1. Introduction
1. Some 52% of all refugees in Europe are women or girls.
Women seek asylum from the same forms of persecution as men. In
addition, women are also victims of persecution for reasons that
are specific to their being women. Even if the reasons for the persecution
happens to be the same as for a man, it may manifest itself differently
when the victim is a woman. The same applies for individuals who
are gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender (LGBT). Although the term
“gender” covers LGBT persons, the rapporteur has opted to limit
the examination of gender-related claims of this group to a short
section (Section 7). The reason for this is that he believes the
subject of sexual orientation-related claims merits an Assembly
report in its own right.
2. The perpetrators of gender-specific violence (or harm) can
be state or non-state actors, including relatives. During armed
conflict in particular, women are submitted to all forms of physical,
sexual and psychological violence, including rape, sexual exploitation,
forced marriage, forced abortion, forced pregnancy and forced sterilisation.
Systematic rape and sexual violence against women can be an instrument
in “ethnic cleansing” campaigns. Gender-specific violence does not
only occur during periods of conflict. Two further forms of gender-based
violence are female genital mutilation and trafficking.
3. When assessing asylum applications, it is recommended that
states take into account the gender dimension. Violence which is
gender related may amount to persecution in the sense of the 1951
Geneva Convention relating to the Status of Refugees (“the 1951
Geneva Convention”) in no lesser degree than violence which occurs
without regard to the sex of the victim. According to NGOs and international organisations,
member states do not always take this into account.
4. It is not only in the legal assessment of whether there is
gender-related persecution or gender-specific violence amounting
to persecution that states often fail to give proper weight to gender.
Women also have additional hurdles to overcome in the asylum procedure.
The interview situation is often gender insensitive. If the setting
of the interview and the approach of the interviewer is gender insensitive,
there is a risk that a female asylum seeker may feel uncomfortable
or threatened. This might prevent her from correctly putting forward
her story and relevant circumstances. If the interviewer is gender
insensitive, or uses non-relevant country of origin information,
the wrong questions may be asked and an incorrect analysis may be
made of the answers. Even if states properly take gender-related
issues into account in the legal assessment of the asylum claim,
these other flaws, such as the setting up of the interview, may
undermine the quality of the asylum information obtained and the
whole basis on which the asylum decision is taken.
5. Asylum seekers and refugees are vulnerable in their host country.
Female asylum seekers and refugees are even more vulnerable. They
may face discrimination because they are aliens or on the basis
of their ethnicity or simply because they are women. They may continue
to face violence in their community, even in their new host country
or amongst their family members or relatives. They may fear expulsion
if they complain to the authorities and have a number of other problems
in obtaining legal protection. They may also face particular problems
due to their gender in reception and detention centres.
6. The present report enters into the framework of a set of adopted
and forthcoming reports prepared by the committee with the objective
of improving the quality and consistency of asylum systems in Council
of Europe member states, as well as the situation of individual
asylum seekers and irregular migrants. This set of reports includes
the already adopted reports on “Improving the quality and consistency
of asylum decisions in Council of Europe member states” (rapporteur:
Boriss Cilevičs, Latvia, Socialist Group),
“The detention of asylum seekers
and irregular migrants in Europe” (rapporteur: Ana Mendonça, Portugal,
Socialist Group)
and the forthcoming report on “Unaccompanied
minors in Europe: issues of arrival, stay and return” (rapporteur: Mailis
Reps, Estonia, Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe).
7. As part of the preparation of the present report, the rapporteur
conducted a fact-finding mission to Geneva on 9 April 2010 where
he met with representatives of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR), the International Organization for Migration
(IOM), the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), the
United Nations Office for the High Commissioner for Human Rights
(UNHCHR) and the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT). The
rapporteur would like to extend his gratitude to them for the valuable
information provided. He would also like to thank the participants
and experts in the Conference on Migration and Violence against
Women in Europe, which took place in Paris on 10 and 11 December
2009 and which was organised jointly by the Parliamentary Assembly’s
Committee on Migration, Refugees and Population and Committee on
Equal Opportunities for Women and Men and the Inter-Parliamentary
Union (IPU).
2. Objective,
structure and scope of the report
8. In the report, the rapporteur intends to outline
the problematic issues, explain the legal framework and propose
some measures that European countries could take in order to step
up the protection offered to victims of gender-specific violence
and gender-related persecution. This work must address not only
the legal assessment of a protection claim, but also the interview
situation and the general situation of asylum- seeking women and
girls before, during and after the asylum decision.
9. The structure of the report will thus be the following:
- (1) The legal assessment. The
obligation of states to give proper weight to gender-based violence
and gender-related persecution in the legal assessment leading up
to an asylum decision;
- (2) The asylum determination procedure. States should
organise interviews with female asylum seekers in a way that respects
their gender and allows them to tell their story openly. The interviewer,
who should be a woman, should be trained to ask the right gender-relevant
questions. Country of origin information should be gender relevant.
Women should remain independent with regard to the asylum process
and have unimpeded access to the asylum process and to legal remedies;
- (3) The social situation of female asylum seekers. Women
and girls should be protected from abuse that can occur due to their
increased social vulnerability as victims of violence. Female asylum
seekers are particularly vulnerable in places where they are deprived
of their liberty and in collective accommodation.
