Bisexual woman faces imminent deportation to Nigeria
IMMIGRATION / Okojie says she and her kids will be persecuted
James Burrell / Toronto / Monday, July 07, 2008
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Time is running out for a bisexual woman who has been denied refugee status in Canada. Jane Okojie is scheduled to be deported to Nigeria on Thu, Jul 10 where she says she and her two children will face persecution because of her bisexuality.

"I don't know what to do," says Okojie. "I am more afraid for my children than for myself. There are so many things going on in my head, I cannot think properly."

"She's very scared," says Nastaran Roushan of the immigrant and refugee rights group No One Is Illegal, which is holding a rally in support of Okojie on Tue, Jul 8 at 11am in front of the offices of Citizenship and Immigration Canada (Toronto, 50 St Clair Ave E). "She fears for her life. If she goes back with her children, she has no one there. Her family has shunned her because she is bisexual. She doesn't have any money and nowhere to go. If she's arrested [her children] will be without a mother. They'll already face extreme discrimination because they were both born out of wedlock, and in fact, Samuel has already endured a lot of harassment while growing up there."

A victim of sexual violence and domestic abuse in her home country, Okojie says she fled Nigeria after being beaten by locals in her village and detained in prison after it was discovered she was bisexual.

"In Nigeria things are very bad for lesbians and gay people," says Okojie. "If you are a bisexual or lesbian or gay you can be stoned to death and you can be sentenced to prison for many many years. The government doesn't care."

Homosexuality in Nigeria is punishable by imprisonment of up to 14 years. The country has been criticized by human rights organizations including Amnesty International over its record of queer and other human rights abuses. In 2006 the Nigerian justice minister proposed a bill that would have made it a crime to support queer advocacy groups or participate in a same-sex marriage ceremony and banned adoption by queers. The bill was brought before the house of the national assembly but was not passed.

After arriving in Canada in July 2003 with her then seven-year-old son Samuel, Okojie attempted to claim refugee status but was denied by the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (IRB) in August 2005. She has since received a negative pre-removal risk assessment decision — which means that an IRB member has concluded it's safe for her to be returned to Nigeria — and has also been denied refugee status based on humanitarian and compassionate grounds. Since arriving in Canada Okojie has also given birth to a girl, who is now 18 months old.

"We are instituting a motion at the federal court to stay Jane's removal," says Okojie's lawyer, Kingsley Jesuorobo, "and we are going to be asking that the motion be expedited."

Jesuorobo says Okojie wasn't told until Jul 2 that she would have to leave Canada on Jul 10.

"She was told to report for removal together with her 12-year-old child Samuel... but essentially it would also include her Canadian-born child who is 18 months old," says Jesuorobo, explaining that Okojie is the sole caregiver for her daughter. "She has only been given a week's notice for her to get out of Canada with her children.

"I don't want to bring my daughter back to Nigeria to have people ostracize her," says Okojie. "I don't want people in my village to say, 'Look at her, she is the child of a lesbian.' It's already bad enough for children who are born from unmarried mothers — people are always calling them bastards. But it would be worse for my daughter. I don't want her to go through the torture that I had to go through there."

Jesuorobo says his client is also afraid that her children's medical conditions won't get proper attention in Nigeria.

"Nigeria is a country that is notorious for having a completely broken medical system and sending the Canadian-born child to this environment — she will not receive proper medical care," he says.


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