Federal judges "angry" with government lawyers in FGM case
The three judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals must decide whether the Board of Immigration Appeals was right to deny asylum to the women and permit them to be returned to Guinea.
At the hearing, the judges seemed particularly upset at a conclusion by the government that it was fair to return the women to Guinea because they could not suffer further persecution since mutilation had already occurred. At times, all three judges raised their voices or cut off lawyers to make a point.
Other asylum cases built on other forms of persecution did not require that the individual seeking asylum prove that the persecution could be repeated, the judges said.
"Supply me any case in which a well-founded fear of persecution was not sustained because the same leg couldn't be amputated or the same organ removed," demanded Judge Rosemary Pooler."
LARRY NEUMEISTER for the Associated Press.

