Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 December 2011

Gay diaspora Malaysian threatened by government, Muslim groups


AriffSource: Towleroad

Ariff Alfian Rosli, a Malaysian national who has been studying in Ireland for eight years, is under fire from his home country after photos were published showing his wedding to his civil partner (identified only as Jonathan) at Dublin City Hall, the Irish Times reports:

The pictures were published on the front pages of some local newspapers and have been the source of criticism from numerous political groups in Malaysia, where same-sex sexual relationships are illegal and punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

The Malaysian police have been urged by Muslim groups to investigate the issue on the basis that Mr Rosli has failed to adhere to the country’s Islamic laws. The controversy has prompted the Malaysian prime minister’s office to issue a statement pledging to investigate the matter.

An official from Malaysia’s ruling political party is reportedly due to arrive in Dublin later this week to convince Mr Rosli to return home.

Said Rosli:

“I am not missing. The Irish authorities know I am legally resident here. The Malaysian embassy has also been aware for several years that I am residing here legally. I feel I have have been inadvertently thrust into the public eye. I just want to get by without upsetting anyone or causing any trouble. My overriding concern is for my family.”

The Malaysian Insider reports:

Local criticism of the same-sex union has been swift and harsh, with mainly Muslim users attacking Ariff Alfian on Twitter for straying from Islam and dishonouring his family.

“Ariff Alfian Rosli is a disgrace! Rot in hell!” user @DTOTHEZAK wrote on the popular micro-blogging site.

Another user, @shkyla, wrote: “Looking at those wedding pictures of Ariff Alfian, makes me want to vomit. Blergh, disgusting.”

Muslim groups have also been quick to condemn Ariff Alfian, with the Kepong Islamic Youth Organisation (PBIK) lodging a police report yesterday over his alleged failure to adhere to Malaysia’s Islamic laws. Other critics have taken a different tack, preferring instead to “rehabilitate” what they saw as a Muslim who had strayed far from the teachings of Islam. This includes the Facebook group, “The Campaign to Bring Ariff Alfian Rosli Home to Malaysia to Save His Faith”, which was set up on Saturday.

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Monday, 19 September 2011

Video: In Ireland, a roadmap for reform of asylum system


Launch of Roadmap for Asylum Reform from Irish Refugee Council on Vimeo.


Launch of Roadmap for Asylum Reform - q+a from Irish Refugee Council on Vimeo.

Source: Irish Refugee Council

Mrs. Justice Catherine McGuiness launched the Irish Refugee Council’s roadmap for reform of the asylum system in Dublin 13 September. ‘Roadmap for Asylum Reform’ sets out how efficiency and fairness could be injected into the asylum and protection systems by introducing a single protection system, investing in early legal advice and creating a new appeals body that could deal with both protection and immigration cases.

Catherine McGuinness said:

“For many years, I have watched with concern how the lack of fair procedures and transparency, especially in the appeals process, has meant that justice has not always been done within the asylum process. The proposals contained in this document would lead to more sustainable and just decisions. This means that decisions would not be subject to costly challenges and the burden on the courts would be reduced.”
The Irish Refugee Council (IRC) claims that the current protection system bears an unnecessary human and financial cost. The proposals in ‘Roadmap for Asylum Reform’ are targeted at ending the misery and needless waste of public funds inherent in the current system.

Sue Conlan, Chief Executive of the IRC said:
“Following best practice in other countries, we propose investing in legal assistance and representation at the initial decision-making stage. By ensuring that all the relevant information is placed before the decision-maker at the earliest opportunity, the number of challenges to decisions and therefore, the overall costs in legal aid, legal fees and in providing accommodation for those claiming asylum would be reduced.”
The IRC also proposes a new appeals body that would have jurisdiction to hear appeals on both protection and immigration matters. This would replace the current Refugee Appeals Tribunal and fulfil the commitment in the Programme for Government to create a statutory appeals mechanism to deal with immigration decisions. According to the IRC, the current appeals body does not represent an effective remedy.

“The appeals system proposed in the Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill 2010 bears little difference to the current Tribunal and fails to introduce the checks and balances needed to create an effective remedy. Independent appointment of Tribunal members, clear procedural rules and the publication of Tribunal decisions are key to an effective appeals body,” says Sue Conlan.

The Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill is due to come before the Justice Committee in the new Dáil term.

The Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill 2010 was at Committee Stage when the last Dáil was dissolved. In July 2011, Minister for Justice, Alan Shatter TD, announced that the Bill would be returned to Committee Stage in the autumn with over 300 amendments.

Programme for National Government 2011: Passports, Citizenship, Immigration and Asylum
“We will introduce comprehensive reforms of the immigration, residency and asylum systems, which will include a statutory appeals system and set out rights and obligations in a transparent way. We will provide for the efficient processing and determination of citizenship applications within a reasonable time.”

