasons. The family
    then moved to Nairobi, where they joined the undocumented
    Somali ex-pat community and Jibril worked in a kitchen. In
    Nairobi, Jibril was arrested several times because he did not
    possess identity papers, but each time he was able to bribe the
    officials to obtain his release.
    Over a period of several years, he accumulated $2,800 from
    relatives, including a relative in Saudi Arabia, who would
    wire the money to him in Nairobi, where another relative,
    who had Kenyan citizenship, would vouch for his identity.
    Jibril used this money to pay a smuggler, who arranged for his
    transportation under cover of forged documents via Paris and
    Mexico to the United States. Jibril entered the United States
    illegally in July, 1998, and filed his application for asylum on
    July 22, 1998.
    At his hearing, Jibril conceded removability but sought asy-
    lum and withholding of removal. His asylum claim was based
    13444                   JIBRIL v. GONZALES
    on his membership in a persecuted minority clan and on his
    father’s status as a military officer in the late, disfavored
    Barre regime. The IJ did not find his testimony to be credible
    and denied both his claims.
    On April 21, 2003, the Board of Immigration Appeals (the
    “BIA”) summarily affirmed the IJ’s decision. Jibril timely
    petitioned to this court.
    II
    [1] Asylum is a form of discretionary relief that may be
    granted by the Attorney General to an applicant who qualifies
    as a “refugee,” defined as one who refuses to return to his
    home country “because of persecution or a well-founded fear
    of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, mem-
    bership in a particular social group, or political opinion . . .”
    8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A).
    [2] To establish a well-founded fear of persecution, Jibril
    must show his fear to be both objectively reasonable and sub-
    jectively genuine. See Fisher v. INS, 
    79 F.3d 955
    , 960 (9th
    Cir. 1996) (en banc). The objective component of this test “re-
    quires a showing by credible, direct, and specific evidence in
    the record, of facts supporting a reasonable fear of persecution
    on the relevant ground,” 
    id., which may
    be made by the pro-
    duction of specific documentary evidence or by the credible
    and persuasive testimony of the applicant. Id.; 8 C.F.R.
    § 208.13(a) (“The testimony of the applicant, if credible, may
    be sufficient to sustain the burden of proof without corrobora-
    tion.”).
    In this case, the IJ did not find Jibril’s testimony to be cred-
    ible and there was no verifiable, corroborating evidence to
    support his story and bolster his credibility.
    A
    [3] “[T]rivial errors by an asylum applicant do not consti-
    tute a valid ground upon which to base a finding that an asy-
    JIBRIL v. GONZALES                  13445
    lum applicant is not credible.” Osorio v. INS, 
    99 F.3d 928
    ,
    931 (9th Cir. 1996) (quotation omitted). Similarly, “ ‘[m]inor
    inconsistencies’ that ‘reveal nothing about an asylum appli-
    cant’s fear for his safety are not an adequate basis for an
    adverse credibility finding.’ ” 
    Id. (quoting Vilorio-Lopez
    v.
    INS, 
    852 F.2d 1137
    , 1142 (9th Cir. 1988)). Why a person who
    provides inconsistent testimony on any one matter should still
    be presumed credible as to all other matters is far from obvi-
    ous, but such is the rule we are bound to apply.
    In this case, the IJ found an apparent inconsistency between
    the fact that Jibril was “pretending to be dead while these six
    men presumably go into his house and trample over his body
    and that of his brother” and the fact that “he is able to see
    many details with respect to these men.” Those details cited
    by the IJ are: “the type of weapon that they have, even to the
    point of telling what brand of rifle it is”; “that they have a
    special rocket launcher weapon”; “he is able to see their cloth-
    ing and the type of clothing they have”; and “he is able to
    even hear what they are saying.”
