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Legal
limbo for Canada's gay refugees
LAW
/ Process is cumbersome and sometimes homophobic
Jen Lahey / Capital Xtra /
Thursday, February 21, 2008
Xtra:
http://www.xtra.ca/public/viewstory.aspx?AFF_TYPE=2&STORY_ID=4375&PUB_TEMPLATE_ID=4
Arsham Parsi
was forced to leave his life behind. Threats loomed large. He spent years
looking over his shoulder, carefully concealing the truth about himself
from everyone he knew. Still, the dangers grew.
As a gay man in Iran one who founded an underground organization to help
queers Parsi's life was at risk.
Under
strict Iranian law, Parsi could have been hanged or publicly stoned, a
particularly gruesome form of capital punishment in which his body would
be battered by a jeering, angry crowd.
Facing this, he left his friends and family in 2005. He had no way of
knowing if he would ever lay eyes on them again.
After making it to Turkey, he visited the office of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees. There he endured a seven-hour interview
and a 10-hour session with a psychologist.
"That was so hard. Because you know, in that time I was so emotional, I
cried for the whole interview," says Parsi. "I left my family, my job, my
friends, everything that I had. And I didn't have anything, a few clothes
and maybe $50 or $100. I didn't have anything, just hope. I needed someone
to talk to."
The UN granted him a certificate of asylum. Later, he was referred to the
Canadian Embassy and after eight months, he arrived in Canada.
"When I was in Iran, I was just silent. Not talking about everything. When
I was at the UN, for the first day in my whole life, I told them who I am
and what I do. Of course it was hard. In Iran, nobody knew I was working
in that organization, called Rainbow Group. I used a nickname, and all of
my friends only knew my nickname. I couldn't trust anybody. That interview
was the first day in my whole life where I could say I started this
organization, and my name is Arsham."
Refugees
must battle their own fear of revealing to strangers what have always been
hidden parts of their lives, and revealing such facts to a potentially
unsympathetic government official can be a challenge all in itself.
Terror and relief. But for many gays and lesbians, relief is withheld,
leaving them in legal limbo. The spectre of returning to their home
country haunts them sometimes for years as they make their way through
the cumbersome and sometimes homophobic process.
Toronto
refugee lawyer El-Farouk Khaki recalls an incident in which one of his
clients, seeking refugee status in Canada as a gay man, was told by a
member of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (IRB) that if he
could be more discreet in his home country of Kenya, he would be just
fine.
"What do you mean discreet? Are you telling him that for the rest of his
life he has to look over his shoulder, and hope nobody finds out that he's
gay because if they do he could get jailed or mobbed and killed?" says
Khaki. "Why should somebody have to hide their sexual orientation? You
don't have to hide your gender or your political opinion or your religion
to avoid persecution."
"There has to be a consistency of analysis. I should be able to wear my
homosexuality on my sleeve if I choose to, and be safe. So there needs to
be some ongoing sensitivity, particularly for IRB members who may not have
openly queer people in their private lives and who are not familiar or
sensitive to those issues."
For all refugees, the process has several key steps. The claimant must
apply at whichever point of entry into the country they first access,
usually an airport or port or harbour. If the claim is being made after
arriving in Canada, then the claimant goes to a Canada Immigration office.
They get an appointment to come back, and they are given a personal
information form to fill out.
Sound bureaucratic?
It's on this form that they must tell their story, explaining why they
fear persecution, in as much detail a possible. A hearing is scheduled,
and the prospective refugee will be seen by a one-person panel, who will
hear the claimant's case and decide whether they fit the requirements to
be deemed a refugee.
Canada's guidelines for accepting refugees are based, as they are in most
countries, on the United Nations' 1951 Convention Relating to the Status
of Refugees. The key passage in this document states that a refugee is a
person who, "owing to well founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of
race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or
political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable
or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of
that country."
For a
majority of queer claimants, it is the "particular social group" clause
under which they will make their claim.
And the
burden of proof is on the queer refugee, according to Nicole LaViolette,
an associate professor in the law department at the University of Ottawa.
They must prove they are gay no small task for many who have spent years
trying not to leave a trace of their gay identity. Then they must show
that they fear persecution in their home country. Discrimination is not
enough.
Khaki, who has practiced for 15 years, says that making each case for his
clients is a unique challenge, since no two claimants' situations are
identical. He compares building the case for a refugee claim to a jigsaw
puzzle, in which each piece must be turned over and carefully made to
create a whole picture.
Khaki often turns to photos perhaps of the claimant at Pride, or
socializing in a gay bar letters from friends or lovers, and even
membership at bathhouses or online gay chatrooms. Each element helps to
legitimize the claimant's clear status as a gay person.
However, it is much more difficult to establish a claim when a person is
less social, and therefore may have fewer opportunities to show that they
are living and socializing as a gay person, he says.
He also points out that it can be more difficult for lesbians to make a
refugee claim based on their sexual identity, since women tend to
socialize differently than gay men.
"One of the most difficult parts is when somebody has been married, and
has kids, and may still be married," says Khaki. "A lot of my female
clients actually, the harm that they fear is often more private than the
harm that gay men fear, which is more public. Women often experience harm
within the family within the context of the cultures; they may not have
the same kind of access to public space as men do."
