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6 - Women and Girls Fleeing Conflict

Gender and the Interpretation and Application of the 1951 Refugee Convention

from Part III - Refugee Status and Special Groups

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 February 2017

Volker Türk
Affiliation:
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNCHR), Geneva
Alice Edwards
Affiliation:
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNCHR), Geneva
Cornelis Wouters
Affiliation:
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNCHR), Geneva

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
In Flight from Conflict and Violence
UNHCR's Consultations on Refugee Status and Other Forms of International Protection
, pp. 183 - 214
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

Introduction

Women, girls, men and boys all suffer when exposed to the effects of conflict. Sometimes women and girls have similar experiences in these situations as men and boys. Many times, however, they have different experiences. They may be subjected to different violations because they are women and girls, or they may be subjected to the same types of violations as men and boys but experience or perceive these harms in a different manner. One obvious example is sexual violence committed during war; the United Nations reports that ‘[s]exual violence, and the long shadow of terror and trauma it casts, disproportionately affects women and girls.’Footnote 1 This different female experience stems from pervasive global gender inequality: around the world, women and girls tend to be poorer and receive less education and are often less mobile as a result of traditional family and care-giving responsibilities, all of which negatively compound their experiences during conflict.Footnote 2 While women and girls may have common experiences based on their gender, sometimes girls suffer additional targeted harm as a result of their young age. For example, girls forcibly recruited to serve as fighters may serve in combat (like boys) but may also be subjected to conjugal slavery (unlike boys).

When women and girls fleeing conflict seek asylum, are their gender-differentiated experiences recognized by decision-makers? It is not immediately obvious that they would be, given that neither the terms ‘sex’ nor ‘gender’ appear in the definition of ‘refugee’ set out in the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (1951 Convention), as amended by the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees (1967 Protocol).Footnote 3 However, over the past twenty years, there has been a significant focus at the international level on ensuring a gender-sensitive interpretation of the refugee definition. These efforts include UNHCR’s issuance of a number of groundbreaking guidance documentsFootnote 4 and state adoption of legislation including ‘sex’ or ‘gender’ in the list of 1951 Convention groundsFootnote 5 or of guidelines on female asylum-seekers.Footnote 6

Given this guidance, one would expect gender-sensitive determinations of asylum claims by women and girls fleeing conflict. However, numerous studies show that deep flaws still exist in the domestic consideration of refugee claims by women and girls and that both policy and practice need improvement.Footnote 7 To date, this analysis has not concentrated specifically on women and girls who have fled conflict. This chapter therefore aims to bring some focus to this subset of female refugee claimants.Footnote 8 It does so by analyzing a group of forty-six cases decided between 2004 and 2012 in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States involving women and girls who seek asylum based on claims related to conflict. These cases come from various levels of the refugee determination process. In addition to this group of recent cases, this chapter also considers certain relevant earlier cases, as well as reports on and academic discussions of the female refugee experience that include contemplation of conflict-related claims.

The second section of this chapter begins by exploring when conflict-related ill-treatment has been recognized as persecution and when it has not. This section also examines whether ill-treatment in conflict can be considered to be targeted at individual women and girls. The third section examines the 1951 Convention grounds most often used in refugee claims made by women and girls fleeing conflict: membership of a particular social group, political opinion, race and religion. The fourth section discusses how lack of state protection has been considered in female conflict-related refugee claims. The fifth section discusses procedural and evidentiary problems that arise in such asylum claims, especially with respect to credibility gaps on sexual violence and lack of gender-specific country-of-origin information. The final section concludes with observations on the need for a deeper understanding of persecution, expanded conceptions of the 1951 Convention grounds as they relate to women and girls fleeing conflict and recognition that women and girls fleeing conflict face problems similar to those making peacetime-related claims and specific conflict-related evidentiary and procedural hurdles.

