Thursday, 26 June 2008

Jacqui Smith's Iran comments misunderstood claims minister

From PinkNews

A Home Office minister has defended his boss against accusations that she does not understand the dangers faced by gay people in Iran.

The controversy started on Monday when a letter Home Secretary Jacqui Smith had written to a Lib Dem peer was published in The Independent newspaper.

On the subject of people from Iran seeking asylum in the UK on the grounds of their sexual orientation, she wrote:

"Current case law handed down by the asylum and immigration tribunal concludes that the evidence does not show a real risk of discovery of, or adverse action against gay and lesbian people who are discreet about their sexual orientation."

When asked to clarify her remarks today, Home Office minister Vernon Coaker, who was attending the launch of new Stonewall research into homophobic hate crime, told PinkNews.co.uk:

"She was quoting an asylum and immigration tribunal.

"She accepts that gay and lesbian individuals may need protection."

He said that the Home Secretary has written to The Independent to clarify the matter.

~~~~

gayasylumuk comment: The tribunals act on Home Office advice. It is ridiculous for him to claim they are somehow impartial and equivalent to a court. The evidence of persecution is overwhelming. Just ask Human Rights Watch (they don't).

Wednesday, 25 June 2008

How many LGBT UK asylum seekers? Too expensive to find out

Question Mark and ArrowImage by laurakgibbs via Flickr
To: Freedom Of Information Team ( IND )
Subject: Freedom of Information request - LGBT Asylum Seekers

Dear Sir or Madam,

I am looking for information to confirm the number of people in the UK within the past year who have used being a member of the LGBT community (gay, bisexual, trans) as grounds to remain in the UK.

In addition, I would like to know the number of the people from the above who have been granted Asylum in the UK.

Yours faithfully,

Lord Robert McDowall

~~~~~~~

Information Access Policy Team
Resource Management Group
United Kingdom Border Agency
Lunar House
11th floor, Short Corridor, 40 Wellesley Road
Croydon CR9 2BY

Lord Robert McDowall,

Via Email
Web www.bia.homeoffice.gov.uk

Your Ref:
Our Ref: 9598

Date: 20 June 2008

Dear Lord McDowall,

Thank you for your request dated 4 June 2008 where you have asked, `I am looking for information to confirm the number of people in the UK within the past year who have used being a member of the LGBT community (gay, bisexual, trans) as grounds to remain in the UK. In addition, I would like to know the number of the people from the above who have been granted Asylum in the UK. This falls to be dealt with under the Freedom of Information Act 2000.

Unfortunately, I am not able to provide you with the information you have requested because the information is not centrally recorded. Whilst the number of claims and their outcomes are centrally recorded and published on the Research and Development Statistical Website (RDS), personal information and the reasons cited for claiming asylum are not. This information would be held on the person's personal file.

Therefore, in order to answer your request it would be necessary to examine manually all asylum files to retrieve the information, which due to the numbers involved is not possible. Additionally, as part of the Home Office, the UK Border Agency is not obliged under section 12 of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 to comply with any information request where the estimated costs involved in supplying the information exceed the £600 cost limit. I regret that we cannot supply you with the information that you have asked for, as to comply with your request would exceed this cost limit. This limit applies to all central Government Departments and is based on work being carried out by one member of staff at a rate of £25 per hour, which equates to 3½ days work per request. The costs involved include locating and retrieving information you requested, and preparing our response to you. They do not include considering whether any information is exempt from disclosure, overheads such as heating or lighting, or disbursements such as photocopying or postage.

Your request would at present be too costly to answer. This is due to the fact that the data to these questions would be held on individual case files and is not held separately. However, if you were to refine your request further so that it falls under the £600 cost limit, we will be pleased to consider it further.

Should you wish to refine your request, so that we can provide you with answers to your questions within the £600 cost limit, please write back to me at the above address.

I should also point out that if you were to break your original request down into a series of smaller applications, we might, depending on the circumstances of the case, decline to answer if the aggregated cost of complying would exceed £600.

You should also bear in mind that even if any new request were to fall below the £600 cost limit, some information which we hold on this matter which you have requested may fall to be withheld under the terms of a number of the substantive exemptions contained in Part II of the Freedom of Information Act 2000. These exemptions could also make it necessary for us to extend the period for responding beyond the usual 20 working day target if they involve having to consider the public interest balancing test.

If you are dissatisfied with this response, you may request an independent internal review of our handling of your request by submitting your complaint to:

Border and Immigration Agency Information Access Policy Team
Lunar House
11th Floor, Short Corridor
40 Wellesley Road
Croydon
CR9 2BY

During the independent review the department's handling of your information request will be reassessed by staff who were not involved in providing you with this response. Should you remain dissatisfied after this internal review, you will have a right of complaint to the Information Commissioner as established by section 50 of the Freedom of Information Act.

Yours faithfully,

Mr Feakins,
Freedom of Information Team,
Resource Management Group
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You’ll be safe in the closet… maybe…

Courtesy: Liberal Conspiracy

By Unity

I can be as hardnosed as anyone when it comes to dealing with harsh political realities but even I draw the line when it comes to this:

Gay and lesbian asylum-seekers can be safely deported to Iran as long as they live their lives “discreetly”, the Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith, has claimed.

In a letter to a Liberal Democrat peer, seen by The Independent, Ms Smith said there was no “real risk” of gay men and lesbians being discovered by the Iranian authorities or “adverse action” being taken against those who were “discreet” about their behaviour.


You fucking what, Jacqui?

The Bouromand Foundation, which maintains an online memorial/database of human rights abuses in Iran, currently lists 145 individuals executed since 1979 after being charged with committing homosexual act along with, typically, a range of other offences - although, as the Foundation notes, the use of false charges to justify the arrest and execution of dissidents is known to be sufficiently widespread to make it uncertain exactly how many of those listed may actually have been gay.

Nevertheless, to choose an illustrative case from the Foundation’s records, on 11 November 2005, Mr Moktar N, 24, and his co-defendent Mr Ali A,25, were reported to have been executed at Shahid Bahonar Square in Gorgan, Iran. The Foundation’s database does note the specify the method of execution, although semi-official reports indicate that they were executed by means of public hanging, as noted here by Human Rights Watch:

On Sunday, November 13, the semi-official Tehran daily Kayhan reported that the Iranian government publicly hung two men, Mokhtar N. (24 years old) and Ali A. (25 years old), in the Shahid Bahonar Square of the northern town of Gorgan.

The government reportedly executed the two men for the crime of “lavat.” Iran’s shari`a-based penal code defines lavat as penetrative and non-penetrative sexual acts between men. Iranian law punishes all penetrative sexual acts between adult men with the death penalty. Non-penetrative sexual acts between men are punished with lashes until the fourth offense, when they are punished with death. Sexual acts between women, which are defined differently, are punished with lashes until the fourth offense, when they are also punished with death.

Officially, homosexuality does not exist in Iran, at least not according to its President, Mohammed Ahmedinejad who had this to say to an audience at Columbia University, last year:

“In Iran, we don’t have homosexuals. In Iran we don’t have this phenomenon. I don’t know who has told you we have it,”

Iran may not have any homosexuals, according to its current President, but it does have a population of around 20,000 transsexuals, courtesy of a fatwa issued by Ayatollah Khomeni in the 1960’s in which he took the view that transsexuality is a condition to be ‘cured’ by means of gender-reassignment surgery, which may all sound unusally enlightened (for Iran) unless one runs across reports of male homosexuals being pressured into undertaking reassignment surgery as an alternative to execution.

