Showing posts with label Robert Segwanyi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Segwanyi. Show all posts

Tuesday, 1 November 2011

Audio: LibDem MP slams record on LGBT asylum



LiberalDemocrat MP Mike Hancock has slammed the record of the government on LGBT asylum.

Hancock is the MP of Robert Segwanyi, a gay Ugandan asylum seeker who was saved from removal at the last moment last month. Segwanyi has a fresh judicial hearing November 3.

He is also the MP of a gay Iranian whose asylum case Hancock is supporting.

Speaking to Gaydar radio's Scott Roberts, Hancock said of the government's commitment to LGBT rights globally, championed by Prime Minister David Cameron this weekend, in the light of these asylum cases, "they say one thing and do another." Hancock charged that these cases had been "mishandled" and that others had also been.

Hancock's comments came on the eve of the attempted removal of another gay Ugandan, Kenneth, only stopped because he fought all the way on to the plane and a couple of weeks after the removal of gay Ugandan David, who has subsequently disappeared.
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Thursday, 1 September 2011

How the Home Office is misusing law in gay Ugandan asylum seeker case

BBC report on Segwanyi republished in Uganda's Monitor newspaper. Click for full scan of page.

By Paul Canning

The British Home Office in judging the claim of gay Ugandan asylum seeker Robert Segwanyi is misapplying the law, according to its latest refusal of his case.

Segwanyi was jailed for homosexuality and tortured but escaped and fled to the UK and claimed asylum. His case was rejected by an immigration judge last November and, on the basis of the judge's decision, by the UK Border Agency (UKBA).

A campaign for Segwanyi which has included a 3000 strong petition has prevented several attempts to remove him. Evidence that Segwanyi is "obviously gay" as well as a statement by Ugandan Anglican Archbishop Christopher Senyonjo on the risk of removal is amongst the new evidence submitted to support Robert's case, however this new evidence does not appear to have been considered by the agency as it is not referred to in his last rejection letter dated 25 August.

Using the wrong precedent

In both Immigration Judge Hembrough's decision last November and the UKBA's latest rejection of Segwanyi 's case (citing the judge's decision) reference is made to case law precedent on gay Ugandan asylum seekers - but the wrong case law is cited. And this is not the first time this 'mistake' has been made in rejecting the claim of a gay Ugandan asylum seeker.

In another Ugandan case we reported in February Home Office lawyers argued that a 2008 ruling ('JM') applied. This said that LGBT could be safely returned to Uganda if they relocated and lived 'discreetly' and that Uganda's sodomy law was not used to jail homosexuals. In January 2011 Home Office lawyers on the Home Secretary's behalf were still arguing that in Uganda:
"while there may be disapproval of homosexuality, instances of violence and discrimination, there is no persecution."
The correct legal precedent is 'SB 2010', which overturns 'JM' on how gay Ugandan cases should be considered. In this case a judge accepted a mountain of evidence from NGOs and other experts of gay men - and crucially in this case also of lesbians - being arrested in Uganda just because of their sexual identity. This rejected Home Office lawyers arguments of an absence of persecution, particularly of lesbians. 
Refusing the Home Office and allowing the judicial review, [Immigration Judge] Hickinbottom wryly noted that the presentation of the previous judgment [JM] once again by [then Home Secretary] Alan Johnston's representative as an argument for deportation - despite all the subsequently available evidence of persecution of lesbians in Uganda - could not be used as "a trump card for the Secretary of State".
In SB, Hickinbottom dismissed Home Office lawyers resorting to JM 2008 precedent writing that:
"The 'climate has changed' [in Uganda], as has the government stance: homosexuals are suffering beyond intimidation and harassment to the point of persecution and the new ['kill the gays'] law will worsen their position."
In rejecting Segwanyi's case again, the Home Office quotes Judge Hembrough's use of JM precedent - he said:
"Even if I am wrong as regards the Apellant's homosexuality I see no reason to depart from the country guidance in JM which states: "Although there is legislation in Uganda which criminalises homosexual behaviour there is little, if any, objective evidence that such is in fact enforced. Notwithstanding a prevailing traditions [sic] and cultural disapproval of homosexuality, the evidence does not establish that in general there is persecution of homosexuality in Uganda"."
but the Home Office omits the inherent legal error ('SB' is the precedent) and says:

"It is not considered that the treatment of homosexuals in Uganda has significantly worsened since the date of the Immigration Judge's determination" (my emphasis).
This bizarre twist in logic ignores that the judge's decision was based on incorrect precedent relating to 2008 - not to November 2010 - never mind that it ignored the great mass of evidence of increased persecution since 2008

No evidence of 'penetrative sexual acts'

In February this year, lawyer Mohammed Ayub of Chambers Solicitors in Bradford, who represented a Ugandan lesbian in a case where Home Office lawyers quoted 'JB' and argued that she would be safe because there is no repression of lesbians in Uganda, told me that if an asylum claimant doesn't have a competent lawyer a judge will often adopt the view of the Home Office. We've previously reported that it's been shown the judges can ignore or even be ignorant of legal precedent.

Roberts+scars.png
Segwanyi's torture scars, including from burning plastic
In Segwanyi's case, the Home Office lawyer before Hembrough last November argued that even if Robert was gay, gay people are not at risk in Uganda. Hembrough's determination follows the Home Office lawyer's arguments.

The question of why Home Office lawyers are still using 'JB' precedent and why they are still arguing that there is no repression of LGBT in Uganda is one likely to be followed up as it has yet to be satisfactorily answered.

There are numerous other reasons for concern at Judge Hembrough's determination, such as his treatment of the evidence of a leading psychologist, Professor Cornelius Katona, particularly the judge's claim that the psychologist had said Segwanyi was not gay which was not the case, as the psychologist has repeatedly and loudly insisted, and his rejecting of Katona's finding that Segwanyi suffered Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, something Katona said could not be faked.