    1
    [4] First, the IJ ignored the fact that Jibril initially saw the
    militia through the window, before he was shot, which could
    account for some of the observations. Second, the observa-
    tions that Jibril did make are not the sort that would require
    long or detailed study; on the contrary, they are no more
    detailed or extensive than the sort of first impressions one
    would record at a glance. For example, it is unsurprising that
    he recognized that the militia carried Kalashnikov rifles—a
    sight that would be familiar to a Somali native given the ubiq-
    uity of AK-47s in Africa. The IJ mistakenly thought that
    “Kalashnikov” referred to a brand name rather than the most
    common model of machine gun in the world, which is made
    both under brand and piratically. Similarly, Jibril described
    the militia as wearing “traditional Somali dress,” but when
    pressed for further detail could not provide it, saying that “I
    13446                  JIBRIL v. GONZALES
    was not looking at them fully, I was hiding that I was alive
    and that I was looking at them.” The IJ cites Jibril’s partial
    knowledge of what the militia soldiers were wearing as evi-
    dence of inconsistency, but it is the opposite: he could only
    describe their pants and shirts, not what they wore on their
    heads, which fits with the observations of a man lying on the
    ground. Finally, that Jibril was able to hear what the soldiers
    were saying is in no way inconsistent with the fact that he was
    lying on the floor, pretending to be dead.
    2
    The IJ also found that Jibril testified inconsistently about
    whether or not his father told him where he was taking the
    family when they fled. According to the IJ, “[i]nitially, he
    said that the father only said he would take the family to
    Kenya and no particular place. Then, upon further question-
    ing, and realizing that he was being caught in an inconsis-
    tency, did [sic] indicate that he was going to take the family
    to Nairobi.”
    [5] However, the actual exchange began with Jibril’s coun-
    sel asking him where the family was supposed to go and Jibril
    responding first “out of the country” and then “[h]e did not
    tell us that we were going to Mombasa the first. But later, we
    find our family in Mombasa in Otanga [in the refugee camp].”
    When the IJ then asked him “where did your father tell you
    that he was going with the family when he left,” Jibril replied
    “[h]e said that we will take the family to Kenya.” So far, no
    inconsistency. Pressing him, the IJ asked if his father had told
    him “any particular place in Kenya” and Jibril’s answer was
    “No, he did not tell us any particular place. Our intention was
    to go up to Nairobi before, but we went to Mombasa.” This
    is, admittedly, an unclear answer, but it does not contradict
    his earlier testimony and the confusion appears to be due to
    translation problems rather than to Jibril’s unresponsiveness.
    Read together, Jibril’s statements indicate that the family had
    a prior intention of fleeing to Nairobi, but ended up in Mom-
    JIBRIL v. GONZALES                  13447
    basa (also in Kenya), where Jibril eventually found them in a
    refugee camp. Although the transcript of Jibril’s testimony is
    not a model of pellucidity, neither is it inconsistent.
    [6] Because Jibril’s testimony is not inconsistent or, at
    most, is inconsistent with regard to trivial or minor facts that
    do not go to the heart of his asylum claim, it cannot support
    an IJ’s adverse credibility. See Mendoza Manimbao v. Ash-
    croft, 
    329 F.3d 655
    , 660 (9th Cir. 2003).
    B
    [7] Under our case law, testimony that is “implausible in
    light of the background evidence,” Chebchoub v. INS, 
    257 F.3d 1038
    , 1043 (9th Cir. 2001) (emphasis added), can sup-
    port an adverse credibility finding. For example, a finding
    made by an IJ that a petitioner’s testimony is implausible
    given the evidence in a Country Report or other objective evi-
    dence in the record is accorded deference. However, when an
    IJ finds a petitioner’s testimony implausible based solely on
    “conjecture and speculation” that the testimony, though
    uncontroverted by any evidence that the IJ can point to in the
    record, is inherently unbelievable, then that “finding” should
    not automatically be accorded deference. See Vera-Vellegas v.
    I.N.S., 330 F.3d 1222,1231 (9th Cir. 2003) (“The IJ’s view
    was based on mere speculation and conjecture, and . . . con-
    jecture is not a substitute for substantial evidence.”) (quota-
    tion marks omitted).
    [8] Although “speculation and conjecture” alone cannot
    sustain an adverse credibility finding, an IJ must be allowed
    to exercise common sense in rejecting a petitioner’s testimony
    even if the IJ cannot point to specific, contrary evidence in the
    record to refute it. Without such latitude, IJs would be bound
    to credit even the most outlandish testimony as long as it was
    internally consistent and not contradicted by independent evi-
    dence in the record. Unfortunately, a survey of our precedent
    reveals no consistent line that has been drawn between an IJ’s
    13448                  JIBRIL v. GONZALES
    legitimate application of common sense, on the one hand, and
    an IJ’s reliance on “speculation or conjecture” in determining
    that a fact alleged by a petitioner is implausible on the other.