Roadmap for Asylum Reform in Ireland

Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Ugandan activist inspires in Northern Ireland

Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesera opening Foyle Pride, Derry, Northern Ireland

By Michael Carchrie Campbell

You are facing arrest at any time, there are death threats published in newspapers concerning you, you are forced to move home frequently as it is unsafe not to do so, and all because of those that you love.

This is the sad, unfortunate, and unacceptable life that 25 August’s speaker at the Amnesty International Belfast Pride Lecture 2011 faces every day of her life in her own country. She says:
"I love my country, I want to live in it. There is nowhere else I want to live."
But it seems that many in the Parliament of her country do not want her there. We were shown many photographs of protests across her country against ‘same-sex marriage’ and ‘sodomy’. We, here in Belfast, could almost hear the ‘Save Ulster from Sodomy‘ campaign of the now Lord Bannside resounding back at us through another medium.

Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesera was inspirational when she talked of the struggle for freedoms that we in Northern Ireland and across Europe tend to take for granted.

She talked about how it is important for her security and of all the gay community to be ensured:
"We need to be careful – we’re better activists alive than dead."

Wednesday, 17 August 2011

UK denies leading Ugandan LGBT activist a visa

Kasha
By Paul Canning

Update, 22 August: Kasha was today granted a visa to visit Northern Ireland. When reapplying in Kampala she reports it being granted extremely quickly.

We understand that there has been significant lobbying regarding the previous visa denial, in particular of the UK Foreign Office.

