Three gay
men from African countries who sought asylum in the Netherlands have won their
case at the European Court of Justice. The decision could set a precedent - and
was of course welcomed by pro-refugee groups.
Homosexual refugees persecuted for their gender preference could more easily gain asylum after a ruling by Europe's high court on Thursday (07.11.2013). The Luxembourg-based European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruled that gay refugees from African countries, where homosexuality is legally punished, form a "particular social group" under the Refugee Convention.
Asylum
agencies and courts in European states should in every case check that
homosexual asylum-seekers are subjected to state persecution and
discrimination, according to the ECJ judgment. "The fact that punishment
is threatened for homosexual acts is not enough. Actual imprisonment must be
imposed and carried out in the refugee's country of origin," said
presiding judge Alexandra Prechal upon release of the decision.
'X, Y and
Z' vs. the Netherlands immigration ministry
According to Amnesty International, homosexuality is officially a crime in 38 sub-Saharan African countries |
The
Netherlands high court turned to the ECJ for clarification on European
regulations relating to the issue. The cases now return to the Netherlands,
where the authorities must apply the standards set out in the ECJ ruling.
Michael
Diedring, head of the European Council on Refugees and Exiles, welcomed the
decision. It's a positive step, he said, that now European Union states must
look more deeply into the cases of homosexual refugees.
"Perhaps
we had hoped that we would have a clearer groundbreaking case," Diedring
told DW. "But this is definitely moving in the right direction, and we are
very encouraged by that."
The ruling
gives hope to people in the 71 countries around the world where homosexuality
is still criminalized.
No more
denial
Diedring said the ruling was a step in the right direction |
Dutch
immigration authorities had said that the three applicants could have behaved
in a restrained manner in their home countries, in order to avoid punishment.
Julian Pepe Onziema, director of Sexual Minorities Uganda, said that such
restraint violated human rights.
"No
gay Ugandan goes around kissing or making out on the streets deliberately
exposing themselves - what we are persecuted for is what is done in the privacy
of our bedrooms," he told the Deutsche Presseagentur news agency.
Diedring
said the ruling means that asylum applicants will no longer have to fear that
they will be sent back with the argument that they could pretend not to be gay.
"The biggest change perhaps is that someone does not feel that they have
to hide their gender identity," he said.
Scope of
ruling
The ECJ
press office noted that although the decision provides a binding interpretation
of EU law, member countries will continue to adjudicate such disputes on a
case-by-case basis.
Russia has been cracking down on gay rights |
The
International Lesbian and Gay Association in its annual report indicated that
Mauritania, Nigeria, Sudan, Somalia, Saudi Arabia and Iran proscribe the death
penalty for homosexuality. In wide swaths of Africa and the Muslim world, also
in Asia, the law includes imprisonment as a possible punishment for
homosexuality.
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