10. Statistics concerning gender elements of asylum claims in
the Council of Europe member states are hard, if not impossible,
to come by. This fact is reflected in the present report. One of
the recommendations that the rapporteur would like to make is that
states should pay greater attention to collecting and analysing statistics
on gender-specific violence and gender-related persecution and publish
the results.
11. A few particularly important documents deserve to be mentioned.
The organisation Asylum Aid in the United Kingdom has prepared a
document called “The rights of women seeking asylum: a charter”.
The European Council for Refugees and Exiles (ECRE) has published
a report concerning many of the issues raised in the present report,
including a set of recommendations. The UNHCR has published a set
of guidelines on the legal assessment of asylum claims of gender-based
violence.
3. What are gender-based
violence (or harm) and gender-related persecution?
12. “Gender” is not the same as “sex”, which is biologically
defined. The term “gender” relates to what it means to be a woman
or a man. Gender refers to the relationship between men and women
based on socially constructed and defined identities, status, roles
and responsibilities. Gender differences are affected by the power
relations between women and men in a particular society and the
implications of these relations for the identity, status, roles
and responsibilities of women and men.
13. The first article of the United Nations Declaration on the
Elimination of Violence Against Women (1993) provides the following
definition of gender-specific – or based – violence: “Any act of
violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual
or psychological harm or suffering to women, including threats of
such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivations of liberty, whether
occurring in public or private life.”
14. Certain forms of harm are more frequently or only used against
women or affect women in a manner that is different from men. These
include, but are not limited to sexual violence, societal and legal
discrimination, forced prostitution, trafficking, refusal of access
to contraception, bride burning, forced marriage, forced sterilisation,
forced abortion, (forced) female genital mutilation, and enforced
nakedness/sexual humiliation. These are therefore the prominent
types of violence or harm one needs to look at in examining gender-specific violence
in asylum claims.
15. Gender-related persecution (or gender persecution) relates
to the causal relationship between the persecution and the reason
for the persecution. Where it occurs, a woman may be persecuted
because of her gender (for example, where she is persecuted because
she refuses or fails to comply with social/religious/cultural behaviour
expected from a woman). Gender-related persecution is not necessarily
the same as persecution on the basis of biological sex. It does
not simply refer to persons being persecuted because they are biologically
male or female, but to them being persecuted because they fail or
refuse to comply with the social requirements of being a man or
a woman.
16. It is therefore important to note that an asylum seeker may
be persecuted in a gender-specific manner for reasons unrelated
to gender (for example, raped because of her membership of a political
party), she may be persecuted in a non-gender specific manner, but
because of her gender (for example, flogged for refusing to wear
a veil), and persecuted in a gender-specific manner and because
of her gender (female genital mutilation or the honour killing of
an adulterous woman).
17. As has been pointed out by the ECRE, the persecution of women
may be different, both in terms of its form (gender-specific violence)
and its motivation (gender-related persecution), from that experienced
by men. Women may be targeted because they are community organisers
or because they persist in demanding that their rights are respected.
Other women are targeted because they are vulnerable – young women
who can easily be sexually abused or mothers who will do anything
to protect their children. Women have a reproductive role and may
be viewed as the embodiment of the identity and future survival
of a given ethnic group. Therefore, any case of violence against
a woman may also represent an attack on her ethnic group. In many parts
of the world, women who do not live according to the standards imposed
on them by society can suffer cruel treatment. Refusing arranged
marriages, having sexual relations outside marriage, failing to
provide a satisfactory dowry or wearing certain forms of dress can
result in persecution. Due to social and economic constraints, relatively
few of these women manage to flee to other countries for protection,
yet when they do, their experiences tend to be interpreted as discriminatory
rather than persecutory.
4. Gender-based asylum
claims
4.1. The legal assessment
18. In order to be granted refugee status, according
to Article 1A of the 1951 Geneva Convention, the asylum seeker must
be able to show that he or she has a well-founded fear of being
persecuted upon return for reasons of race, religion, nationality,
membership of a particular social group or political opinion and
that for this reason he or she is unable to return home. A woman’s
refugee status might be recognised on any of the above five grounds.
19. There is no definition of “persecution” in the 1951 Geneva
Convention. The UNHCR Handbook states that it may be inferred from
Article 33 of the 1951 Convention that a threat to life or freedom
on account of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or
membership of a particular social group is always persecution.
4.2. Persecution by
state actors
20. Gender-specific violence or gender-related persecution
can be inflicted by the authorities in the country of origin. In
some cases the reason might be that the woman has acted in a manner
that is considered inappropriate or simply because she is refusing
to submit to gender-discriminatory norms, leading to severe punishment.
The political opinions of male relatives are often attributed to
women, who may be subjected to persecution as a result.
4.3. Persecution by
non-state actors
21. Gender-specific violence or gender-related persecution
can also be inflicted by non-state actors in the country of origin,
including by relatives. Where a state facilitates, condones, conditions,
excuses or tolerates violence against women carried out by private
actors, the state bears the responsibility. The state is responsible for
persecution in cases where it is able but unwilling to provide protection,
where it implements laws or practices that are discriminatory against
women and lead to persecution, where law is administrated through persecutory
means, or where the penalty for non-compliance with law or policy
is disproportionally severe.