In addition to opening the Pride Festival in Derry on Saturday, Kasha will also give a speech to Amnesty International in Belfast on Thursday. 13 August she gave an extremely well received speech to Amnesty's International Council meeting in Geneva (see video of that speech).

~~~

The British government has denied a visa to Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesra, a leading LGBT activist in Uganda and the 2011 winner of the prestigious Martin Ennals award for Human Rights.

She had been invited to open Foyle Pride in Derry, Northern Ireland, 24 August.

According to Foyle Pride she:
"was refused entry into the UK over concerns over her financial status at home in Uganda, a query which has never arisen before, making the UK the only country in her international tour to deny this inspirational character entry."
Kasha said:
"It's a pity that they would think that I am interested in staying in the UK. I have a mission unaccomplished and that is why I am still in Uganda."
UPDATE: A UKBA spokesperson provided the following statement:
"Each application to enter the UK is considered on its individual merits and in accordance with the immigration rules”. 
"The onus is on the applicant to demonstrate that they meet the immigration rules. This may include providing evidence of financial ties to their home country which would indicate that they intend to return home at the end of their proposed visit."

"Our rules are firm but fair and where insufficient evidence is provided visa applications may be refused, though the individual is able to apply again at any time and any new evidence will be considered."
UPDATE: We asked the Home Office (who lead on foreign policy implications of visa decisions according to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office):
Is the Home Office concerned on how the denial of this visa will be perceived internationally as undermining the government's expressed support for LGBT rights in countries such as Uganda? Support which was underlined by the Prime Minister in June?

Given that she has traveled to numerous countries and returned to Uganda to continue her work there, why would the UK believe that she would abandon this and remain in the UK as opposed to any of these other countries?
A UK Border Agency spokesperson said:
"The UK’s reputation for supporting those seeking protection on the grounds of sexual orientation is not in doubt.

"In June 2010, the Government published ‘Working for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Equality’ which outlined commitments to advance equality for LGB&T people including on asylum and to use the UK’s relationship with other countries to push for unequivocal support for gay rights abroad.

"This includes a commitment to proactively question countries who retain homophobic legislation.  However, the onus is on the applicant to demonstrate that they meet the immigration rules.

"This may include providing evidence of financial ties to their home country which would indicate that they intend to return home at the end of their proposed visit. We make visa decisions on a case by case basis according to the immigration rules."

Nabagesera is a prominent and visible lesbian activist in Uganda. In May she debated the lead author of the 'kill gays' bill, MP David Bahati on Voice of America television. She has faced slander and death threats and says she has to move from house-to-house as a result.

She spoke last weekend at an international meeting of Amnesty International, giving a speech which impressed those who heard it, including Amnesty Head Salil Shetty. Previously she had attended Pride in Rome and has traveled extensively internationally to give speeches about the situation in Uganda.

Last month the offices of the group she leads, Freedom and Roam Uganda (FARUG), was burgled in what many saw as a suspicious way. This did not stop the launch of a major anti-hate campaign last week in Uganda, which FARUG and Nabagesera led.

Sha Gillespie, chairperson of Foyle Pride, said:
"As a city still evolving and dealing with the legacy of the past, Kasha’s message and story is of particular importance and relevance and inspirational for our wider community to hear."
"Foyle Pride has invested heavily in bringing Kasha to Derry despite having a very limited budget and relying on donations and the support of local businesses, money and resources that will now be lost."

"I can’t understand why the UK is the only country to deny her entry and deny the opportunity for the people of Derry and Northern Ireland as a whole the chance to hear this inspirational woman speak. We intend to publish an online petition on our facebook page and urge everyone to go and register their disgust. Gay Rights have come a long way in this country but actions like this demonstrate how far they need to come. Despite this setback, I and the rest of the Foyle Pride committee remain committed to putting on a fantastic festival and welcome everyone to attend."
Last year saw the first gay pride parade on the streets of Derry and proved to be a great success with over 5000 people taking part in the parade and 6400 in the week long festival.

Thursday, 23 June 2011

In Ireland, youth group wins major grant to support LGBT asylum seekers

Source: Irish Times

By Eoin Burke-Kennedy

An Irish youth organisation has secured funding from the European Refugee Fund to provide support services for young people seeking asylum in Ireland on the basis of their sexual orientation.

BelongTo, which works with lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender young people (LGBT), has received €135,000 from the European Refugee Fund, through Pobail, for a two-year programme to acquaint asylum services here on how to deal with LGBT refugees.

The grant, which will also fund a direct support service for LGBT migrants inside the State, has been matched by a further €40,000 in funding from the Health Service Executive.

While the Irish Naturalisation and Immigration Service does not provide numbers on LGBT refugee cases, BelongTo said it has been dealing with a string of cases involving young people fleeing persecution from African and Middle Eastern countries on the grounds of sexual orientation.

In many instances, the refugees are too fearful to disclose their sexual identity in case they are "outed", and forced to go back if their case is refused, said BelongTo’s director Michael Barron.

Asylum seekers are not afforded the protection of the State’s equality legislation, Mr Barron said, and are often unaware they can claim asylum on the basis of a sexual orientation or gender. Another issue, he highlighted, was the housing of LGBT refugees in hostels with people from the same countries, which can often expose them to further discrimination and persecution.