Persecution

The 1951 Convention requires that the refugee claimant possess a well-founded fear of a form of harm that qualifies as persecution.Footnote 9 The term ‘persecution’ is not defined in the 1951 Convention, though there is agreement that ‘a threat to life or freedom on account of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership of a particular social group’ and other serious violations of international human rights constitute persecution.Footnote 10 There are a number of gender-related forms of harm that are currently considered to fit within these parameters – such as rape, dowry-related violence, female genital mutilation, domestic violence and trafficking – because they inflict severe pain and suffering (both mental and physical), whether perpetrated by state or non-state actors.Footnote 11 However, only some gender-related forms of ill-treatment common in the context of conflict have been recognized as rising to the level of persecution. The conflict-related harm that is most well established as a form of gendered persecution is rape.

Rape in Conflict

Rape is committed during conflict for many reasons.Footnote 12 These reasons may range from opportunistic ‘sexual looting’, to strategic design, to a combination of the two.Footnote 13 These reasons may overlap and coexist in a given conflict and may also change over time. Rape can also be committed in many ways, such as brutal gang rapes, the insertion of various objects into victims’ genitalia, the raping of pregnant women and forced sexual intercourse between male and female civilian abductees.Footnote 14 Rape is an expression by the perpetrator of control and powerFootnote 15 and therefore is effective in not only physically and psychologically harming the victims but also in tearing apart social units (such as families and communities).Footnote 16 This is why rape has been acknowledged as a particularly effective tool of genocide,Footnote 17 as a crime against humanity (including the crime against humanity of persecution)Footnote 18 and as a war crime.Footnote 19 Rape has also been recognized as a human rights violation.Footnote 20

Given the serious harm created by rape, it is therefore not surprising that rape has been identified within international and domestic refugee law as a form of persecution. UNHCR has stated that ‘[t]here is no doubt that rape is an act which inflicts severe pain and suffering (both mental and physical) and which has been used as a form of persecution by States and non-State actors.’Footnote 21 Various country guidelines, directed at refugee claim adjudicators, also specify rape as a form of persecution.Footnote 22 Domestic refugee case law has also recognized rape in conflict as a form of persecution.Footnote 23 In my examination of twenty recent cases involving claims of rape (of the claimant or a family member) or fear of rape as persecution,Footnote 24 eight claims or appeals were accepted on the evidence of past rape and/or future feared rape.Footnote 25 For example, in a New Zealand case involving the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the female applicant’s husband was sexually assaulted in detention, her mother and sister were raped during a visit to their house by soldiers and other women in her house were sexually assaulted. This, and other treatment during conflict, was considered to amount to a well-founded fear of persecution.Footnote 26

However, it must be noted that several of the eight positive decisions presented troubling histories in the lower courts, only remedied on appeal. For example, in the Canadian case of Kika, the claimant had been raped by soldiers in the DRC in 2006.Footnote 27 Her claim was initially denied on the basis of lack of evidence of persecution but was ordered to be reassessed, as ‘the officer apparently did not consider the possibility that Ms. Kika had a gender-based claim for refugee protection as a result of her sexual assault in 2006.’Footnote 28 As in Kika, the claimant in the case of NS (United Kingdom) was originally denied asylum in part because the adjudicator had found that her rape occurred ‘because the assailant found her attractive, and therefore that the attack was a purely personal one, and no more than a common crime’.Footnote 29 On appeal, the Immigration Appeal Tribunal stated that this ‘finding was not based on the evidence before [the adjudicator]’.Footnote 30 The evidence was that the applicant’s husband had been detained by the militia of an Afghan warlord on suspicion of supporting the warlord’s enemy.Footnote 31 The warlord’s nephew took advantage of her husband’s detention and the applicant’s vulnerabilityFootnote 32 and demanded that the applicant become his fourth wife; when she refused, he raped, beat and threatened her with death.Footnote 33 The tribunal concluded that ‘to take as a wife, by force, the wife of one’s enemy, after first imprisoning him, is not an uncommon act in the course of war or other conflict, as an act of aggression against the enemy.’Footnote 34 The applicant was granted refugee status.Footnote 35