4.4. Internal flight
alternative
22. In examining an asylum claim, states will often look
to see if there is an internal flight or relocation alternative
available for the asylum seeker. Internal flight or relocation alternatives
are not, however, gender neutral. Gender-specific violence or gender-related
persecution is often perpetrated by private actors. The lack of
effective state protection in one part of the country is an indication
that the state will also not be able or willing to protect the girl
or woman in another part of the country. The UNHCR declares that
“Relocation is not relevant if the applicant would again be exposed
to a risk of being persecuted in a new location, whether in its
original or any new form of persecution or serious harm. It is important
to consider that, due to her age, gender and other factors, the
applicant may face discrimination of various kinds and be at heightened
risk of abuse, violence and deprivation of other basic human rights”.
4.5. Refugee status
or complementary protection
23. In terms of refugee status or complementary/subsidiary
status, the former should be granted to applicants whose claims
fall within the 1951 Geneva Convention and the latter should be
granted to those whose claims do not fall within the 1951 Geneva
Convention but who do merit protection as a result of international
human rights law, European Union law or the practice of individual
member states. The acceptance proportion between these two types
of protection differs widely between Council of Europe member states.
Those persons obtaining complementary protection normally obtain
fewer rights and less security than those receiving refugee status.
When looking at the statistics published by the UNHCR, in France in
2007, of all persons granted protection, 91% were granted refugee
status and 9% complementary protection. In other countries the proportion
of applicants afforded refugee status as opposed to complementary
protection were: Germany, 91%; United Kingdom, 77%; Switzerland,
36%; Norway, 24%; Sweden, 7%, Malta, 1% and the Netherlands, 12%.
One can conclude that there is one set of countries that prioritise
refugee protection, inter alia,
France, Germany and the United Kingdom, and another set that finds
it more justified to grant complementary protection, represented
most prominently by Sweden, Malta and the Netherlands.
24. As regards protection due to risks of female genital mutilation,
there are reports that states have begun to prefer complementary
protection to refugee status when it comes to such asylum claims.
It is important that member states generally do not begin to slide
towards prioritising complementary protection, with fewer rights and
less security, as a matter of convenience rather than as a matter
of law. It is particularly important that states do not choose to
grant complementary protection automatically for women or individuals
who are lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender (LGBT). These asylum
seekers are not second-rate asylum seekers; their claims are as
valid as those of any other claimant. The rapporteur recommends
that member states should survey this development and publish relevant
gender-disaggregated statistics, which have until now been lacking.
He also recommends that member states make the assessment of refugee
status and eligibility for complementary protection by reference
to legal factors, and not convenience of political factors. Refugee status
is defined by international law and this cannot be circumvented
by national law or practice.
5. Legal instruments
25. The most important international legal instrument
in the context of asylum and gender-based violence is the 1951 Geneva
Convention and its refugee definition set out in Article 1A, discussed
above, and the prohibition against refoulement in Article 33.
26. The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) also enters
into play when it comes to the protection of asylum seekers and
migrants. There are cases where the persons concerned are not offered refugee
protection, but where it is nevertheless impermissible under the
ECHR to expel the person. In such a case, the obligation by the
member state not to return the individual is solely based on a risk
of treatment contrary to the rights enshrined in the ECHR, without
the necessity for the treatment to be on the basis of one of the
five refugee convention grounds. Article 14 of the ECHR protects
women against discrimination with regard to the exercise of their
rights as set out in the Convention. Protocol No. 12 to the Convention
protects women against discrimination that is not necessarily related
to a violation of one of the other articles of the Convention (which
is required by Article 14 of the Convention addressing discrimination).
According to Article 1 of the ECHR, Parties to the Convention undertake
to guarantee the rights set out in the Convention to everyone within
their jurisdiction, that is also to asylum seekers who might risk
expulsion or who are discriminated against.
27. The European Union Qualification Directive applies to European
Union member states.
According to Article 9(2) of the
directive, acts of persecution can consist in acts of a gender-specific
nature.
6. Forms of gender-based
violence and gender-related persecution
6.1. Violence against
women as a means of warfare
28. One particular case of gender-specific violence is
violence against women as a means of warfare. In its
Resolution 1670 (2009) on sexual violence against women in armed conflict,
the Assembly states that sexual violence against women in armed
conflict is a crime against humanity, a war crime, and an unacceptable,
but unfortunately effective weapon of war. Raping, sexually assaulting
and mutilating, forcibly impregnating and infecting with HIV/Aids
the wives, daughters and mothers of the “enemy” have terrible physical
and psychological effects on the victims and can also disrupt or
destroy whole communities.
29. In 2008, through the United Nations Security Council Resolution
1820 on women, peace and security, the international community recognised
that rape and other forms of sexual violence can constitute a war
crime, a crime against humanity and a constitutive act with respect
to genocide. However, sexual violence against women in armed conflict
is still common. It was a constitutive feature of the Balkan wars
and today occurs in the Democratic Republic of Congo and in Sudan
where thousands of victims are furthermore denied access to justice,
reparation and redress. The lives of the victims remain blighted
in many ways while the perpetrators enjoy almost complete impunity
for their crimes. In the Democratic Republic of Congo rape has continued
after the end of the war.