The primary focus of his organisation’s project, he said, would to be to build the capacity of Irish asylum services and the Department of Justice to work with LGBT refugees.

Political asylum generally covers asylum sought on the basis of nationality, race, religion, membership or participation in a particular social group. Many countries have recently extended asylum to LGBT people, recognising them as a particular social group subject to persecution.

Last year, a gay Nigerian man who claimed he faced persecution over his sexuality in his native country won a High Court challenge to his deportation. The court ruled the then minister for justice's decision gave no consideration to principles set out in a UN Human Rights Commission guidance note which says having to hide one's sexual orientation may amount to persecution.
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Sunday, 5 June 2011

Irish government: 'we're getting the wrong sort of asylum seeker'; UN investigates Irish treatment of refugees

Source: Irish Refugee Council

The Department of Justice’s explanation that Ireland’s low recognition rate is due to the profile of asylum seekers received ignores the fundamental flaws in the current system, says the Irish Refugee Council. The IRC made the comment in response to statements by Department of Justice officials  replying to the UN Committee Against Torture which has been examining Ireland’s human rights record.

Sue Conlan, CEO of the Irish Refugee Council (IRC) says:
“In the IRC’s experience, it is not that Ireland does not get the ‘right’ sort of asylum seeker, it is that people seeking protection in Ireland simply do not get the ‘right’ kind of protection system. This fails the Irish people as much as it fails those who seek protection.”
The Department of Justice’s argument is based primarily upon the top 5 nationalities which, for a long time, have made the most applications for asylum in Ireland. But a comparison with other European countries with a significant number of applicants from those countries shows that nationality cannot account for Ireland’s low recognition rate.

According to Eurostat figures, 20% of applicants (385 individuals) in Ireland came from Nigeria, 12% from China and 10% from Pakistan. By way of comparison, the largest number of applicants in Italy are also Nigerian nationals, making up 14% of applications. The second largest are Pakistani,  at 9% of all applications. Despite similar country breakdowns, Italy has an above average recognition rate of 38%. Switzerland, with an acceptance rate of 42%, received 1,970 applications from Nigerians, or 13% of applications. In short, the two other European states who receive similar applicants had recognition rates that were well above the European average.

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Don't go to Ireland if you need asylum

Source: Irish Refugee Council

On Friday 21st January 2011, the Irish Times reported that, according to a new report from Eurostat (the EU statistics agency), the Office of the Refugee Applications Commissioner rejected 99% of asylum claims decided between July and September 2010, giving Ireland the distinction of the lowest acceptance rate in the EU. In a statement to the newspaper, a spokeswoman for the Department of Justice said that it was not possible to make direct comparisons between Ireland and other jurisdictions as the caseload profiles differ.

For too long, the Irish authorities have explained the high refusal rate by effectively saying that Ireland simply doesn’t get the right type of refugees.  In other words, it maintains that the majority of those who come to Ireland are not in need of international protection. 

It approaches applications on the assumption that most applicants are lying and therefore dismisses their claims on the grounds that they are lacking in credibility.  In reality, it is exceptionally difficult to succeed in a claim for protection in Ireland when the decision makers start with that assumption as the focus will therefore invariably be on minor matters which cannot be explained to their satisfaction.  This is regardless of the prima facie evidence for suggesting that the account may be true.

Friday, 26 November 2010

Civil partners included in new Irish immigration legislation

make love not war - CSD Berlin 2006Image via Wikipedia
Source: eurout.org

By Saskia Joreen

The Irish Minister for Justice and Law Reform has tabled amendments to the Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill that provide for equal treatment between married couples and civil partners in immigration law.

Eoin Collins, Director of Policy Change at GLEN (Gay and Lesbian Equality Network) said:
This is a very important advance and will help deliver greater security for same-sex couples worried about separation due to immigration difficulties.
Inclusion of civil partners in immigration law will build on progress already made, especially since 2008, in providing recognition for same-sex couples in immigration regulations. In provisions for people in de facto relationships, non EU same-sex partners of Irish or EU nationals are now entitled to apply for permission to remain in the State on the basis of their relationship.

Collins continues:
GLEN strongly welcomes the amendments proposed by the Minister for Justice and Law Reform which are in line with commitments he made at the advancement and enactment of civil partnership legislation.

GLEN also welcomes the amendments by Alan Shatter and Lucinda Creighton of Fine Gael to provide for inclusion of civil partners. This again reflects the support of all parties for legal recognition of same-sex couples as shown in the debates and final enactment of civil partnership.
Concern over the immigration status of a partner is one of the issues most frequently raised by callers to GLEN over the past 5 years. These callers have included Irish people seeking to return from the US, Canada and other countries but concerned that their same-sex partner would be excluded from living and working in Ireland or even excluded from entering the country.

The calls to GLEN have also included many lesbian and gay people in long-term committed relationships in Ireland with partners from outside the EU concerned that their partner’s permission to live in the State might not be renewed and that they might both have to leave as a result.
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Saturday, 20 November 2010

Deported gay Nigerian asylum seeker wins Irish court challenge

Four Courts, Dublin.Image via Wikipedia
Source: Irish Times

A Nigerian man who says he is gay and claimed he faces persecution over his sexuality in his native country has won a High Court challenge to his deportation.

The man, who cannot be identified and is referred to as “A”, was deported last year after a number of other challenges were rejected.