To give a somewhat more transparent account of Smith’s comments than the Indy, she is only giving the official line, as laid down by the Home Office’s Country Information and Policy Unit (CIPU) after they cribbed the ideas from a 2001 UNHCR/ACCORD report, as The Safra Project notes in its Country Information Report on Iran (pdf):

The UNHCR/ACCORD workshop report mentions that “individuals hiding their sexual orientation in public are most likely not at risk of persecution” .Moreover, the report suggests that it is “not difficult to encounter homosexuals in Iran in parks known to be meeting places”. In addition, the report states that “homosexuality is practised every day, and as long as this happens behind closed doors within your own four walls, and as long as people do not intend to proselytise ’transvestitism’ or homosexuality, they will most likely remain unharmed”.

However, as this same report notes, the CIPU’s guidance omits the next section of the UNCHR report:

The CIPU report however does not include the additional information in the UNHCR/ACCORD workshop stating that in assessing asylum applications “one should consider on a case by case basis how intolerable it is for the asylum seeker not to be able to openly express his/her sexual orientation, not only because of the social context but also because it is considered to be against the law and punishable by death”.

All of which neatly sums up the prevailing attitude here, which is that the UK’s commitment to basic human rights ends at Dover, hence Smith’s additional comments which note that:

“With particular regard to Iran, current case law handed down by the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal concludes that the evidence does not show a real risk of discovery of, or adverse action against gay and lesbian people who are discreet about their sexual orientation.”

In short, stay in the closet and you’ll be okay - well, enough to allow us to justify deporting you.

It’s difficult to know quite which element in all this is the more despicable; the “Sir Humprey’s” at the Home Office who seem to think that UNHCR’s recommendations are some sort of finger buffet from which they can pick and choose the elements that suit their desire to hit targets for deportations, or Smith’s unthinking parroting of the official line, which puts political expediency ahead of not only of Labour’s long-standing commitments to equality and human rights but ahead, even, of basic human compassion.

Clause 4 of Labour’s Constitution commits the party, amongst other things, to work for:

a just society, which judges its strength by the condition of the weak as much as the strong, provides security against fear, and justice at work; which nurtures families, promotes equality of opportunity, and delivers people from the tyranny of poverty, prejudice and the abuse of power.

That’s ‘delivers people from the tyranny of poverty, prejudice and the abuse of power’, Jacqui, not ‘delivers people into‘…

Jacqui Smith branded "offensive" by gay immigration group

From PinkNews

A group that works with lesbian and gay asylum seekers has said that the Home Secretary's assertion that gay men and lesbians who are "discreet" are not in danger in Iran is ill-informed and offensive.

The UK Lesbian and Gay Immigration Group (UKGLIG) was founded in 1993 to assist same-sex, bi-national couples win the right for foreign partners to remain in the United Kingdom.

For the last four years focused on the problems faced by lesbian and gay asylum seekers.

In the past year it has dealt with more than 200 people.

Executive director Sebastian Rocca told PinkNews.co.uk that he believes there are many more, some of whom are afraid to declare their sexuality to Home Office officials in case being open about their sexuality could put them in danger if they are returned.

The bulk of the people UKGLIG helps are from Iran, Iraq, Uganda, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Jamaica and Pakistan.

Mr Rocca said he was personally offended by Jacqui Smith's comments.

In a letter to Lib Dem peer Lord Roberts of Llandudno, published in The Independent yesterday, she said:

"With … regard to Iran, current case law handed down by the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal concludes that the evidence does not show a real risk of discovery of, or adverse action against gay and lesbian people who are discreet about their sexual orientation."

Mr Rocca said her comments showed an ignorance of what it means to be gay.

"Being gay is not just about sex, it is about being able to express who you are, walking the way you like, not having to change the tone of your voice, being able to talk about the things that interest you, be that interior design and not football.

"Asking gay men to go back to Iran and be "discreet," that is persecution in itself."

He said that the Home Secretary had not thought about what discreet means in this context.

"If you are a gay man and you go back, you have to get married to a woman - it's not acceptable to not be married.

"If you do not, that is one of the reasons why they can decide not to employ you or rent you an apartment - they will ask questions.

"I had a case where they keep refusing to get married and their family sent them to a psychiatrist."

Mr Rocha added that being "discreet" is effectively someone to be alone for the rest of their life.
"We have an obligation to protect lesbians and gay men," he added.

UKGLIG is helping 35 people from Iran at present.

Mr Rocha said that Home Office guidance had improved in recent years.

"They do consult with us quite often and they have improved the bulletin about Iran after consultation.

"The people we deal with are the people who prepare the country of origin reports that judges read when they make a decision about asylum.

"They're key to us."

Mr Rocha said it was difficult to understand how this concept of "discretion" would be factored into asylum appeals.

Monday, 23 June 2008

Jacqui Smith's statement: media release by LGBT Greens

Home Secretary ‘misled’ to claim safety of LGBT people returned to Iran
Urgent review of Home Office approaches to LGBT asylum needed

23.6.8
The Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith, does not consider Iranian LGBT asylum seekers to have fears of persecution if they are returned. According to Smith who has had correspondence with Lord Roberts of Llandudno published in a letter in today’s Independent, ‘evidence does not show a real risk of discovery of, or adverse action against gay and lesbian people who are discreet about their sexual orientation.’

In condemning the Home Secretary’s response, Phelim Mac Cafferty, media spokesperson for LGBT Greens stated:

“Jacqui Smith, Home Secretary, is playing a dangerous game with the lives of Iranian LGBT refugees: effectively she’s trying to rubbish the argument that LGBT people are being persecuted for their sexuality in Iran. Her claim that as long as people are ‘discreet’ a regime notorious for its treatment of LGBT people will somehow stop persecuting them is misled at best and homicidal at worst.

“Instead of this macho posturing from the Home Office on keeping asylum figures down, we desperately need a Home Secretary prepared to look the Iranian regime in the eyes and stand up for what’s right for LGBT people.

“Iranian LGBT refugees have fled from persecution and torture and we now need an urgent review of the services provided for all LGBT refugees. We need-

1. Compulsory training for all asylum staff on sexual-orientation and trans-awareness.
2. Explicit instructions to all immigration and asylum staff, and asylum judges, that homophobic and transphobic persecution are legitimate grounds for granting asylum.
3. Clearer and up-to-date guidance from the Home Office for asylum judges to reflect
the accurate scale of LGBT persecution throughout the world
4. Legal-aid funding for asylum claims need to be substantially increased."

Music and poetry event for Babi Badalov



An awareness raising event took place on 19th June for gay asylum seeker Babi Badalov. The evening of poetry and acoustic music was organised by the 'Keep Babi Safe in Cardiff' campaign, in collaboration with Welsh poet and playwright Patrick Jones.

The free event was held at Cardiff's Butetown History and Art Centre and was attended by around 60 people. There were contributions from Bethan Jenkins AM, poets Mike Jenkins and Mike Church, music from New State Radio and Lethargy and physical theatre by Gaijin- San.

The campaign has gained the support of Leanne Wood AM, Chris Bryant MP, Jenny Willot MP, Deputy Leader of Cardiff Council Neil McEvoy and Cardiff Council Leader Rodney Berman.

The campaign to keep Babi safe in Cardiff will continue to build upon the support shown at this event.


Great support for gay immigration group


Source: UKLGIG

Sir Ian McKellan and other illustrious guests support UK Lesbian and Gay Immigration Group fund raising evening

At a fund raising evening held on Friday 20 June, an illustrious group gathered to support UKLGIGs work on behalf of LGBT asylum seekers and same sex bi-national couples.

Sir Ian McKellan, Michael Cashman MEP, Evan Harris MP, Simon Hughes MP and Ben Summerskill spoke to an audience of over 100 people, emphasising the pressing need to help LGBT asylum seekers in the UK and also the need to change attitudes towards LGBT people around the world.

Sebastian Rocca, Executive Director of UKLGIG said: We are extremely grateful to be able to call upon the support of such inspirational people. Despite the constant pressure of raising funds, we will not only continue our very successful work in helping LGBT people obtain the sanctuary they deserve, but also ensure that LGBT issues are always considered and included in the Home Office agenda.