6.2. Trafficking
30. Trafficking in human beings is a major problem in
Europe today. Annually, thousands of people, largely women and children,
fall victim to trafficking for sexual exploitation or other purposes,
whether in their own countries or abroad. Forms of trafficking include
sexual exploitation, forced labour and slavery and can concern boys
and men as well as girls and women. Traffickers can be criminal
organisations, family members or government, rebel or even international
forces. Trafficking is a grave human rights violation.
31. In Article 4(a) of the Council of Europe Convention on Action
against Trafficking in Human Beings (CETS No. 197), trafficking
is defined as follows:
“Trafficking
in human beings shall mean the recruitment, transportation, transfer,
harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use
of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception,
of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the
giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent
of a person having control over another person, for the purpose
of exploitation. Exploitation shall include, at a minimum, the exploitation
or the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation,
forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery,
servitude or the removal of organs.”
32. Recognition of refugee status could be an important component
of the protection response for certain trafficking victims. While
being a victim of human trafficking normally does not suffice to
establish a valid claim for refugee status, this does not exclude
that, under specific circumstances, trafficked persons may be in
need of international refugee protection. This could be the case,
for instance, if the trafficking victims fear repercussions against
themselves or against their families or communities by the perpetrators,
which would amount to persecution for one of the reasons, contained
in the 1951 Geneva Convention definition and when there is no effective
national protection available should they be returned.
33. Whereas trafficking can form the basis of a claim for asylum,
according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM),
other forms of persecution often take precedence and trafficking
is neglected. Authorities are allegedly afraid of setting a precedent
by basing their decisions on the subject of trafficking.
34. In some countries, co-operation with the police and the prosecutor
is a necessary condition for trafficking to be taken into account
in an asylum claim. UNHCR recommends that refugee protection be
considered separately from witness or victim protection under criminal
law, as not all victims of trafficking will be selected by investigating
and prosecuting authorities to act as witnesses in criminal proceedings,
a fact that has no bearing on their actual protection needs. The
rapporteur supports the UNHCR’s recommendation in this respect.
Furthermore, many witness and victim protection programmes are temporary
in nature. A positive example to the contrary is Canada, where victims
of trafficking are not required to testify against their trafficker to
gain temporary or permanent resident status.
6.3. Female genital
mutilation
35. Amnesty International estimates that over 130 million
women worldwide have been affected by some form of female genital
mutilation (FGM), with over
3 million girls at risk of undergoing FGM every year. FGM is mainly
practised in 28 African countries. It is common in a band that stretches
from Senegal in West Africa to Ethiopia on the east coast, as well
as from Egypt in the north to Tanzania in the south. It is also
practised by some groups in the Arabian peninsula. The countries
where FGM is most prevalent are Egypt, followed by Sudan, Ethiopia
and Mali. Many girls that are citizens of or live in European countries
are lured to Africa every year in order to be submitted to FGM.
36. FGM is inflicted on girls and women because they are female,
to assert power over them and to control their sexuality. The practice
often forms part of a wider pattern of discrimination against girls
and women in society. Following efforts over the past decades to
eliminate FGM at the international and national level, rates of
FGM have decreased in some areas. Women and girls will nevertheless
continue to need international protection as long as the authorities
in their own countries are unable or unwilling to provide effective protection.
37. FGM violates a number of human rights of girls and women,
including the right not to be exposed to torture and inhuman or
degrading treatment as guaranteed by Article 3 of the ECHR.
UNHCR
considers FGM to be a form of gender-specific violence that inflicts
severe harm, both mental and physical, and which reaches the level
of severity amounting to persecution in the sense of the 1951 Geneva
Convention. UNHCR has concluded that a woman seeking asylum because
she has been compelled to undergo, or is likely to be subjected
to FGM, can qualify for refugee status. Under certain circumstances,
a parent could also establish a well-founded fear of persecution
in connection with the exposure of his or her child to the risk
of FGM.
38. Most, if not all, countries of origin have legislation in
place that prohibits FGM and even take measures to implement these
laws. In many countries, however, the legislation remains ineffective
and very few perpetrators are punished. Under these circumstances,
knowing that the act of FGM is most often committed by private actors,
the state cannot be considered able or even willing to offer the
protection on which an asylum seeker should be expected to rely.
UNHCR states that “For protection to be considered available, states
must display active and genuine efforts to eliminate FGM, including
appropriate prevention activities as well as systematic and actual
(not merely threatened) prosecutions and punishment for FGM-related
crimes”.
39. It is by now widely recognised by states that the fear of
a girl or a woman being subjected to FGM may be for reasons of “membership
of a particular social group”, but also of “political opinion” and
of “religion” as defined in Article 1A of the 1951 Geneva Convention.
Where a woman or a girl does not behave, or is perceived as not
behaving in accordance with the interpretation of a particular religion,
such as by refusing to undergo FGM or to have FGM performed on her
children, she may have a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons
of religion.
