A confidential Home Office document leaked to the Observer reveals
how one bisexual asylum seeker was asked a series of lurid questions by
a Home Office official, including: "Did you put your penis into x's
backside?" and "When x was penetrating you, did you have an erection?
Did x ejaculate inside you. Why did you use a condom?"
The document
reveals that during five hours of questioning in a UK detention centre,
the male asylum seeker was also asked: "What is it about men's backsides
that attracts you?" and "What is it about the way men walk that turns
you on?"
The questions, typed up by a Home Office employee, and dated last October, have been branded an "interrogation".
The Home Office
on Saturday admitted that staff were "not permitted to ask inappropriate
or intrusive questions", but added that attempts to determine an
individual's sexual orientation were conducted "as sensitively as
possible".
S Chelvan, a
barrister and expert in asylum claims based on sexuality, said the
interview, which was conducted with no lawyer present, was "shockingly
degrading".
He added: "I'm
horrified by the nature of the questions that have been highlighted.
It's more like an interrogation than an interview. It is exceptionally
troubling that there were questions like whether an individual
ejaculated or whether they used a condom. This is an unacceptable
investigation of a gay asylum claim. Clearly, something is going
terribly wrong here."
Immigration
barrister Colin Yeo also voiced concern: "This is the worst I have seen,
but these sorts of intrusive, abusive questions are features of Home
Office interview practice, particularly in cases involving sexuality.
The underlying problem is that officials believe everyone is a liar. It
leads to a fundamental lack of respect for the people they are dealing
with."
Keith Vaz, chair
of the home affairs select committee, said he was "shocked" that Home
Office officials were still questioning asylum seekers in such a manner,
and called for the practice to be stopped.
Campaigners said
it exposed the culture of disbelief of vulnerable asylum seekers. In
2010, a whistle-blower who had worked at a centre for processing asylum
seekers' claims revealed how colleagues expressed vehemently
anti-immigration views and took pride in refusing applications.
Gay
rights group Stonewall, whose studies found almost "systemic
homophobia" in the UK's asylum system, said the approach could be
"deeply distressing" to asylum seekers.
Richard Lane,
spokesman for Stonewall, said: "Valuable time and resources is spent
attempting to 'prove' a claimant is gay rather than establishing whether
they have a legitimate fear of persecution."
A Home Office
spokesperson said: "The UK has a proud history of granting asylum to
those who need it and we do not deport anyone at risk of persecution
because of their sexuality.
"All applicants
are required to establish they face persecution, inhumane or degrading
treatment in their home country to qualify for our protection.
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