Showing posts with label mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mexico. Show all posts

Friday, 20 January 2012

Torture killing of another trans person in Mexico

By Paul Canning

Mexican media reported 17 January on the brutal killing of an apparently transsexual person in Apodaca, near Monterrey in Northern Mexico.

The body of a man wearing women's clothes was found by police after local residents heard gun shots and explosions.

According to the police report, the body was found lying face down and was about 25 years old. It showed signs of torture, of being shot as he was beaten, his hands were semi-amputated and there was a written message that said "For Rat" ("Por Rata").

The body has reportedly not yet been identified but had a major identifying mark, a tattoo with the name "Pamela".

The Trans Murder Monitoring project recorded 23 reports of murders of trans people in Mexico in 2011. Last August, in Mexico City, the first national march against anti-gay hate crime took place. That claimed that 700 LGBT people had been murdered in 2011.

Last year it was reported that LGBT Mexicans fleeing for US sanctuary are increasingly finding their asylum requests turned down.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, 20 December 2011

Video: Human rights crisis at Mex/USA border

The remains of at least 6,000 migrants have been found in U.S. desert land since U.S.-Mexico border policies were implemented in the 1990s. Some groups estimate that for each set of remains recovered, those of 10 more people are lost to the harsh desert elements.

Advocates and authorities attribute the escalating number of deaths not only to rising heat but also to ever-tightening border security forcing migrants into more remote and dangerous terrain. Deserted calls on viewers to recognize these deaths as a humanitarian emergency and human rights crisis.

The video includes chilling images of a morgue in Tucson, Arizona in which row after row of body bags contain human remains that may never be identified, of people whose families may never know what happened to them.

Stand with Breakthrough and recognize this human rights crisis that is taking place at our border. Watch and share this video, and take action against this human rights crisis with No More Deaths (www.nomoredeaths.org) and Coalition de Derechos Humanos (derechoshumanosaz.net).

VIDEO CREDITS: Directed, filmed and edited by Dana Variano with Ishita Srivastava; music by Denver Dalley; post-production audio by Hobo Audio. Produced by Breakthrough.


Enhanced by Zemanta

Saturday, 3 December 2011

US asylum urged for trans Mexican

Seal of the United States Court of Appeals for...Image via Wikipedia
Source: Lambda Legal

30 November, Lambda Legal and a group of organizations that advocate for the rights of people living with HIV, including HIV-affected immigrants, filed a friend-of-the-court brief with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Lopez Berera v. Holder, urging the Court to grant asylum to a transgender Mexican woman living with HIV/AIDS.
"Growing up in Mexico, Karolina Lopez Berera suffered horrific abuse at the hands of her family and police because of her transgender identity," said Iván Espinoza-Madrigal, Lambda Legal Staff Attorney. "She fled to the United States to escape that abuse, and immigration officials concede that she was persecuted."

"Ms. Lopez Berera has been diagnosed with HIV/AIDS. Notwithstanding her diagnosis and her credible claims of persecution and abuse, the U.S. government is intent on deporting her to Mexico. Her forced removal, in light of rampant HIV stigma, discrimination, and persecution amounts to nothing less than an indirect death sentence."
"Our brief highlights the reality of Mexican cultural and social conditions, in contrast to recent pro-LGBT legislative accomplishments that are as yet only paper tigers," said Peter Perkowski, a partner at Winston and Strawn LLP. "Until Mexican attitudes catch up with the country's aspirations, Mexico will always be a dangerous place for transgender people with HIV, like Karolina. This case is therefore important not just for her, but for others like her who rely on United States asylum law as an avenue of escape from horrific abuses in their home countries."
The friend-of-the-court brief highlights country condition reports, media accounts, and studies that document the persecution, discrimination and neglect that transgender individuals, especially transgender people living with HIV/AIDS, face in critical HIV-related health care services in Mexico. Since transgender people are often deliberately excluded from access to, and the delivery of, HIV medications, Ms. Lopez Berera will not have access to life-saving medications. In addition, the brief discusses how Ms. Lopez Berera's HIV status places her in great danger of persecution because people living with HIV in Mexico are frequently the victims of hate crimes.

Counsel for amici curiae include Iván Espinoza-Madrigal from Lambda Legal, and Peter E. Perkowski from Winston and Strawn LLP. The firm handled this matter pro bono. The brief was filed on behalf of Lambda Legal, the American Civil Liberties Union, the HIV Law Project, AIDS Legal Council, Asian Pacific AIDS Intervention Team, East Bay Community Law Center, HIV and AIDS Legal Services Alliance, and the Health and Human Rights Clinic at Indiana University School of Law - Indianapolis.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, 2 December 2011

Video: New doco on trans Mexican asylum seekers in the US

Feature-length documentary Crossing Over is the story of three transsexual women from Mexico seeking asylum in the United States from the physical, emotional, and sexual abuse inflicted on them in their homeland.