40. UNHCR points out that when assessing a child’s claim for asylum,
it is important to remember that actions or threats that might not
qualify as persecution in the case of an adult may suffice in the
case of a child. In most cases, however, the potential or actual
harm caused by FGM is so serious that it must be considered to qualify
as persecution, regardless of the age of the claimant.
41. Furthermore, it can happen that a girl is unwilling or unable
to express a fear of FGM. A very young girl could well be unaware
of or not fully understand the harm that FGM carries with it. In
certain situations, adolescent girls could even claim to be looking
forward to undergoing FGM, as it also entails receiving attention and
gifts and is a sign of growing up. Well-founded fear can nevertheless
be considered established since, objectively, FGM is clearly considered
as a form of violence amounting to persecution. It is up to the
decision maker to make an objective assessment of the risk facing
the child, regardless of the absence of an expression of fear. Even
when the parents have been in the country of asylum for some time,
a well-founded fear on behalf of the child can arise upon the birth
of a daughter post-flight.
42. According to UNHCR, FGM-related claims not only involve the
threat of being subjected to the practice, but can also cover women
or girls who have already been subjected to the practice and suffer
its long-term consequences. There is no requirement that the feared
persecution should take an identical form to the one previously
endured, as long as it can be linked to one of the grounds in the
1951 Geneva Convention. Even if the mutilation is considered to
be a one-off past experience, there may still be compelling reasons
arising from that past persecution to grant the claimant refugee
status, for example if the persecution suffered was particularly
atrocious, and the woman or girl is experiencing traumatic psychological
effects, rendering a return to the country of origin intolerable.
6.4. “Honour crimes”
43. All forms of violence against women and girls in
the name of traditional codes of honour are considered to be so-called
honour crimes and constitute a serious violation of human rights.
The issue has been addressed generally in Assembly
Resolution 1681 (2009) on the urgent need to combat so-called “honour crimes”.
The risk of being submitted to “honour crimes” should be taken into
account in gender- related claims.
44. “Honour crimes” comprise many types of crimes. Any form of
violence against women and girls, in the name of traditional codes
of honour, is regarded as an “honour crime”. What distinguishes
this form of violence from other forms of violence against women
therefore resides in the fact that it is exercised in the name of traditional
codes of honour. Where the “honour” of the family is at stake, according
to the family, and the woman suffers the consequences, one can speak
of an “honour crime”.
45. “Honour crimes” have been defined as follows: “Crimes of ‘honour’
are seen to encompass a variety of manifestations of violence against
women, including ‘honour killings’, assault, confinement or imprisonment, and
interference with choice in marriage, where the publicly articulated
‘justification’ is attributed to a social order claimed to require
the preservation of a concept of ‘honour’ vested in male (family
and/or conjugal) control over women and specifically women’s sexual
conduct, actual suspected or potential”. Murder is the most extreme
form of “honour crime”.
7. Gender-based violence
due to sexual orientation
46. “Sexual orientation” refers to a person’s capacity
for profound emotional, affectional and sexual attraction to, and
intimate and sexual relations with, individuals of a different gender
or the same gender, or more than one gender.
The
rapporteur would in this context like to draw attention to Assembly
Resolution 1728 (2010) on discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation
and gender identity.
The
rapporteur finds that the topic of asylum matters and gender-based
persecution of gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender persons merits
a report in its own right by the Assembly.
47. Individuals who are LGBT may be subjected by the authorities
or by private actors, including their families, to physical abuse
and to discrimination, because of who they are or who the community
perceives them to be. This might result from cultural and social
norms, leading to intolerance and prejudice, or because of national
laws reflecting such attitudes. Where acts of abuse and discrimination
go unpunished or where LGBT orientation is criminalised, LGBT individuals
may successfully lay a claim for asylum under the 1951 Geneva Convention.
48. Claims relating to sexual orientation and gender identity
are primarily recognised under the 1951 Geneva Convention on grounds
of membership of a particular social group, but may also be linked
to political opinion and religion. According to the UNHCR, this
has been affirmed by courts and tribunals in various jurisdictions,
including Australia, Canada, France, Germany, New Zealand, Sweden,
the United Kingdom and the United States.
49. A common element in the experience of many LGBT applicants
is having to keep parts of their lives secret in response to pressure,
hostility and discrimination, or criminal sanctions. As a result,
they often have limited evidence to establish their LGBT identity
or may not be able to put forward evidence of past persecution, in
particular where they were not living openly as LGBT in the country
of origin.
50. Claims made by LGBT persons often reveal exposure to physical
and sexual violence, extended periods of detention, medical abuse,
threat of execution and “honour killings”. These acts of harm and
mistreatment are so serious that they generally reach the threshold
of persecution within the meaning of the 1951 Geneva Convention.
Severe forms of family and community violence, rape and other forms
of sexual assault, particularly if occurring in detention settings,
would fall within the definition of torture. LGBT persons could
also experience lesser forms of physical and psychological harm,
including harassment, threats of harm, intimidation, and psychological
violence that can rise to the level of persecution.