    1
    For example, in Malhi v. INS, 
    336 F.3d 989
    , 993 (9th Cir.
    2003), the BIA found it implausible that the petitioner, who
    was university-educated and spoke Punjabi, Hindi, Bengali,
    and English, could not read or write Punjabi, even though he
    claimed to have lived in the Punjab and operated a business
    there for eight years. We upheld that adverse credibility deter-
    mination as supported by “specific, cogent reasons.” 
    Id. In so
    doing, we did not point to any evidence in the record suggest-
    ing that university-educated Punjabis can typically read and
    write the Punjabi language; we simply relied upon the
    common-sense proposition that someone with the petitioner’s
    purported background would be literate.
    Similarly, in Singh-Kaur v. INS, 
    183 F.3d 1147
    , 1152 (9th
    Cir. 1999), we upheld an IJ’s finding that it was implausible
    “that the [Punjabi] police would suspect Petitioner of assisting
    terrorists, when he had absolutely no political affiliations him-
    self and his wife did not have a Sikh name.” There again, the
    IJ’s conclusion relied upon common sense, not upon evidence
    in the record regarding the manner in which the Punjabi
    police operate.
    However, in Ge v. Ashcroft, 
    367 F.3d 1121
    (9th Cir. 2004),
    we rejected the IJ’s adverse credibility finding even though it
    was based on several “incredible” and “implausible” aspects
    of the petitioner’s testimony, none of which was any more
    speculative than those findings upheld in Malhi and Singh-
    Kaur. In Ge, the
    IJ did not believe [petitioner’s] testimony regarding
    the loss of his job at the government-owned shipping
    company after his wife’s second unauthorized preg-
    JIBRIL v. GONZALES                  13449
    nancy, reasoning that “if the government was so con-
    cerned about the respondent’s violation of the one-
    child policy, they [sic] surely would have taken
    [employment] action against respondent at the time
    [of the first unauthorized pregnancy].”
    
    Id. at 1125.
    Nor did the IJ believe petitioner’s testimony that
    “[he] was permitted to open a restaurant after he was termi-
    nated from his employment with a government-owned factory
    for violating the one child policy,” 
    id., or that
    “the
    government-owned factory where his wife had been
    employed provided her with a modest monthly stipend when
    she was forced to step down from her position after a second
    unauthorized pregnancy.” 
    Id. For each
    of these findings, the
    IJ provided a well-reasoned, common-sense explanation for
    her skepticism. Nevertheless, we spurned her reasoning
    because “the IJ’s findings rest on her speculation about what
    she imagined the Chinese authorities would or would not do
    under certain circumstances.” 
    Id. In Singh
    v. INS, 
    292 F.3d 1017
    (9th Cir. 2002), the peti-
    tioner claimed he had been arrested because of his association
    with his brother. The BIA deemed his testimony incredible, in
    part because he had not testified that he was questioned about
    his brother’s whereabouts after being arrested. The BIA rea-
    soned that, if the police had really arrested him because of his
    brother, they would have questioned him about it. We rejected
    that conclusion because “the IJ’s assumptions about what the
    motives of the police should have been . . . are the sort of con-
    jecture and speculation that cannot be used to support an
    adverse credibility determination.” 
    Id. at 1024
    (citations omit-
    ted).
    2
    If there is a logical way to reconcile the first two decisions
    with the latter two, it is not obvious to us. In the absence of
    a clear standard, our “rule” against upholding adverse credi-
    13450                 JIBRIL v. GONZALES
    bility determinations based on “speculation and conjecture” is
    of dubious utility. This problem could be avoided if, instead
    of picking at the minutiae underpinning an adverse credibility
    finding, we applied the properly deferential standard of
    review set out in the statute. See 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(B)
    (findings of fact are “conclusive unless any reasonable adju-
    dicator would be compelled to conclude the contrary.”). How-
    ever, under our current practice, we must evaluate the IJ’s
    implausibility findings to determine whether or not they are
    speculative or conjectural.