Stigmatized by religious and patriarchal powers within their community, transsexuals in Mexico find acceptance elusive and jobs nonexistent. Francis Murillo, Brenda Gonzalez, and Abigail Madariaga – the three women who let us into their lives for Crossing Over – have been denied work because of their refusal to hide who they are. They have been sexually abused by police, neighbors, and by their own family members.

It’s difficult enough for undocumented immigrants to find safe work and a living wage once they arrive in the United States – but the transsexual men and women among them have an even harder time. Many resort to working in the sex industry, where their chances of being exposed to HIV and developing drug addictions greatly increase. Abigail became addicted to drugs while working as a prostitute, and Brenda contracted HIV. Both women have been more successful finding treatment since being granted political asylum in 2008.

Francis, Brenda and Abigail now have safe, stable jobs. Abigail is a dancer, Quinceañera planner, and student. She intends to become a lawyer to fight for transsexual rights. Brenda works at Bienestar, an organization that provides support and education to marginalized Latino communities in Los Angeles. There, she leads HIV education classes and support groups, and spreads awareness about Bienestar’s resources. Francis is a housecleaner and aid to a thirty-year old autistic woman.

Francis has yet to receive asylum. Her final hearing is scheduled for February 13, 2012, and will determine whether or not she is eligible to stay in the United States. If she is denied, she will be deported and sent back to Mexico.



Director Isabel Castro has started a Kickstarter page to raise money to finish her project. She is trying to raise $4,000 in 40 days to help pay for a crew, travel and equipment to shoot a documentary about 45 minutes long.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday, 1 December 2011

Research help: LGBTI refugee detention in Greece and Mexico

HelpImage by LiminalMike via Flickr
The George Washington University Law School International Human Rights Clinic, in collaboration with The Organization for Refuge, Asylum, and Migration (ORAM) is researching the human rights implications of subjecting LGBTI individuals to immigration detention in Greece and Mexico.

Immigration detention inherently implicates numerous human rights norms, and the probability that LGBTI detainees will experience multiple levels of marginalization is especially acute. This project seeks to expose the unique protection gaps LGBTI detainees face in immigration detention, identify the international, regional and domestic legal obligations of the detaining States, and to make recommendations for States to better address these shortcomings that have previously not garnered any attention.

The IHRC Detention Team is seeking individuals who can share relevant experiences of detention in either Greece or Mexico for inclusion in the report we are authoring. Testimonials from migrants and refugees, including former and current detainees, would be used to give an accurate portrayal of the situation in Greece and Mexico, and to ensure appropriate representation through compelling personal stories

If you know of individuals or service providers that would be willing to assist, please contact Katerina Herodotou at kherodotou@law.gwu.edu. We are completing this project in mid-December.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Saturday, 12 November 2011

Tomb of the Unknown Migrant

Source: New American Media

Holtville, Calif. -- They could have been anybody -- a talented musician, a farm worker, an unemployed teacher, a desperate parent, a son or daughter looking to feed their mother, brothers and sisters. Whoever they are, their identities are now shrouded beneath the saline terrain that surrounds the town of Holtville, just west of Arizona and less than an hour from the Mexican border.

Most of the John and Jane Does buried here were found dead, their bodies strewn across the desert hills of Imperial Valley, or along the All American Canal that feeds a sprawling agricultural expanse extending from El Centro, Calif., to Mexicali, Mexico. No one knows who they are and few seem to really care.

Day of the Dead

Nov. 2 marks the Mexican holiday known as Día de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead, when families traditionally gather to honor those who have gone before. This year a handful of immigrant rights activists and community members gathered at Holtville’s Terrace Park Cemetery, near the site of dozens of unmarked graves, to celebrate and to mourn.

Partially obscured by a six-foot wall are rows and rows – 49 to be exact – of crosses with simple, mud-colored bricks delineating the final resting place for these would-be migrants.

“None of the people buried here expected to end up like this,” says Enrique Morones, head of the non-profit organization Border Angels.

Founded in 1986, the organization provides humanitarian assistance to migrants living in the canyons of North San Diego County. For several years it has also helped recruit volunteers as part of a campaign to leave bottles of water in areas identified as crossing points for undocumented immigrants.

“Most undocumented migrants are not aware of the perils of the desert. They are also easy prey for unscrupulous smugglers that rob them and then leave them lost on their own in a place where north and south are indistinguishable,” adds Morones, as he leaves a few gallons of water at a strategic point marked by a blanket hanging from a small shrubby tree, known as a huizache.