The evening was rounded off with moving testimony from an Iranian gay and a Jamaican lesbian asylum seeker, comedy from TetraFlap (a lesbian comedy duo) and a performance from Ngati Ranana London Maori Club.

Over the last year, UKLGIG has helped more than 200 LGBT asylum seekers by providing information on the asylum process, finding expert legal representation, providing research and a safe environment for mutual support and has continued to give support to bi-national same sex couples.

‘Discrete’ Gays Safe in Iran: Really Ms. Smith?


UKGayNews op-ed

It was enough to make anyone with a remote interest in gay men and women from Iran seeking refuge in the United Kingdom – and their problems with the Home Office – choke on their morning corn flakes.

“Iran Is Safe for ‘Discrete’ Gays, Says Jacqui Smith”, the headline in this morning’s The Independent informed us.

Robert Verkaik, the Indy’s legal editor who was the first to highlight in the ‘mainstream’ Press the plight of the then teenage gay Iranian Mehedi Kazemi, reported that Ms. Smith, the Home Secretary, had written to a Liberal Democrat Peer that gay and lesbian refuge-seekers can be safely deported to Iran as long as they live their lives “discreetly”.

Not only that, but she also said that there was no “real risk” of gay men and lesbians being discovered by the Iranian authorities or “adverse action” being taken against those who were “discreet” about their behaviour, Mr. Verkaik reported.

Frankly, we are wondering what planet Jacqui Smith is on.

No one expects Ms. Smith to know everything concerning her department. She has “advisors”, in the form of senior civil servants.

And as the TV series Yes Minister poignantly portrayed in every episode, these mandarins have a habit of getting their own way.

Perhaps the writer of the letter to the Peer was a Daily Mail-reading official who had never come across any of the background situation reports on Iran by likes of Amnesty International or Human Rights Watch.

Scott Long, the director of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights Program at Human Rights Watch, wrote in The Guardian on March 31 this year:

“The UK should recognise – as the Netherlands has done – that with a law prescribing death or torture for gay Iranians, they need not demonstrate the details of past persecution. Lift the burden of proof from Mehdi and his gay compatriots. End the threat of deportation.”

He also said that current policy of the Home Office “is a disastrous evasion of the UK's responsibilities under international law”.

To coincide with International Day Against Homophobia on May 17, Human Rights Watch added the Home Office to its annual “Hall of Shame” for its policy on the deportation of gay men and women back to less than sympathetic countries, often flouting international law.

The problem with the reasoning of the Home Office is that in all but one of the half dozen cases of gay Iranian men and women seeking refuge that UK Gay News knows about, arrived here having fled because the police were actually on their trail – and not for fearing that the police might one day be interested in their sexuality.

The one exception was Mr. Kazemi who was already in the UK completing his education on a student visa when he learned that his partner had been executed – but not before he had named Medhi.

Jacqui Smith, as the LGBT Greens suggest, is “playing a dangerous game” with the lives of gay Iranian refugees.

“Effectively she’s trying to rubbish the argument that LGBT people are being persecuted for their sexuality in Iran,” LGBT Greens spokesperson Phelim Mac Cafferty said this afternoon.

“Her claim that as long as people are ‘discreet’ a regime notorious for its treatment of LGBT people will somehow stop persecuting them is misled at best – and homicidal at worst.”

Campaigning group GayAsylumUK described the remarks by the Home Secretary in the letter to Lord Roberts as being “outrageous, shameful, inhumane and anti-gay”.

The astounding thing is that, almost four years ago Ms. Smith was in charge of steering the Civil Partnerships Bill through the House of Commons back in 2004 when she was the Women and Equality Minister.

UK Gay News would hazard a guess that Her Majesty’s Government is ‘running scared’ of the xenophobic and largely homophobic tabloid press when it comes to a fair policy on gay refuge seekers.

Who runs this country? The democratically elected Government, or the self-appointed tabloids that huff and puff – and are expert at creating mass hysteria?

LGBT asylum briefs

Leading US Liberal blog, AmericaBlog:
British Home Secretary: Iran safe for gays if they are "discreet"

An unheavenly silence on homophobia

Clerics at the Global Anglican Futures Conference have been slow to condemn violence against gay people. It's incredible, and unchristian

Homosexuality is illegal in Nigeria, Uganda and Kenya and is punishable by a fine, imprisonment or death. Archbishops from these countries were on the panel. They said they could not influence government policy on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) legislation, nor could they condone homosexual behaviour because their churches would be shut down.
Doug Ireland: Crackdown at AIDS Meeting
In the past two and a half years, LGBT Ugandans have been under increasing attack, by both leading government figures and the sensationalist media. A popular daily tabloid newspaper, Red Pepper, led outing campaigns in 2006 and 2007 in which it named more than 100 it said were gay or lesbian, printing descriptions of them, and describing their places of residence and employment. The gay-baiting media campaign forced many LGBT Ugandans out of their homes, [Sexual Minorities Uganda]'s [David] Kato told this reporter: "One guy was told by his landlord to move out because he was a criminal, and many others had to move away from their homes. Some of those who could left the country."
Gay Uganda: I am so Proud of My Boyfriend
"After school I came to Kampala to look for a job, and while I was working and growing up the issue [of being attracted to men] was going on. One time I happened to meet someone in town who was also like me. We talked, we talked; I understood that I was not alone. I knew I was gay, but being gay in Uganda, it is not easy. It has to be quiet - we are hiding."
Michael Petrelis: July 19 SF Vigil: Stop Iran's Gay Hangings, Global LGBT Solidarity
On Saturday, July 19, gays will assemble at Harvey Milk Plaza, located at Market and Castro Streets, from 12 noon till 1 pm, to call attention to the following issues and demands:
1. Remember the hanged gay Iranian teenagers, and all LGBT victims of hatred and bigotry around the world who've suffered violations of their human rights
2. Engage in coordinated global gay solidarity
3. Abolish the death penalty everywhere, and an especially quick end to executions of minors and women
4. Oppose foreign military intervention in Iran, particularly war-mongering by U.S. politicians.
(Iraq) Out of the gathering darkness
Two Iraqi lesbians, Amal and Zahra, were shot dead and decapitated as a result of their courageous concealment of six gay men, and a child that they had rescued from paedophile sex work. Amal and Zahra were only two members of Iraq's underground LGBT network of safe houses, which exists across Iraq, and tries to smuggle out LGBT Iraqis to Syria, Turkey and the European Union. In the latter, they can at least claim sanctuary as asylum seekers from their ordeal.
Scottish refugee film highlight of Edinburgh Festival
One character has been refused asylum so turns to a woman friend for help - although if she does help him her own life will be ruined. It also features an Iranian who poses as a gay man in order to claim refugee status while disguising the fact from his Iranian friends that he really is a homosexual.
Breaking News:Kill All Gays Jammeh Issues New Threats!! Iran Supports Jammeh’s Threats!!
Gambia’s President Yahya Jammeh is reported to have ordered his hit squad to kill gays and lesbians found in The Gambia, reveals competent official sources. The Presidential final directive was given last week, as his hit men have intensified night patrols around the Tourism Development Area with sole aim of killing suspected gays in the country. The President says he wants all gays dead in The Gambia. “ The President has given us directive to kill gays in The Gambia. Our men are currently patrolling the Tourism Development Area to search for gays soliciting sex from Gambians. The President has created an anti gay terror squad, whose main responsibility is to apprehend and kill gays in The country. This project is being funded by the Iranian Government. The Iranian Government has welcomed the President’s move to eradicate gay and lesbianism in The Gambia. Following the President’s threats to behead gays, Iran has announced its solidarity with The Gambia. Our men have been issued with a special budget to combat homosexuals in this country.” Said a highly placed source close to the President’s office in Banjul.

