Gays' asylum cases fuel law field's growth
Delmy Berganza left El Salvador and came to the United States in 
1989, she says. Though she is a lesbian, she was afraid to utter the 
word in her homeland. She was granted asylum in August. Delmy 
Berganza left El Salvador and came to the United States in 1989, she 
says. Though she is a lesbian, she was afraid to utter the word in 
her homeland. She was granted asylum in August. (Mark Wilson/Globe 
Staff)
By Maria Sacchetti
Globe Staff / October 14, 2008
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2008/


 In her sister's spacious home in Chelsea, Delmy Berganza sat at the 
kitchen table one recent day and talked openly about life as a 
lesbian. In her native El Salvador, she was too terrified to utter 
the word.

In a small flat in Brazil, Genesio Oliveira covered his face with his 
hands in despair. He lives blocks from a man he said raped him years 
ago, and he lives in fear in a country where dozens of gay men were 
killed last year.

"Really I am afraid to even go out," he said, speaking into a Web 
camera. "It's just terrifying. I'd rather stay in my room."

Both had asked the US government for asylum, saying they feared 
persecution in their homelands because of their sexual orientation. 
Berganza's approval letter arrived in August. That same month, 
Oliveira's American husband held a candlelight vigil in Haverhill to 
mark the year anniversary since Oliveira returned to Brazil. His 
asylum bid was rejected.

Offering a haven for gays and lesbians is an emerging field of law in 
the United States and around the world, lawyers and advocates say, 
awakening foreigners to the option to live in the United States that 
was previously unknown. But the practice is raising concerns, as 
critics cite the potential for fraud and advocates worry that 
possible homophobia or lack of international experience might lead 
some judges and government officials to send foreigners back to 
dangerous lands.

In a 2003 case, an immigration judge in California denied asylum to a 
Mexican national, saying it wasn't obvious the man was gay. The man 
appealed and won asylum last year.

"Asylum is a discretionary measure," said Dusty Araujo, asylum-
documentation coordinator for the Chicago-based National Immigrant 
Justice Center. "I usually tell clients it will depend on what side 
of the bed the judge got up that morning."

US Citizenship and Immigration Services spokesman Bill Wright said 
government officials and others are trained to follow immigration 
law. The US government doesn't track how many gays and lesbians 
receive asylum, he said. Homophobia "shouldn't factor in at all," he 
said. "An asylum case is adjudicated based on its own merits 
individually."

The Executive Office for Immigration Review, which oversees 
immigration courts, had no comment, said spokeswoman Susan Eastwood.

Federal human-rights reports outline threats worldwide, including to 
gays and lesbians. Brazilian law bans discrimination against gays, 
but 116 gays, lesbians, and transvestites were killed last year, up 
from 88 in 2006, the US State Department said in a report. 
Homosexuality is illegal in India, Uganda, and Jamaica - where it is 
punishable by 10 years in prison.

Critics of increased efforts to extend asylum to gays and lesbians 
are expressing concerns that applicants could pretend to be gay when 
they are really fleeing poverty back home. Unlike heterosexuals, gays 
and lesbians cannot sponsor their spouses for legal US residency.
The problem with broadening asylum [is] how do you control for 
fraud?" said Dan Stein, president of the Federation for American 
Immigration Reform. "How do you handle that?"

In all asylum cases, applicants must show they have a well-founded 
fear of persecution in their homelands. Applicants can seek asylum in 
different ways: They can apply to Citizenship and Immigration 
Services, and they can appeal the decisions in court; or, if they are 
facing deportation, they can appeal to a judge directly in court.

Asylum does not guarantee citizenship, and asylum status can be 
revoked if conditions improve in their homelands or if they commit 
certain crimes.

For Berganza, a 40-year-old floor installer, the fear came early in 
El Salvador.

In her hometown, crowds frequently taunted and threw garbage at a boy 
they thought was gay. One girl had no friends because people believed 
she was a lesbian. One of Berganza's aunts received death threats 
because people thought she was a lesbian.

Berganza had always known she was different. Around age 8 she 
developed a crush on a girl. She never had a boyfriend.

"I never told anyone," she said. "I was afraid of what could happen."

After her father was killed during the country's civil war, her 
mother decided to leave Berganza and her two sisters in order to work 
in the United States. Berganza, then a teenager, volunteered to go 
instead. She couldn't wait to leave.

She was smuggled illegally into the United States and found work in 
California. But she struggled emotionally.

With the support of a friend, she came out as a lesbian - and then 
realized that she couldn't go home.

"It would never be the same," Berganza said.

She eventually moved to Massachusetts, where she fell in love and 
even attended a same-sex wedding.

She had tried different routes to gain legal status before she 
realized that asylum was an option. One day, she mentioned to her 
Boston-based lawyer, Jeff Ross, that she was a lesbian. Her story 
came pouring out and the asylum bid took shape.

She has no plans to return to her homeland. Instead, her elderly 
mother comes to visit, to avoid any harm to Berganza or her family.

"You can escape from that here," Berganza said.

The fear came early for Oliveira, too.

He heard slurs when he was only 6 years old, according to court 
documents. Around age 16, he said, he was raped by a doctor in the 
town he lives in now.

He left Brazil as soon as he could, going to medical school in 
Bolivia. When Oliveira's father died and he could no longer afford 
school, he moved to England and entered a sham marriage to gain 
residency.

And then, during a 2002 vacation in Boston, he met Tim Coco, an 
advertising agency owner, at a bar one Friday night after New Year's. 
By April 2002, they were in love. That October, Oliveira applied for 
asylum, was rejected, and appealed in court.

As the case continued, they built a life, buying a house, adopting a 
dog named Q-tip, and finally, marrying in 2005.

In 2006, the judge rejected Oliveira's asylum plea, though he found 
the testimony credible. He pointed out that Brazil has 
antidiscrimination laws and that Oliveira has gone to Brazil at least 
twice without incident, including for his father's funeral.

Now, Coco, who is 47, and Oliveira, 29, are planning another appeal 
because a recent federal report found that some government 
appointees, including immigration judges, had been screened for their 
views on gay marriage before they were appointed.

Coco tries to comfort Oliveira through nightly Internet chats, but it 
doesn't work.

"I just don't want to go out," said Oliveira, with a shrug.

Maria Sacchetti can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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