“No one can survive more than two hours under 115-degree heat during the summer,” explains Border Patrol Officer Adrian Corona. “Winter is equally dangerous,” he says, adding that the mountainous terrain is especially treacherous at night and brutally hot in the day. Most don’t make the trip, he says.

Under high heat and with no water, the body enters into a state of shock, the vital organs gradually shutting down. People in this state will experience hallucinations – also described as the “oasis effect” – before collapsing in a delirium.

The "coyotes," meanwhile, who are essentially paid guides for migrants looking to head north, often warn fellow travelers not to stop for those showing signs of dehydration. Since most border trips are made at night, it’s common practice for coyotes to abandon stragglers.

BOARSTAR (Border Patrol Search, Trauma and Rescue Unit) agents operating in the Imperial Valley say they have performed 30 emergency rescues this fiscal year, down from the 50 performed the previous year. Corona and his fellow border agents attribute the decline to improved technology, which is making it easier to track movements across the desert.

“Not only can we better chart their point of entry, but it is becoming more common for migrants to dial 911 [in an emergency] and through the GPS signals we get from their phones, we can get to them before it becomes critical,” explains Corona.

Still, a majority of undocumented immigrants are unlikely to carry cell phones. And even if they did, the fear of getting caught and facing potential sentences of between three and five years would deter them from making that call. It also means that many don’t carry identification.

In the Valley of the Dead

“The problem is that most of the time their bodies are found days, weeks, or years after they die. Sometimes authorities only find a femur or just a few bones,” said Jesus Gutierrez, head of the Legal Protection department for the Mexican Consulate in Calexico.

In such cases, legal protocol requires authorities to contact the Mexican consulate in a specific jurisdiction and work in tandem with them to try to ID the deceased. In cases where identification is not possible, the coroner's office saves samples of the remains with a view toward future DNA identification, which is costly and done sparingly at best.

“No matter how many fences the U.S. government builds, as long as the economic disparities between this country and the countries of Latin America persist, people will try to come, legally or not,” said Morones, adding that any given day along the U.S.-Mexico border could be a “day of the dead.”

Immigrant rights advocates like Morones warn in fact that with the growing trend of mass deportations, carried out with particular zeal under the current administration, migrants are becoming more desperate to return, with greater numbers likely to perish under the desert sun.

According to official figures, between January and June 2011, the U.S. government has carried out more than 46,000 deportations of parents whose children are U.S. citizens. While there is no solid government data regarding the number of children left behind, the New York-based think tank Applied Research Center, which works to foster racial justice, estimates that at least 5,100 children have ended up in foster homes.

In the next five years, says ARC, that figure could reach 15,000.

“Do you think those parents who have been deported will remain in their countries knowing that their children are here?” asks Anita Nicklem, who lives in the Imperial Valley and attended the ceremony at Terrace Park Cemetery. “Of course not. They will do whatever they can to come back and of course they will risk their lives in doing so,” she says.

Pointing to one of the nearby graves, she adds, “I could be one of them."

Monday, 7 November 2011

Video: A Tree of Wounded Roots

Source: Mapping Memories

A queer Mexican newcomer describes her journey to Canada and her process as an asylum seeker.

Friday, 28 October 2011

Call to support HIV+ Mexican gay refugee Canada wants to remove

Source: AIDS ACTION NOW!

Call for Immigration Canada to stop the deportation of gay refugee claimants who are living with HIV and face extreme violence if sent home!

To show support for Herberth and call for him to stay, friends of Herbeth, concerned community members, Latinos Positivos and AIDS ACTION NOW! will be holding a support vigil of at Yonge and Dundas Square on November 8, 2011 at 6pm.

Herberth Menendez is a 30 year old Mexican citizen who immigrated to Canada in 2007. He left Mexico to claim refugee status in Canada because he feared for his life due to the intense discrimination and threats of physical violence he faced for being openly gay and living with HIV. Despite having submitted detailed proof of the homophobia and HIV discrimination he has faced in Mexico, Herberth is currently in the final stages of his Pre-Removal Risk Assessment Application. His lawyer has told him there is very little likelihood of his application will be accepted.

Canada has a record of deporting immigrants from many Spanish speaking countries, including Mexico, despite the fact that they have proof they will face violence in their home country if they return.The Mexican Government continues to put up a façade for Canada that homophobic murders do not take place there. However, we sadly hear of cases very often where gay men have been assassinated in Mexico for their sexual orientation or HIV status.