Tory MP attacks Home Secretary over Iran comments

Source: PinkNews

The Chairman of the Conservative Party's Human Rights Commission has added his voice to the chorus of criticism of Jacqui Smith after she claimed that gay people are in no danger in Iran as long as they are "discreet."

Stephen Crabb MP said that the Iranian regime's record of brutality towards sexual minorities is "dreadful" and the Islamic nation regularly uses torture and the death penalty.

Ms Smith, the Home Secretary, said in a letter to Lib Dem peer Lord Roberts of Llandudno that in Iran "the evidence does not show a real risk of discovery of or adverse action against gay and lesbian people who are discreet about their sexual orientation."

Mr Crabb said that most "fair-minded people" will be appalled by her comments.

"The Iranian regime has a dreadful track-record when it comes to the treatment of homosexuals and other minority groups and is more than willing to use torture and the death sentence to punish offenders.

"Asking minorities to live their lives discreetly is to give in to the tyrants and bullies who sustain their positions through fear and coerced conformity.

"It demonstrates both an unelevated view of the importance of human rights and cowardice in championing our own system of values."

The Green party has also criticised her and attacked the "macho posturing" of the Home Office.
Phelim Mac Cafferty, media spokesperson for LGBT Greens said:

"Jacqui Smith is playing a dangerous game with the lives of Iranian LGBT refugees: effectively she's trying to rubbish the argument that LGBT people are being persecuted for their sexuality in Iran.

"Her claim that as long as people are "discreet" a regime notorious for its treatment of LGBT people will somehow stop persecuting them is misled at best and homicidal at worst.

"Instead of this macho posturing from the Home Office on keeping asylum figures down, we desperately need a Home Secretary prepared to look the Iranian regime in the eyes and stand up for what’s right for LGBT people."

Stonewall chief executive Ben Summerskill had praised the Home Secretary earlier this year when she reviewed the case of Mehdi Kazemi.

The 20-year-old was due to be returned to Iran, where he claimed his boyfriend had been executed and police had a warrant for his arrest on homosexuality charges. He was given leave to remain in the UK.

Today he told The Independent:

"You only have to listen to people who were terrorised by the Metropolitan Police in the 1950s and 1960s to know that telling gay people to live discreetly is quixotic."

Respected human rights groups such as Amnesty and Human Rights Watch have documented scores of cases of Iranian gay men and lesbians being targeted, and sometimes executed, for homosexual behaviour.

Campaign group gayasylumuk called the Home Secretary's comments outrageous, shameful, inhumane and anti-gay and called for protesters to target the Prime Minister and the Labour party.

"We hope that gay and lesbian Labour voters in particular will consider changing their vote if the policy isn't changed before the next election," said spokesperson Paul Canning.

"This is one way to get the message through on their hypocrisy regarding lesbian and gay rights issues — when embassies in other countries are flying the rainbow flag they aren't doing this in Tehran, Kingston or Kampala."

In 2005 Iran sparked international outrage when it publicly executed two teenage boys.
Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni were hanged because according to the regime they were rapists, however gay campaigners insist the boys were killed under Sharia law for the crime of homosexuality.

At first it was claimed by Iranian officials that they were aged 18 and 19.

The best evidence is that both youths were aged 17 when they were executed and therefore minors, aged 15 or 16, at the time of their alleged crimes.

In March Lib Dem peer Lord Avebury drew to the government's attention the case of Makwan Mouloudzadeh, a 20-year-old who was executed in December 2007 for a homosexual offence allegedly committed when he was 13.

Last year information was released by the Foreign and Commonwealth office regarding the execution of gays in Iran.

The documentation took the form of correspondence sent between embassies throughout the EU and dates back as far as May 2005.

It refers specifically to the case of Mahmoud and Ayaz.

It also shows that although the two boys may not have been executed solely because of the homosexual aspect for the crime, the punishment was carried out "before all legal means to avoid the execution had been exhausted."

A further conversation between a Parliamentary Union and the Iranian Majles (legislative body) in May 2007 showed that "according to Islam gays and lesbianism were not permitted. He [an Iranian representative] said that if homosexual activity is in private there is no problem, but those in overt activity should be executed."

According to the transcript he initially said "torture" but changed the wording to "execution."

He also argued that "homosexuality is against human nature" and that "humans are here to reproduce. Homosexuals do not reproduce."

According to Iranian human rights campaigners, more than 4,000 lesbians and gay men have been executed since the Ayatollahs seized power in 1979.

gayasylumuk condemns "inhumane, anti-gay" Labour government

MEDIA RELEASE

23rd June, 2008

FOR IMMEDIATE USE

gayasylumuk condemns "inhumane, anti-gay" Labour government

The campaigning group gayaylumuk today called the comments of British Labour Home Secretary Jacqui Smith about retuning gays and lesbians to Iran "outrageous, shameful, inhumane and anti-gay".

In a letter to the LibDem MP Lord Roberts, Smith echoed government policy by claiming that it was safe to return people if they were "discreet".

Spokesperson, Paul Canning, said "we are calling for protest to be directed at Gordon Brown over the issue. Sign the petition."

"We hope that gay and lesbian Labour voters in particular will consider changing their vote if the policy isn't changed before the next election. This is one way to get the message through on their hypocrisy regarding lesbian and gay rights issues — when embassies in other countries are flying the rainbow flag they aren't doing this in Tehran, Kingston or Kampala."

Human Rights Watch (HRW), the respected international authority often quoted by the government, has documented the persecution and torture of gays and lesbians in Iran, where sex can attract the death penalty.

In March they issued an alert over the raiding of a private party in Ishfahan. In May the Home Office was added to their 'Hall of Shame'.

Scott Long of HRW said: "Torturing and killing gays is legal in Iran: you don't need to view the bodies to prove it. International law bars Britain from returning people to the risk of torture. Britain must give gay Iranians asylum."

"Human Rights Watch has shown how Britain tries to redefine its obligations on torture, so it can send people back to states where they face grave risk. Usually it happens in the context of counterterrorism. But with gay Iranians, too, the government aims to change the rules, denying that legal torture is "persecution"."

gayasylumuk believes that the number of such asylum seekers in the UK is small, maybe 30. Such small numbers is also the case in other countries.

"The Dutch experience shows that a proven, tested model exists of how to operate a humane asylum policy for gays and lesbians - and they haven't had a 'flood'", said Canning.

"Similar policy and practice exists in the United States, Canada and Sweden - why is the UK alone in being inhumane and disregarding international law?"

gayasylumuk countered the government's position, as restated in the Medhi Kazemi case in the House of Lords by the Home Office Minister, Lord West.

"We are extremely cautious about the way in which we treat these cases"
They have shown no evidence of caution. For a number of years they have consistently refused asylum to gays and lesbians and transgender people who would suffer persecution if returned, because that is their policy. Some of these people have committed suicide rather than be returned. There is a mass of evidence that Iran and other countries like Jamaica and Uganda are a 'deathzone'.

"We give detailed consideration to these cases"

This is not the experience of asylum seekers, and this is well documented. They do not consider the stated opinion of their own colleagues in the Foreign Office and never have. They misrepresent evidence of torture and systematic harassment by Human Rights Watch and other NGOs.

"They go through a rigorous appeals and court process"
As Smith has just reiterated, there is a Home Office policy that gays and lesbians can be returned if they are 'discreet'. Further, there is a history of the Home Office accepting bland assurances from the Iranian and other governments. Further, there is a lot of evidence of homophobic attitudes within the Appeals Court process.

"Obviously we have to follow and respect the integrity of that process"
Not if it is biased. Not if the outcome is guaranteed because of their (unstated) policy. There is no integrity to this process for gays and lesbians.

