LONDON and STRASBOURG, March 13,
2008 – The UK Government is to review the case of Mehdi Kazemi after the
European Parliament expressed its support for a motion tabled by Michael
Cashman MEP.
Meeting in Strasbourg, the
Parliament voted 46 to two, with 12 abstentions, to support Mr. Cashman’s
motion which was backed by the Liberal (ALDE), Socialist (PSE) and Green
groups.
Fears that the European People’s
Party (EPP) would scupper the motion were allayed after they decided to
abstain instead.
After the vote, in London British
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith said that Mehdi’s case would be reviewed.
“Following representations made on
behalf of Mehdi Kazemi, and in the light of new circumstances since the
original decision was made, I have decided that Mr Kazemi’s case should be
reconsidered on his return to the UK from the Netherlands,” she said in a
statement.
Mehdi Kazemi is a 19 year old gay
Iranian national who applied for asylum in the United Kingdom following the
execution of his partner by Iranian authorities after being found guilty of
sodomy.
When his asylum application was
turned down Kazemi fled to the Netherlands.
The European Parliament resolution
drew attention to the fact that European Union asylum law has to be applied
by member states on an individual case basis and that persecution for sexual
orientation should be an automatic ground to grant asylum.
It also called on the EU
institutions and Member States, under their European and international human
rights obligations, to take action to avoid such situations as Mehdi
Kazemi’s occurring in the future.
Mr. Cashman,who as president of the
European Parliament’s Lesbian and Gay Intergroup co-signed a motion,
welcomed the result.
“This is a fantastic result and I
now hope that the UK government takes on board the recommendation and
listens to the voice of the Parliament,” he said.
Liberal Democrats also welcomed
today’s developments.
Responding to Jacqui Smith’s
announcement, Lib Dem Shadow Home Secretary, Chris Huhne said the decision
was not before time.
“There should be no deportations of
gay people back to Iran while we know the fate that lies in store for them.”
Commenting further, Liberal
Democrat MP for Southwark and North Bermondsey, Simon Hughes, who has
campaigned on behalf of Mehdi Kazemi, said: “This public confirmation of the
Government’s position is very welcome.
“I hope Mr Kazemi will now come
back to Britain where arrangements are already in place for an urgent
meeting with him, his family, specialist lawyers and myself to prepare a new
application to the Home Office.
“It is becoming more and more clear
that sending gay people back to Iran under the present regime is completely
unacceptable.”
Speaking in Strasbourg, Jean
Lambert, the Green Party MEP from London said that the deportation of anyone
to a third country where they risk persecution, torture and death amounts to
a violation of European and international human rights obligations.”
“There is no doubt that Mehdi
Kazemi will be in danger if returned, his former partner has been executed
and his own father has threatened to kill him.
“Obviously this is an extremely
distressing situation for him and the Member States involved should resolve
his status as quickly as possible.”
Mehdi Kazemi is still in a Dutch
detention centre in Rotterdam awaiting removal to the United Kingdom. There
is no indication yet as to when he is to be returned.
SEE ALSO
Gay Iranian
in Europe: Mehdi Says ‘Thank You’. Mehdi Kazemi, the 19-years-old
gay Iranian currently in a Netherlands detention centre awaiting removal to
the UK where, until yesterday he was concerned that he would be immediately
returned to Iran, has this morning thanked his many supporters throughout
the world. (UK Gay News, March 14, 2008)
Gays in
Iran: Lib Dems Attack Home Office While Peers Quiz Government.
The Home Office needs to understand that gay men and women face arrest and
execution in Iran, the Liberal Democrats for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and
Transgender Equality group DELGA said last night.
(UK Gay News, March 12, 2008)
Christmas
Gift from Netherlands for Gay Iranian – One Way Ticket to UK.
It was not the Christmas present that a young gay Iranian wanted. A court in the Netherlands has
ruled that Mehdi, the gay Iranian teenager, has to be returned to the United
Kingdom, where he faces deportation back to Iran. (UK Gay News,
December 24, 2007)
Gay Iranian Teen Awaits Decision of Dutch Court Over
Return to UK.
A young gay Iranian, who fled the
United Kingdom in fear after his asylum application with the Home Office’s
Border and Immigration Agency failed earlier this year, will be spending the
festive season hoping that a Dutch court will allow him to stay in the
Netherlands. (UK Gay News, December 21, 2007)
They Hang Gay Teenagers, Don’t They? A gay Iranian teenager whose asylum claim was denied in the UK fled to
the Netherlands, and then to Germany. The Germans returned him to the Dutch,
who are now threatening to return him to the Brits, who have already decided
to return the gay teenager to Iran. And you know what they do to gay
teenagers in Iran, right? (Seattle Stranger - USA, December 20)
Young Gay Iranian Soon on His Way Back to UK? Mehdi, the young gay Iranian who fled the United Kingdom
in April, could be back in the country within weeks, his uncle revealed last
night.
(UK Gay News,
October 17, 2007)
Nineteen
Year Old Says ‘I Am an Iranian Gay’. The following email has been
received by the IRanian Queer Organisation in Toronto from a young gay man
who was studying at school in UK and, after difficulties with the UK Home
Office over asylum managed to flee England, ending up in the Netherlands.
The letter is published here as written.
(UK Gay News,
September 26, 2007)
Don’t Leave
Iranian Gays Abandoned. By Mehdi.
This article was written by a 19-years-old gay Iranian
who tells how, while he was a student in London, his
boyfriend back home was executed for being gay. Mehdi says he was
scared of returning home and meeting the same fate when his student visa
expired last year – and of his asylum application to the Home Office. (UK Gay News, April
18, 2007)
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Posted: 14 March 2008 at
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