A U.S. immigratn board mt ci whether non-U.S. cizens who are perceived to be gay their home untri n qualify for asylum the U.S. regardls of their actual sexual orientatn, a feral appeals urt said on Thursday.
Contents:
- PEOPLE PERCEIVED TO BE GAY ULD BE ELIGIBLE FOR ASYLUM, U.S. URT SAYS
- GAY ASYLUM SEEKERS: APPLITNS AND COUNTRY OF ORIG
PEOPLE PERCEIVED TO BE GAY ULD BE ELIGIBLE FOR ASYLUM, U.S. URT SAYS
* gay asylum application *
However, if ndns the applint’s home untry have changed sce s/he was persecuted–for example, if an anti-homosexualy law has been overturned–an applitn may be nied.
REUTERS/Noah BergerSummaryLaw FirmsPeople thought to be gay uld be 'social group' unr asylum lawCourt says immigratn board mt ci issueGuatemalan woman beaten, threatened for wearg men's cloth(Rters) - A U. Board of Immigratn Appeals (BIA) has for s held that gay people om certa untri qualify as such social BIA was wrong to fd that Anton's asylum applitn had more to do wh the way she drsed than her sexual orientatn, Circu Judge Mark Bent wrote for the panel.
Sanchez his ncurrg opn said he believed that people perceived as gay would qualify as a social group based on other urt s that volved perceived or imputed characteristics.
GAY ASYLUM SEEKERS: APPLITNS AND COUNTRY OF ORIG
Severe persecutn and discrimatn om both State and non-State actors force lbian, gay, bisexual, transgenr, tersex and queer (LGBTIQ+) persons – cludg children and olr persons, wh and whout disabili – to leave their plac of habual rince search of a safe environment which they n fully exercise their rights.