The group is calling on all British people outraged by government policy to sign the petition, established by Durham Methodist minister Walter Attwood, which says: 'we the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to stop deporting gays and lesbians to countries where they may be imprisoned, tortured or executed because of their sexuality'. to Gordon Brown (at http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/Stopdeportinggay/).

This petition says: 'we the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to stop deporting gays and lesbians to countries where they may be imprisoned, tortured or executed because of their sexuality'.

The petition has almost 3000 signatures but needs many more to achieve significance in the Number Ten petitions system, established by Downing Street to affect and inform policy.

gayasylumuk is a campaign group established by Omar Kuddas. It has supporters in the UK, USA, Europe and around the world.


A button promoting the petition to Gordon Brown, for use on websites and blogs, can also be found on our website.

~~~~~~

Independent: Iran is safe for 'discreet' gays, says Jacqui Smith

Friday, 20 June 2008

The World is an Unkind Place for Gay Refugees


Source UkGayNews

by Hossein Alizadeh

Just two years ago, Arash and Javad (not their real names), two young Iranian men were building their future together. Arash was pursuing a successful career in Iran's financial sector and Javad was a university student in Tehran. Now the men live in abject poverty in a remote area of Turkey.

They have no income and are frequently forced to scavenge for food in their neighbors' trashcans. Javad, a diabetic, needs regular monitoring and medication, which he cannot afford. His health has deteriorated to the point where he regularly suffers diabetic comas.
How did two young, upwardly mobile Iranians end up in such dire circumstances? The answer to this question is simple. Arash and Javad are gay men forced to flee their country as refugees.

According to the Iranian penal code, homosexual conduct is a crime that is punishable by death.
Arash and Javad met in 2005 and conducted their relationship in secrecy for over a year. But late in 2006, Javad's father caught them in an intimate act. Incensed at being dishonored, the ultra-religious man locked his son and his partner in the bedroom and rushed to the kitchen to get a knife, intending to kill them on the spot. Arash and Javad managed to escape through a window but knew that if they stayed in Iran either the mob or the morality police would soon catch up with them. Left with no choice, they fled to neighboring Turkey and applied for refugee status.

According to UN statistics, there are currently over 21,000 refugees in Turkey, 2,500 of whom are from Iran. Turkey is the preferred destination for many Iranian refugees because they do not have to get entry visas.

However, once gay refugees arrive in Turkey, the situation is bleak.

Due to the volume of applications, it normally takes up to two years for them to be reassigned to a country willing to accept them. During the transitional period, gay refugees are only allowed to live in small towns, without the right to work or pursue education.

While the UN Refugee Agency may provide some financial aid, the amount is nominal and before they are eligible they must be recognized as "genuine" refugees. This is a process with results that are not guaranteed.

Arash and Javad have been interviewed twice by the UN Refugee Agency since their arrival in Turkey in December 2006. So far they have not been recognized as refugees, and therefore they are not eligible for any financial or medical aid.

This can lead to destitution for gay refugees, like Arash and Javad, who are forced to leave their country to escape persecution and death.

Unlike other refugees, who travel in groups and enjoy various degrees of support from their family, church, or party members, gay and lesbian refugees are often disowned by their family members, have no support network, and in most cases do not have enough resources to survive the resettlement process.

The situation of gay refugees is complicated because the Turkish public and law enforcement agents are very hostile to sexual minorities, despite the fact that homosexuality is not a crime in Turkey.

In recent years, many gay and lesbian refugees have been subject to verbal and physical attacks. As a consequence, they are often forced to remain indoors during the day for their own safety, and venture outside only at night, under cover of dark, when they are less likely to be recognized as foreign and can more readily hide their sexual orientation.

Tragically, there is no organization that attends to the needs of gay and lesbian refugees worldwide.

The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, along with a few human rights and resettlement agencies, tries to respond to the refugee crisis but the overwhelming volume of cases makes it impossible to do without large-scale intervention.

The US government currently spends hundreds of thousands of dollars to resettle religious and ethnic minorities who are persecuted in their home countries. Isn't it time for our government to show some interest in protecting this vulnerable population, too?

Hossein Alizadeh, a gay Iranian who won asylum in the United States, is Communications Coordinator at the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission in New York.

World Refugee Day



Public Service Announcement by Angelina Jolie, a Goodwill Ambassador for UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency.

Sunday, 15 June 2008

Why we changed this website's name


This website was established to campaign for Mehdi Kazemi. We won 'leave to remain' for him but if Jacqui Smith can save Mehdi she can also save these other lesbians and gays from what would have been Mehdi's fate. You can help by telling her boss - Gordon Brown - this.

We need to change the government policy which led to Mehdi being denied asylum in the first place.

Please sign the petition to Gordon Brown to 'stop deporting gays and lesbians to countries where they may be imprisoned, tortured or executed because of their sexuality

gayasylumuk wants more to sign petition to Gordon Brown


MEDIA RELEASE
15TH June

FOR IMMEDIATE USE

gayasylumuk wants more to sign petition to Gordon Brown

The campaigning group gayaylumuk today called on all those moved by the plight of the 19-yo Iranian Mehdi Kazemi to support other lesbian and gay asylum seekers at risk of return to torture and possible death.

The group is calling on all British people outraged by government policy to sign the petition to Gordon Brown (at http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/Stopdeportinggay/).

This petition, established by Durham Methodist minister Walter Attwood, says: 'we the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to stop deporting gays and lesbians to countries where they may be imprisoned, tortured or executed because of their sexuality'.

The petition has almost 3000 signatures but needs many more to achieve significance in the Number Ten petitions system, established by Downing Street to affect and inform policy.

The group has also established an international petition to support Prossy Kakooza, a 26-year-old lesbian woman seeking asylum in the UK. She fled Uganda after suffering vicious sexual, physical and verbal attacks due to her sexual orientation. Her application has been refused with Prossy being told she can return and 'be discrete' when this is not an option in Uganda.

International petition for Prossy http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/ProssyKakooza/

We are also highlighting the cases of:

* Pegah Emambakhsh, an Iranian lesbian threatened by the British government with deportation to torture and possible death by stoning.
* Gay Syrian refugee JoJo Jako Yakob, who fled his homeland two years ago after being arrested, shot and beaten.
* Babakhan 'Babi' Badalov, a target of repression and persecution as an openly gay radical artist and poet in Azerbaijan.

Their claims for asylum has all been dismissed.

Spokesperson Paul Canning said, "LGBT refugees fleeing torture and possible murder are routinely being refused asylum because of UK government policy. This is at the same time as British embassy's abroad are flying the rainbow flag — it's hypocritical."

"Many other countries, such as Holland, the United States and Sweden do not treat LGBT asylum seekers this way and the evidence shows that there is no 'flood' if you adopt humane policies. The government needs to change its shameful attitude and we are calling on British people to tell them it is, indeed, shaming."

gayasylumuk is a campaign group established by Omar Kuddas. It has supporters in the UK, USA, Europe and around the world.

Further information about Prossy, Pegah, JoJo and Babi can be found on 'LGBT asylum news (formally Save Mehdi Kazemi)', the campaign's website http://www.medhikazemi.com

Further information on Rev. Walter Attwood http://www.durhamdeernessmethodist.org.uk/ministers.shtml

-- ENDS --

LGBT asylum briefs


Sex and the ayatollahs
When it comes to sex education, the Iranian authorities are anything but squeamish

Prossy Kakooza Must Stay!
New group for Facebook members

asylumlaw.org
New content on Sexual Minorities & HIV Status

Commentary: UK’s Gay Asylum Policy Is Crazy!
Queerty (USA) — There’s quite a queer contradiction in the United Kingdom’s gay policy.

Letter to the Ugandan Authorities Regarding Recent Arrest of LGBT Activists