Another might be the judge rejecting the November appeal in part on the basis of a lack of medical evidence "which might show that the Appellant had engaged in penetrative sexual acts" - a comment which is reminiscent of the ‘virginity’ tests given to South Asian brides by the British authorities in the 1970s or the use of phallometry, a method used by the Czech authorities to judge gay asylum seekers that involves attaching electrodes to the penis to measure sexual arousal.

The new rules

Last July's ruling of the Supreme Court took 'SB' and overthrew the Home Office's 'discretion' and relocation argument at the highest level, for every country.

Barrister S. Chelvan explains:
"The Court expressed in clear language, that the correct test .. involves firstly making a finding that an individual is gay, lesbian or bisexual, or will be perceived to be. This importantly recognises the risk to those who do not live what I term a ‘heterosexual narrative’, ie living, or being perceived to live, a straight life, by engaging in a socially expected heterosexual gender sex role. Secondly, an assessment will be required of what would occur to a gay, lesbian, or bisexual person, if they lived ‘openly and freely’ in the country of origin. If, as a result of living openly, there would be persecution, then the fear is well-founded. Thirdly, if it is found that they will live ‘openly’ and consequently be subjected to a real risk of serious harm, then they are entitled to refugee status. Nevertheless, if, on the other hand, they are discrete, due to this fear of persecution, then they are also a refugee."
The Supreme Court laid down new rules, which were subsequently codified by the Home Office in a new Asylum Policy Instruction (API) published in October 2010 on sexuality-based asylum claims and which UKBA officers are supposed to be trained to follow.

This guidance says that consideration should be made of the traumatised state in which someone may be telling their story. This is especially relevant as the rejection of Robert's account of his relationships in the UK and in Uganda as inconsistent and 'not credible' was because of language issues and Professor Katona said that

"Mr Segwani's Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder [means that] there is a strong possibility that his high levels of fear and stress may have led to his assenting to be interviewed in English without taking fully into account the disadvantages of doing so."
That July 2010 interview which is picked apart for inconsistency and on which basis Segwanyi's case is still being rejected was conducted mere weeks after he escaped from prison and fled with the Ugandan police looking for him and putting up 'wanted' notices. Judge Hembrough explicitly rejected the idea that he should be re-interviewed.

In his letter to UKBA, Segwanyi's MP, Mike Hancock, writes that Hembrough's findings about Segwanyi being interviewed in English, about his Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and his homosexuality:

"Are at best based on somewhat prejudiced views and not in line with the evidence. Indeed if Mr Segwanyi had wanted to mislead the immigration authorities he would surely have acted in a different way."
The UKBA API says that officers are supposed to ascertain why someone claiming asylum on grounds of persecution because of sexuality will be 'discrete'. The Supreme court rules include four tests, three concerning why someone gay would be 'discrete'. If it is not their own choice, if they are saying they'd be 'discrete' because of societal or state pressure, they are a refugee the rules say.

In rejecting Segwanyi's claim reference is made to a supposed comment in his interview in July 2010 that he would be discrete because his family would want him to be. As noted, there are serious questions regarding the translation of his answer as English is not his first language and the interview was conducted in English, but if current guidance was being followed this claim on how he would behave would be directly asked, rather than being extracted out of context from other testimony, as it has been.

Different department, different Uganda policy
 
As well as the instructions and rules having changed, the UKBA's own 'country information' on Uganda changed in February this year, after much criticism of the slowness by which such information was updated. This now recognises the persecution of LGBT in Uganda, in particular it points decision makers at an Amnesty International report from last year.
"Amnesty’s 2010 Report 'I Can’t Afford Justice' published on 6 April 2010 commented “…section 145 of the Penal Code Act has been and continues to be used by the police and other law enforcement officials to subject lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people in Uganda to arbitrary arrest and detention often resulting in torture or other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment.” [10b] This comment is contrary to that made by UHRC at 19.04 and should be considered accordingly. [This means that this information should be prioritised over prior information.]"
Any claim that the sodomy law is not enforced and that LGBT are not persecuted in Uganda, such as by Home Office lawyers representing the Home Secretary, actually mirrors the argument of those pushing for the so-called 'Kill gays' bill. Its advocates say that a new law is needed in Uganda precisely because LGBT are not now persecuted and new law is therefore needed to persecute them.

Other parts of the British government are heavily engaged with critiquing the same growing persecution of Ugandan lesbians and gays that is detailed in evidence presented in 'SB', the February case and Bishop Senyonjo's evidence regarding Segwanyi.

UK Ministers have made statements against the 'Kill gays' bill and state-sanctioned persecution. The Foreign Office is "concerned" and is reportedly privately lobbying Ugandan politicians. The previous Prime Minister even pulled aside the Ugandan president at an international conference and told him to stop the bill.

But another part of the government, in August 2011, thinks differently if it is still using the same argument on the lack of persecution of Ugandan LGBT advanced in 'JM', and supported by Judge Hembrough in Segwanyi's case before him last November, as it appears to be in its latest argument rejecting Segwanyi.

Robert's case has now been reported (picking up from the BBC report) in the respected Ugandan newspaper The Monitor (see scan of their report at the beginning of this article). It is cited in a section covering mentions of Uganda in foreign media, as often occurs in media in other countries which picks up on mention of them elsewhere - see Australia's media for other examples of this.

The Home Office (and immigration judges) routinely discount media coverage on the basis that it is sought "for the sole purpose of of attempting to increase any perceived risk he may face on return" as the latest rejection letter for Segwanyi puts it. BBC reports and other coverage is not considered part and parcel of normal civil society investigation of how the Home Office works. Any journalistic or campaigning challenging of Home Office decisions which results in media coverage must be 'manipulation' personally orchestrated by the asylum seeker - according to their own words there cannot be any other reason for it.

