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News
Jamaican lesbian wins appeal to stay in UK
Friday, July 08, 2011
LONDON, England (CMC) — In a landmark case that could set a new precedent for asylum-seeking Jamaican homosexuals, an immigration tribunal has granted a Jamaican lesbian the right to stay in the United Kingdom after agreeing with her lawyers that she risked persecution in a "deeply homophobic society", the BBC reported yesterday.
Senior judges in the Upper Tribunal's Immigration and Asylum Chamber in London said the case provided potential "country guidance" on the issue of the risks to lesbians returning to Jamaica.
The immigration judges said she was "entitled to refugee protection", after the woman appealed an original refusal.
The woman who cannot be identified under British law, left Jamaica to study in the UK in 2003 won an appeal to immigration judges after the Home Office, the country's interior ministry, had refused her "refugee protection" in the UK, the BBC said.
Lawyers for the woman, who now lives in Stoke-in-Trent in the English west Midlands, argued that she would be at risk of persecution and clinical depression should she return to Jamaica.
In her appeal she said that Jamaica was a "deeply homophobic" country in which she as a known or "out" lesbian had been threatened with "corrective rape" and suffered clinical depression, the BBC reported.
It said that it was only in Britain that she found that she could live as an openly gay woman and that her partner was unwilling to return with her to Jamaica.
The judges were told that the woman became aware of her sexuality as a young girl but lived as a "discreet lesbian", using social networking on the Internet to socialise with other women.
She told the tribunal that while the women were going out dancing with each other, they were declared as likely lesbians out with this group on one occasion they were identified as possible lesbians and the DJ began playing hostile songs with anti-gay lyrics.
A group of men then threatened to "convert" the women by raping them and followed them out of the bar, she told the judges. The women escaped unharmed, the BBC said.
It was while she was abroad where she enjoyed the freedom to live an openly gay lifestyle that she became clinically depressed and stressed upon each return to Jamaica where she faced a life in the shadows. She could not discuss this with her doctor, she told the tribunal.
As a student in the UK in 2003, she came to realise that she could have open relationships with other women.
Now, after more than seven years living as an openly gay woman, she told the tribunal that she was no longer "the same person" and could not risk her depression by returning.
Her partner was unwilling to join her in a country where it would be unsafe to live as an openly gay woman and was prepared to end the relationship if she returned to Jamaica, the woman told the tribunal.
Lawyers for the woman argued that Jamaica was a "deeply homophobic society". Lesbians and women thought to be gay risked being victims of violence, including "corrective" rape and murder, the immigration judges heard.
In granting her appeal, senior immigration judges said that any return to a discreet life would be the result of a fear of persecution rather than mere "social pressures", the BBC reported.
Gay Jamaicans are increasingly turning to Britain, Canada and the US as havens for asylum seekers as they fear persecution and death at the hands of homophobic Jamaicans.
In February, Immigration Equality, which campaigns on behalf of gay and HIV-positive asylum-seekers who face persecution in their homelands, said it won dozens of asylum applications for Caribbean clients in 2010.
Of the record 101 cases it undertook last year, 28 of the 38 Caribbean people seeking asylum were Jamaican, the group said.
Since the mid-1990s, the United States has recognised persecution due to sexual orientation and gender identity as a basis for seeking asylum.
Canada has also granted asylum to gay Jamaicans.
Homosexuality remains illegal in Jamaica.
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7/9/2011
A lot of u ppl who are writing in support of this NASTY habbit that some want to impose on people are not even "that" yourself, but u just want to join the band wagon. Jamaica is a Country that believe in god, respect, principle and discipline, not like these other Countries that has no respect for God or man, if these ppl want to join others with their Dirty, nasty lifestyle give all of them Asylum. let the wheat and the grass grow together until the day of harvest. NASTY SET.