Mr Justice Seán Ryan yesterday quashed the Minister for Justice’s decision of July 28th last year to refuse to revoke his deportation order. The man is in Nigeria and yesterday’s decision does not mean he can come back to Ireland until the Minister reconsiders his decision, legal sources said. The court heard “A” arrived here in 2006 as an unaccompanied minor and applied for refugee status.

He claimed that on August 25th 2006, his boyfriend’s brother discovered them naked in his boyfriend’s bedroom. The brother threatened to report them and they were seriously beaten, it was claimed. Later that day, the boy rang the brother and was told they had “gotten rid” of the boyfriend and that he would be next.

Saturday, 13 November 2010

Northern Ireland’s first detention centre given the green light

Larne Looking west along Dunluce Street.Image via Wikipedia

Source: Belfast Telegraph


Northern Ireland’s first detention centre will go ahead despite opposition from residents and human rights activists.

A meeting was held 29 October between the UK Border Agency, the Planning Service and Larne Borough Council to discuss the matter after concerns were raised over the impact the facility could have on Larne.

Immigration officials want to convert Hope Street police station into a short-term holding centre capable of housing up to 22 detainees.

Under the initial plans the existing custody suites would be used to hold adults and an extension would be built at the back of the site for showering, catering and exercise facilities.

But the proposals — which have already been approved by the Planning Service — have angered some residents as well as human rights activists.

The plans have also raised opposition from the far-right British National Party (BNP) which printed leaflets claiming Larne had been “earmarked as a dumping ground for illegal immigrants and bogus asylum seekers”.

Friday, 15 October 2010

Protests in Dublin at Ireland's treatment of asylum seekers

Source: Irish Times

By Jamie Smyth

About 70 asylum seekers demonstrated outside the Dáil yesterday against the poor conditions at many asylum hostels and the long delays in deciding their applications for protection by the State.

They were joined by several politicians and representatives of immigrant groups, who delivered a letter of protest to Minister for Justice Dermot Ahern about the Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill. The NGOs (Nongovernmental organisations) say the Bill disregards basic human rights by introducing summary deportation, which means people deemed illegally in the State can be deported without any appeals.

“Current procedures regarding deportation provide an individual 15 days to make representations to the Minister as to why he or she should be allowed to remain in the State. The new Bill would take away this basic provision,” said a statement from an NGO coalition opposing the Bill.

Thursday, 15 July 2010

Ireland. removed gay asylum seeker seeks judicial review

Night shot of the Four Courts, Dublin, Ireland.Image via Wikipedia
Source: Irish Times

By Pamela Duncan and Jamie Smyth

A Nigerian national deported in 2009 after he unsuccessfully applied for asylum on the basis he faced persecution in his home country because he is homosexual will this week seek a judicial review in the High Court.

The case is being brought on the basis that Minister for Justice and Law Reform Dermot Ahern failed to take into account the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) guidelines on sexual orientation and gender identity in his refusal to revoke a deportation order in relation to Mobolaji Adams, who was refused asylum on the basis that if he practised “discretion” in Nigeria he would not be persecuted.

The case will be heard a week after five supreme court judges in the UK ruled gay and lesbian asylum seekers should not be expected to “exercise discretion” to avoid persecution.

Mr Adams arrived in Ireland in September 2006 as an unaccompanied minor and applied for asylum, claiming he was assaulted and threatened after his homosexuality was discovered. In December 2006, the Refugee Applications Commissioner refused refugee status on the basis of adverse credibility findings, which are disputed, and on the basis that homosexuals who hide their homosexuality in Nigeria could relocate within the country without facing persecution.

Wednesday, 14 July 2010

Irish neglect of asylum seekers

Source: Irish Times

The dispute over the rehousing of 111 asylum seekers from Mosney has once again thrown an unflattering light on the overstretched and oppressive asylum system. Deliberately designed to be uncomfortable enough to discourage bogus applicants, the system certainly lives up to its purpose, to the point where it is certainly arguable whether some of the most basic human rights of refugees are being honoured. The prolonged, bureaucratic application and appeals process, denying refugees their right to a speedy determination, hostel overcrowding, the puny level of “direct provision” cash support of €19.10 a week, and the denial of the right to seek work all need urgent review.

The current system also means that genuine asylum seekers, fleeing often horrendous regimes, and entitled under the 1951 Geneva Convention to asylum and protection, are unjustly trapped in a miserable limbo for years by a net designed on this presumption that all applicants are frauds deserving of every discomfort they face.

The Department of Justice makes the remarkable claim that “the Irish asylum determination system compares with the best in the world in terms of fairness, decision-making, determination structures and support services for asylum seekers including access to legal advice.” Would any of its clients concur? But this State certainly excels in one notable regard, its remakable rate of asylum rejections. Of 6,560 decisions last year only 395 or 6 per cent were positive, less than a quarter of both the EU average or that of the UK.

Ireland and Denmark are also alone in opting out of the EU reception directive, which requires that asylum seekers be allowed to take a job if a decision on their case is not forthcoming within 12 months. Today there is a backlog of 11,700 “leave to remain” cases waiting to be determined – at the current processing rate it will take at least six years to clear, although the procedures in the new Immigration Bill should speed future processing.

Six thousand of these applicants survive under the “direct provision” system in some 52 centres, half of them there for over three years. Typically they are sharing rooms with several others – up to five in some centres. This soul-destroying life of enforced idleness saps morale and the ability eventually to integrate into a workforce, and inevitably affects the physical and mental health of refugees. Figures obtained by The Irish Times show as many as 46 asylum seekers living in hostels have died over the past 10 years.