Another argument used is that such coverage, usually African coverage, has been bought and deliberately placed. It remains to be seen if this will be used regarding the Monitor coverage, given that the Monitor is Uganda's equivalent of The Guardian or The New York Times

Mike Hancock MP will be protesting his treatment regarding his interventions on behalf of Segwanyi. He was written to by UKBA asking for further information and then the next day written to again to be told that they'd already made a decision.

Hancock's office say that he is currently considering putting down an Early Day Motion in the House of Commons concerning Segwanyi's treatment.

Segwanyi's lawyer is submitting an appeal today.

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Sunday, 28 August 2011

UK LGBT asylum activists react strongly to Ugandan activist comments

Robert Segwanyi
By Paul Canning

The publication by South African based news website Behind The Mask of an article on UK LGBT asylum issues has drawn adverse comment by British activists.

The article followed extensive publicity surrounding the case of the Ugandan gay refugee Robert Segwanyi and quotes Ugandan activists. Segwanyi's case was rejected by the British authorities, however their attempts to remove him were 'deferred' following an campaign which included a petition of almost 4,000 people. [Disclosure: the petition was started by the author.]

The article contain claims about asylum seekers which UK supporters of LGBT asylum seekers have strongly reacted against.

Dr Paul Semugooma, a Ugandan physician and an activist on HIV and LGBT issues, is quoted as saying:
“For quite some time, there has been a tendency for everyone [claiming asylum] to claim that they are gay.”
The article's unnamed author wrote that "some people pretend to be at risk gays to enter Britain and other western countries."

It quotes Frank Mugisha, of Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG) saying that:
“So they (Britain and other Western countries) should work with us (local activists).”
Mr Mugisha was quick to add that his comments were general and not specific to Segwanyi’s case.
Mugisha said: “Immigration (British) should carry out good analysis, work with us and grant genuine cases asylum. But because of the situation here, it is not correct to come up with guidelines and just reject every one who applies.”
Jide Macaulay, speaking for London-based Justice for Gay Africans, which has supported a number of gay Africans claiming asylum in the UK, said:

"I believe that the article published in MASK is misleading and [could] prejudice future cases."
"We have to be mindful of journalistic jibes that can taint credible years of hard work."

Friday, 19 August 2011

Ugandan gay refugee recounts horror of imprisonment

Robert Segwanyi
By Joe Mirabella, change.org

Robert Segwanyi was scheduled for deportation on August 18,  from the United Kingdom's Heathrow airport. The UK was sending Robert back to Uganda, where he was tortured with molten plastic and imprisoned for being gay.

Robert was spared from deportation at the very last minute according to his friend and fellow gay Ugandan refugee John Bosco:
"[Robert] is back in the detention centre waiting to hear what's next.  He had 5 escorts up to the plane, and as he was about to board the plane the Home Office stopped his deportation.  He is very tired and stressed since he has not been sleeping well.  He is in pain."
John Bosco told me on the phone that Robert has not been eating well and that he was considering suicide.
"Since last Friday, when he was given the deportation notice he stopped eating. He threatened to kill himself, because he has had enough,” said Bosco.
More than 3,500 people signed Paul Canning's Change.org petition asking the Home Office to grant Robert Segwanyi asylum in the UK.

I asked John to make sure Robert knew about the thousands of people fighting for his right to live freely as a gay man in the United Kingdom. John said, "I was overwhelmed with the way people helped him through the petition. I think the petition played a big part in this."

Paul Canning was pleased to hear that Robert would be given more time to make his case, but he is not done working to keep Robert safely in the UK. He may still need your help. He wrote to the people who signed his petition on Change.org, "We won because everybody helped including you, but we won a battle we didn’t win the war. Robert Segwanyi isn’t safe yet, so we may need to come back to you.”

John Bosco
John Bosco told me about life in Uganda and what it was like for him when he was imprisoned for being gay. He said:
"There are no beds in prisons in Uganda -- no mattresses --  just the concrete floor. The prisons are packed. You sleep on one side. You don’t have room to turn around," John recounted.
"There are no toilets, there is no running water. There are buckets where everyone eats. No blankets, no curtains. It is hell. It is even worse than the place that they keep pigs," John explained.
"If they know you are gay, you can get beat up by the other prisoners. You have to stand in a corner because no one wants to be near you. You end up not sleeping almost 24/7 because no one wants to be near you if you are gay, so you can not lie down."
Robert Segwanyi was in a similar prison and was tortured with molten plastic. He has the scars to prove it according to John Bosco:
"He has the marks on him. That’s the way the Ugandan government makes you say things. If they ask you something and you say no, they burn you until you say yes. The pain makes you say yes.”
Life is not even safe for gays if they are free from police custody or prison. The public will beat or even set fire to gay people, "in broad daylight," according to Bosco.

Bishop Christopher Senyonjo from the Anglican Church of Uganda, said in a statement:
"Ordinary people are being forced to move because their fellow Ugandans are attacking them: there is a “witch-hunt” atmosphere regarding LGBT in the country which is unfortunately being encouraged by many of my fellow Christian leaders," he said, "It is not safe to return anyone who is LGBT or perceived to be LGBT to Uganda."
What's next for Robert is still unknown. He has thousands of people fighting for him. Paul Canning and John Bosco hope his new application for asylum will allow Robert to be released from detention, and that ultimately the UK's Home Office will do the right thing and let him stay.

Robert is "obviously gay" according to everyone that knows him, but whether officials believe Robert is gay or not is mute at this point. According to John Bosco, because Robert claimed to be gay his life is in danger if he is returned to Uganda. He will face the "witch hunt" described by Bishop Senyonjo.
"Once you claim to be gay you can be arrested in Uganda and be in prison your whole life," John Bosco said.