7/8/2011
Recalling that the PM mentioned that he would be uncomfortably appointing or having a gay cabinet person is his opinion and he said out loud an opinion of many who are scared to mention this for fear of being accused of discrimination. I am sure that like Pres Obama whose support of gay marriage is evolving, your PM opinion too evolving Gays are powerful in every aspect of our society and they never forget anything that they perceived as negative, yet they practised discrimination ex cliques
7/8/2011
I won't even read this story, just the headline is good for me. i just want to say thank gad that they have win the appeal to stay in the UK, Canada and the USA, they should take dem brothers with dem to. lol
7/8/2011
The sad part about this is that they make it seem like everyone in Jamaica is out hunting to destroy gay people. We all know that many gay people live in Jamaica without being harassed by anyone. Some of these gay men and women use asylum so that they can go live overseas whether there is a threat to their life or not.
7/8/2011
She just wanted a Green Card to stay in the UK. While i would admit that Jamaica is homophobic, its not so much against Lesbians. Nobody cares if your a lesbian here as a matter of fact, men are more curious than anything when they find that ur a Lesbian. So all she did was get one over on the UK judges. You go girl...Get a free stay inna d UK.
7/8/2011
This is becoming a popular excuse people use to get their permanent stay in other countries and these countries are falling for it. Everytime I read one of these stories, I read about elaborate stories these people make up as to why they cannot be sent back to Jamaica.
7/8/2011
The commments from the first two individuals are absolutely out of touch with reality. Being Homosexual in Jamaica is the equivalent of being marked for death. Upstanding and good people who are gay are victimized by outdated , inhumane and degrading laws that outlaw natural human behavior and sexuality. Until our society changes its rotten ways and learn how to live or let live, the best choice for the Jamaican Gay population is to move overseas. It is a matter of human rights and Jamaica fail
7/8/2011
There is more gay on gay violence, & they are usually gruesome, in Ja. than there are homophobic violence. Stop badmouthing the country for your selfish reasons. Find other means of remaining in UK if that's where you want to live.
7/8/2011
Hogwash and dishonesty! This is a disingenuous claim. If this was a male homosexual then there may have been some validity to asylum application. She is blowing things way out of proportion because she wants to remain in Britain -- so why not use the old "I feel threatened" excuse.
7/8/2011
Many gay Jamaicans would die if they were foolish enough to publicly demand their rights. The problem is they are weak, a small minority without political clout. Dons on the other hand, can operate openly because we all know they carry a big stick. Therefore, anyone talking about homophobia as a moral issue needs to be reminded of this simple fact. Another thought - gays became more liberated in Europe and the US when the rich ones opened their wallets ...
7/8/2011
II. The fact is that our very own PM told an international audience, on a widely watched international channel, that he too practises discrimination against gay Jamaicans: he will not have them in his cabinet. So, all gay JAMs need, in supporting some of these applications, is that tape of the PM's interview. It tells the world that discrimination against gay Jamaicans is alive and well, and it comes from the very top of the "leadership" (used in its loosest form) of the country.
7/8/2011
I think that it is about time that gay people in Jamaica stand on their own feet and decide that they will not flee their country because of their sexuality. Once you are granted asylum, you cannot return to the country, because of the claims that you make in your petition. Does that mean that you all do not want to go back ever? These stories also paint us as this perpetual backward society, though pronouncements to the world by our own PM serves to support what some of these people claim.
7/8/2011
This woman has passed one over the U.K. courts. A Lesbian or homosexual has no greater chance of being murdered in Jamaica than a straight person and when they are murdered it is usually done by one of their own.
I remember a prominent female lawyer from MoBay just a few years ago who sought and gained asylum in the UK after she swiped her clients funds and was being sought by the police who claimed that she was being harrassed for her views. I can't remember if the claim then was lesbianism
7/8/2011
I don't see that homosexuals in Jamaica are been harass, they are seen all over Kingston daily openly wit their mates. I recently attended a annual fashion events and the majority were gays, they keep parties the best one ten days per week! People use seeking benefit from overseas country applied the homophobic argument to strengthen their case...Jamaica is not homophobic.
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