Human Rights Watch

Land of no return
All across the country, communities are organising themselves to stop their friends and neighbours from being deported. From lobbying the Home Office to foiling dawn raids, the resistance will stop at nothing to keep failed asylum seekers safe in Britain.

The hell of being an asylum seeker
Meet Sergey. He's a doctor. He's also an asylum seeker who is forced to survive on £35 of Asda vouchers a week. Award-winning novelist Mark Haddon discovers the horror of being a refugee in the UK today.

Once again, Harmondsworth hunger strike broken violently

On Saturday, 5th April, between 5 and 6am, around 50 police in riot gear stormed the Harmondsworth immigration prison, near Heathrow, to break the detainees hunger strike who were protesting against the so-called fast track asylum system. They took 30 detainees away and most of them were put in solitary confinement or taken into normal prisons to prevent them from communicating with each other and the outside world. One detainee, who managed to contact supporters, said he was bruised all over his body, had injuries from handcuffs and a damaged ankle. He also reported that he saw another detainee being violently 'manhandled' by police.

The detainees' peaceful protest had started at 9am on April 1st, with mass food refusal by almost all of the detainees in the so-called immigration removal centre. Later, they also occupied the courtyard and around 120 of them remained there all night. A petition, with 116 signatures, has been sent to the European Court of Human Rights, John McDonnell MP and others (see also supporters' press release).

Canadian immigration bill will impact LGBT refugees


TORONTO, ON (CNW) — Canada is one of the top three countries in the world that lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual/transgender (LGBT) people come to looking for asylum. Often fleeing violence and persecution in their home countries, LGBT immigrants and refugees view Canada as a safe-haven where diversity and tolerance are viewed as the norm.

In commemoration of World Refugee Day, the 519 Church Street Community Centre is hosting Refugee Pride on June 20th from 6:30 to 8:00pm. The event will feature a forum to discuss the federal government’s changes to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (Bill C-50) and its impact on LGBT refugees in Toronto.

Guest speaker’s including EGALE’s Helen Kennedy, human rights activist El-Farouk Khaki, and film director Leo Zuniga will present their views on the controversial new changes to Canada’s immigration and refugee policies for LGBT people. Volunteers and members of the 519’s peer refugee support group will offer insight into how changes in the legislation may affect their communities.

“We’re excited to provide a forum for LGBT refugees and immigrants to celebrate Pride while learning about how changes in the laws may affect them,” says the 519s Diego Macias, Among Friends Volunteer Coordinator of the Centre’s Immigrant and Refugee Project. “It is often very difficult to navigate a new country and we are extremely happy to launch our Among Friends LGBT Resource Manual, at Refugee Pride, which offers resources for immigrants and refugees settling in the city.”

In addition to the panel, Leo Zuniga’s Short Film “Seeking Conclusion!” will be screened which follows a young gay man’s struggle to learn the outcome of his immigration claim. The event will be held at the 519 Church Street Community Centre and is free and open to the public.

LGBT asylum group gets financial award


UK Lesbian and Gay Immigration Group (UKLGIG) has been awarded £5000 for its work in supporting LGBT people seeking refuge in the UK.

“UKLGIG are very concerned by reports of LGBT asylum seekers being harassed, humiliated and forced into extreme isolation,” Sebastian Rocca, executive director of UKLGIG, said this afternoon.

“When detained, LGBT asylum seekers face a real risk of being abused and harassed because of their sexuality or gender identity,” he pointed out.

“The detention system does not take account of the needs of LGBT asylum seekers. For example, transmen are being detained in Yarl’s Wood – a female-only detention centre, gay men are forced to live with other detainees from their country of origin who often hold the same the homophobic views as the society they are escaping from.”

In order to combat the extreme isolation that LGBT refugee seekers face and offer them support, UK Lesbian and Gay Immigration Group now regularly visits those held in detention centres.

The work is run by volunteers and is now funded by the £5,000 grant from the lottery distributor Awards for All.

UKLGIG was founded in 1993 to assist same‑sex, bi‑national couples win the right for foreign partners to remain in the United Kingdom on the basis of their relationship.

The work of the group resulted in the first ever legislation in this country giving rights to lesbians and gay men. From 1997 the group achieved increasing steps towards equality and with many of its recommendations being included in the Civil Partnership Act.

Immigration equality for same‑sex partners was finally achieved in December 2005.

Since 2004, UKLGIG has shifted its focus towards the problems faced by lesbian and gay refugee seekers.

The group is receiving more and more calls for help from lesbians and gay men seeking the protection of the UK, because they are persecuted in their home country.

There is currently very little support available for them and the group’s asylum seeker project is a vital lifeline – a place to meet others struggling with similar issues, a source of quality legal advice, of support and importantly of hope.

source: UKGayNews

Severe threats to Ugandan LGBT


Ugandan bishop attacks European attitude towards gays

An Anglican bishop has urged the government of Uganda to keep homosexuality illegal.
Eria Paul Luzinda of the Mukono diocese said that "not all that comes from Europe is superior and must be taken up."

"I have been hearing that gays are demanding that the government should legalise their activities," Bishop Luzinda said, according to the Daily Monitor.

"This is absurd because God created a man and woman so that they can produce and fill this world.

"The government should not be tempted to legalise this backward culture which is bound to destroy this country."

In 2007 Bishop Luzinda condemned the decriminalisation of adultery by the Ugandan Constitutional Court.

Last week three gay rights activists forced their way into an international conference about HIV/AIDS prevention in Uganda.

Their protest was sparked when the head of Uganda's AIDS commission said that gay people are driving up the number of infections in the country, but would not be targeted with prevention work.

The international meeting was organised by an international group including the US, the World Bank, the UN.

More than a million of Uganda's 27 million people are already HIV+.

The three protesters have been released from jail but are to face charges.

Uganda's penal code carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment for homosexual conduct, while 'attempts' at carnal knowledge get seven years of imprisonment.

A poll in August 2007 found that 95% of Ugandans want homosexual acts to remain illegal.
Government officials have regularly threatened and harassed lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Ugandans.

In 2005 Uganda became the first country in the world to introduce laws banning same-sex marriage.

Last summer an organisation called Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG), a coalition of four LGBT organisations, launched a campaign called "Let us Live in Peace."

At a press conference in Kampala the group condemned discrimination and violence against LGBT people, as well as the life-threatening silence about their sexualities in HIV/AIDS prevention programmes.

In response, Ethics and Integrity Minister James Nsaba Buturo told the BBC that homosexuality was "unnatural."

He denied charges of police harassment of LGBT people, but also declared, "We know them, we have details of who they are."

In response to the SMUG press conference the first anti-gay rally in the country's history and was organised by the Uganda Joint Christian Council.

UJCC member churches include the Roman Catholic and Anglican Church of Uganda.

Source: clericalwhispers


Thursday, 12 June 2008

Another gay asylum seeker at risk, refused asylum


A new campaign has been lauched for a gay Azerbaijani asylum seeker from Cardiff.

Babakhan Badalov, (Babi) is an openly gay, internationally renowned radical artist and poet from Azerbaijan. His art and poetry have been explicitly critical of the government and prominent members of present/past regimes. These factors have led Babi to become a target of repression and persecution over many years.

Because of his sexuality and the radical nature of his creative activities, he has endured government-led suppression together with physical and mental abuse from other sectors of society. All this has taken place in a Muslim country, where homosexuality remains an extremely taboo subject. This led one of Babi’s brothers to threaten to kill him because of the shame which he has brought on the family.

As a result of beatings and bullying over the years Babi has only eight teeth remaining and suffers from a number of mental health problems