    3
    [9] The IJ found it implausible that Jibril could have
    remained unresponsive while being kicked in the head, that
    Jibril could have survived a gunshot wound to the stomach
    overnight, and that there was a medical facility in Mogadishu
    during the civil war that could have performed the operation
    that Jibril described undergoing. In each case, the IJ deter-
    mined that Jibril’s account was implausible without pointing
    to any evidence in the record that contradicted him. There was
    no medical testimony at the hearing to support the IJ’s disbe-
    lief of Jibril’s stoicism and stamina and no basis for the con-
    clusion that western aid workers were not active in the city,
    as Jibril claimed. The IJ’s conclusions, therefore, can only be
    characterized as speculative or conjectural, and cannot be the
    basis of an adverse credibility finding.
    C
    Finally, the IJ noted that Jibril’s “demeanor in testifying
    showed much evasiveness” and that “[h]e had a constant ten-
    dency to be overly defensive in his answers and to not address
    the question specifically but to provide explanatory answers
    to simple yes or no questions.” The IJ explained that “[h]ad
    it been something that one could see in some isolated
    instances, the Court would not place so much importance on
    JIBRIL v. GONZALES                 13451
    it, but the Court is troubled by the general demeanor of the
    respondent’s testimony.”
    [10] “We give ‘special deference’ to a credibility determi-
    nation that is based on demeanor.” 
    Singh-Kaur, 183 F.3d at 1151
    (citing Paredes-Urrestarazu v. INS, 
    36 F.3d 801
    , 818-19
    (9th Cir. 1994)). This is only proper, given that the IJ has an
    opportunity to make a first-person evaluation of all of the sub-
    tly conveyed factors that, together, can be evidence of a peti-
    tioner’s credibility. Few, if any, of these ephemeral indicia of
    credibility can be conveyed by a paper record of the proceed-
    ings and it would be extraordinary for a reviewing court to
    substitute its second-hand impression of the petitioner’s
    demeanor, candor, or responsiveness for that of the IJ. See
    
    Paredes-Urrestarazu, 36 F.3d at 818
    (“Weight is given the
    administrative law judge’s determinations of credibility for
    the obvious reason that he or she sees the witness and hears
    them [sic] testify, while the Board and the reviewing court
    look only to cold records.”) (citation and quotation marks
    omitted).
    [11] Remarkably, while a general finding based on “demea-
    nor” is accorded deference, under our case law, an IJ’s deter-
    mination that a petitioner’s testimony is “evasive” or
    “unresponsive” may be insufficient to support an adverse
    credibility finding. While these judgments will usually
    encompass extensive non-verbal behavior or patterns of
    speech, we have held that they are, nevertheless, subject to
    review by comparison with the inert transcript. When “the IJ’s
    credibility determination rest[s] on factors concerning the
    nature of petitioner’s testimony,” or “aspects of [his] demea-
    nor and method of answering questions” we have held that
    this evidence is “ascertainable from the record.” Arulampalam
    v. Ashcroft, 
    353 F.3d 679
    , 685-86 (9th Cir. 2003). Where the
    record does not obviously show that the petitioner was eva-
    sive or unresponsive, our precedent instructs us not to accord
    deference to the IJ’s demeanor finding, no matter how likely
    it was to have been supported by non-verbal, and therefore
    13452                  JIBRIL v. GONZALES
    non-textual, factors. The lesson for IJs is that, to the extent
    their demeanor findings rely on non-verbal factors, that
    behavior should be explicitly described in their opinion. See
    
    Paredes-Urrestarazu, 36 F.3d at 818
    (describing “the expres-
    sion of his countenance, how he sits or stands, whether he is
    inordinately nervous, his coloration during critical examina-
    tion, the modulation or pace of his speech and other non-
    verbal communication.”) (citation omitted). Because such evi-
    dence is not normally apparent from the transcript, it is effec-
    tively unreviewable and must be accepted as supporting an
    adverse credibility finding.
    [12] In this case, although the transcript shows that the IJ
    admonished Jibril several times for giving explanatory
    answers when she requested merely a “yes” or “no” response,
    Jibril’s answers do not appear to be unduly evasive and, when
    they are more than a “yes” or a “no,” they usually provide
    useful information. They cannot, therefore, be fairly charac-
    terized as evasive or unresponsive on the basis of the tran-
    script. Any other behavior that may have contributed to the
    IJ’s adverse credibility finding was not described in her opin-
    ion and cannot, therefore, be given deference.
