US Immigration Policy Comes to the Rescue of the Discriminated

Social Issues

  • Author Steve O'donnell
  • Published August 22, 2011
  • Word count 406

Can you imagine that in today's reality people who are homosexual and lesbian are being persecuted by their own country's government? There are not a few countries around the this world where administration persecution and prosecution of Lgbt citizens is a daily occurrence. As hard as it is to believe, it is happening every day. There are 2 kinds of this type of persecution. Persecution by police and other government officials in a territory where being Lgbt is not illegal and official's persecution by the government because being LGBT is illegal! Many countries have active initiatives for entrapping and prosecuting homosexuals. It isn't just a thing of the police acting extra-legally, they are actually following current laws.

What is even more astonishing about this is that this circumstance happens right here just a few hundred miles away from the US. The island of Jamaica has very Draconian regulations against homosexuality. Government officials campaign on platforms of forcefully prosecuting gays. Both local and national politicians and media spout a tremendous measure of anti-homosexual dished out. Can you envisage a presidential theme song with the lyrics, "kill the gay man"? The present President of Jamaica had those lyrics in his theme song.

What is emerging in response to these state sponsored discrimination laws is that western countries are starting to bestow immigration asylum to Homosexual citizens who come from countries that are principally aggressive in the prosecution and persecution of Homosexual. Immigration asylum isn't only for political refugees.

Under the United Nations Treaty known as the Convention Against Torture, if people think they are at real risk for suffering torture because of their beliefs whether they are political or not, they may be considered for asylum in the United States United States, as well as some other western nations. In fact, as of February 2011, an estimated 35 individuals were granted asylum in the US on the rationale of their experiences and worries of living in Jamaica and being LGBT.

An asylum petition is not like filling in a elementary form and its supporting notes is complex. All risks and experiences of abuse and torture must be diligently authenticated before the petition can be successful. In fact, many people acquainted with the process believe that the application is one of the most grueling of immigration processes. An individual who thinks that they are eligible for gay asylum ought seek out experienced counsel to help them work through these demanding legal processes.

Contact Grace Gómez of Gomez & Lackey, a lawyer experienced in aiding gay Jamaican in petitioning for gay asylum in the U.S.

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