ASYLUM
OR REFUGEE STATUS
The U.S. Government offers protection to those fleeing
political, religious, or social persecution under two basic
sets of laws:
- Refugee law and Asylum law. The legal
test for both groups is the same – both must prove
a "well-founded
fear of persecution" for their political opinion,
race, religion, nationality or membership to a particular
social group in their home country.
- Individuals who apply
while they are in the United States are asylum applicants.
A foreign national who is already on US soil or at its
borders can apply for asylum if they meet the definition
of “refugee”.
A “refugee” is
someone unable to return to their home country (or in
the last place lived) because of past persecution or
a well-founded fear of future persecution because of
race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular
social group, or political opinion.
The conception of well-founded fear of persecution is
central to asylum. What are its key elements?
The key to an asylum claim is proving that you face
a well-founded fear of persecution for one of five reasons:
race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership
in a "social group”. Or you qualify because
you can prove you were forced to undergo sterilization
or an abortion or fear genital cutting. This well-founded
fear standard does not necessarily mean torture, killing,
imprisonment, or harassment or that you are specifically
targeted for persecution or that you have an economic
hardship or a repressive government.
You must be very clear about why you fear persecution.
You can make a case by convincing the court that you
have suffered persecution in the past and that the conditions
in your country have not changed. Or you can show that
it is likely you will suffer persecution if returned
to your country. Your own testimony may be enough if
it is compelling, consistent, believable, and specific.
Your case is strengthened if you bring corroborating
proof, such as newspaper articles, affidavits of witnesses
or experts, journals, books, doctors’ statements,
photographs, etc., to the hearing.
The courts recognize the difficulty asylum applicants
face in proving a claim. It can be an emotional nightmare
for those traumatized by events that forced them to flee
their homeland. Simply having a discussion in the first
place and in a language that they are grappling to learn
are often daunting tasks. Many cannot stomach the discussion
and questioning. It is for these reasons that we don’t
advocate representing yourself; get professional legal
advice.
Information
Source: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service
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