Tuesday, 16 August 2011

Change.org protests removal by UK of gay Ugandan Robert Segwanyi

Robert with his partner in Uganda. He doesn't know where his partner is now.
Source: change.org

London, UK - In less than 24 hours, more than 800 people have joined a petition campaign started on Change.org calling on the Home Office to halt the deportation of Robert Segwanyi to Uganda, where he was imprisoned and tortured for being gay.

Segwanyi is scheduled for deportation on Thursday,18 August, 2011 on Kenya Airways KQ410 which leaves Heathrow Airport at 20:00.

“Robert has been badly represented, which is largely why his case has hit a crisis point,” said Paul Canning, a blogger at LGBT Asylum News who launched the campaign on Change.org. “The UK authorities are also being completely unreasonable. There is plenty of evidence Robert is gay and -- of course -- that Uganda is unsafe.”

Uganda’s government continues to threaten gays and lesbians with the infamous “kill the gays” bill, which if passed would make being gay or lesbian a crime punishable by death. While the bill died at the end of the last Parliament in May, Uganda’s government appears willing to resurrect the measure sometime in August.

Gays and lesbians are regularly arrested and tortured in Uganda, and according to LGBT Asylum News Segwanyi was arrested in 2010 and tortured for being gay. He eventually escaped to the United Kingdom, where he applied for asylum two weeks after his arrival.

John Bosco, one of the few gay men to return to the United Kingdom after being deported to Uganda, met Robert before he was in Haslar detention centre (near Portsmouth) and has remained in phone contact.
"It's a really bad time for him and as a gay Ugandan, I know how hard it is to be gay in Uganda as I was arrested and tortured by police,” Bosco told LGBT Asylum News. “Many people have been beaten by the public as soon as you have been labelled being gay. When I was deported by the British, you handed me back to government officers and this is what exactly happened to me. I was beaten up really badly. Robert is in tears and terrified."
A UK immigration judge denied Segwanyi’s asylum appeal, claiming Uganda poses no threat to gays and lesbians.

On Tuesday, Canning started an additional petition on Change.org asking Kenya Airways to refuse to let Segwanyi board his flight. Pilots for Air France refused to fly Joseph Kaute to Cameroon, where he faced five years in prison for being gay. Canning hopes this last-minute campaign will potentially spare Robert’s life.
“I hope Immigration officials do the right thing and let Robert Segwanyi stay in the United Kingdom,” said Paul Canning. “But if they don’t, then I hope Kenya Airways refuses to fly Robert Segwanyi because Robert’s safety is in jeopardy if he is deported to Uganda.”
Paul Canning’s petition on Change.org asking UK officials to let Segwanyi stay:
http://www.change.org/petitions/save-gay-ugandan-robert-segwanyi

Paul Canning’s petition asking Kenya Airways to refuse to fly Segwanyi:
http://www.change.org/petitions/kenya-airways-stop-removing-gay-asylum-seekers-to-uganda

Paul Canning’s up-to-date reporting about Segwanyi:
http://madikazemi.blogspot.com/2011/08/obviously-gay-ugandan-asylum-seeker.html
http://madikazemi.blogspot.com/2011/07/uks-removal-of-gay-tortured-imprisoned.html
http://madikazemi.blogspot.com/2011/07/another-arrested-tortured-gay-ugandan.html

Change.org is the world’s fastest-growing platform for social change — growing by more than 400,000 new members a month, and empowering millions of people to start, join, and win campaigns for social change in their community, city and country.
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Monday, 15 August 2011

Action Alert: Help save gay Ugandan Robert Segwanyi!

BBC South Today report



UPDATE, 18 September: A number of websites have reported on developments, including Liberal Conspiracy and LibDem Voice.


UPDATE, 14 September: Robert's case will be in court 4 2 October.


UPDATE, 12 September: Robert was released from detention last week. We now know why. His case was accepted as not being suitable for the fast track and this was 'due to complexity and merits of the case' - a complete turn around in attitude. His asylum application is still refused but has been accepted as a fresh claim with a right of appeal. Robert's lawyers have now lodged an appeal and are awaiting a Notice of Hearing with the appeal date.

This would not be happening if a campaign had not happened for Robert. He would be on a plane to Uganda and we would be organising protection from violence and extortion at the airport and then a safe house. Despite that he could have been picked up police and re-imprisoned. LGBT Asylum News thanks everyone who has helped and pays tribute to the office of Mike Hancock MP and Ugandan refugee John Bosco in particular.


UPDATE, 5 September: Robert has been released from detention. He was not given a reason. He has been told to report weekly to a police station.

UPDATE, 1 September: An appeal has gone in today. For more on the latest from the Home Office see 'How the Home Office is misusing law in gay Ugandan asylum seeker case'.


UPDATE, 26 August: The fresh representations including new evidence, Bishop Senyonjo's statement, MPs statement etc., have been refused by the Home Office.

A legal appeal is being prepared.

Robert's case has been published in the Ugandan media.


UPDATE, 18 August:  7.15pm - We won.

Robert's removal was deferred by the Home Office in a message to his lawyer less than a hour before he was due to be flown to Kampala. An earlier request to a judge for an injunction to stop the removal was refused.

This is a battle victory - but we have not won the war. The Home Office can still refuse to accept the fresh evidence and his asylum claim and issue new removal instructions. However his supporters will fight this and will argue that Robert's mental state and his post-traumatic stress means he should be released from detention, as well as that his claim must be given a proper hearing.