Herberth left Mexico to escape persecution from his neighbors and his own father because he was openly gay and is living with HIV. He was thrown out of his family home by his father and told never to return or he would personally kill him. When Herberth found out he was HIV positive, he suffered discrimination by friends and family and dealt with the intense stigma that exists in the medical community when he sought out health care in Mexico. Nurses and doctors would disclose his HIV-positive status without Herberth’s consent in front of other patients in the clinic without any conscious effort of respecting his confidentiality.

Herberth came to Canada to try and get support and leave a climate of fear and stigma he faced in Mexico. In Toronto, he found Latinos Positivos, an organization dedicated to supporting members of the Latin community who are living with HIV. Members of Latinos Positivos have now become Herberth’s family in Canada. He has volunteered for Latinos Positivos since his arrival and in 2011, Herberth’s drag persona Ashanti Silman was crowned Miss Latinos Positivos. In this role, Herberth has performed at and supported several fundraisers for the organization and helped raise funds for and awareness of their programming. Most recently he contributed efforts towards the production of a pamphlet about HIV and stigma in the Latin community with the Centre for Spanish Speaking Peoples and Latinos Positivos.

  • Latinos Positivos aims to help empower Latino People Living with HIV and AIDS to move beyond their diagnosis and establish a supportive and accepting Latino community within the AIDS movement.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Video: A Distant Voice from the North

Source: Mapping Memories

A queer Mexican newcomer describes his journey to Canada.



Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, 21 October 2011

Canada refuses asylum to Mexican gay couple

Source: Montreal Gazette

In the fall of 2007, David Perez sat down with his longtime girlfriend in Mexico City for what he knew would be a difficult conversation.

Perez told her he had to call off their engagement because he was gay and he could no longer live with the secret.

His girlfriend was furious and told him she would rather see him dead than be with a man, he says.

Perez and his partner, Pablo Gonzalez, told their story about what happened next in an interview with The Gazette this week:

A few weeks after the conversation, after leaving work one day, Perez was bundled into a car and driven to a remote neighbourhood by his ex-girlfriend’s uncle – a police officer – and three other men.

He says the men beat him, threatened to kill him with a gun and sexually assaulted him with a flashlight.

He and Gonzalez eventually fled Mexico City and moved to Cuernavaca, south of the capital. But his girlfriend soon showed up at their door, warning Perez she would track him down wherever he went.

A few months later, after fleeing to yet another city, Pachuca, Gonzalez says he was punched in the face by a man who turned up at his doorstep looking for Perez.

The men say they never reported either incident because they had no confidence the police would intervene.
“The culture is too macho – they don’t accept homosexuality,” Gonzalez said.
The couple fled to Montreal in the summer of 2008.

In their application for refugee status, they said they fear for their lives in Mexico because the ex-girlfriend’s uncle was able to use his police connections to track them down.

However, the Immigration and Refugee Board has rejected their claim on the grounds that they could have found safety by moving to another part of Mexico.

The two men were ordered to leave Canada by Oct. 20. They’re booked on a flight to Mexico Thursday morning.

In its decision, the refugee board said it was implausible that the ex-girlfriend’s uncle had “the motivation or the power to track the men down anywhere in Mexico.”

Perez, 29, and Gonzalez, 26, disagree.

They say homophobia is widespread in Mexico, and both have tested positive for HIV since arriving in Canada.

The couple has applied to remain on humanitarian grounds. But the Canada Border Services Agency has turned down a request to delay Thursday’s removal pending that hearing, which could be months away.

In 2009, the federal government made it compulsory for Mexicans to obtain a visa to enter Canada, saying too many bogus refugee claims were being made.

Since the new visa regulation was implemented, refugee claims by Mexicans have plummeted 84 per cent – from 7,594 in 2009 to 1,201 in 2010.

Kathleen Hadekel, a lawyer and case worker with a legal clinic that helps refugee claimants, said the couple’s case is compelling given the trauma they say they’ve suffered.

After arriving in Montreal, Gonzalez said he opened a car wash business in St. Léonard, where Perez also worked. The business is now closed for good.

The couple will ask a Federal Court judge on Wednesday to delay the removal order until their application to remain here on humanitarian grounds is heard.
“I am scared,” Perez said of returning home. “But we have to follow the law.”
Update: After the couple’s refugee application was rejected, their lawyer asked the Canada Border Services Agency to delay their removal until their application to remain in Canada on humanitarian grounds is heard.

The CBSA rejected the request for a delay in the removal. However, a Federal Court judge ruled on Wednesday that the couple can stay in Canada while they contest the CBSA’s decision.
“They are thrilled; they broke down in tears,” said Kathleen Hadekel, a lawyer who has been assisting the couple.
No date for the hearing has been set.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday, 20 October 2011

Video: Trapped in Tijuana

Source: New York Times

Friday, 30 September 2011

Video: Mexican gay activist fleeing persecution surfaces in San Diego


By Paul Canning

The Mexican gay activist Agustín Estrada Negrete has surfaced in San Diego, local TV news reports, and is claiming asylum.

