Deportation Could Mean Death For Gay Ugandan

Deportation Could Mean Death For Gay Ugandan

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SAN DIEGO, Calif.— Joseph Bukombe spent his entire life hiding his sexual orientation from friends and family in his native Kampala. Today he is fighting an American immigration system that doesn’t believe he’s gay.

In March 2011, the Board of Immigration Appeals—which decides appeals based on paper reviews of cases—denied Bukombe’s petition for asylum based on his sexual orientation, saying he failed to provide credible testimony attesting to the fact that he is gay. Bukombe is fighting his deportation order.

The 35-year-old chef-in-training in San Diego says he fears for his life if he’s deported because Uganda is not a safe place for gays. “If I’m sent to Uganda, I fear I will be tortured, imprisoned or killed,” Bukombe explained.

Such fears are grounded in personal experience and public scorn – at times violent -- of homosexuality in his native country.

Earlier this month, Uganda’s Ethics and Integrity Minister Simon Lotodo called for the arrests of the organizers of a gay rights conference, saying gay people should go home “and suffer their illness from there,” according to news reports.

Bukombe’s saga illustrates the trouble of gay immigrants from the Middle East and Africa who flee persecution back home because of their sexual orientation. Upon arrival in the United States, many fall outside the stereotypical boundaries of gay life in this country and thus struggle to prove their homosexuality in court.

“They [immigration courts] may be asking, ‘Do you go to gay bars? Do you have relationships?’” said Shannon Price Minter, legal director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights. “[These are] things that gay people might do in the U.S. but not people in other countries, or they would be killed.”

Tortured

Bukombe married in 2005, two years after arriving in San Diego on a six-month tourist visa. He recalls hoping the marriage would “change” him. But it didn’t, and he eventually told his wife the truth, though he still could not bring himself to tell family back home, or for that matter, some of his African friends here.

“I did what most people do back home,” Bukombe said. “I lived a double life.”

It was only in the courtroom that he dared open up. A timid Bukombe told the judge that his relatives had tried to beat the gay out of him. In his testimony, he described how when he was 8 or 9 years old, his aunt and two neighbors tied him up and then beat him until he bled. His aunt thought she was doing him a favor.

“They were beating the homosexual demon out of me,” Bukombe explained. “They squeezed my penis and testicles so hard I had to have one of my testicles removed.”

They tried burning his genitals. His aunt grabbed a piece of burning wood from a cooking stove. When Bukombe wouldn’t stand still, she sizzled his leg. He couldn’t walk for days. His aunt told him he would die if he ever told anyone.

The young boy remained quiet; the fear that relatives would find out he was gay outweighed his fear of the beatings.

“I was afraid I would get into more trouble,” he said.

Punishable by Death

Bukombe came to the attention of immigration officials in January 2010, when he was arrested in the parking lot of a San Diego fast food restaurant on a DUI. In court, he began to recount for the judge the persecution gay people, including some of his friends, experienced back home.

“They look at you like if you have a disease and nobody wants to come near you,” Bukombe said of Uganda, where legislation was introduced in 2009 that would make gay sex punishable by death.

While the bill was tabled after international outrage, the climate in Uganda remains hostile. Currently, male-male relationships there are punishable with 10 years or more in prison, according to the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association.

Worldwide, same-sex relationships are illegal in 75 countries, according to the San Francisco-based Organization for Refuge, Asylum and Migration, most of them clustered in the Middle East and Africa. In seven of those countries, being gay is punishable by death.

Despite these dangers, Bukombe’s petition for asylum was denied, a fact he attributes in part to his attorney’s inexperience. As a result, he’s now navigating the complicated web of immigration law without the assistance of legal representation.

“It’s a huge problem for LGBT people who are in the asylum process, finding attorneys who know what they’re doing; who are competent,” says Minter, noting that a number of his clients come seeking help after the attorney they initially hired missed a deadline or failed to show up for a court hearing.

Generally, non-citizens arrested for a crime have the right to government-appointed legal representation for criminal charges. But those facing deportation don’t have that right.

For Bukombe, this has meant struggling alone against a complicated, foreign legal system. He recently submitted a request for legal representation with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, cognizant of the fact that without a lawyer his chances of winning on appeal are slim at best.

“It’s very difficult without an attorney. The government has all the resources to discredit you,” said Grace M. Gómez, an immigration attorney with the Law Offices of Gómez & Lackey in Florida who has successfully helped LGBT clients obtain asylum. “If you are not educated, not familiar with the language and the law, it can be very difficult.”

An End to the Nightmare

Bukombe still has nightmares from the 23 months he spent locked up in the Otay Mesa immigrant detention center outside San Diego. He says while there, agents regularly pressured him to sign deportation papers.

“We have your travel documents,” one agent told him after he was forcefully woken up and brought into an empty room to be interrogated.