But more than 5,000 are also living in the community without State support, presumably helped by family and friends, many of them also undoubtedly working illegally. Recognising that reality by legalising their right to work after a year would hardly act as an incentive to travel to Ireland, and could save money by reducing dependence on State aid. Last year, 2,689 asylum applications were received, down from a peak of 11,634 in 2002 – no doubt the Department would say the result of the success of its deterrent policy, but also a function of the jobs crisis. Allowing the deferred integration of such numbers into the workforce should not be problematic.
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Sunday, 2 November 2008

EU-Regulations and Asylum Issues

EU MapImage by centralasian via Flickr
Source: ILGA-Europe

Workshop held at the ILGA Europe Annual Conference , Vienna, 30 October - 2 November 2008

By Sabine Jansen, COC Netherlands

I would like to start with some explanation and a few remarks on the Conventions that apply to LGBT asylum seekers in Europe. After that I will give two examples of issues in asylum policy that form specific obstacles to LGBT people. Then I will say something about two recent cases that are important for the Netherlands and maybe for other European countries as well.

Convention matters

In theory LGBT asylum seekers who flee for reasons related to their sexual orientation or their gender identity in most European countries could qualify for asylum. In the Netherlands this is case-law since 1981. There are two possible ways.

To qualify for a refugee-status under the 1951 Refugee Convention (the Geneva Convention) one should have a well-founded fear of being persecuted for one of the grounds mentioned in this convention: race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership of a particular social group. Although ‘Sexual orientation’ or ‘gender identity’ are not explicitly mentioned in the Convention, LGBT people can be seen as ‘members of a particular social group’, who share a common characteristic and have a distinct identity due to the perception in the society of origin. On this ground they should be protected against persecution by the Refugee  Convention. 

The second way in which LGBT people could obtain asylum is a status based on Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights, that forbids to send someone to a situation where he or she has a ‘real risk’ of being subjected to ‘torture or an inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment’. This is also called ‘subsidiary protection’.

These two asylum statuses are also described in the EU Refugee Status Directive, that has been adopted by the EU member states and came into force in 2004.[1] It contains minimum standards: states are allowed to give more protection than is prescribed by the Directive.

The Directive should have been implemented in your national legislation since October 10th 2006. Now that this date has expired, people can call upon the Directive itself in the national procedures. The national judge should then apply European law.

The Refugee Directive says in Article 10 explicitly that ‘depending on the circumstances in the country of origin, a particular social group might include a group based on a common characteristic of sexual orientation.’ National legislation of the EU member states must therefore include in the ground ‘particular social group’ the possibility of groups based on sexual orientation .

Article 10 continues: ‘Sexual orientation cannot be understood to include acts considered to be criminal in accordance with national law of the Member States.’ I do not understand the intention of this phrase. It resembles Country Reports with sentences like: ‘Homosexual acts are punishable by law, the penalty is three years of imprisonment. The penalty on homosexual acts with a minor against his will is seven years.’ We would call this ‘rape’ or ‘child abuse’ instead of homosexuality. This kind of information does not belong in a Country Report chapter on the situation of LGBT people. Why would the Directive describe criminal sexual orientation acts? To exclude criminal asylum seekers one could apply other articles of the Directive.

When I did research on the legal position of homosexual asylum seekers in the Netherlands, I identified several problems, of which I will now describe two examples. If you want more information about these issues, I could send you the article I wrote, although an extra problem is, that it is in Dutch.[2]

State protection against non-state actors

Sometimes LGBT people flee their country of origin, because they are persecuted directly by the authorities. But more often the persecutors are so-called ‘non-state actors’, family, neighbours etc. For a long time the idea was that a real refugee is someone who is politically active and persecuted by the state. So women and LGBTs, who often flee because of violence by sexist or homophobic non-state agents, did not fit this image. It is very important that the Directive explicitly recognizes non-state actors as actors of persecution or serious harm.

When a LGBT person is so mistreated by non-state actors that he or she decides to leave the country in search of safety elsewhere, one of the questions that is posed by the Immigration officer is: ‘Did you go to the local authorities to ask for protection?’ Sometimes the answer is: ‘Yes, but they refused to help me’ and sometimes the answer is: ‘No, because I am afraid of the police’.

A gay man from Algeria fled to the Netherlands after he was gang-raped by fifteen ‘civilians’. His asylum claim was refused, because he should have asked the Algerian police to protect him. He did not do so, because a few years earlier he was raped by a police officer and in Algeria homosexuality is punishable with three years imprisonment. According to Dutch Immigration officers the first rapist was just one policeman and he could have asked help from other or higher authorities. It’s true that homosexual acts are criminal in Algeria, they argued, but rape is too. Finally they granted him asylum, but this took almost four years of procedures.

In general, people fleeing because of persecution by non-state actors are supposed to seek protection in their home state first. Though in my opinion it is not reasonable to expect from an LGBT person to turn to the police for protection in a country where homosexuality is a crime or where the general atmosphere is homophobic.

Article 6 of the Refugee Directive states that actors of persecution include non-state actors, ‘if it can be demonstrated that the State is unable or unwilling to provide protection’. But who has to demonstrate this, on whose shoulders is the burden of proof? The general answer is: ‘the asylum seeker’, but I think the burden of proof should be on the receiving state. The state should first demonstrate that the authorities of the country of origin are in general able and willing to offer protection to LGBT people, before expecting the asylum seeker to turn to the police.