In another case, PS (United Kingdom), the applicant, a Tamil woman from Jaffna, had been raped on three occasions in her home by Sri Lankan soldiers.Footnote 36 The first time, she was raped by two soldiers.Footnote 37 Five days later, one of those soldiers returned, accompanied by a different soldier, and both of them raped her. A week or so after, these latter two soldiers returned, held her father at gunpoint so that he could witness the act and raped her again.Footnote 38 She subsequently tried to kill herself and failed and then discovered that she was pregnant.Footnote 39 The immigration judge classified these soldiers as ‘rogue’, comparing them to three civilian criminals, and concluded that these past rapes had no relevance to the potential for future persecution.Footnote 40 This decision was rejected on appeal: the soldiers were clearly able to act with impunity, given the repetition of the rapes, and therefore there was a real risk that she would again be targeted for rape by Sri Lankan soldiers in the vicinity.Footnote 41 In a similar decision, in the case of LM Congo (United Kingdom), the court accepted, on appeal, that the applicant, who was from the Republic of Congo, had been raped in 1997 and that she had ‘a real risk of something similar happening to her on return’.Footnote 42 Finally, in In re B (FC), the House of Lords considered an appeal by a female Kosovar Albanian applicant who had been raped in front of her husband, sons and twenty to thirty neighbours due to suspected involvement in the Kosovo Liberation Army. Baroness Hale of Richmond found that the Court of Appeal had failed to realize that ‘the persecution of Mrs. B was expressed in a different way from the persecution of her husband and sons’, through rape, and that rape may be a weapon or strategy of war.Footnote 43

These examples demonstrate that rape claims stemming from conflict face some common obstacles. The first obstacle is in the characterization of the rape. Some adjudicators – such as the initial adjudicator in NS (United Kingdom) – view sexual violence in conflict as a matter of personal sexual gratification rather than as a method of terrorizing, controlling or punishing civilians.Footnote 44 In the UK case of Najjemba, the court held that a woman from Northern Uganda who had suffered rape at the hands of government soldiers was the victim of ‘simple and dreadful lust’ and not persecution.Footnote 45 This was despite her connection to her son, who was suspected of involvement with a rebel group opposed to the Ugandan government and had ‘disappeared’.Footnote 46

A related concern is that those who commit sexual violence in conflict are sometimes viewed by adjudicators as having committed the act in their private capacity and are therefore analogous to common criminals rather than persecutors, which was the original reasoning in PS (United Kingdom) and the reasoning in the Canadian case of VA9-00148.Footnote 47 Both the ‘conflict rape as lust’ and the ‘conflict rape as a common crime’ approaches demonstrate a profound misunderstanding of the context of rape in conflict. As Macklin puts it, ‘some decision-makers have proven unable to grasp the nature of rape by State actors [and non-state fighters, too] as an integral and tactical part of the arsenal of weapons deployed to brutalise, dehumanise, and humiliate women and demoralise their kin and community.’Footnote 48 The characterization of rape as lust incorrectly creates the impression that sexuality, rather than an exercise of power and gender-based discrimination, is at play. It also completely ignores the coercion, overarching violence and impunity created by the conflict. In other words, even if the perpetrator’s motive happens to be entirely sexual, it does not follow that the perpetrator did not target the victim for persecutory reasons or that his conduct does not cause severe pain and suffering to the point of persecution. Similarly, the characterization of rape as a ‘common’ criminal activity instead of persecution assumes that the rape in conflict is somehow random or private – and therefore unconnected to the state and lacking the discriminatory or rights-violating character required by the refugee definition.Footnote 49 This is despite the fact that the rape occurs in the context of overarching violence and impunity granted by weak or misdirected state authority and enhanced by vulnerability and gender-based discrimination. Both types of (mis)characterizations of rape are not exclusive to refugee claims involving conflict,Footnote 50 but the fact that they occur means that decision-makers are failing to adequately consider the environment surrounding the rape. On a positive note, these characterizations were correctly dismissed in In re B (FC) and the UK case of N.Footnote 51