We reported earlier this month on how Negrete and his lawyer had faced severe persecution, rape and death threats in the state of Mexico (which surrounds Mexico City) for their activist work.

Negrete was forced to step down from the position as director and founder of a local school, Centro de Atención Múltiple (CAM), for disabled children in 2007 due to false allegations by fellow staff against him that he had gone to the school dressed as a woman. He had in fact been pictured in newspapers at a LGBT rights march in the nearby city of Ecatepec de Morelos dressed as 'Alban' in La Cage Aux Folles.

At a meeting with state authorities in 2009 with supportive parents, Negrete was arrested and assaulted by police. Taken to a maximum security prison, Negrete was told that “El Gobernador del Estado México no te quiere por maricon, te vamos a desaparecer” (the Governor of the State of Mexico doesn’t like faggots, we’re going to make you disappear”). At the jail he was verbally and physically assaulted again and then sexually assaulted by men who covered their faces so as not to be identified.

After he was released, he continued to receive death threats and four months later men broke into a house he was in hiding in and he was raped with a metal tube and left for dead, a plastic bag over his head. The next week he was stabbed by men wearing State police uniforms. The following day he reported the incident to the authorities, who closed the door when they saw him arriving. On 22 November 2009 unknown individuals spray-painted the wall beside his sister's home with messages saying “Agustín vete, vas a morir putato” (Agustín leave, you are going to die whore).

Negrete in an interview with French gay magazine Tetu claimed that his former lover was the State of Mexico politician and candidate of the right-wing PRI for State Governor Eruviel Ávila Villegas. "They did everything to silence me because it is important that Eruviel Ávila is not out of the closet," he said. He said that he was approached to negotiate his silence, "but after the rape I suffered, I do not want to negotiate."

He had reported the assaults and called on the National Commission for Human Rights, Consejo Para Prevenir la Discriminación- CONAPRED (the Council for the Prevention of Discrimination), the Minister for Education and the Minister for Health, among others, to take action. But the complaint wasn't accepted - Negrete was told “we are not allowed to take any declaration from you” - and warned not to continue with the particular complaint if he wanted to remain alive.


US asylum is reportedly becoming harder for LGBT Mexicans because of a perception amongst US authorities that legal progress, such as gay marriage in Mexico City, means that the country is safe for LGBT. It is unclear whether Negrete has faced problems with his asylum case because of this changed attitude and the legal circuit is which he has claimed is understood to be the most accepting of LGBT asylum claims in the United States.

There is a petition to the Mexican authorities regarding Negrete's treatment.

Negrete is being supported by Patti Bowman, co-president of PFLAG San Diego. She told local TV:
"I'm getting involved because I fear for his life. If he goes back, he will be imprisoned or tortured or worse."

"I'm scared, but if I could go back in time, I would wear that dress again … and add a rainbow," said Estrada Negrete.
Negrete said that he has been interviewed about his claim and is expecting to receive a decision in about a month.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Monday, 12 September 2011

Why is Mexico persecuting gay lawyer Jaime López Vela?

Jaime López Vela
By Paul Canning

A Mexican lawyer and gay activist is facing 14 months in prison for defending a victim of homophobia. In 2009 Jaime López Vela was physically assaulted and then arrested and charged with "insult to police and obstruction on the road" by police in the State of Mexico (in South-Central Mexico) on the orders of State authorities.

Jaime López Vela was the first to be married in Mexico City (by its Mayor) after the city approved same-sex marriage in 2010 and is planning to run to be a Member of Parliament on the list of the PRD.

A human rights lawyer, he is the director of the LGBT rights group Agenda LGBT.

On 7 May 2009, López Vela and Agustín Estrada Negrete went to the offices of the Government of the State of Mexico in Toluca for a scheduled meeting with the Deputy Secretary General of State, Luis Felipe Puente. Negrete was forced to step down from the position as director and founder of a local school, Centro de Atención Múltiple (CAM), for disabled children in 2007 due to false allegations by fellow staff against him that he had gone to the school dressed as a woman. He had in fact been pictured in newspapers at a LGBT rights march in the nearby city of Ecatepec de Morelos dressed as 'Alban' in La Cage Aux Folles.

"I offered to defend him because he was asked" to give up his sexual orientation "to be reinstated," said López Vela.

Several parents of children who attended the school accompanied them to support the call for Negrete’s reinstatement but they were not allowed to participate in the meeting. Parents and students had organised 17 rallies asking the authorities to reinstate Negrete as director of the CAM.

