Commentary
Over the past week, the UK
Government has earned itself considerable praise world-wide after flying
‘Rainbow Flags’ on two embassies in Eastern Europe during Gay Prides in
Latvia and Poland.
Yet while the two flags were
proudly flying on embassies in Riga and Warsaw, there are gay men and women
who are seeking sanctuary in the United Kingdom, having fled their countries
under threat of execution or lengthy imprisonment because of their
sexuality.
And they are not being given a fair
and compassionate hearing.
The Foreign and Commonwealth
Office, headed by David Miliband, should be commended on its work in the
LGBT rights field overseas. It’s recently-publish guidelines made a
refreshing change.
But while the FCO takes justifiable
praise, the Home Office remains, in those immortal words uttered by a Home
Secretary of a couple of years ago, “not fit for purpose” when it comes to
considering applications for refuge from gay men and women.
Thanks to campaigners, and
considerable publicity on his case in the
Scotland on Sunday newspaper, nineteen year
old gay Syrian Jojo Jako Yakobv has had his “day in court” (an immigration
appeals tribunal) and has been released from a young offenders centre on
orders from the tribunal.
But what was Jojo doing in a young
offenders centre in the first place? What “offence” has he committed?
While it is still not certain that
he will be granted refuge in the UK, things are looking far more hopeful
that they were a month ago.
But for Ugandan lesbian Prossy
Kakooza, things are not so good.
She arrived in the UK in July last
year, having fled her country after being severely beaten and burned by
police purely on the grounds of her sexuality. In addition she was
repeatedly raped while in custody.
Such were her injuries that when
she sought medical help on arrival in UK doctors were so shocked at the
extent of her injuries that the police were called.
Prossy left behind a girlfriend who
is still believed to be in detention in Uganda.
The Home Office accepts that Prossy
was brutally raped and burned. Yet they want to deport her back to Uganda,
saying that she can settle in another town.
But a phone call to the FCO would
probably tell the Home Office that there is little freedom of movement in
Uganda, as we enjoy in Europe, and that a person wishing to relocate needs
what amounts to a “reference” from one’s home town or village.
Meanwhile, Prossy, a 26 year old
university educated Ugandan lesbian, lives in fear of deportation, via
Yarl’s Wood, to Kampala.
The Metropolitan Community Church
in Manchester has started a campaign “Prossy Must Stay”, and her story, and
how you can help, can
be read
HERE.
The Home Office certainly needs to
answer some questions. Do they ever consult the Foreign and Commonwealth
Office about situations in “problem countries” when it comes to matters of
sexuality? Do they even read the “situation reports” published by such
respected human rights groups as Amnesty International and Human Rights
Watch?
From judgements and reasons given
for deportation to gay and lesbian refugee applicants – not to mention a
statement in the House of Lords by a Home Office Minister a few months ago,
it would seem doubtful.
UK Gay News
has actually heard an immigration appeal tribunal in Birmingham tell a gay
Iranian, who fled his country when the ‘religious police’ knocked on the
door of his home to arrest him, that he should be returned to Iran where he
could make an “application to the British Embassy in the usual way”.
And in another case involving an
Iranian, a tribunal questioned the discrepancy in dates on an application
and accompanying paperwork, refusing to believe that the calendar used is
not the same as used in the West. Application was refused.
There might be very good reason why
some applications from refugees are turned down. And it is accepted that
this can be a very emotive subject.
But from where
UK Gay News stands, it
looks as though the Home Office is making decisions, sometimes literally
life or death, to hit deportation targets, which in turn pleases the UK
tabloids.
At the end of the day, the UK is
not ruled by the largely xenophobic and anti-gay tabloid press. The
government should return to the traditional “British way” of compassion
based on fairness and forget the emotive and ‘anti’ language of the
tabloids.
One can but hope that the lead
taken by David Miliband at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office is noted –
and acted upon – by Jacqui Smith at the Home Office.
SEE ALSO
Gay
Immigration Group Wins Funding to Assist LGBT Refugee Seekers.
Awards for All, which distributes lottery funding to ‘good causes’ has
awarded a £5,000 grant to the UK Lesbian and Gay Immigration Group (UKLGIG)
for its work in supporting LGBT people seeking refuge in the UK. (UK
Gay News, June 9, 2008)
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Licence.
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Posted: 9 June 2008 at
15:30 (UK time) |