The second common obstacle identified in the cases is that, sometimes, adjudicators (and the applicant’s counsel) do not recognize the importance of considering the after-effects of past rape in order to consider the risk of future persecution.Footnote 52 These after-effects commonly include societal stigma, which considers raped women and girls to be somehow ‘tainted’.Footnote 53 This stigma is a form of discrimination, and it can create social, cultural and economic exclusion for the victim and her children and lead to increased vulnerability to sexual and other forms of violence, as well as death.Footnote 54 For example, the US case of Mambwe considered the claim of a young Angolan woman who had fled from National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA) forces as a child, was raped in a Zambian refugee camp (and gave birth as a result) and was kidnapped from Zambia by UNITA and repeatedly raped.Footnote 55 Her appeal was denied on the basis that the conflict in Angola had ended.Footnote 56 However, it appears that the court (and earlier decision-makers) did not consider the lasting stigma (and therefore discrimination) she would likely face in post-conflict Angola as a lone young woman with no relatives who had been a past victim of rape by rebels, raising a child conceived through rape.Footnote 57 However, in In re B (FC), Baroness Hale of Richmond states, ‘To suffer the insult and indignity of being regarded by one’s own community (in Mrs. B’s words) as “dirty like contaminated” because one has suffered the gross ill-treatment of a particularly brutal and dehumanizing rape directed against that very community is the sort of cumulative denial of human dignity which to my mind is quite capable of amounting to persecution’ as ‘the victim is punished again and again for something which was not only not her fault but was deliberately persecutory of her, her family and her community.’Footnote 58 She did note, however, that these issues should have been identified by earlier decision-makers but were overlooked.Footnote 59 An evaluation of the risk created by the after-effects of rape should be a standard consideration in conflict-related cases in order to better understand potential sources of future persecution.

Other common obstacles to conflict-related refugee claims based on rape – such as rape being considered to be part of indiscriminate conflict, rape being found not to relate to a 1951 Convention ground, rape evidence being considered as not credible and a lack of relevant country-of-origin information on rape in conflict – will be dealt with in the sections that follow.

Other Forms of Sexual Violence in Conflict

While case law and academic analysis to date have largely focused on rape as a form of persecution common in conflict, other forms of sexual violence may qualify as forms of persecution.Footnote 60 International criminal law provides some assistance in enumerating examples of such sexual violence. Sexual slavery, enforced prostitution, mutilation of sexual organs or breasts and forced nudity have all been recognized as forms of sexual violence amounting to crimes against humanity and/or war crimes.Footnote 61 Given their comparability to rape, it can be expected that the same obstacles outlined earlier would apply to other forms of sexual violence.

Other Forms of Gender-Related Ill-Treatment in Conflict

There are a number of gender-related forms of ill-treatment that occur in conflict that may qualify as persecution. These include conjugal slavery (also referred to as ‘forced marriage’ in conflict),Footnote 62 forced pregnancy,Footnote 63 forced sterilizationFootnote 64 and forced abortion/miscarriage.Footnote 65 The latter three violations are likely the easiest to understand as gender-related crimes because they are targeted at reproductive organs. Conjugal slavery, which is comprised of sexual slavery plus domestic slavery, is also clearly a gender-related crime: the perpetrators enforce a norm of ‘femaleness’ on the victims, expecting them to submit to sex and cook and clean on demand.