51. While the violence and human rights abuses faced by LGBT persons
have many common elements, it is also necessary to distinguish between
them. Lesbian women often experience harm as a result of the inter-relation
of their sexual orientation and gender, since women’s position in
society is generally less powerful than that of men. In societies
where women are regarded primarily as wives and mothers, lesbians
may be isolated. They often have less access to informal protection
systems.
52. Transgender persons, as an even smaller group, will often
have distinct experiences of persecution. These could, for example,
relate to health care or be due to an increased risk of exposure
to harm if their gender identity is not legally recognised. Such
exposure could be prompted where a transgender individual is asked by
the authorities to produce identity documents and his or her physical
appearance does not correspond to the sex indicated in the documents.
Someone who is seeking to change or has changed his or her sex may particularly
be perceived as challenging prevailing conceptions of gender roles.
53. Where harsh punishments are imposed that do not conform to
international human rights standards, such as the death penalty
or severe corporal punishment, their persecutory character is particularly
evident. What is decisive in a refugee status determination is whether
there is a real risk of harm upon return to the country of origin.
Persecution may be found even where there is no conclusive country
of origin information providing evidence that laws criminalising
homosexual conduct are actually enforced.
54. LGBT applicants who have concealed their sexual orientation
in their country of origin might not have experienced harm in the
past sufficient to amount to persecution. It is possible that their
conduct was not a voluntary choice and was modified precisely to
avoid the threat of being persecuted. The absence of persecution
in the past does not necessarily imply that there is no risk of
persecution in the future. As long as the asylum seeker can show
that he or she has a well-founded fear of persecution or that there
is a real risk of serious harm, he or she should have the opportunity
to receive asylum or subsidiary protection. Consequently, LGBT persons
who have left their country of origin for a reason other than their
sexual orientation or have “come out” after arrival in the country
of asylum could qualify for refugee status if they can demonstrate
a well-founded fear of future persecution.
8. Gender issues in
the asylum determination procedure
8.1. Discrimination
55. Female asylum seekers face additional problems upon
arrival and during their stay in the host country. First of all,
their access to the asylum system itself might be impaired due to
discrimination. One example is the queue at the asylum office, which
might be open only for a limited time per day and in which it might
be difficult for a women to claim her place against men who may
show her little consideration. Asylum-seeking women who have families
are often supposed to care for the children, making it more difficult
for them to access the asylum procedure. Many refugee and asylum-seeking
women are also dependent on the status of a male family member who
is or has been the principal applicant in an asylum claim. He may
directly receive and retain control over any financial or other
material assistance that is provided. Female asylum seekers are
often victims of discrimination in the host country, just like women
in general face discrimination in society. However, in the case
of a female asylum seeker the consequences are multiplied and magnified.
56. Although many Council of Europe member states are stepping
up their work in order to streamline a gender understanding into
public decision making, policy and operations, this thinking is
not always reflected in the asylum procedure. Women seeking asylum
in Council of Europe member states should, however, have their protection
claims determined by an asylum system that is informed in all aspects
of its policy and operations, by a thorough understanding of the
particular forms of persecution, violence and human rights abuses
that women experience because of their gender and of their particular
needs. They have the right to be treated with fairness, dignity
and respect, in accordance with international refugee law and the
Council of Europe and other international human rights standards.
8.2. Identification
of women asylum seekers
57. The IOM points to the problem of identification.
According to the IOM, large flows of migrants are predominantly
male, whereas female asylum seekers more often arrive on an ad hoc
basis. It is important to ensure that ad hoc arrivals receive appropriate
information and that they are given the possibility of being identified
in the same way as those who arrive in large-scale or mass flows
of mixed migration, which are often received by international organisations
such as the UNHCR, IOM or the Red Cross. If the identification process is
not solid, women and girls that could be asylum seekers risk falling
through the cracks in the system. It is also important to give victims
of persecution access to support upon identification, independently
of a possible asylum procedure. The rapporteur draws the conclusion
that women and girls might be unable or reluctant to identify themselves
as asylum seekers.
58. When women do arrive in mixed flows they are in a minority
and are therefore particularly vulnerable. According to information
provided by Associazione per gli Studi Giuridici sull’Immigrazione
(ASGI), 80% of women arriving on the Italian shores claim to have
been exposed to sexual abuse by their smugglers.
59. It is important to have a set of identification criteria in
order to cater for needs, such as shelters, or to provide a recovery
period before the asylum process sets in. This might be particularly
important for victims of trafficking. Identification should also
include the special needs of the individual. Women might suffer
trauma due to gender-based or other forms of violence and it is
therefore important that they are given sufficient time to reflect
and recuperate before the asylum procedure is initiated. The International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has set up “listening houses”
in countries of origin with a view to receiving women who need to talk
about their experience of violence, for example in the Democratic
Republic of Congo. Similar institutions could be set up also in
countries of destination. Additional psychological and physical
care for survivors of trauma should be provided, including counselling
services for families as a whole, where this is requested.
60. Violent acts are part of certain cultures and it is often
the whole of society that is implicated in violence against women
in all its forms. Consequently, it might be difficult for the women
themselves to recognise that they have been victims of gender-specific
violence or gender-related persecution that might qualify them for refugee
status.
