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LGBT Asylum Seekers Suffer in Biased Court System
Seeking political asylum in the U.S. is today a grim proposition with the lives and safety of applicants at stake, writes Victoria Neilson, legal director of Immigration Equality, which advocates for equal immigration rights for the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and HIV-positive community. IMMIGRATION MATTERS regularly features the views of the nation's leading immigrant rights advocates.
NEW YORK--Applying for political asylum nowadays can be like playing roulette -- land the right judge and you win, land the wrong judge and you lose. But because the result could lead to deportation to a country that would jail, torture and or execute you, the game is more like Russian roulette.
Aswad and Zaid (not their real names), came to the United States for a vacation in the summer of 2001. They wanted a holiday from the stress of their lives as a gay couple in the Middle East. Aswad and Zaid, both Egyptian, had fallen in love five years before while working in a neighboring country. After seeing that it was possible to live openly and without fear as gay men in the United States, they wanted to stay here beyond the six months that Immigration had authorized.
It wasn’t until many months later that they learned it was possible for gays and lesbians to seek political asylum in the United States -- but by that time the Sept. 11 attacks had taken place, and Aswad and Zaid doubted they would be allowed to stay.
By the time they decided to apply for asylum, they had missed the mandatory one-year filing deadline and were both placed in removal (deportation) proceedings. Thankfully, they were still eligible to apply for "withholding of removal," a form of relief related to asylum.
The United States has been protecting the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people who would face persecution in their home countries for over a decade. Nevertheless, a gay couple that seeks asylum or withholding of removal on this basis must pursue their claims separately, unlike a married heterosexual couple.
With a straight couple, if a wife wins asylum based on her religion, political opinion or any other ground of asylum, she may keep her husband with her in the United States as a “derivative” of her own status. Ironically, for a gay couple -- whose relationship itself may help prove the validity of their claim -- there is no derivative status. Aswad and Zaid had to pursue their cases separately, and they were assigned to different judges.
Earlier this month, the Transactional Records Clearinghouse (TRAC) of Syracuse University released a comprehensive study of the asylum grant rates of American immigration judges. The results of the study (available at http://trac.syr.edu/immigration/reports/160/) are startling. While on average, judges over the past decade denied 65 percent of asylum applications, some judges denied up to 98 percent of their asylum applications, TRAC found.
More
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=1ceb8db22b7cfe7bb2cff09a6da3d5bd
Aswad and Zaid (not their real names), came to the United States for a vacation in the summer of 2001. They wanted a holiday from the stress of their lives as a gay couple in the Middle East. Aswad and Zaid, both Egyptian, had fallen in love five years before while working in a neighboring country. After seeing that it was possible to live openly and without fear as gay men in the United States, they wanted to stay here beyond the six months that Immigration had authorized.
It wasn’t until many months later that they learned it was possible for gays and lesbians to seek political asylum in the United States -- but by that time the Sept. 11 attacks had taken place, and Aswad and Zaid doubted they would be allowed to stay.
By the time they decided to apply for asylum, they had missed the mandatory one-year filing deadline and were both placed in removal (deportation) proceedings. Thankfully, they were still eligible to apply for "withholding of removal," a form of relief related to asylum.
The United States has been protecting the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people who would face persecution in their home countries for over a decade. Nevertheless, a gay couple that seeks asylum or withholding of removal on this basis must pursue their claims separately, unlike a married heterosexual couple.
With a straight couple, if a wife wins asylum based on her religion, political opinion or any other ground of asylum, she may keep her husband with her in the United States as a “derivative” of her own status. Ironically, for a gay couple -- whose relationship itself may help prove the validity of their claim -- there is no derivative status. Aswad and Zaid had to pursue their cases separately, and they were assigned to different judges.
Earlier this month, the Transactional Records Clearinghouse (TRAC) of Syracuse University released a comprehensive study of the asylum grant rates of American immigration judges. The results of the study (available at http://trac.syr.edu/immigration/reports/160/) are startling. While on average, judges over the past decade denied 65 percent of asylum applications, some judges denied up to 98 percent of their asylum applications, TRAC found.
More
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=1ceb8db22b7cfe7bb2cff09a6da3d5bd
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