Statement by Mike Hancock MP.

~~~~~

Robert's removal has been confirmed by Home Office.


Fresh legal representations for Robert have been made

New media coverage on Japanese TV, BBC, Huffington Post (front page), pinknews.co.uk, Miami Herald, Advocate and Portsmouth local radio.

Petition over 3,500.

Kenya Airways is refusing to respond to any inquiries regarding Robert.


UPDATE, 17 August: Fresh legal representations for Robert are to be made tomorrow. As of the end of today the petition to the Home Secretary is now over 3,200, to Kenya Airways over 500.

Gay Kenya has tried to get a response from Kenya Airways. They said:

'Sorry, we cannot do that. The flight has already been booked and we are not the ones who did it. You should be asking those in charge of that case.' Dead line.
New media coverage in Sydney Star Observer, Liberal Conspiracy, Eklesia, Xtra, San Diego Gay and Lesbian News and change.org.

Mike Hancock MP has issued a new press release, drawing attention to the evidence of Robert being tortured and to the statement that it is unsafe to return Robert, made by Bishop Senyonjo.

Said Hancock:
"As with all my constituents all I want is proper consideration of their case and the proper laws and regulations applied. It is very clear that they haven’t been properly applied in Mr Segwanyi’s case and I hope that his lawyers can now challenge this and get proper legal consideration. Amazingly and bizarrely the Home Office still say there is no persecution of gay men in Uganda, both now and when Mr Segwanyi was in Uganda when their own country report flatly contradicts this. Looking at the case overall, I have massive concerns about the case and I also believe that Mr Segwanyi’s case “stacks up” and I don’t say either of these things lightly. As the Bishop says, it would now be dangerous to deport Mr Segwani and this is shown by what happened to John Bosco Nyombi."


UPDATE, 16 August: Over 750 have now signed the petition. The flight information is 8pm, 18 August Kenya Airways KQ410. Petition targeting Kenya Airways.

pinknews has published a new story - this is in addition to previous media coverage.

Bishop Christopher Senyonjo has put forward a statement which says:
"The situation of LGBT in Uganda is dire and getting worse. People are being attacked, harassed and we face the revival of the Anti-Homosexuality bill in the Parliament."

"Ordinary people are being forced to move because their fellow Ugandans are attacking them: there is a 'witch-hunt' atmosphere regarding LGBT in the country which is unfortunately being encouraged by many of my fellow Christian leaders."
...
"It is not safe to return anyone who is LGBT or perceived to be LGBT to Uganda."
~~
Robert Segwanyi
Robert Segwanyi is a Ugandan gay asylum seeker who was jailed and tortured yet the UK Border Agency wants to remove him this Thursday, 18 August.

This is despite evidence that Robert is "obviously gay", despite a highly respected psychologist Professor Cornelius Katona saying he is gay and suffering post-traumatic stress disorder from his treatment in Uganda, and despite the backing of Robert's MP, Mike Hancock.

Please help by signing the petition at http://www.change.org/petitions/save-gay-ugandan-robert-segwanyi or by contacting Home Secretary Theresa May personally. And by passing on this message to your friends and contacts.

The UKBA, in writing to Hancock, is standing by an Immigration Judge's decision last year that:
"Even if I am wrong regarding the Appellant's homosexuality I see no reason to depart from the [then] current country guidance" - this guidance being that "the evidence does not establish that in general there is persecution of homosexuality (sic) in Uganda".
This country guidance was changed in April and now reflects the actual situation for gays in Uganda.

Ugandan gay refugee John Bosco met Robert before he was in Haslar detention centre near Portsmouth and has remained in phone contact. He says:
"Robert is in tears and terrified."

"It's a really bad time for him and as a gay Ugandan, I know how hard it is to be gay in Uganda as I was arrested and tortured by police. Many people have been beaten by the public as soon as you have been labelled being gay. When I was deported by the British, you handed me back to government officers and this is what exactly happened to me. I was beaten up really badly. "

"I was lucky that I had friends here in UK who gave me some money which I used to bribe the police, but Robert doesn't have many friends as he has not been here long enough to make friends and most of the time he has been in detention centres."
John says:
"When I met him face to face, it was obvious that Robert is gay. The way he was talking, the mannerism and mentioning some of Ugandan gay guys I from Uganda. Robert told me what he has been through and from my experience I knew it did happen to him as it happened to me when people in Uganda came to know about my sexuality."
Some of Robert's scars
UK Border Agency are refusing to accept John's evidence as new as well as other evidence on the deteriorating conditions for LGBT in Uganda.

He has been refused a fair consideration of his case. His campaigners are supporting him in keeping him safe in the UK. We are urging the Home Secretary to re-examine his case and give him protection in the UK.
You can contact the Home Secretary at:
Rt. Hon Theresa May, MP
Secretary of State for the Home Department,
2 Marsham St
London SW1 4DF
Fax: 020 7035 4745
mayt@parliament.uk
UKBApublicenquiries@UKBA.gsi.gov.uk
Please don't forget to quote Robert's Home Office reference number which is # S1457269

Thank you.

For further information or media enquiries contact:
Paul Canning, Editor, LGBT Asylum News
gayasylumuk@gmail.com

OR

John Bosco
nyjbosco2003@yahoo.co.uk

OR

Mike Hancock CBE MP
email@mikehancock.co.uk
023 92 861055
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Monday, 8 August 2011

'Obviously gay' Ugandan asylum seeker faces removal by UK Wednesday

Robert with his partner in Uganda. He doesn't know where his partner is now.
By Paul Canning

New updates continue here.

Update, 15 August: Robert has new removal instructions for Thursday 18 August. His lawyer is preparing another possible claim.


Update, 11 August: pinknews.co.uk, LibDem Voice, ILGA, Portsmouth local newspaper The News and now widely circulating The Advocate in the US have reported on Robert's case.

Update, 10 August: Robert's removal has been "deferred" pending consideration of his fresh claim for asylum.

Updated to add: Mike Hancock MP has issued a strong statement expressing "grave concern" and citing issues with the case including:
"Continued old-fashioned attitudes by immigration judges and a system that does not allow for the extreme nervousness that LGBT people may have in admitting their sexuality to people in authority following their experiences."

A Ugandan asylum seeker described by those who have met him as 'obviously gay' faces removal this Wednesday after the acting head of the UK Border Agency (UKBA), Jonathan Sedgwick, personally rejected an appeal by LiberalDemocrat Mike Hancock MP. A 'fresh claim' for asylum is to be put in today by his lawyer.

