By Amy Lieberman
WeNews correspondent
Sunday, October 3, 2010
A Guatemalan woman's asylum case could add being female to the list of other reasons--such as race, religion, nationhood or politics--for being granted freedom from persecution in the U.S. Thousands of refugee applicants have a stake in the decision.
GUATEMALA CITY (WOMENSENEWS)--Persecution for race, religion, nationality, political opinion or social group have all provided grounds for winning U.S. asylum.
But not persecution for being a girl or a woman.
"We have a legal definition of refugees that has been interpreted in a way that has really left women out," said Karen Musalo, director of the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies at University of California Hastings' College of Law.
That could change, however, with the case of women resisting compulsory return to Guatemala, the country in Latin America with the highest rate of femicide.
The U.S. Board of Immigration Appeals is now reviewing the case of Lesly Yajayra Perdomo, a 34-year-old woman who has been seeking refugee status for six years. At the same time, it is also considering whether Guatemalan women between the ages of 14 and 40 could be classified as a particular social group for granting asylum.
If the board rules yes, approximately 3,000 Guatemalan women presently facing deportation in the U.S. could be eligible for refugee status, if they successfully make the case that returning to Guatemala could mean death.
"There are many Guatemalan women in the U.S. who were victims of violence in Guatemala or, like Perdomo, who would face extreme danger if forced to return to Guatemala. This decision would provide an important tool for these women," said Kelsey Alford-Jones, program associate of the Guatemala Human Rights Commission.
The board has yet to take any action on Perdomo's case, her attorney, Alan Hutchinson, told Women's eNews.
Regardless of the outcome, Perdomo's case has already created U.S. official recognition of the extreme violence Guatemalan women are experiencing at an escalating rate.
Nearly 5,000 women have been murdered in Guatemala in the past decade; slightly more than 2 percent of these cases led to successful prosecutions, according to the Center for Refugee Studies, based in San Francisco.
Approximately 120 femicides were reported in Guatemala in 1990, and the cases have continuously spiked from then. The Survivor's Foundation, based in Guatemala City, estimates in 2008 there were 649 femicides, which increased to 729 killings in 2009.
Women's rights organizations and other nongovernmental groups in Guatemala first tuned in to the crisis in the mid-1990s, when gangs carved messages to each other in the bodies of decapitated women.
Drug-cartel gangs' intensifying presence is partially to blame for the escalation of femicides since then, says Glenda Garcia of the Myrna Mack Foundation, a Guatemala City-based human rights organization. Guatemala's generally weakened political and judicial state are also factors.
By Bojana Stoparic
WeNews correspondent