61. It is important that relevant residence and other permits
are issued to the female asylum seekers as soon as possible after
their identification and that such permits are issued in the woman’s
name and given to her personally, with a view to releasing her from
possible dependence on male relatives.
8.3. The asylum application
62. In order to enable women to put forward their asylum
claims, it is also important that asylum applications are individualised
and not only submitted and registered with regard to a married couple
or a family. When a woman is dependent upon a male family member
for her legal status in the host country and he takes the decision
to return, he might thereby forfeit her refugee status at the same
time. For the same reason, it is important that a woman who wishes
to divorce can do so without losing her refugee status. These problems are
of course shared by all female asylum seekers, but victims of gender-based
violence are particularly vulnerable.
63. The female asylum seeker should be informed in private of
her right to make an independent application for asylum (separate
from her husband) at any stage and of the right to be subsequently
interviewed without the presence of family members. It should be
ensured that women are given the opportunity of filling out their asylum
applications themselves, independently of their husbands or male
relatives.
64. Female asylum seekers may also have difficulties seeking necessary
legal remedies. They are often in a situation of dependence vis-à-vis
their husbands or families and they might have difficulties interacting
with and trusting the authorities. The authorities might not be
as accessible as they should be. If in an irregular situation or
awaiting return following an unsuccessful asylum application, the
women concerned might be reluctant to seek assistance from the authorities.
Female asylum seekers should be provided with assistance by counsellors
and interpreters wherever appropriate. The female asylum seeker
should be given a female counsellor or interpreter if there is any
indication of gender-sensitive issues arising during the asylum
claim.
8.4. The interview situation
65. There are also obstacles for women once they have
entered the asylum system. Member states of the Council of Europe
generally agree that the person conducting an interview with an
asylum seeker should be of the same sex. According to the UNHCR,
however, there is a gap between this principle and reality (for
example, when there is a lack of qualified female interpreters).
Female interviewers and interpreters should be available automatically
and not be subject to a request by the asylum seeker. At the very
least, the female asylum seeker should be offered the option and
not left to raise the issue herself.
66. The setting of the asylum interview is crucial. It may seem
obvious, but it is important to point out that in interviews with
women, both the authorities and legal representatives should be
particularly conscious of the need for discrete and tactful communication
that takes account of possible reactions to trauma. The interview must
also be culturally sensitive. It is important that the setting is
such that the woman feels comfortable enough to reveal all the relevant
facts with regard to her asylum application. She should as far as
possible be meeting the same officials throughout the procedure
in order to enable her to develop trust in that person, thereby
making it easier for her to tell her story. For the same reason,
the asylum procedure should allow her sufficient time.
67. It should be ensured that both open-ended and specific questions
which may help to reveal gender issues relevant to an asylum claim
are used in all asylum interviews. Women who have been involved
in indirect political activity or to whom political opinions have
been attributed, for example, often do not provide relevant information
in interviews due to the male-oriented nature of the questioning.
Female applicants may also fail to respond to questions concerning
the type of harm that they fear, such as sexual abuse.
68. The type and level of emotion that a female asylum seeker
displays during an interview should not affect her credibility.
For example, a lack of displayed emotion does not necessarily imply
that the woman is not deeply affected by the harm she has suffered.
Interviewers and decision makers should understand that cultural
differences and trauma play an important and complex role in determining
behaviour.
69. Interviewers often conclude a “lack of credibility” in interviews
where the experience of persecution is related to a woman’s gender.
Delay in submitting the application, or giving an account of gender-specific
harm at a late stage in an application, should not undermine the
credibility of a woman’s application, as this delay may be due to
shame or the effects of trauma.
8.5. Training of the
interviewer
70. During the interview, questions should be asked with
a view to helping the woman reveal gender issues relevant to the
asylum claim. In order to be able to do this, the interviewer should
have the appropriate training.
8.6. Country of origin
information
71. Authorities should use country of origin information
that is up to date and that has relevance as evidence in women’s
asylum claims. If these factors are not gender sensitive, the female
asylum seeker has to work harder than her male counterparts in order
to get her story across and have it assessed in a neutral and correct way.
It is therefore important that the role, status and treatment of
women in the country of origin is fully understood by interviewers
and asylum decision makers. Where such information is lacking, interviewers should
take care to obtain detailed testimony that provides a coherent
account of the basis for fear. Country of origin information often
establishes that a certain country has adequate legislation in place.
However, it rarely provides sufficient detail on whether the legislation
is implemented or not. Country of origin information is often formulated
with regard to adult male experience. This is a disadvantage for
girls and women in the asylum process.
72. Country of origin information should be collected that has
relevance as evidence in women’s claims. Accurate, up-to-date information
should be obtained from the public domain (including non-governmental) sources
on issues such as the position of women before the law, the political
rights of women, the social and economic rights of women, the cultural
and social customs of the country, the existence of practices such
as female genital mutilation, and the incidence and forms of reported
violence against women. Information should also include the protection
available to them and the penalties imposed on those who perpetrate
the violence and, of course, the risks that a woman might face on
her return from making her claim in the asylum country.
