Ugandan lesbian wins UK asylum court case, will government still try to deport?

By Paul Canning

A Ugandan lesbian, known at this stage only as 'SB', has won a case in
the High Court against Home Office arguments that she could safely be
deported.

The 24 February case before Mr Justice Hickinbottom, which will now go
to judicial review, featured strong evidence of the persecution of
lesbians in Uganda. The government's defence highlights how the UK
asylum system will make every effort including breaking and twisting
both rules and evidence to deport lesbians and gays.

It remains to be seen whether the Home Secretary, Alan Johnson, will continue to insist that it is safe to return her to Uganda.

Fleeing from Uganda

SB had been briefly detained by police for her lesbianism in September
2003 in Mukono, just west of Kampala (which has ties to Guildford), and
again in Kampala in May 2004. Released, she was put on bail but because
she had not complied with their reporting conditions she was put on a
'wanted list'.

That November she traveled on a visitor visa to the UK. She overstayed
the visa and was discovered during an immigration sweep. Found to have
a false Ugandan passport she was arrested and sentenced to 12 months’
imprisonment.

Many LGBT asylum seekers do not immediately claim asylum for a variety
of reasons, including shame or simply a lack of awareness that they can
claim asylum. False papers are often used to escape oppression but lead
to criminal charges.

In June 2008, SB claimed asylum. This was refused point blank by the
Home Office: they did not believe either that she was a lesbian or that
she had been detained by police.

She appealed before an immigration judge in March 2009 but asylum was
again refused on the basis that "there was no evidence that she was at
risk of ill-treatment of such severity [once deported] as to amount to
persecution."

That judge agreed with the Home Office's case that there was only ever
one case of persecution of lesbians in Uganda, which had involved the
high profile chair of a gay group. Because, the judge said, SB was "a
very discreet person, and had conducted her sexual relationships
discreetly in the past - and would continue to" she could be safely
deported.

However the judge did accept the fact that she was a lesbian, that she
had been detained by the police and ran the risk of being detained
again.

She filed another appeal in July 2009 but on 2 November a caseworker issued an order to seize, detain and then deport her.

On 5 November further representations were made which included far more
detailed and up-to-date evidence on the position of lesbians and gays
in Uganda. But these were again rejected out of hand by the Home Office
who plowed on with their drive for deportation.

Justice Hickinbottom described this decision as "irrational".

The evidence

The evidence Hickinbottom had before him came from Dr Michael Jennings of The
School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Paul Dillane from Amnesty International UK, who works with the AI Office in Kampala, and Dr Chris Dolan, Director of the Refugee Law Project in Uganda, a community project of the Faculty of Law, Makere University.

Dolan
The Immigration Advisory Service
provided over 350 pages of recent background material. Dolan provided
evidence on the treatment of returnees, particularly at (Kampala's)
Entebbe Airport.

This showed that there is a check on failed asylum seeker returnees by
Ugandan police and that, given the current hostile attitude towards
homosexuality, it would be more difficult for SB to bribe her way out
of detention (as
John Bosco, who was returned by the Home Office, was forced to do), and it's likely that any bribe would be for a considerable sum.

Amnesty International said that her history of arrest and detention
would mean she would be “at real risk of harm should she be forcibly
returned." Evidence presented of the abuse suffered by lesbians in
Ugandan police detention ran the gamut from touching of intimate parts
to the threat of being put into a male cell with the consequent risk of
rape.

Prossy Kazzoza,
who finally won UK asylum in 2008, was marched naked to a Ugandan
police station and subjected to horrific sexual attacks and physical
torture after she was discovered by her family. She escaped to the UK
after her family bribed the guards to release her — as they wanted to
deal with their family shame by having Prossy killed.

The original immigration judge for Prossy's case believed her claim to
having been raped and tortured but felt it would be safe to return her
to a different part of Uganda.

The evidence Hickinbottom had showed that identified gay men and
lesbians can be the subject of ill-treatment, by both the public in
terms of lynching and 'corrective rape' and by the police — without
them being otherwise 'high profile'. (Thus arguing against the Home
Office claims that only one lesbian who was a group leader has ever
been persecuted in Uganda).

Because SB is unmarried and without children, the evidence showed, it
would - apart from the police attentions - be extremely difficult for
her to maintain the sort of 'discretion' which Home Office policy
dictates should allow for 'safe' deportation for lesbians and gays even
to countries where persecution is known to occur (for example Iran).

Wrote Hickinbottom:
Given this evidence - much of which post-dates the determination of Immigration Judge Grimmett last year - it is perhaps surprising that the Secretary of State took the view that this
material, taken with the material the Claimant previously relied upon,
was not such as to give the Claimant any chance at all of succeeding
with her new asylum claim before a tribunal.
Never mind the evidence

All of this was blithely dismissed by the Home Office representative
who wanted deportation because he continued to claim that evidence
"lacked specific examples of ill-treatment of identified gay men and
lesbians in Uganda". Home Office minister Alan Johnston's
representative claimed:
  • that the ill-treatment of gay men in Uganda was limited to discriminatory legislation that was not enforced
  • SB would only be at risk of arrest in Kampala because the record of her bail infringement was only kept there (evidence showed otherwise, Ugandan police do share the 'wanted list')
  • she could internally relocate and live discreetly, as a lesbian, without fear of persecution
  • even if arrested in Kampala, she would not face the risk of persecution because the harassment she suffered at the hands of the police when she was arrested in 2003 and 2004 was not sufficiently
    severe to amount to persecution
  • there was evidence of only one incident in which lesbians had suffered ill-treatment during detention
All this is in line with the Home Office country-specific operational guidance notes available to case workers and judges on Uganda - it makes no mention of lesbians. (A series of reports - including one last month - have decried the quality of these reports.)

Victory?

Refusing the Home Office and allowing the judicial review, Hickinbottom
wryly noted that the presentation of the previous judgment once again
by Alan Johnston's representative as an argument for deportation -
despite all the subsequently available evidence of persecution of
lesbians in Uganda - could not be used as "a trump card for the
Secretary of State".

He also decided that the brief detention of SB on the orders of a case
worker in November was unlawful. He said a number of mistakes were made
by the case worker, such as falsely claiming that SB was liable to
abscond, and that an Judge's order saying she could not be deported due
to a judicial review and must be released was ignored.

It is not over for SB. The Home Office could still fight the case at
its next stage. It can keep trying to pull out trump cards rather than
live up to its solemn obligations under international laws which the UK
is signed up to.

Other parts of the British government are engaged with critiquing the
same 'crack down' on Ugandan lesbians and gays that's detailed in
evidence presented in SB's case. Ministers have made statements. The
Foreign Office
is "concerned". The Prime Minister has pulled aside
the Ugandan president and told him to stop.

Perhaps those ministers who tell off Uganda for its attitude to Ugandan
lesbians could have a quiet word with their fellow minister, Alan
Johnson, about his own treatment of Ugandan lesbians?


© All Rights Reserved, Contact Info: gayasylumuk@gmail.com
Posted by Paul Canning on February 28, 2010

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