Since arriving in Cardiff in December 2006, Babi has engaged fully with various parts of the local community and has made many friends in his new home. He is still producing poetry, is writing a book about his art/gay life experiences and is also working on a film addressing the rise of Muslim fundamentalism. This latter work, as well as many other aspects of his art, would of course be impossible in his country of origin.

For the first time in his life, Babi felt happy and safe in Cardiff. He felt able to openly express himself artistically, politically and with regard to his sexuality, without associated feelings of fear, shame and imminent repression.

Babi’s claim for asylum has recently been dismissed by the home office. If he is forced to return to Azerbaijan he faces an uncertain and unhappy future. He will undoubtedly face severe persecution, from the state, community and family.

What you can do to help Babi stay

Use this model letter: babi-badalov-model-campaign-letter to copy/amend or write your own letter to the Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith, asking her to allow Babi to stay safe in Cardiff.

Hand-written letters can be more effective, if you have the time. Remember to quote the Home Office ref. number: B1234623

Send to:
Rt Hon Jacqui Smith MP
Secretary of State for the Home Department
3rd Floor Peel Buildings
2 Marsham Street
London
SW1P 4DF

-Fax: 020 8760 3132 (00 44 20 8760 3132 if you are faxing from outside UK)
-E-mail: jacqui.smith@homeoffice.gov.uk
-Sign the online petition here: http://www.petitiononline.com/badalov/petition.html
-Collect signatures using this Babi campaign petition
-Distribute information about the campaign using the Babi campaign flyer

Please send any copies of letters/faxes to:
Friends of Babi Badalov
c/o Refugee Voice Wales
389 Newport Road
Cardiff
CF24 1TP

or let us know of any e-mails, faxes or letters you’ve sent by e-mailing us at: keep_babi_safe_in_cardiff@yahoo.co.uk

Tuesday, 10 June 2008

Foreign Office Gets ‘Gay’ Kudos While Home Office Remains ‘Not Fit for Purpose’


HM Ambassador Ric Todd raising the rainbow flag over the British Embassy building on Aleje Ujazdowskie, Warsaw on 6 June.

Commentary from UK Gay News

Gay men and women seeking refuge in UK still get rough deal as Rainbow Flag flies on embassies

Over the past week, the UK Government has earned itself considerable praise world-wide after flying ‘Rainbow Flags’ on two embassies in Eastern Europe during Gay Prides in Latvia and Poland.

Yet while the two flags were proudly flying on embassies in Riga and Warsaw, there are gay men and women who are seeking sanctuary in the United Kingdom, having fled their countries under threat of execution or lengthy imprisonment because of their sexuality.

And they are not being given a fair and compassionate hearing.

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office, headed by David Miliband, should be commended on its work in the LGBT rights field overseas. It’s recently-publish guidelines made a refreshing change.

But while the FCO takes justifiable praise, the Home Office remains, in those immortal words uttered by a Home Secretary of a couple of years ago, “not fit for purpose” when it comes to considering applications for refuge from gay men and women.

Thanks to campaigners, and considerable publicity on his case in the Scotland on Sunday newspaper, nineteen year old gay Syrian Jojo Jako Yakobv has had his “day in court” (an immigration appeals tribunal) and has been released from a young offenders centre on orders from the tribunal.

But what was Jojo doing in a young offenders centre in the first place? What “offence” has he committed?

While it is still not certain that he will be granted refuge in the UK, things are looking far more hopeful that they were a month ago.

But for Ugandan lesbian Prossy Kakooza, things are not so good.

She arrived in the UK in July last year, having fled her country after being severely beaten and burned by police purely on the grounds of her sexuality. In addition she was repeatedly raped while in custody.

Such were her injuries that when she sought medical help on arrival in UK doctors were so shocked at the extent of her injuries that the police were called.

Prossy left behind a girlfriend who is still believed to be in detention in Uganda.

The Home Office accepts that Prossy was brutally raped and burned. Yet they want to deport her back to Uganda, saying that she can settle in another town.

But a phone call to the FCO would probably tell the Home Office that there is little freedom of movement in Uganda, as we enjoy in Europe, and that a person wishing to relocate needs what amounts to a “reference” from one’s home town or village.

Meanwhile, Prossy, a 26 year old university educated Ugandan lesbian, lives in fear of deportation, via Yarl’s Wood, to Kampala.

The Metropolitan Community Church in Manchester has started a campaign “Prossy Must Stay”, and her story, and how you can help, can be read HERE.

The Home Office certainly needs to answer some questions. Do they ever consult the Foreign and Commonwealth Office about situations in “problem countries” when it comes to matters of sexuality? Do they even read the “situation reports” published by such respected human rights groups as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch?

From judgements and reasons given for deportation to gay and lesbian refugee applicants – not to mention a statement in the House of Lords by a Home Office Minister a few months ago, it would seem doubtful.

UK Gay News has actually heard an immigration appeal tribunal in Birmingham tell a gay Iranian, who fled his country when the ‘religious police’ knocked on the door of his home to arrest him, that he should be returned to Iran where he could make an “application to the British Embassy in the usual way”.

And in another case involving an Iranian, a tribunal questioned the discrepancy in dates on an application and accompanying paperwork, refusing to believe that the calendar used is not the same as used in the West. Application was refused.

There might be very good reason why some applications from refugees are turned down. And it is accepted that this can be a very emotive subject.

But from where UK Gay News stands, it looks as though the Home Office is making decisions, sometimes literally life or death, to hit deportation targets, which in turn pleases the UK tabloids.
At the end of the day, the UK is not ruled by the largely xenophobic and anti-gay tabloid press.

The government should return to the traditional “British way” of compassion based on fairness and forget the emotive and ‘anti’ language of the tabloids.

One can but hope that the lead taken by David Miliband at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office is noted – and acted upon – by Jacqui Smith at the Home Office.

Monday, 9 June 2008

Gay Immigration Group Wins Funding to Assist LGBT Refugee Seekers

Source: UK Gay News

wards for All, which distributes lottery funding to ‘good causes’ has awarded a £5,000 grant to the UK Lesbian and Gay Immigration Group (UKLGIG) for its work in supporting LGBT people seeking refuge in the UK.
“UKLGIG are very concerned by reports of LGBT asylum seekers being harassed, humiliated and forced into extreme isolation,” Sebastian Rocca, executive director of UKLGIG, said this afternoon.
“When detained, LGBT asylum seekers face a real risk of being abused and harassed because of their sexuality or gender identity,” he pointed out.
“The detention system does not take account of the needs of LGBT asylum seekers.  For example, transmen are being detained in Yarl’s Wood – a female-only detention centre, gay men are forced to live with other detainees from their country of origin who often hold the same the homophobic views as the society they are escaping from.”
In order to combat the extreme isolation that LGBT refugee seekers face and offer them support, UK Lesbian and Gay Immigration Group now regularly visits those held in detention centres.
The work is run by volunteers and is now funded by the £5,000 grant from the lottery distributor Awards for All.
UKLGIG was founded in 1993 to assist same‑sex, bi‑national couples win the right for foreign partners to remain in the United Kingdom on the basis of their relationship.
The work of the group resulted in the first ever legislation in this country giving rights to lesbians and gay men.  From 1997 the group achieved increasing steps towards equality and with many of its recommendations being included in the Civil Partnership Act.
Immigration equality for same‑sex partners was finally achieved in December 2005.
Since 2004, UKLGIG has shifted its focus towards the problems faced by lesbian and gay refugee seekers.
The group is receiving more and more calls for help from lesbians and gay men seeking the protection of the UK, because they are persecuted in their home country.
There is currently very little support available for them and the group’s asylum seeker project is a vital lifeline – a place to meet others struggling with similar issues, a source of quality legal advice, of support and importantly of hope.

Sunday, 8 June 2008

Ahmadinejad meets gay protest in Rome



Mahmud Ahmadinejad’s visit to the food crisis summit in Rome on June 3 ended in failure as the Iranian president united the entire Italian political class against himself. His inflammatory rhetoric found no audience as even the left was appalled by his hysterical anti-Israel outbursts.
Ahmadinejad had to take the first blow before his ill-fated journey had even begun. A week ahead of the summit the Iranian leader had asked for an audience with Pope Benedict XVI. The Vatican kept him waiting for some time and then announced on Saturday that no such meeting would take place. Prior to that, Italy’s prime minister Silvio Berlusconi and foreign minister Franco Frattini had already declared that they would have no time for a meeting with Ahmadinejad.

