My translation of article in Danish newspaper Homotropolis...
September 12th,
2012 Homotropolis
Everything indicates that if the
transgender human rights and LGBT activist Fernanda Milán is expelled from
Denmark to Guatemala on Monday, she will be in danger. The Refugee Board’s
decision arouses indignation and amazement.
On
Monday, human rights and LGBT activist Fernanda Milán will be deported to
Guatemala, where she is at serious risk of assault, torture and death. This is
not just Fernandas own assessment of the situation in Guatemala, but also the view
of senior researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS),
Ninna Nyberg Sorensen, who for has many years studied the situation in the
Central American country. Nyberg Sørensen says that Denmark is already fully
aware of the risk to which we expose Fernanda Milán, by condemning her to
deportation, she cannot understand the decision:
“That
LGBT people in Guatemala suffer from cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment -
that included threats of violence, torture, enforced disappearances, sexual
violence in prisons and other institutions, and medical testing without prior
consent - is not only known among national, regional and international human
rights people, but also by the Danish state.
Denmark,
has since 1992 supported human rights organizations in Guatemala and the Pan-American
Human Rights System. The Danish development system has continued to receive
reports from organizations it funds, in which murders and assaults on activists
have been clear. Why does the Refugee Board not have this knowledge relating to
the treatment of Fernanda Milan’s asylum case?”
Refugee Board failure
The
Asylum Working Party, T-Refugee Project, which is committed to Fernandas case,
is also dismayed by the decision.
“It
seems completely obvious to us that the Refugee Board has not done an adequate
job in this case. The decision to refuse asylum has been taken without all
relevant information being included in the decision, and obviously this shouldn’t
be allowed.” says Emil Cronjäger in a press release, and backed by Stine
Larsen, also from T-Refugee Project:
“It
may surprise many as to why this knowledge has not been taken into account when
the Danish government has known about it for years. It seems frankly like shoddy
work, and I do not think that it puts Denmark in a particularly positive light when
we on the one hand support human rights work around the world, while on the
other, deport even those openly persecuted by torture and killings. It
is deeply hypocritical and directly subversive of the foreign policy set by the
Government. So they cannot both say that they support human rights and
simultaneously expel a person like Fernanda Milán. It simply makes no sense,
"said Stine Larsen.
Reasoned and well-documented fears
Ninna
Nyberg Sørensen, amongst other things, an expert in gender, migration and
deportation in Central America, has a thorough knowledge of the situation of
human rights activists and LGBT people in Guatemala, and says it the prospects
are not good.
“Fernanda
Milan's fears are not unfounded. Over the summer of 2012, the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights expressed its concern over the murders of first a
19-year-old trans woman in Guatemala City (28 June), then two trans women in
Villanueva (July 9), and finally the murder of a Honduran transgender person in
Guatemalan territory (11 July). Local trans and human
rights organizations report murders or 'forced disappearances' of at least 30
transgender people in Guatemala from 2009-2010. In the period 2005-2008
reported killing of approx. 50 LGBT people. The bodies are often terribly
mauled, it is not uncommon that genitals are cut off, or that the body is
dismembered to send out a warning that only heterosexual gender identity and
practice will be accepted. A report from March 2012 estimated the average life
expectancy of transgender people in Guatemala to be 25 years”
Demands for Justice minister’s
involvement
Emil
Cronjäger from T-Refugee Project also emphasizes in its press release that the
Danish government has a direct responsibility for Fernanda Milan's fate and
urges the Minister of Justice to investigate:
“If
Denmark does not change its decision in this case, we are directly complicit in
the abuses to which Fernanda Milán will be exposed in Guatemala. Responsibility
cannot be swept away with the claim that there wasn’t enough evidence about the
local situation, we now have many years evidence about this. It cannot be swept
away by arguing Fernanda is not personally persecuted: She's been attacked and
threatened repeatedly, including by the national police PNC.
“Just
the fact that she is transgender should in itself be enough that she should not
be expelled. This group is so extremely exposed, as it is. When you then
include the fact that she has been a figurehead for human rights organization
OASIS, whose leading members the last few years have been murdered
indiscriminately, then it's completely outrageous that the Refugee Board
chooses to continue to reject her application. I sincerely hope that it is an
error by the authorities and not a general pattern or a conscious decision.
“If
we choose to maintain this decision, Denmark is not just on a collision course
with the UN Refugee commission's crystal clear statements about persecution
based on gender and gender identity as a basis for asylum. We are also helping
to undermine our own foreign policy to strengthen human rights around the
world. I invite the Minister of Justice to take up this matter and reverse this
decision, so we are not complicit in human rights abuses and so we do not put
our own foreign policy to shame.” Says Emil Cronjager