There is support for this idea in the Refugee Directive. Article 7 of the Directive says that protection is generally provided, when the state takes reasonable steps to prevent the persecution. The state should operate ‘an effective legal system for the detection, prosecution and punishment of acts constituting persecution’ and the applicant should have access to such protection. In homophobic societies this kind of protection will seldom be available. So, when someone was persecuted by homophobic non-state actors in the state of origin, you could try to refer to the Directive.

The right to privacy or private life

In 1981 the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) decided that the provision that criminalized homosexuality in Northern Ireland was a violation of the right to privacy in Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).[3] This decision was followed by similar judgements on the criminalization of homosexuality in Ireland and Cyprus.[4]

The only time a gay asylum case was decided upon by the European Court of Human Rights was in 2004 when the Court judged the case of a gay man from Iran who sought asylum in the UK. The Court rejected his claim at the right to private life in Article 8 of the Convention. Although homosexuality is a crime in Iran, this does not mean that deportation of a person to this country is a violation of Article 3 or 8 of the ECHR. Iran is outside the European Union and this country is not a party to the European Convention.[5]

Decision-makers sometimes argue that gay people will not be persecuted as long as they act discreetly or are not openly gay. And of course, if all LGBT people would stay in the closet completely, there would probably be no harassing, rape, ill-treatment, murder, torture or discrimination of LGBTs. The Netherlands recently adopted the policy not to use this argument anymore, but for instance the UK still does: The British Home Secretary said that ‘Gay and lesbian asylum-seekers can be safely deported to Iran as long as they live their lives "discreetly".’[6]

The advice to act discreetly upon return is a violation of  the right to privacy and ‘the right to privacy includes the choice to disclose or not to disclose information relating to one’s sexual orientation or gender identity’, as the Yogyakarta principles state.[7] The Michigan Guidelines say: An individual shall not be expected to deny his or her protected identity or beliefs in order to avoid coming to the attention of the state or non-governmental agent of persecution.[8]

In the case Bensaid v. UK (2001) the European Court of Human Rights stated that ‘private life’ is a broad term and that gender identification, name, sexual orientation and sexual life are important elements of the personal sphere protected by Article 8 ECHR. It might be a good idea for people in the UK to start a procedure at the ECHR stating that the claim to act discrete is a violation of the right to privacy protected by article 8 ECHR. And the Dutch Government should convince other European members to follow their policy not to expect LGBT people to live discreetly.

Two recent cases

A case that attracted a lot of attention in the EU was the case of Mehdi Kazemi from Iran. He  first applied for asylum in the UK, after he had heard that his boyfriend was executed in Iran and he feared the same fate. Nevertheless, his case was refused. Then he fled to the Netherlands. The Netherlands has the policy to grant asylum to all LGBT people from Iran, but Mr. Kazemi’s asylum claim was refused again because of the Dublin Convention, which prevents application for asylum in more than one EU country. He was sent back to the UK. After a lot of protests and demonstrations from several LGBT-organisations in the UK and the Netherlands and a resolution from the European Parliament, Kazemi was finally granted asylum in the UK. To avoid this kind of Dublin cases in the future the Dutch Government should export the policy to grant asylum to LGBT people from Iran.

There was also the case of the Iranian lesbian Pegah Emambakhsh, whose partner was sentenced to death by stoning. The last report on her situation dates from last March, when she was still in the UK, fearing deportation to Iran. I wonder if anybody knows what has happened to her? 

Last year the case of mr. Salah Sheekh from Somalia against the Netherlands was decided upon by the European Court of Human Rights.[9] He won the case because according to the Court his expulsion to Somalia would be in violation of article 3 of the Convention. Mr Sheekh was a member of the Somali clan of the Ashraf, and as a result of this the Netherlands had to change the asylum-policy. We now have two new categories: ‘vulnerable minority groups’ and ‘groups at risk’. Vulnerable minority groups are for instance single women in Afghanistan and Christians in Iraq. Their burden of proof is much lower. A few days ago, in a meeting with Dutch government officials we heard that they plan to recognize homosexuals from Iraq and Afghanistan as ‘groups at risk’. If these asylum seekers  pass an individual examination with limited evidence, they will get a refugee-status. So that is good news, although it has a somewhat bitter taste, because very recently the categorical protection for asylum seekers from Central Iraq was ended.

This summer the European Commission presented a policy plan on asylum, as part of the creation of a Common European Asylum System (CEAS). One of the overarching objectives of this CEAS is to incorporate gender considerations and take into account the special needs of vulnerable groups. I don’t know if ILGA is already creating LGBT input in this harmonisation process, but I think this would be a good idea.

I would like to end with a subject that is, as far as I know, in the Netherlands hardly an issue: Immigration sometimes does not believe someone to be gay. Here in Vienna for instance I heard that lesbian women from Zimbabwe are denied asylum in the UK, because they have children and for that reason are not believed to be gay. And I also heard the story of a man from Azerbaijan, who sought asylum in the Czech republic. To test his gayness the Czech authorities showed him porn-videos, while putting a device around his penis, to measure his reaction to the porn. This is a gross violation of human rights and if this is true, human rights organisations should send a fierce protest to the Czech authorities.

Anyhow, I would be very interested to hear how the situation of LGBT asylum seekers is in other EU-countries. So I hope we can exchange ideas and experiences in this workshop or during this conference.

