United States: Virgina Judge Grants Asylum in FGM Case
On April 26, 2011, an immigration judge in
Ms. A-T-’s petition was originally denied by the same judge in 2005. The Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) upheld that decision in 2007 stating in its opinion that Ms. A-T- was unable to prove future persecution based upon past FGM and that the prospect of forced marriage did not rise to the requisite level of persecution. The BIA’s decision resulted in stricter legal standard for women seeking asylum based on past FGM than for other previously-persecuted applicants.
However, in 2008, Attorney General Michael Mukasey set aside the BIA’s decision citing the interconnectedness of gender-based violence and stating that past FGM may be indicative of future persecution. The BIA then remanded Matter of A-T- to the original immigration court for a re-hearing. The judge’s reversal included a comprehensive review of the evidence and an acknowledgement that the prospect of forced marriage alone may indicate future persecution. This decision marks an important shift in the legal standard for FGM-based asylum applications.
Compiled from: Breaking News: Tahirih Wins Key Immigration Case (27 April 2011), WURN.
For More Information
Please visit the pages on Gender-Based Asylum, Female Genital Mutilation, and Forced and Child Marriage of this website.
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