Those Forced to Aid Terrorists Should Get Asylum
New York, Oct 26 2009 4:10PM
Women who have been forced by terrorists to provide shelter, food and sexual services should never be denied asylum on the ground that they gave material support to terrorism, an independent United Nations expert said today.
“Victims of
gender-based persecution, including by terrorist groups,
should be granted asylum and entry into countries and never
fall victims of the notions of material support to
terrorism,” Martin Scheinin, Special Rapporteur on the
promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental
freedoms while countering terrorism, told a news conference
after delivering a report to a General Assembly
Committee.
The report to the Third Committee, which
deals with social, humanitarian and cultural affairs,
devotes considerable attention to the gender dimension and
specific rights of women and sexual minorities such as gays
and lesbians in the war against terrorism, and Mr. Scheinin
referred to previous reports he has issued highlighting the
problem.
In these he had noted that the security wall
Israel says it has built to keep out suicide bombers, some
of it on Palestinian land, impeded women from getting to
hospital to give birth. Another example he cited was the
United States tightening of immigration laws and the
rejection as asylum-seekers on account of material support
of terrorism.
This “often affects women, including
situations where terrorists have forced women to provide
shelter, food or sexual; services upon gunpoint,” he said.
“Then when they manage to flee and seek refuge in another
country, they are suddenly confronted with an accusation of
providing material support for terrorists.”
Among
other gender-specific issues, he cited the use of sexual
humiliation and forced homosexual activity in the
interrogation of male suspects.
The report’s
recommendation to States, apart from calling for an end to
using the material support charge to deny asylum to some
applicants, include halting the detention of women and
children for the purpose of producing information on the
whereabouts of male family members suspected of terrorism
and a ban on targeting people’s sexual identity or using
homophobia in interrogations.
Asked about the US
detention centre in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, holding alleged
terrorists, Mr. Scheinin said the prison should be closed
along the end-of-year timeline mentioned by President Barack
Obama, but acknowledged that such matters take
time.
“It should not be closed through trying and
sentencing people through the military commissions because
my assessment of the military commissions act is very
negative and I don’t think small fixes will help,” he
said.
Those who are considered too dangerous to
release should be tried in US federal courts, even though
the methods of their interrogation might make the evidence
inadmissible, “and then it should be left in the hands of
the judiciary to apply the law,” he stressed.
For
more details go to UN News Centre at http://www.un.org/news
ENDS