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1992-1997 Inter Alia 48 (1992-1997)
Women Refugees; Does the United States Provide Adequate Protection?

handle is hein.journals/ialia1 and id is 256 raw text is: 

INERATIOAL SETO


WOMEN REFUGEES; DOES THE UNITED STATES
         PROVIDE ADEQUATE PROTECTION?

                           By Karen Musalo


The issue of women's rights as human rights, long neglected by
the international human rights community, has been brought
into the foreground by a series of world events. The tragic and
highly publicised use of rape and forcible impregnation by the
Bosnian Serbs as a war strategy in the former Yugoslavia
dramatically focused world attention on the violations of
women's human rights. The successful organising and
advocacy of women at two world conferences, the Fourth
World Conference on Women, which took place in Beijing in
1995, and the World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna
in 1993, also focused sustained attention on the issue. At the
Vienna Conference, governments formally recognised that the
human rights of women and of the girl-child are an inalienable,
integral and indivisible part of universal human rights.1

Until these very recent developments, women's human rights
were largely considered outside the area of concern of the
international human rights community. The historic exclusion
of women's human rights from the mainstream human rights
movement resulted from perceptions that violations of
women's rights implicated private rather than governmental
action, and had to do with culture and tradition, which put them
off-limits to criticism from the international community. These
perceptions have been challenged by women from diverse
cultures and countries. They have forcefully made the point that
culture cannot excuse practices which violate fundamental
rights. They have also challenged the public/private distinction,
pointing to the countless situations in which governments are
complicit in human rights violations committed by private
actors by failing to provide even minimal state protection.

The perceptions that have been responsible for the slow
recognition of women's human rights as a legitimate human
rights issue have implications for the protection of women
refugees. The situations of persecution from which women flee
have often been characterised as personal, rather than political,
and therefore not a basis for refugee status. Women who fear
rape during conditions of armed conflict, or who flee to avoid
forcible sterilisation or abortion, or domestics violence have
been considered outside the sphere of protection of the
international refugee framework. The same exclusion from
protection has been the norm regarding women who resist the
practice of female genital mutilation (FGM, which is also
referred to as female circumcision), a physically and
psychologically damaging practice which maims women for
life. Only recently have perceptions regarding women refugees
who flee such human rights violations begun to change, in
tandem with changing concepts regarding women's human
rights in general.

Canada was the first country to directly address the issue of
refugee women in an attempt to make its adjudicatory process


more responsive. In 1993 the Canadian Immigration and
Refugee Board issued Guidelines on Women Refugee
Claimants Fearing Gender-Related Persecution. The
Guidelines counselled that when deciding the claims of women
applicants, the decision-makers should take international
human rights standards regarding women into consideration.
As discussed in more detail below, refugee must establish that
the harm they fear is related to their race, religion, nationality,
political opinion, or membership in a particular social group.
The Guidelines recommended a protection-oriented approach
in determining the connection between the feared harm, and the
five enumerated grounds. The Guidelines also advised
adjudicators to be more sensitive to the gender specific harms
which women may suffer, i.e., rape or sexual violence, and to
be aware of the difficulty associated with revealing such facts
in the context of an asylum application.
In 1995 the United States Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) issued Considerations for Asylum Officers
Adjudicating Asylum Claims from Women. The
Considerations provide guidance for the INS' first tier of
                   2
asylum adjudicators and is modelled somewhat on the
Canadian guidelines. Although it is a step in the right direction,
it has failed to effectively address two key aspects of U.S.
asylum jurisprudence which have resulted in failed protection
for women asylum applicants. These aspects are the unfortunate
trend in the U.S. to ignore international human rights norms in
the adjudication of refugee cases, and the misplaced reliance on
requiring proof of the persecutor's intent in determining
whether the harm is related to the race, religion, nationality,
political opinion, or social group membership of the victim.

The International Refugee Protection Framework and U.S.
Interpretation
The United States adopted the international definition of
refugee when it ratified the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status
of Refugees.3 In the wake of World War II, the international
community drafted the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status
           4
of Refugees to address the post-war European refugee crisis.
The 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees
incorporated the Convention's provisions, but removed
geographical and date restrictions which limited the
Convention's applicability to the post-war European situation.
The Convention and Protocol form the cornerstone of the
international refugee protection regime.
The Convention defines a refugee as an individual who has been
persecuted in the past or has a well-founded fear of persecution
in the future for reasons of' race, religion, nationality, political
opinion, or membership in a particular social group. The
Convention encourages State signatories to provide protection
to refugees, although such protection is within the discretion of


INTER ALIA SPRING 1996

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