8.7. Standard of proof
73. Normally, it is the applicant who bears the responsibility
of establishing the accuracy of the facts on which the claim is
based, by submitting oral or documentary evidence. The UNHCR has
noted: “The burden of proof is discharged by the applicant rendering
a truthful account of facts relevant to the claim so that, based
on the facts, a proper decision may be reached”.
In the context of the applicant’s responsibility
to prove facts in support of her claim, the term “standard of proof”
means the threshold to be met by the applicant in persuading the
adjudicator as to the truth of her factual assertions. Facts which
need to be “proved” are those that concern the background and personal
experiences of the applicant, which purportedly have given rise
to fear of persecution and the resultant unwillingness to avail
himself/herself of the protection of the country of origin.
74. In the context of national criminal procedure, it is a sad
fact of life that women often have difficulties proving that they
have been subjected to violence. The reason is that violence against
women, including domestic violence and rape, most commonly takes
place within the confines of the private home without witnesses.
Such acts may also have taken place a long time before the trial,
and it is therefore difficult to give the exact date and time of
the act. In order to protect the presumption of innocence of the
person charged with a crime and to give him the benefit of the doubt,
the required proof must normally not be eased for the female victim
in such cases.
75. The same difficulties persist for a woman who invokes gender-based
violence as a ground for asylum. In fact, on one hand, the burden
of proof in such a situation becomes even more difficult to surmount
since the facts often took place in a different country and due
to the fact that the asylum seeker’s resources are often very limited.
Often she has had to leave important documents behind. On the other
hand, contrary to the domestic criminal procedure, the required
proof could be significantly eased for the female asylum seeker, since
in the asylum procedure there is no defendant whose rights to a
fair trial have to be taken into account. The aim of the asylum
procedure is basically humanitarian.
9. The social situation
of victims of gender-based violence and gender-related persecution
76. According to the IOM, female migrants (which include
also asylum seekers and refugees) suffer from violence to a higher
extent than other women.
In
2006, in Ireland, migrant women represented 13% of those who used
services reserved for women victims of violence, but made up only
5% of the female population over 15 years of age. In Norway, migrant
women represent 56% of women seeking help against violence. In Spain, the
number is 44%. There are also indications that this discrepancy
is growing. However, these statistics are not broken down with regard
to the legal status of the women concerned, whether they are asylum
seekers, refugees or regular or irregular migrants.
77. Asylum seekers awaiting appeal may suffer financial hardship
during long delays in the appellate processes of certain European
countries. Such conditions can leave them vulnerable to exploitation
and abuse.
78. The ECRE has proposed a set of measures in order to meet the
social needs of refugee women. Women should be represented among
the refugees who are consulted at every stage of policy and programme planning.
Opportunities should be created for women-only space in discussions
and interviews. The ECRE has also called for information services
to be provided to all asylum-seeking and refugee women in order
to assist them in accessing their rights under national law in relation
to discrimination, social assistance, employment, health and domestic
violence.
79. Asylum-seeking women and girls should have access to health
care and should be informed of the availability of these services.
Asylum-seeking women and girls should have the opportunity to be
attended by female medical professionals if they so wish.
10. Gender issues in
detention and collective accommodation
80. A special situation is that of women in detention
or in reception centres. They can be exposed to violence or threats
of violence or to humiliating situations such as searches and examinations
performed by men or exposure to men when using toilets or showers.
They can be denied hygienic protection, they can be insulted and
subjected to degrading language.
81. Asylum seekers should not be detained except in exceptional
cases. Where they are detained, the following safeguards should
be put in place: separate facilities should be available for women
and men, unless specific requests are received from all members
of a family that they wish to cohabit. As for reception centres and
“international zones” at ports and airports, measures should be
taken to improve the security of women and girls. In both cases,
personnel should receive training on gender-sensitive behaviour.
11. Conclusions
and proposals
82. Generally, and when assessing asylum claims in particular,
Council of Europe member states must not allow themselves any relativism:
human rights violations or crimes against women can never be justified
by reference to history, religion, tradition or culture. All Council
of Europe member states should ensure that gender-specific violence
and gender-related persecution are taken fully into account in asylum
claims under the 1951 Geneva Convention.
83. While many member states are stepping up their work in order
to streamline a gender understanding into public decision making,
policy and operations, this work does not always translate into
action in the asylum process. Much greater progress needs to be
made on this front.
84. The rapporteur emphasises the importance of greater consultation
with refugee women at all stages of policy and programme planning,
and has called on European governments to actively support the development of
refugee women’s fora and associations. He recommends that the Committee
of Ministers develop guidelines that detail good practice in the
determination of asylum claims from women and girls, taking into
account existing guidelines in Australia, Canada and the United
States.
85. It is necessary to examine how to tackle gender-specific violence
and gender-related persecution in countries of origin, even if it
is not the role of this report. In this context, the rapporteur
would like to underline that by continuously promoting equal opportunities,
equal participation, non-discrimination and the eradication of domestic
violence, both on their own territory and in an international context,
Council of Europe member states contribute to making women less
dependent on men and on male traditions. This will contribute to making
them less vulnerable to violence and more capable of counteracting
violence and persecution when it occurs. By implementing the relevant
Council of Europe and other international instruments, member states set
an example by consolidating their moral prerogative to promote the
same policy and rules in countries of origin.