The parents group was preparing to stage a protest in front of the building when a civil servant, Humberto Rodríguez Suárez, ordered police on patrol outside the buildings to arrest López Vela. He was forced into a police van where he was beaten. The police officers told him that “el Gobernador Peña Nieto no quiere maricones en el Estado de México” (State Governor Peña Nieto doesn’t want faggots in the state of Mexico).

Peña Nieto, is the current favorite for the 2012 presidential election in Mexico.

López Vela was taken to a police station, put back in the police van and finally brought to the office of the Ministry of Justice, where he was informed that he was under arrest for the obstruction of traffic. Negrete was also arrested and driven to the Ministry of Justice in an ambulance. He was physically assaulted throughout the journey.

Saturday, 10 September 2011

Video: gay asylum in Canada

Source:




Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

Is the USA closing the door to LGBT Mexican asylum seekers?

Source: Beach-Oswald Immigration Law Associates

For over a decade, the United States has been granting asylum to homosexuals Mexico. This is due to the fact that homosexuality was not tolerated by Mexico's strongly Catholic and macho culture.In fact, according to a gay rights group in Mexico, between 1995 and 2006, an estimated 1,200 Mexicans were killed as a result of the discrimination against homosexuals.

In modern-day Mexico, however, the situation is changing. National laws are becoming more liberal and accepting of homosexuality, and pride parades and other events are beginning to emerge. For these reasons, attorneys are claiming that it is now much more difficult to win these asylum cases. This is very unfortunate, as it takes decades to erase discriminatory attitudes completely, and many people are still very intolerant of homosexuals in Mexico.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) claims that there has not been any change in policy for homosexual asylum applicants. DHS does not keep record of which asylum cases are in the homosexual category (or any other category), so there is no way of knowing whether asylum officers and immigration judges have become more skeptical of homosexual asylum cases. However, immigration attorneys insist that it is now much more difficult to win asylum cases than it was several years ago. In fact, just recently US circuit courts rejected the asylum claims of two homosexual men from Mexico, and a policy has been set in place that requires all asylum requests from Mexico to go through a separate review process once they are filed with DHS.

With the current situation, it is important to have a very experienced attorney to increase your chances of winning a homosexual asylum claim from Mexico.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Video: 'Sans papiers' life in the East Village, New York



Source: The Local East Village

In the bars and restaurants of the East Village, immigrant workers, many undocumented, toil behind the scenes cooking food, waiting tables, and doing whatever else they can to keep the nightlife abuzz. Felipe Baeza is one of them. He serves food and drinks in a hopping East Village restaurant. For Mr. Baeza, 24, the job was to be a mere stepping stone into an exciting art career, which was to begin three years ago when he graduated with a degree in art from The Cooper Union.

But Mr. Baeza, who as a young boy left Mexico for the United States, doesn’t have a work visa or Social Security number, so he cannot legally work in the U.S. Under current federal law, the jobs he studied to perform are not available to him because of his status.

As Mr. Baeza looks from beyond a bar lined with moist beer bottles and cocktail glasses, he sees his classmates finding success in the art world, at home and abroad. In a word, he is frustrated.

“My options are very limited,” he said. “I couldn’t work in a print shop. I couldn’t even assist an artist.”

Mr. Baeza arrived in Chicago when he was seven, a year after his parents migrated to the U.S. in search of work and an improved life for him and his sister. He quickly learned English and eventually earned a scholarship at the School of Art at The Cooper Union.

Mr. Baeza was relieved and overjoyed to receive the full tuition scholarship. He knew his parents did not have money to send him to college, and federal law barred undocumented immigrants from federal financial aid.

By his senior year in 2009, he received unwelcome press attention when a Catholic group attacked artwork he had displayed in a public art show at the school. The group had objected to the placement of religious symbols in a sexual context.

Most recently, Mr. Baeza found himself in the news again, though this time he was more willing to embrace the attention. Saying he is “frustrated” and “angry” about not being able to work and advance his career, Mr. Baeza has turned to activism to advance his cause.

Mr. Baeza, along with five others, was arrested in June in Georgia during a demonstration, where he was demanding rights for undocumented immigrants. Since his release, he was been working with the New York State Youth Leadership Council, an organization led by undocumented immigrant youth. The group is currently trying to advance the New York Dream Act, which, if enacted, would potentially extend access to higher education, drivers’ licenses and work authorization to undocumented immigrants in the state.

The Act is being taken up in response to the failed attempt of Congress in 2010 to pass the federal Dream Act, which would have provided work authorization and a path to citizenship for immigrants who, like Felipe, were brought to the U.S. as children and pursued higher education.