Other forms of gender-related persecution in conflict may be more difficult to identify for two reasons. Firstly, applicants may describe seemingly gender-neutral forms of ill-treatment, such as torture, enslavement and imprisonment, but underneath those descriptions may lie a gendered form of the harm particularly targeted at or affecting women and girls: torture through threatened or actual sexual touching or rape,Footnote 66 enslavement by forced domestic labourFootnote 67 and imprisonment by the opposing side in a conflict so as to create easily available female ‘entertainment’ for troops.Footnote 68 Another example is terrorizing civilians; this may be achieved through a variety of methods, including rape, sexual slavery and conjugal slavery.Footnote 69 In other words, while some ill-treatment will be gender related on its face (like rape), other ill-treatment may only be revealed as such after gathering further information from the applicant. In the cases studied for this chapter, there appeared to be missed chances to discover potential gendered ill-treatment when ill-treatment was simply described as ‘torture’ or ‘beatings’ without further explanation of how these acts were carried out.Footnote 70

Secondly, the way in which women view harm may be gender differentiated. For example, ‘preliminary empirical research suggests that loss of a child, separation from children, and witnessing harm to children or family members are particularly viewed by women as primary harms to the self, often as or more egregious than a severe violation of their own bodies’.Footnote 71 Since female applicants may experience various harms as intertwined, they may not be able to easily compartmentalize the harms they face into conflict- and non-conflict-related harms for the purposes of describing past and feared persecution.Footnote 72 Similarly, given their experience of persecution as a physical-social-economic whole, they may not see sexual violence as the sole or central part of their claim.Footnote 73 Thus, applicants should be given the opportunity to identify the full range of conflict-related harms from their perspective in order for the harms to be evaluated cumulatively as persecution. Such an approach is more likely to uncover a wider range of gender-related persecutory acts.

Both reasons require those working with refugee claimants to listen closely to the stories told, to consider whether what is said reveals potential gendered ill-treatment and to ask appropriate questions to gain further insight.Footnote 74 In the cases studied, adjudicators tended to focus on the most obvious individual gender-related violation when considering whether persecution is gender relatedFootnote 75 rather than evaluating the harms as a whole, although there were exceptions.Footnote 76 However, sometimes gender aspects were simply never raised or examined by the applicant (or her representative) or the decision-makers, or the adjudicator decided to focus on the non-gender-related aspects of the claim.Footnote 77 This has been identified as a particular problem in cases involving sexual violence – ‘a tendency among some asylum professionals to marginalize, trivialize or ignore accounts of rape’.Footnote 78

Indiscriminate versus Targeted Gender-Related Ill-Treatment

This section concludes by discussing a major obstacle for female refugee claimants fleeing conflict: the categorization of gender-related violence as part of the general indiscriminate consequences of conflict and not targeted at the claimant. This classification occurred in a significant number of the cases studied.Footnote 79 For example, in the Canadian case of VA9-00148, an applicant from the DRC described an attack in 2008 in which rebels came to her home demanding money because they knew that her family had a business.Footnote 80 Her family was beaten and tortured, and the applicant was raped.Footnote 81 The rebels stole $40,000 and abducted her husband and stepson – she has not seen them since.Footnote 82 The rebel violence subsequently increased, and her neighbour and her children were beheaded, while others had body parts amputated or were killed.Footnote 83 While the adjudicator found that a nexus to a 1951 Convention ground does exist due to the sexual violence, he characterized the beatings, rape and torture of her and her family as ‘localized crime’, and even if the rebels had targeted them, it was for money and not for any other reason.Footnote 84 This led to a decision that ‘[a]lthough conditions in the DRC certainly involve a degree of risk and violence’, the applicant and her family would not face a personalized risk to their lives if returned.Footnote 85 This decision is particularly striking because it lacks any consideration of the significant political and ethnic dimensions of the conflict in the DRC, including the political and ethnic choices by the various rebel groups of where, how and who they attack.Footnote 86 As Goodwin-Gill and McAdam note, ‘A closer look at the background to the conflict … and the ways in which it was fought, will often establish a link to the [1951] Convention.’Footnote 87