Sedgwick's letter reiterates what an immigration judge said regarding Robert Segwanyi last November. Judge Hembrough wrote that:
"Even if I am wrong regarding the Appellant's homosexuality I see no reason to depart from the [then] current country guidance" - this guidance being that "the evidence does not establish that in general there is persecution of homosexuality (sic) in Uganda".
This country guidance was changed in February and now reflects the actual situation for gays in Uganda.

In particular it points out that:
"Amnesty’s 2010 Report 'I Can’t Afford Justice' published on 6 April 2010 commented “…section 145 of the Penal Code Act has been and continues to be used by the police and other law enforcement officials to subject lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people in Uganda to arbitrary arrest and detention often resulting in torture or other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment.” [10b] This comment is contrary to that made by UHRC at 19.04 and should be considered accordingly. [This means that this information should be prioritised over prior information.]"
Sedgwick's letter claims that Hancock's pointing to the murder of David Kato earlier this year as 'new evidence' is irrelevant as he claims that Segwanyi would "keep his sexual orientation secret for reasons other than fear of persecution in Uganda." This reiterates the judge's hedging of 'even if I am wrong and he is gay ...'

According to those who have met him, Robert is 'obviously gay'.

Ugandan refugee John Bosco met Segwanyi before he was in Haslar detention centre near Portsmouth. He says:
"When I met him face to face, it was obvious that Robert is gay. The way he was talking, the mannerism and mentioning some of Ugandan gay guys I from Uganda. Robert told me what he has been through and from my experience I knew it did happen to him as it happened to me when people in Uganda came to know about my sexuality."
Anne Dickinson of Haslar Visitor's Group said that they knew immediately that Robert was gay, before he told them, but they didn't want to say anything.

Says Bosco:
"Robert wanted to talk to them but he found it hard to talk about it in front of others listening. So he waited until one went to the kitchen and talked about it. Then when I met Robert I asked how he felt about it afterwards. He was scared to death thinking he has blown off his chance as he will never be allowed to go back to the drop-in as this has been happening where ever he mentions that he is gay. He was then shocked to hear that this time someone listened to him. Robert is so vulnerable as he finds it hard to express himself because of English language. He can speak English but not good enough to express his feelings."
Robert was imprisoned and tortured for homosexuality. On escaping prison in June 2010 he fled to the UK and applied for asylum a fortnight later. The UK Border Agency (UKBA) does not accept he is gay and a judge rejected his appeal claiming that there is no risk to gay people in Uganda.

Hancock's letter demanded that Robert be given enough time to put in for judicial review - because, he explained in some detail, previous judicial dismissal of Robert's case appeared to be unsafe.

In particular he pointed to immigration judge Hembrough's treatment of the evidence of Professor Cornelius Katona, a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, Emeritus professor of Psychiatry in the University of Kent, Honorary Professor in the Department of Mental Health Sciences at University College London and author of over 300 expert medical reports. (We detailed other problems with both judge Hembrough's as well as the UKBA's treatment of Robert.)

Hancock pointed to the judge's statement in his ruling that Prof. Katona did not consider Mr Segwani to be gay - yet Prof. Katona has said that this is "with respect, incorrect".

Hembrough said he had “considerable doubts as to whether” Segwanyi was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PSTD) – despite Prof. Katona saying that it would not even be possible for professional actors to fake PTSD symptoms in a way that Segwanyi did.

The treatment of Katona's evidence demands judicial review, Hancock says. But Sedgwick's letter rejects any need to reassess the judge's decision.

In total, Sedgwick backs the judge and rejects Hancock's assessment that the judge's findings about Segwanyi being interviewed in English, his PSTD and his homosexuality:
"Are at best based on somewhat prejudiced views and not in line with the evidence. Indeed if Mr Segwanyi had wanted to mislead the immigration authorities he would surely have acted in a different way."
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Monday, 11 July 2011

UK's removal of gay tortured, imprisoned Ugandan stopped at last moment

Robert Segwanyi
By Paul Canning
The removal of Ugandan gay asylum seeker Robert Segwanyi was tonight "deferred" at the last minute. He had been moved today to a Heathrow 'removal centre' for an early morning 11 July flight to Kampala.

The deferment comes after the last minute intervention of Segwanyi's MP, Mike Hancock, as well as the MEP Michael Cashman. Many concerned people also wrote the British Home Secretary Theresa May over the past few days.

A new lawyer had been found today for Robert - who has been badly represented previously - but he did not have enough time in which to submit a judicial review application.

Robert was imprisoned and tortured for homosexuality. On escaping prison in June 2010 he fled to the UK and applied for asylum a fortnight later. The UK Border Agency (UKBA) does not accept he is gay and a judge rejected his appeal claiming that there is no risk to gay people in Uganda.

Hancock's letter demanded that Robert be given enough time to put in for judicial review - because, he explained in some detail, previous judicial dismissal of Robert's case appeared to be unsafe.

In particular he pointed to immigration judge Hembrough's treatment of the evidence of Professor Cornelius Katona, a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, Emeritus professor of Psychiatry in the University of Kent, Honorary Professor in the Department of Mental Health Sciences at University College London and author of over 300 expert medical reports. (Katona's evidence wasn't available on Friday when we detailed other problems with both judge Hembrough's as well as the UKBA's treatment of Robert.)

Hancock pointed to the judge's statement in his ruling that Prof. Katona did not consider Mr Segwani to be gay - yet Prof. Katona has said that this is "with respect, incorrect".

Hembrough said he had “considerable doubts as to whether” Segwanyi was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PSTD) – despite Prof. Katona saying that it would not even be possible for professional actors to fake PTSD symptoms in a way that Segwanyi did.

The treatment of Katona's evidence demands judicial review, Hancock says.