    III
    The Supreme Court has repeatedly instructed us on the
    proper standard to apply when reviewing an immigration
    judge’s adverse credibility determination. Time and again,
    however, we have promulgated rules that tend to obscure that
    clear standard and to flummox immigration judges, who must
    contort what should be a simple factual finding to satisfy our
    often irreconcilable precedents. The result of this sly insubor-
    dination is that a panel that takes Congress at its word and
    accepts that findings of fact are “conclusive unless any rea-
    sonable adjudicator would be compelled to conclude the con-
    trary,” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(B), or follows the Supreme
    Court’s admonition that “[t]o reverse the BIA finding we
    must find that the evidence not only supports that conclusion,
    JIBRIL v. GONZALES                        13453
    but compels it,” INS v. Elias-Zacarias, 
    502 U.S. 478
    , 481 n.1
    (1992), runs a serious risk of flouting one of our eclectic, and
    sometimes contradictory, opinions.1
    [13] Because of this state of affairs, we have evaluated
    Jibril’s asylum claim as best we can under an idiosyncratic
    analytical framework that does not permit us to credit the IJ’s
    1
    Thankfully, relief is on its way in the form of the Real ID Act of 2005,
    Pub. L. No. 109-13, 119 Stat. 231 (2005) (the “Act”). Section 101(a)(3)
    (B)(iii) of the Act clarifies the grounds on which an IJ can base an adverse
    credibility determination, explaining that:
    Considering the totality of the circumstances, and all relevant fac-
    tors, a trier of fact may base a credibility determination on the
    demeanor, candor, or responsiveness of the applicant or witness,
    the inherent plausibility of the applicant’s or witness’s account,
    the consistency between the applicant’s or witness’s written and
    oral statements (whenever made and whether or not under oath,
    and considering the circumstances under which the statements
    were made), the internal consistency of each such statement, the
    consistency of such statements with other evidence of record
    (including the reports of the Department of State on country con-
    ditions), and any inaccuracies or falsehoods in such statements,
    without regard to whether an inconsistency, inaccuracy, or false-
    hood goes to the heart of the applicant’s claim, or any other rele-
    vant factor. There is no presumption of credibility, however, if no
    adverse credibility determination is explicitly made, the applicant
    or witness shall have a rebuttable presumption of credibility on
    appeal.
    8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(iii).
    The implications of this provision to the facts of this petition are clear:
    were it in effect today, we would be obliged to deny Jibril’s petition. His
    demeanor and any inaccuracies in his statements, without regard to
    whether they go to the heart of his claim, would all be valid bases for the
    IJ’s adverse credibility determination. The terms of this section of the Act
    are a welcome corrective, which, coupled with Congress’s clear direction
    to IJs that there is to be no presumption of credibility, will mean that in
    the future only the most extraordinary circumstances will justify overturn-
    ing an adverse credibility determination. Such high deference is what the
    law requires today, though in this case, and in the thousands of other peti-
    tions filed before the effective date of the Act, our precedent frustrates its
    expression.
    13454                  JIBRIL v. GONZALES
    adverse credibility determination in this case. We therefore
    remand this appeal to the BIA to exercise discretion regarding
    whether to grant asylum. 
    Ge, 367 F.3d at 1127
    (9th Cir.
    2004).
    IV
    [14] Because the IJ held that Jibril was ineligible for asy-
    lum, she assumed that neither could he meet the higher stan-
    dard necessary to prove that he is entitled to withholding of
    removal. See Al-Harbi v. INS, 
    242 F.3d 882
    , 888-89 (9th Cir.
    2001). Rather than apply the withholding standard to the evi-
    dence ourselves, we remand the issue of withholding so that
    the agency may apply the law to the facts in the first instance,
    see Jahed v. INS, 
    356 F.3d 991
    , 1001 (9th Cir. 2004), accept-
    ing Jibril’s testimony as credible and paying particular atten-
    tion to the supporting evidence in the Country Reports
    concerning the status of the Yibir in Somalia and retaliation
    against those suspected of collaborating with the Barre
    regime.
    Petition GRANTED and REMANDED.