The classification of gender-related ill-treatment in conflict as indiscriminate leads to the assumption that the applicant was not personally targeted for past persecution and/or that she can be returned to her country of origin because any future risk she would face is a risk faced by everyone in that country. While the facts of every case are individual, these underlying assumptions can be legitimately questioned. On the issue of personal targeting, it is crucial that decision-makers examine both the narrow and the wider context in which the violations occurred. In the case of VA9-00148 outlined earlier, the narrow focus reveals a potential case of targeting: the applicant was raped during the rebel attack, while her husband and son were abducted.Footnote 88 Both forms of mistreatment are gendered: the applicant may have been targeted for rape because she is female,Footnote 89 while the men may have been targeted for abduction because they are men (perhaps to become forced fighters). Furthermore, if one examined the wider context of militia movements in the applicant’s area at the time of the attack,Footnote 90 one might be able to discern other cross-cutting ways in which the applicant and her family were targeted – perhaps due to the (presumed) ethnicity or (presumed) political affiliation of the individuals in that area. These narrow and wider inquiries into the conflict would also inform analysis of the risk of future targeting for gender-related persecution (including persecution of a different type than originally suffered).Footnote 91 These deeper inquiries – both gender sensitive and intersectional – are crucial to more accurately determining whether violence is indiscriminate or targeted.

Lessons Learned

During war, gender norms often take on even greater socio-political significance than during peacetime. For example, ‘the role of women in the biological and social reproduction of group identity places them in a position of particular vulnerability.’Footnote 92 Thus, gender-related acts in conflict, such as the rape of women and girls, often take on deeper meanings or have broader repercussions (for families, for communities), thereby creating differentiated experiences. However, the significance of these meanings or repercussions is ‘currently rarely recognized in the asylum determination process’.Footnote 93 This is evidenced by the common obstacles faced by women and girls in proving that they were persecuted in gender-related ways in the past and/or that they risk gender-related persecution in the future. Within rape claims, there are continuing difficulties with the incorrect characterization of rape in conflict as a ‘private’ act. Additionally, not enough attention is paid to the after-effects of past rape in creating future risks of persecution. While the cases studied did not shed much light on other types of ill-treatment in conflict that might be considered as gender-related persecution, there are clearly many more (less obvious) forms.

Another, rather significant obstacle is that a number of decision-makers classify gender-related violence as part of the general indiscriminate consequences of conflict. It appears that this is done without necessarily considering potential gender-related reasons for targeting (e.g. the various ways in which rape is used as a weapon of war) or the wider political and other dimensions of the conflict. If this contextual and gender-sensitive analysis is done, it is suggested that fewer cases of gender-related ill-treatment would be categorized as untargeted.Footnote 94

Refugee decision-makers must listen carefully for, and draw out, gender-related ill-treatment while at the same time respecting that women or girls may identify harm in gender-differentiated ways. Unfortunately, the analysis of persecution in the cases studied suggests that this careful listening is not always happening.

1951 Convention Grounds

Under the 1951 Convention, only those who can demonstrate a ‘well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion’ can qualify as refugees.Footnote 95 As gender is not explicitly listed as a persecutory ground, women and girls fleeing conflict for gender-related reasons must fit their claims within one of the other grounds.Footnote 96 There are many different ways in which gender relates to the 1951 Convention grounds. If the persecutor would not have persecuted the victim had the victim not been female, ‘then an inference may be drawn that one of the motivations for persecution was the victim’s gender.’Footnote 97 For example, a party to a conflict may impose specific forms of conformity on women and girls based on a particular ideological view of how they should act.Footnote 98 When the reason underlying the persecution is the victim’s gender, then ‘membership of a particular social group’ may be the best category.Footnote 99 Where the gender of the victim dictates the manner of persecution (i.e. the persecution is carried out in a gender-specific manner, such as through rape and other forms of sexual violence, forced marriage, forced abortion, forced sterilization or forced pregnancy) but is not necessarily the reason for the persecution itself, then other 1951 Convention grounds might be more applicable.Footnote 100