[1] Directive 2004/83/EC on minimum standards for the qualification and status of third country nationals or

stateless persons as refugees or as persons who otherwise need international protection and the content of

the protection granted, (2004) OJ L304/12.

[2] ‘Op de vlucht voor homohaat, over discriminatie en discretie’, Nieuwsbrief Asiel- en Vluchtelingenrecht 2006, nr. 3, p. 124-146.

[3] ECHR, Dudgeon v. United Kingdom, 22 October 1981, 7525/76.

[4] ECHR, Norris v. Ireland, 26 October 1988, 10581/83; ECHR, Modinos v. Cyprus, 22 April 1993, 15070/89.

[5] ECHR, F. v. United Kingdom, 22 June 2004, 17341/03.

[6] The Independent, 23 June 2008.

[7] The Yogyakarta Principles on the Application of International Human Rights Law in relation to Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity, March 2007.

[8] The Michigan Guidelines on Nexus to a Convention Ground, University of Michigan Law School, Ann Arbor USA, March 2001.

[9] Salah Sheekh v. The Netherlands, 11 January 2007, 1948/04.
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Friday, 11 July 2008

Ireland preparing to deport gay Iranian


The gay independent Irish Senator David Norris has called for the reversing of a deportation order against a young Iranian man who, he said, would be butchered on return to his homeland.

This individual had left Iran, having been investigated and having openly acknowledged a sexual relationship with his male partner, he said.

Norris told the Irish Seanad:

"He has been served with a deportation order. What kind of people are running these services? Are they unaware, uniquely, because everybody else in Ireland knows, this man will be butchered, as was confirmed by the deputy Iranian foreign minister . . . last week.

"He said 'well, we are not going to do it from a crane on the back of a lorry, but we're still going to do it'. What are we doing? Where is the accountability? I demand in the name of the Oireachtas [composed of Dáil Éireann (House of Deputies) and Seanad Éireann (Senate)] that the practice of deporting someone in that condition should be ceased immediately."

Source: The Irish Times

Tuesday, 11 March 2008

News update

CNN obtained the following from the Home Office today (my emphasis):

In a written statement, Britain's Home Office said that even though homosexuality is illegal in Iran and homosexuals do experience discrimination, it does not believe that homosexuals are routinely persecuted purely on the basis of their sexuality

This is the first time anyone has got them to actually state this.

Dutch radio: Netherlands Democratic MP Boris Ham has asked Deputy Justice Minister Nebahat Albayrak to discuss the matter with the UK authorities to prevent Mr Kazemi being deported to Iran.

Interview by frictiontv with Omar Kuddus of the Uk gayasylum group about the Mehdi Kazemi case. This interview was conducted prior to the Dutch court's decision to return Mehdi to the UK.



Strong CNN story (link to video) today (thanks Alphonso) includes Mehdi's uncle, Simon Hughes and Peter Tatchell. It also quotes the Home Office policy.



From Saturday 8th, interview with Pegah Emambakhsh (NB: RealAudio, media may not be available for more than a week) and Lady Haleh Afshar on the Today Show (Radio 4).

Pegah transcript:

If the British government could prove to me that I would be safe in Iran and to be able to lead a normal life and to be myself I would be very happy to go back to Iran. I had to leave my old father, my ill mother and young sister. I have two lovely children which their father took away from me. i had to give this all up because my life was at risk. At the moment I was safe because I am in England but my life is very difficult. I miss my family and more than anything I am worried all the time that the police will suddenly arrest me and send me back.
Today said that the Home Office has agreed to accept new legal representation for her, despite her losing her last appeal in January.

The interviewer, Edward Stourton, asked if Iranians would pretend to be gay if Home Office policy changed. Haleh Afshar pointed out that there is an enormous social taboo against lesbians and gays.

Ben Summerskill, chief executive of Stonewall, said today that the organisation is "deeply disturbed" about his case.
"There is incontrovertible evidence that lesbian and gay people face danger in Iran and we will be raising this once again with the Home Secretary."
A question of ethics, editorial from newspaper of leading US university Rutgers.

FoxNews story.

British gay MEP Michael Cashman will raise Mehdi's case in the European Parliament later this week.

A Dutch newspaper today quotes Mehdi's Dutch lawyer B. Palm (sorry, Google translation) on what legal hopes there are:
A country may grant asylum even if someone has already made an application in another European country. The Netherlands has a different view on the situation of homosexuals in Iran than Britain. The rules assume that a person seeking asylum in any European country has an equal chance to get asylum. In this case this is not the case.
He hopes that Secretary for Justice Albayrak, who Aliens Office, the matter pull and ensure that Mehdi not returning to Iran.

She is also being lobbied by Dutch MP Boris van der Ham Kamervragen.

Writing in The Irish Times, Quentin Fottrell expresses concern that
The British government isn't the only one tightening the screws on the asylum process of late: our own is keen to clear a backlog of 9,427 asylum applications it has racked up since 2000 . . . one way or another. And, because, where the UK leads on asylum/immigration issues, we invariably follow.

Ireland doesn't give numbers on gay refugee cases, and many are unlikely to declare their sexuality for fear of being "outed" and having to go back if their case is refused, like Kazemi. On that basis, Muslims from brutal regimes are unlikely to make a "study" of gay refugee cases. It would be too hazardous if they failed. Many more have hidden their sexuality their whole life and they choose other reasons for seeking asylum.

On the upside, one Irish lawyer told me he has successfully processed 30 cases of gay refugees, helped by the fact that the 1996 Refugee Act and the new Bill cite sexual orientation under "social group" as a basis for seeking asylum. Dublin-based gay teenage group Belong2 have also worked with several gay teenage refugees. Their two most recent cases - from Albania and Kenya - are now studying in college.

However, direct provision centre staff need more intercultural training, especially on bullying. I've heard of three cases, one of a gay Romanian man who left his accommodation in Cork due to harassment, a Kenyan man in Dublin ostracised because he was damned if he was going to deny his sexuality after everything he had been through, and a Kenyan lesbian in accommodation who hides her sexuality to survive.

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