“I was begging for my life,” Bukombe recalls. “I said, ‘No. I can’t do that. That would mean I’m signing my death warrant. I don’t want to die.’”

One agent later threatened Bukombe with jail time of four to nine years for refusing to sign the papers. “Being in prison here for nine years is better than going back and dying,” Bukombe replied.

He was released in December. Since then he’s been working as a chef at the Flavors of East Africa near San Diego State University.

On a recent Friday, he stood outside the restaurant and spoke about his hopes for the future.

“I’m praying every day that the situation gets better back home so that people like me can be free,” he said.

Until then, he adds, he will continue his fight to remain in this country, a fight that could mean the difference between life and death.

This story was made possible through funding from the Rosenberg Foundation’s California Immigration Reporting Project at UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism. It is part of NAM's ongoing 'Stories From the Diaspora' series.
 

Comments

 
Anonymous

Posted Feb 29 2012

I'm of course sympathetic, and hope this young man is granted permanent asylum, but I also can't help wondering why we're constantly hearing about Uganda and not, e.g., Saudi Arabia.

Anonymous

Posted Feb 29 2012

Thanks for your comment. I'd love to do a story on what's happening in Saudi Arabia. If you know of any strong California-Saudi Arabia connection/ story idea, please send it my way. (rosamramirez@hotmail.com)

Anonymous

Posted Mar 1 2012

Ugandans live freely in accordance with the law. No homosexual has ever been tortured or sentenced to death in Uganda. No homosexual has ever been arrested or is serving any sentence in any prison in Uganda as a result of his sexual orientation. Allegations therefore raised by Bukombe here have no grain of truth at all.
Its true, homosexuality is still illegal in Uganda. A law to handle this issue is before parliament. At an appropriate time, parliament will pronounce itself on this matter.
It is important to note that, no Ugandan can ever be tortured or intimidated for any reason in the current establishment. If Bukombe returned to Uganda today, he will head straight to his village without any hassle. Even if he confessed, police will require hard evidence to prosecute him in the courts of law. In that way, he should not be scared of returning home. If he wants to remain in America, there should be other reasons ( economic, maybe) for seeking asylum.
Its unfortunate, the likes of Bukombe are trying hard to paint in the international community a wrong picture about Uganda. Yes, homosexuality is not a big issue in Uganda. Its not! Uganda has its own challenges like improving health care services, providing free education to all, raising the living standards of communities and renovating infrastructure. There is no time to run after homosexuals and Bukombe knows.
Individuals like Bukombe should be encouraged to desist from telling lies and return home so that they develop their country through hard work. Brother Bukombe, come back home. FOR GOD AND MY COUNTRY.

Kind regards,

Ibrahim Ogaram

Anonymous

Posted Mar 1 2012

hmm. Never heard this story anywhere in Uganda. I think the writer needs to research more and genuinely check with both the authorities in Uganda and the Migration courts. The writer may be used by this man to extend his stay in the country. It happens. A drowning man will clutch at a straw and this is a case of a guy trying to dodge deportation. Gays in Uganda walk and are alive and well. The law even focuses on protecting children from adults who force them into acts of homosexuality as children. So then why would he be murdered. Please check it may even be in the interest of his family to come up with that story because they may benefit from the remittances he sends back. Guys are we that naive... how can the immigration people have basic and valid research and a journalist fails to come up with an objective story. Please try again on this one!

Anonymous 2

Anonymous

Posted Mar 7 2012

As you look for an identity theft defense attorney, start by looking for one that has a long list of successful cases in this specific area of the law. The more success the lawyer has under his belt, the better your results will likely be, and the more understanding the lawyer will have about the laws surrounding your particular crime.

Anonymous

Posted Mar 14 2012

David Kato, leading spokesman for the GLBT community in Uganda, was brutally murdered in Uganda and the police covered it up, denying it had anything to do with his sexual orientation. Human rights activists say this is typical of hate crimes in the Third World against any minority group. The "Kill the Gays' bill is back up for consideration in Uganda though now the "moderate" solution to any gay person's sexual orientation is to jail them for life. And Ugandan prisons are horrible, but especially so for gay men.

Anonymous

Posted Jun 8 2012

the truth of the matter is that gays in uganda gays are persecuted and killed without the knolwedge of everyone. its a gravious crime to be identified as gay, you risk death at any time, become isolated and tortured with verbal abuse and descrimination. many peopole have fled not only to the big countires but also to neighbouring villages and countries like kenya south sudan rwanda, etc but this doesnot stop the fact that they continue to exercise their sexuality which inturn leads them to death coz many african counties are homophobic. the people who claim this guy wants extension to stay in usa are not realistic, support the ruling party NRM and themselves would involve in killings, isolation and persecution of gays. uganda is homophobic and many people have indeed lost thier lives, jobs families and education. pls dont be mean to hide the fact.

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