Back in the East Village, Mr. Baeza traverses the streets to pick up discount art supplies at a local shop. He stops by his work to pick up his tips, and makes a deposit at the bank.

“I feel like I have all this money, but then I have to pay rent,” he says. He is still frustrated about not being able to work in the art field, but has a new sense of empowerment knowing he is not alone.

Monday, 29 August 2011

Video: In Mexico, first national march against anti-gay hate crime


Marcha contra la homofobia from elhorizontal.com on Vimeo.

By Paul Canning

Mexicans gay and straight marched 13 August from the office of the Attorney General (PGR), Marisela Morales, to Mexico City's main square (the Zocolo) to demand justice for Christian Sánchez and over 700 people killed in the country in 2011 so far for their sexual orientation.

Mexico reportedly has the second highest rate of homophobic crimes in Latin America. The national march follows protests elsewhere in Mexico, such as a July march in Guerrero the capital city of the southern state of Chilpancingo, following the possible stoning murder of activist Leija Herrera.

The contingent, led by the Sánchez family, activists and local legislators, demanded that the federal agency to implement a national plan to combat homophobia. Protesters called on the authorities to reaffirm the status of the murder of Sánchez as a homophobic hate crime and punished "in exemplary fashion" those responsible. They also requested that the case be transferred to the agency specialised in crimes against the sexual diversity community.

Christian Sánchez
Daniel Sánchez Juarez, the victim's brother, read a statement on behalf of the organising committee of the march, to demand that all hate crimes in Mexico "are clarified with the rigor and the definition of hate crime homophobic, lesfobia, biphobia and transphobia." They demanded a federal law to "prevent and punish conduct homophobic antidiversas, anti-progressive and intolerant that generates an environment conducive to hate crimes."

They requested strongly that the National Council to Prevent Discrimination (CONAPRED) "launch in full force a national campaign against violence against LGBTTTI community, it has become urgent that all states have in the their penal codes hate crime law."

The march was attended by representatives of Amnesty International, the National Association of Democratic Lawyers, Agenda LGBT Fundar, Project 21, the Gay and Lesbian Business Association and Mexican ProDiana Association, among other groups.

Sánchez, a well respected activist in the largest left-wing party, the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD), and a member of la Coordinación de Diversidad Sexual del PRD-DF (the Coordination of Diversity Sexual PRD-DF party, the party's LGBT group), was found dead in his apartment in the neighborhood of Tlatelolco on 23 July, with nearly 100 stab wounds.

Sánchez family at 5 August memorial event
5 August the president of the PRD in the Federal District (Mexico City PRD), Manuel Oropeza Morales, unveiled a plaque in Sánchez's honor in Tlatelolco to highlighted his work to extend and defend the rights of sexual diversity in the country and in Mexico City.

According to Daniel Sánchez Juarez this is the first time a national march of this nature has been organised.

Following the march, a contingent met the Attorney General of Mexico City, Gabriel Hernandez, to request a hearing with Attorney Miguel Ángel Mancera and require a report on the progress of an investigation into the murder of Christian Sánchez.

The march's demands included an end to impunity and to require the murder of gays, lesbians and transsexuals are not considered any more as "crimes of passion". Another of the demands was a campaign to raise the awareness of public servants and police forces on issues of sexual diversity and the creation of a Special Prosecutor.

Most murders go unreported outside of Mexico. Activists in Puebla State just reported on at least 10 hate crime murders of LGBTTTI from 2005 to date. In July we reported the shooting of five trans women in Chihuahua.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday, 21 July 2011

In Guerrero, Mexico, LGBT march against violence, demand justice

Murdered activist Leija Herrera
Source: NotieSe

[Via Google translate]

Before hundreds of pedestrians and motorists, a thousand gays, lesbians and transgender people marched 1 July in the tenth Pride march in Guerrero the capital city of Chilpancingo state.

The appointment was at five in the afternoon at the Memorial Flags, where activists from different municipalities in the state gathered and marched in a light rain, with the intention to hear the collective complaints against homophobia and discrimination experienced by homosexuals in the state, in which there have been more than 20 crimes against gay men and transgender people in the last two years.

Throughout the march and the political and cultural event in the main square of the city the theme was the demand of the government of Guerrero, led by Angel Aguirre Rivero, of the Democratic Revolution Party, to do justice for the murder of activist Quetzalcoatl gay Leija Herrera, who was found dead next to the Zocalo on 4 May.

The president of the Center for Studies and Projects for Human Development (Ceprodehi), José Lavosiere Luquín Jimenez Herrera recalled that Leija was a tireless activist, who organized the last five Pride marches and never stopped lobbying the government and lawmakers to criminalise homophobic hate crimes and pass a law similar to that in Mexico City.