"There might not be as many public spaces for women as there are for men.
So a woman may not be able to demonstrate that she is living or
socializing openly as a lesbian because she may not have opportunity,
especially if she is a single parent. So, there is a gender perspective
here as well."
Many refugees arriving in Canada may also be unaware that they can even
make a claim based on their sexuality. And they may not be eager to out
themselves to a border official or IRB member, given that they may have
experienced persecution or abuse from government officials in their
country of origin.
But the laundry list of problems continues.
IRB hearings are conducted by a single board member, rather than two.
That's the result of the new Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, a
2002 law passed by the Crιtien government.
Previously, there were two-member panels, and if there was a split
decision, the case was more often than not found in favour of the
claimant. Having two panel members served as a sort of check and balance
against any possible biases or homophobic notions that might exist. With a
single-member hearing, that check and balance is now gone.
The 2002 legislation also included a plan to institute a Refugee Appeal
Division (RAD), through which claimants could appeal their case's decision
based on the merits. This served as a sort of carrot to the interested
parties: a one-member panel would be acceptable if there would now be an
appeal division to serve as a backup. However, the government held back
the new division, and now, nearly six years later, it has still not been
implemented.
With no RAD, and one-member panels, claimants who want their decision
reconsidered have only one real next course of action: a federal judicial
appeal. However, people who feel wronged can only make a claim based on
legal mistakes, not on the factual merits of the case. As such, it does
not really constitute a true appeal, according to both Khaki and
LaViolette, who say that this is a serious flaw in the Canadian refugee
system.
Danielle Norris, a media representative for Citizen and Immigration Canada
(CIC), says there are several reasons why the appeal division has not yet
been implemented.
"The in-Canada refugee determination system is often described as one of
the best in the world. There's no doubt that Canada meets its
international commitments," Norris says. "RAD is not necessary
specifically at this time, as refugee claimants have access to three other
mechanisms. Those are a judicial review, the second is a pre-removal
risk-assessment at Citizen and Immigration Canada and that ensures that
no one is removed to risk or harm due to change in circumstances after
their refugee claim decision. Third, there's an opportunity to apply for
permanent residence on compassionate grounds."
The CIC's website claims that the RAD was not implemented due to the high
volume of refugee applications, and it was felt that implementing the RAD
would add too much time to the processing of claims. It would also
increase costs in provincial legal aid and social assistance budgets.
It is not clear how often refugees succeed in staying in Canada based on
the three protective mechanisms that Norris cited, but critics say that
they are not replacements for a formal appeal division. In fact, when
Canada's new legislation was enacted in 2002, The United Nations High
Commission on Refugees issued a statement in which they expressed dismay
at the fact that the RAD was scrapped.
"UNHCR has long urged Canada to introduce a review process which is a
vital part of determining refugee status in its asylum procedure," the
statement reads in part. "We hope that the Refugee Appeal Division will be
implemented in the near future. Canada is one of just a few industrialised
countries that do not have an appeal on the merits in their refugee
determination systems."
There are encouraging signs. A private member's bill would make the RAD a
reality. Bill C-280, introduced by Bloc Quebecois MP Nicole Demers, is now
at second reading. It obliges the feds to implement the promised but
long-stalled review board.
But with no appeal division and one-member panels, a great deal of a
claimant's chance of being granted refugee status has to do with that
single IRB member who hears their case. According to Khaki, this can cause
serious problems if the board member is not "sophisticated" enough about
queer issues.
"It depends on the sensitivity of the refugee board member. The reality
is, I can take the same case in front of two different board members and
get two different decisions. And that's a sad thing, the apparent lack of
consistency," Khaki says.
Khaki feels it merits serious examination, since board members are making
life-and-death decisions.
"There are members of the refugee board who are queer, or who have queer
people in their private lives. But there are also board members who do
not."
However, the IRB does provide specific training to its members around
issues pertaining to queer claimants, according to Stephane Malepart, who
spoke on behalf of the Eastern Region Immigration and Refugee Board of
Canada.
"Training happens on a regular basis," says Malepart. "It specifically
relates to sexual orientation. It makes Immigration and Refugee Board
members aware, and it stresses the fact that it's important for Board
members to avoid relying on stereotypical perception of gay men and
lesbians in determining their membership in a particular social group."
"It also stresses that there is no uniform way in which lesbians and gay
men recognize and act on their sexual orientation, so therefore answers to
questions about a person's sexual orientation may vary widely from one
claimant to another. They also mention the fact that Board members have to
keep in mind that sometimes it may be difficult for sexual minorities to
speak about their sexual orientation, their lives," Malepart says. He adds
that the training also includes a section on how to appropriately question
claimants about their personal relationships, their families, and what
persecution they may have experienced or heard about in their country of
origin.
According to LaViolette, Canada's refugee system does work well for most
refugees, and she says the IRB is a big part of that, though improvements
still need to be continually made.
"They're a fairly good quasi-judicial body. They're certainly way ahead of
the other countries when it comes to sexual minorities. But that's not to
say the system's perfect."
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