Unable to arrange a high-profile encounter in Rome, the Iranian president managed to make headlines by yet again asserting his desire to destroy Israel. This turned out to be a strategic mistake. It forced all parts of the political spectrum to express their dismay at Ahmadinejad’s visit. The Iranian president’s message was so blunt and uncompromising that even critics of Israel felt the need to come to its defense.

Before taking off to Rome Ahmadinajed affirmed that “Israel is now at its end and will soon be wiped out from the maps of the earth.” As if that were not enough he also predicted that “the time for the fall and the annihilation of the satanic power of the United States has begun.” His vitriol mobilized anti-Mullah activists in Italy. On the day of the summit two main protests were organized; one taking place in the afternoon on the Spanish Steps and the other on the Capitol Hill in front of the mayor’s office in the evening.

The mayor, Gianni Alemanno, himself, spoke against Ahmadinejad’s presence in the eternal city and he was followed by many prominent exponents of both the center-right and center-left. It was not only the Jewish community in Rome and supporters of the state of Israel who joined the protests. Also present were Iranian dissidents, trade unionists, gay associations, human rights groups as well as many other people who demonstrated against the autocratic nature and nuclear ambitions of the regime.

It is unusual to see such a united cross-party front in the Italian political scenery. While government and opposition differ notably in their foreign policy prescriptions, the opposition Democratic Party (PD) did on this occasion not deviate from the line taken by the center-right. Former mayor and leader of the PD, Walter Veltroni, said that Ahmadinejad “should be aware of the repulsion felt by the Italian people and the international community” against his remarks.

The Iranian leader’s public relations failure was compounded by an incident which also throws a dubious light on the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) which was organizing the food crisis summit: Ahmat Rafat, a prominent journalist of Iranian origin, was denied entry to the FAO conference only because he is known to be a critic of the Iranian regime. Speaking later at the protest on the Capitol Hill, Rafat expressed his anger that the censorship of Teheran’s regime was even reaching as far as Rome. But this time the censorship backfired. The incident was widely reported on the Italian media and again highlighted the inability of the regime to deal with dissent. At the same time, the FAO was criticized for its handling of the matter.

Ahmadinejad’s ignoble trip to Rome should show him that Italy will lend no ear to his delirious verbal outbursts. But it also raises a question about what UN conferences can really achieve if such individuals are invited.

Source: L'occidentale

Uganda: Amnesty International condemns attacks against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people


AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC STATEMENT

June 4th 2008

Amnesty International is concerned at continuing harassment and attacks on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) human rights defenders in Uganda, and today called on the Government of Uganda to ensure the safety of LGBT human rights defenders in Uganda and to end the harassment of LGBT people by Ugandan police officers.

On 4 June 2008, three LGBT human rights defenders were arbitrarily arrested after a group of seven activists from Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG) distributed a press release to people attending the HIV/AIDS Implementers’ Meeting at the Imperial Royal Hotel in Kampala. The press release and an accompanying report outlined their organisation’s call for HIV prevention programmes for the LGBT community in Uganda.

The three activists were arrested by police officers at the hotel, including one who was reportedly a participant in the meeting, and as of 4 pm on 4 June 2008 were still being held at Jinja Road Police Station in Kampala for questioning.

Amnesty International condemns the arbitrary arrest of these individuals, and is concerned that they may face harassment and degrading treatment in custody as such practices is common against LGBT people in Ugandan police stations. Amnesty International said that the three activists are prisoners of conscience, detained for their peaceful activism for the rights of LGBT people to treatment and prevention measures for HIV/AIDS, and should be released immediately and unconditionally.

These arbitrary arrests follow the recent arbitrary detention and mistreatment while in custody of two transgender individuals in Kampala. On 20 May 2008, the two were dancing at Capital Pub in Kampala, Uganda, when they were detained by club bouncers, harassed and beaten while being asked whether they were men or women, and “accused” of being homosexuals. The club management of Capital Pub called the police, who detained both individuals for four days at Kabalagala Police station. During their detention, both were repeatedly beaten by police officers, and one was kissed, fondled and forcefully propositioned for sex by other detainees, and stripped and had their genitals groped by a police officer. One of the two was denied medical treatment for diabetes, and allowed only one meal a day. After their release on bond, both individuals were charged with public nuisance, and are currently awaiting trial.

Since their release, both individuals have faced harassment and violent attacks from individuals in their neighbourhood who were informed by police of their gender identity. These started with threats and escalated to a serious violent attack on the night of 3 June in Old Kampala, where a group of youths attacked both individuals. One of the attackers has since been arrested by police. Amnesty International calls for this attack to be investigated and any perpetrators brought to justice through fair trials.

Prossy Kakooza Must Stay



Prossy Kakooza is a 26-year-old woman seeking asylum in the UK. She fled Uganda after suffering vicious sexual, physical and verbal attacks due to her sexual orientation.

Prossy had been forced into an engagement when her family discovered her relationship with the girlfriend she met at university, Leah. Both women were marched two miles naked to the police station, where they were locked up.

Prossy’s inmates subjected her to gross acts of humiliation. She was violently raped by police officers who taunted her with derogatory comments like ‘’we’ll show you what you’re missing’’ and ‘’you’re only this way because you haven’t met a real man’’. She was also scalded on her thighs with hot meat skewers.

Prossy was eventually taken out of prison after her father bribed the guards. Her family had decided they would sacrifice her instead, believing this would ‘’take the curse away from the family’’.

Whilst her family were making arrangements to slaughter her, Prossy managed to flee to the United Kingdom to seek asylum.

When Prossy went for treatment to her local GP’s surgery in the UK they were so shocked by the extent of her injuries they called the police.

She was taken to the St. Mary’s Centre in Manchester, and she is still receiving counselling there for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

Prossy’s asylum application has been refused by the Home Office, who acknowledge she was brutally raped and burnt because of the medical evidence, but have dismissed these appalling attacks as ‘’the random actions of individuals’’, and state she can be returned to a different town in Uganda.

This judgement ignores the clear danger to gay people throughout the country where the penalty for homosexuality is life imprisonment.

Also, in Uganda, you cannot settle in a new town without a reference from your previous village, and on the basis she is a lesbian, Prossy would be subjected to similar persecution wherever she went.

We consider that if Prossy is sent back, she faces the continuing threat of incarceration, and further sickening attacks - which next time may be fatal.

Prossy is a highly educated woman who can be a productive member of society.

She has a right to be free with her sexuality, which is causing no harm to anyone, and she has a right not to be raped, attacked, or murdered.

How you can help

1. Download the petition, get it signed by yourself, your family, friends, work colleagues, drinking buddies and anyone else you know! Please return the petition to us so we can send it off to the Home Office - our address is at the bottom of the petition.

2. Write to Liam Byrne, the Minister of State for Borders and Immigration within the Home Office, copying the letter to us and any reply you receive. You can see a sample letter here.

You can email the Minister at this address:
Privateoffice.external@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk

Please ensure you put FAO Liam Byrne, Minister in the subject line. You could base the content of your message on the sample letter provided via the link above.

Or fax your letter to him on 0870 336 9034,
or write to him at:

Mr Liam Byrne
Minister of State for Borders and Immigration
Home Office
3rd Floor, Peel Buildings
2 Marsham St
London SW1 4DF

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