Asylum denied to North Korean due to firm resettlement in South Korea

Political Asylum from North Korea
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May a citizen of North Korea be granted political asylum despite being firmly resettled in South Korea?  The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals recently said, “no.”
In Jang v. Lynch, — F.3d. — (9th Cir. 2015) the applicant, Sung Kil Jang, was born in North Korea and is a citizen of North Korea.  He was persecuted in North Korea and eventually was able to escape by swimming across a river to China.  He spent a year in China and then traveled to Vietnam and Cambodia before eventually landing up in South Korea.  In South Korea, he completed college, worked and lived there for four years.  He eventually became a citizen of South Korea.  He also had family in South Korea – a sister and her family and a brother.  He had all rights available to citizens in South Korea – the right to hold property, receive education, travel, and obtain public relief.  For reasons not discussed in the case, Mr. Jang came to the United States and soon thereafter applied for political asylum.

The Court first analyzed the law of asylum and noted that the definition of a refugee specifically excludes those individuals who have been firmly resettled in another country.  The Court noted that the purpose behind our asylum laws is not to give people a broad choice of safe countries but rather to protect refugees with nowhere else to turn.
Mr. Jang conceded that he was firmly resettled in South Korea but believed he was eligible for asylum based on the North Korean Human Rights Act of 2004 (22 U.S.C. Section 7842).  Specifically he argued eligibility under Section (b) of that statute:

For purposes of eligibility for refugee status under section 1157 of Title 8, or for asylum under section 1158 of Title 8, a national of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea [North Korea] shall not be considered a national of the Republic of Korea [South Korea].

When I read that section, I read it perhaps as Mr. Jang read it, that he would be eligible for political asylum, but that is not how the Court read it.  The Court looked to the legislative history of the statute and determined that the wording indicated Congress’ intent of eliminating a potential problem of dual nationality for purposes of asylum.  A person from North Korea is not to be considered a national of South Korea simply because they could possibly go to South Korea.  Thus, if a person came to the United States directly from North Korea, they would presumably be considered eligible for asylum (as he or she would not be firmly resettled in South Korea); the fact that an applicant could have gone to South Korea would not prevent him or her from seeking asylum.

This was not the situation in Mr. Jang’s case.  He had lived in South Korea.  The Court determined that “firm resettlement” was not an issue in the North Korean Human Rights Act and there was nothing in the legislative history which suggested that the analysis of whether or not someone was firmly resettled should be disregarded. “[T]he Act has no effect on the analysis of whether a North Korean has “firmly resettled” in South Korea (or anywhere else).”  The Court determined that Mr. Jang was firmly resettled in South Korea and denied his application for political asylum.

This is an interesting case as I believe Mr. Jang made a viable argument, but the Court found that the firm resettlement statute was clear and the North Korean Human Rights Act did not change that.

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