Further, he points out that Theresa May has said that "cases involving LGBT will be reviewed before final deportation." And Hancock wants an answer to his suggestion:
"That this case shows that the UKBA and the Home Office are institutionally homophobic and there should be better consideration of this case so that it can demonstrate that it is not."
Mike Hancock MP
Hancock notes that the judge's determination in November was:
"Even if I am wrong regarding the Appellant's homosexuality I see no reason to depart from the [then] current country guidance" - this guidance being that "the evidence does not establish that in general there is persecution of homosexuality (sic) in Uganda".
When, Hancock says, the situation for LGBT in Uganda was widely reported as worsening.

He notes that Professor Katona says that
"Mr Segwani's Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder [means that] there is a strong possibility that his high levels of fear and stress may have led to his assenting to be interviewed in English without taking fully into account the disadvantages of doing so." 
Robert's prior argument was that the 'credibility' issues raised by UKBA were due to the interviewer mixing up his statements about his past relationships - and Prof. Katona says that Robert's understanding of English was poor and his spoken English also "very limited". The judge dismissed this evidence.

When Robert's case was last dismissed by UKBA 21 January reiterating the judge's ruling, Prof. Katona said:
"This assessment appears however to have ignored my expert clinical assessment."
Commenting on the judge's decision, Hancock quotes the Public Law Project:
"Public bodies must correctly understand and apply the law that regulates their decision making powers. An action or decision may be unlawful if the decision maker had no power to make it or exceeded the powers given to him/her. Four kinds of illegal activity may be identified:...[including] taking irrelevant factors into account or failing to take account of all relevant factors."
Hancock writes that Hembrough's findings about Segwanyi being interviewed in English, his PSTD and his homosexuality:
"Are at best based on somewhat prejudiced views and not in line with the evidence. Indeed if Mr Segwanyi had wanted to mislead the immigration authorities he would surely have acted in a different way."
Hancock quotes from Stonewall's Report 'No Going Back' that "some appeal judges' attitudes to LGBT are "old-fashioned"." And he highlights a quote from the report from another Ugandan asylum seeker who said:
"My lawyer asked whether I could change my case and claim on political grounds instead. She said it's hard to represent me properly with the case of being gay."

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Friday, 8 July 2011

Another arrested, tortured gay Ugandan that Britain wants to deport

Robert Segwanyi
By Paul Canning
Edited to add: Robert's removal was stopped at the last minute.

Robert Segwanyi is a Gay Ugandan man imprisoned and tortured for homosexuality and who on escaping in June 2010 fled to the UK and applied for asylum a fortnight later.

The UK Border Agency (UKBA) does not accept he is gay and a judge rejected his appeal claiming that there is no risk to gay people in Uganda. They plan to remove him to Uganda on Tuesday, 12 July.
  • Scroll to bottom to see how you can support Robert
In February 2010 Robert was arrested in Uganda because, he believes, someone found out about his last relationship and informed the police.

Whilst in prison he was tortured - beaten with electric wires, sticks and metal objects. One day whilst he was working in a prison detail at a sugar plantation he managed to escape. Hiding under foliage in the sugar cane field, he managed to escape detection. As he was wearing a prison uniform, he stole some clothes and managed to make his way to a friend's house. Three weeks later after his friend had organised travel including a visitor's visa he got on a plane for London.

After he arrived his possessions including his passport were stolen. An African man took pity on him and after a fortnight took him to the Border Agency office in Croydon and told him to explain his situation.

Robert has been badly legally represented but photographic evidence was submitted from a previous boyfriend. A new witness to Robert's sexuality has come forward and the Ugandan gay refugee advocate John Bosco, who has become friends with Robert and has also made a statement, said:
"We talk about how good looking other men are. The expression on his face when he looked at some men made it obvious he is gay."
Robert and John also shared recollections of venues in Kampala.
 
Bosco says that what Robert has gone through was not "news to my ear" but typical of how Uganda treats gay people. The way Robert talks and his mannerisms would immediately put him at risk in Uganda, Bosco says:
"I’m terribly worried about Robert’s life if he is deported back to Uganda."
The rejection by UKBA of Robert's case follows a similar path to that of other lesbian or gay asylum seekers, where minor discrepancies in testimony are taken to undermine his entire testimony, especially that a person is gay. No translator was provided at Robert's interview with UKBA and no account was taken that he could be suffering from post-traumatic stress. Robert believes that the interviewer had mixed up his statements about his past relationships.

If it is accepted that an asylum applicant is gay then this triggers a series of considerations, so it is unsurprising significant effort was made to deny Robert's sexuality.

In rejecting him, UKBA say it is implausible that Robert managed to escape from prison and that Ugandan authorities would then put a 'wanted' advert in the New Vision newspaper - yet he was able to leave using his passport. The possibility that authorities at Entebbe airport would not necessarily have similar electronic notification of 'wanted' people to those at Heathrow does not occur to this border agent.

On appeal, last November, immigration judge Hembrough had available to him a copy of the wanted notice in New Vision, complete with Robert's picture.

He also had a psychiatrist's report showing that Robert was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

The Home Office lawyer argued that even if Robert was gay, gay people are not at risk in Uganda.

Hembrough rejected that a fresh interview with an interpreter needed to take place, rejected that he had been tortured and has PTSD and rejected the appeal - in part on the basis of a lack of medical evidence "which might show that the Appellant had engaged in penetrative sexual acts" - and otherwise due to Robert's then lawyer's various failings in sourcing evidence.

Hembrough finds it "implausible" that Robert would not contact his family, who live in a small village, despite the explanation that contact could cause them problems.