Herrera said it is necessary that the State Attorney's Office arrest the murderers of Leija. Along with Mrs. Guadalupe Herrera, Herrera Leija's mother, the crowd sent a strong message for justice to the state attorney general, Alberto Lopez Rosas.

The Ombudsman of the state of Guerrero, Juan Alarcón Hernández, greeted the activists and showed his support for the demands of the group. He informed them that his commission was making the necessary arrangements for cases of collective discrimination against people of sexual diversity arises and that they are not forgotten.

Olivia Hill, representing the state Health Secretaríaa, spoke out against discrimination against homosexuals and said that her agency has an open approach to sexual diversity, where "respect for the right to health to those who belong to the community" is paramount. Therefore, she added, "we have launched campaigns aimed at health sector".

In this tenth Pride joined a large contingent of the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD), whose participants said they were not necessarily gay, but yes, heterosexual aware of the violation of rights of the sector lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, transvestite transgender and intersex, therefore, consistent with the statutes of the PRD, support their demands.

So said Diana Sánchez Barrios, who attended the rally in behalf of the National Coordination of Sexual Diversity PRD.

Before giving way to cultural event, activist Francisco Alberto Mogollon, from Acapulco, agreed that the unity and solidarity of all groups in Guerrero allow further advances in rights, since despite substantial changes in the state in this matter, "homophobic attitudes and discriminatory towards trans people, gays and lesbians persist."

He welcomed the recognition and teamwork that make some public institutions with the various groups, both as Chilpancingo Acapulco, but called on the hundreds of marchers for increased participation and union when political strategies are concerned.

Finally, the journalist and activist Arzeta Emiliano García, who led the political and cultural event, encouraged the more than thousand participants in the march to denounce acts of discrimination and homophobia visible because silence, said, "hurts us individually and collectively ".

Throughout the event people were invited to participate in the first Pride march in Zumpango, which is an hour away from the state capital, July 2.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, 15 July 2011

In Mexico, five shot, one dead, in attack on gay, trans sex workers

Source: La Parada

[Via Google translate]

[Chihuahua, Mexico] Another shooting in the 'zone of tolerance' left five people riddled with bullets, one of them dead. It was suggested that the victims are transvestites and the deceased was known as "Thalia"

The attack occurred 6 July morning at the intersection of 12 and Freedom in the downtown area. Witnesses said the gunmen came in a white car and opened fire with high powered rifles against the group of people stood outside a guest house, located at this junction.

Found at this place was the lifeless body of a homosexual, and two others were wounded and a woman also involved in prostitution. Reporters at the scene interviewed witnesses who said that days before the transvestites who work in the area and were to participate in a gay and lesbian march were threatened by organised crime.

At the crime scene ammunition casings were found 17 rounds 7.62 x 39, 5 cartridges .40 caliber casings and seven rounds of ammunition 9mm.

One of the injured fled in his vehicle to the General Hospital for medical care, while the others were treated by paramedics and the Red Cross, and were taken to different hospitals. Municipal Police and the Attorney General arrived to cordon off the area and collect evidence, ambulance staff moved the body for autopsy.

The Prosecutor's Office said that the deceased is a man about 23 years old, fair complexion, light brown skin, 1.80 mt. tall, brown straight hair, wearing a purple dress, black shoes, had three bullet wounds caused by firearms, of which one on the left arm, another in the right leg and once in the head.

The incident occurred at 00:04 pm today, when the now deceased walked down the street 12 th of the colony center, subjects from a vehicle fired several shots and fled.

The injured are 18, 23 and 21 years old.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Sunday, 15 May 2011

Mexican refugee loses asylum case in CA court

Category:WikiProject Parliamentary ProcedureImage via Wikipedia
Castro-Martinez v Holder

Case No. 08-70343 (C.A. 9, Apr. 15, 2011)

Rafael Castro-Martinez (“Castro”), a native and citizen of Mexico, timely petitions this court for review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals affirming an immigration judge’s denial of his applications for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture. We conclude that substantial evidence supported the BIA’s conclusion that Castro failed to demonstrate past persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution on account of his homosexuality or HIV-positive status. The sexual abuse Castro suffered was not inflicted by government actors, and the BIA had sufficient basis to conclude that Castro failed to show that the government was unable or unwilling to control his attackers. Accordingly, we deny the petition.

Background

Rafael Castro-Martinez entered the United States without inspection in 1995. He subsequently resided in California. Castro, who is homosexual, believes that during his time in this country he contracted HIV. He found out he is HIV-positive in June 2004.

Related Posts with Thumbnails