Hembrough rejects that Robert is gay due to the apparent mix-up by the interviewer of Robert's account of his relationships, though he accepts that Robert's statements may appear confused because "there is an obvious tendency towards squeamishness when dealing with such matters" (i.e. gay sex), and because in the UK Robert has not "joined any social groups, attended gay bars, clubs and the like."  Hembrough doesn't mention the photographic evidence of Robert's then relationship.

But Hembrough - astonishingly - hedges his bets:
"Even if I am wrong regarding the Appellant's homosexuality I see no reason to depart from the [then] current country guidance" - this guidance being that "the evidence does not establish that in general there is persecution of homosexuality (sic) in Uganda".
Edited to add: The Judge refers to the 'JM' decision on the safety of returning gay people to Uganda, rather than the 'SB' decision which superseded it in February 2010. A similar tactic was used by Home Office lawyers in another Ugandan case in February this year.

Some of Robert's scars
An examination of Robert's scars was only conducted last month under 'rule 35', (which is supposed to ensure that asylum seekers who are torture survivors are not detained, though it rarely does result in anyone being released). Although this did led to Robert's temporary release from detention, unfortunately, Robert's previous lawyer failed to follow up on this report and Robert was swiftly detained again.

News of this new Ugandan gay asylum case which the UK wants to send back comes at we learn of plans to resubmit the infamous 'Kill the gays' bill to the Ugandan Parliament.

Many may say or expect that that law will be unenforced because the current colonial hand-me-down sodomy law is widely believed to be unenforced - but this is untrue.

In rejecting Robert's case (in 2010) the UKBA case officer relied on inaccurate information on whether gays and lesbians are arrested in Uganda - this information has now changed.

Recently updated country guidance for the UK Border Agency quotes the 2009 US State Department human rights report for Uganda saying that "no persons have been charged under the law" (the 2010 report repeats this line).

It also quotes the 12th Annual Report of the Uganda Human Rights Commission to the Parliament of
the Republic of Uganda, covering events in 2009, released in October 2010, which says that "few arrests, prosecutions and convictions have been made under section 145 of the Penal Code Act, which suggests that this law is redundant."

However, citing the most up to date evidence, it also says that:
"Amnesty’s 2010 Report 'I Can’t Afford Justice' published on 6 April 2010 commented “…section 145 of the Penal Code Act has been and continues to be used by the police and other law enforcement officials to subject lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people in Uganda to arbitrary arrest and detention often resulting in torture or other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment.” [10b] This comment is contrary to that made by UHRC at 19.04 and should be considered accordingly."
This means that this new information on police treatment of gays in Uganda should be prioritised over prior information

Ugandan activists have reported arrests under the existing law for some time. In her eulogy for the murdered gay activist David Kato earlier this year, Val Kalende noted that Kato had: "visited all of the prisons and police stations where a member (s) of the LGBT community had been arrested or detained."

Ugandan refugees in the UK like John Bosco and Prossy Kakooza both experienced arrest (and torture) by police before 2010.

In a Channel Four documentary 'Africa’s Last Taboo' last year, African journalist Sorious Samura documents in detail the arrest and detention of two gay men in Mbale (a city in southeastern Uganda) under the existing sodomy law.

Barrister S. Chelvan, of London's No5 Chambers, says:
"What they [the police] do is use the law to act with impunity. That's what happens."
Chelvan says there are arrests, detention and torture - but prosecutions generally don't eventuate: "you bribe yourself out." This was John Bosco's experience. Uganda's Inspector General of Police, Maj Gen Kale Kayihura, has explained the lack of officially reporting of prosecuted cases as them 'dying a natural death'.

Interference on the question of the existing law's application has been a consistent tactic by anti-gay forces in Uganda. The police itself, in its 2010 police crime report, says that "there were no cases of homosexuality reported in Uganda" (that's the language reported in the Observer newspaper). The leading anti-gay campaigner Pastor Ssempa has claimed that:
"For the last 50 years we’ve had this law, since we’ve had a law against homosexuality, no homosexual has been arrested or killed for homosexuality."
LGBT Asylum News has noted how international media has repeated such claims and other ones, such as the repeated 'concession' by 'Kill the gays' bill author David Bahati MP that the death penalty would be removed and the claims that the bill only pertains to child abuse or sexual assaults.

Yet some comments have made it through which suggest the real motives of the anti-gay forces and what could be the actual impact of the bill's passage into law. On the Christian radio show Michael Brown’s Line of Fire Pastor Julius Oyet, another author of the bill, tells a gay man that he will be arrested when the Anti-Homosexuality law takes effect.

In the documentary 'Uganda: Killing in the name of god' Oyet defends death for gays with his Bible and a Muslim cleric is shown preparing squads to hunt down gays.

And most infamously David Bahati told investigative journalist Jeff Sharlet in an unguarded moment after a long day spent together that he wanted “to kill every last gay person.”

Speaking about the experience to NPR, Sharlet said:
"It was a very chilling moment, because I'm sitting there with this man who's talking about his plans for genocide, and has demonstrated over the period of my relationship with him that he's not some back bencher — he's a real rising star in the movement. This was something that I hadn't understood before I went to Uganda, that this was a guy with real potential and real sway and increasingly a following in Uganda."
Bahati also famously threatened gay British radio star Scott Mills as he was interviewing him for a documentary.
When the presenter said he was gay, Bahati became enraged and the film crew fled.

Later, they heard that Bahati had sent armed police to a hotel he thought they were staying at.
And earlier this year Bahati threatened another Ugandan asylum seeker in the UK, BN. This author witnessed that threat and made a statement to that effect.

Act Now

1) Contact the Home Secretary
Rt. Hon Theresa May, MP
Secretary of State for the Home Office,
2 Marsham St London SW1 4DF

Fax: 020 7035 4745
(00 44 20 7035 4745 if you are faxing from outside UK)

Email:
mayt@parliament.uk
UKBApublicenquiries@UKBA.gsi.gov.uk
CITTO@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk
Privateoffice.external@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk

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