Membership of a Particular Social Group

In practice, claims by women and girls tend to be considered under – and, indeed, funnelled into – the category of ‘membership of a particular social group’ (MPSG).Footnote 101 The cases studied confirmed this. MPSG was the most common 1951 Convention ground, with political opinion, race and religion the next most common grounds (in that order). Thus, conflict-related cases appear to reflect the more general trend in female cases, which suffer from the disproportionate use of MPSG.Footnote 102

UNHCR has defined ‘particular social group’ as ‘a group of persons who share a common characteristic other than their risk of being persecuted, or who are perceived as a group by society. The characteristic will often be one which is innate, unchangeable, or which is otherwise fundamental to identity, conscience or the exercise of one’s human rights.’Footnote 103 Within the cases studied, there were examples in which ‘women’ within a particular country were identified as such a group,Footnote 104 for example, Iraqi,Footnote 105 AfghaniFootnote 106 and Somali women.Footnote 107 However, in other cases, this category was not considered to provide enough differentiation.Footnote 108 In these other cases, the group was defined both by gender and by other characteristics, for example, Tamil women whose husbands are missing or dead,Footnote 109 Afghan women and girls related to a particular male,Footnote 110 lone Somali Ashraf woman with children,Footnote 111 widows of former members of the Iraqi Ba’ath Party and lone women with children,Footnote 112 single Somali women with children with no clan or family protectionFootnote 113 and family of senior Iraqi government employees with the additional factors of being in a mixed Sunni/Shia marriage and having liberal views.Footnote 114

The cases studied demonstrate that there are differing approaches as to whether and when it is appropriate to adopt the broad category of ‘women’ as a particular social group in a given country in conflict. For example, the UK case of HM indicated that women in Somalia form a particular social group ‘not just because they are women, but because they are extensively discriminated against’.Footnote 115 However, in the UK case of HH & Others, a narrower approach was adopted, in order, it appears, to be able to accept one female claimant and exclude others. Thus, the analysis did not focus, as it had in HM, on the overarching situation of women in Somalia. Rather, the focus was on clans and sub-clans because ‘[o]n the evidence, being a woman, without more, is not a sufficient differentiator’ to place her at individualized risk on return to a city ‘which is in a situation of armed conflict’.Footnote 116 Thus, the successful claimant was classified as part of the social group ‘lone Ashraf woman with children’, while the analysis of the others focused on clan (and not gender).Footnote 117 In this case, the narrowness of the social group seemed to be a decision-making device rather than an analysis of intersectionality. Intersectionality, in and of itself, can be positive and necessary because it recognizes the lived realities of female members of a society – who are not only female but also of a particular age, religion, race and so on.Footnote 118 However, if one is able to establish that a woman is being persecuted because she is a woman, or for reasons of gender, then ‘women’ may be the more accurate particular social group.Footnote 119

A default to the MPSG category sometimes also means that the nature of the conflict from which the applicant is fleeing is not analysed at all or not in depth.Footnote 120 It is not clear from the cases why this is so, but it may be because many MPSG gender-related cases typically deal with ‘private’ harms in peacetime,Footnote 121 such as domestic violence, forced marriage and female genital mutilation.Footnote 122 As with these other sorts of harms, sometimes the MPSG analysis in conflict-related cases focused closely on the ill-treatment and less so on the wider (and more ‘public’) religious, national or political aspects of the conflict and their gendered components.Footnote 123 As a result, potential social groups or other applicable 1951 Convention grounds may be missed. There is also the concern that conflict-related cases raising non-typical gender issues (e.g. outside of the realm of sexual violence) may mistakenly be considered as not qualifying as MPSG. Within the cases studied, the decisions that did consider the nature of the conflict in some depth tended to be more thorough in their consideration of the various facets of MPSG and the other 1951 Convention grounds.Footnote 124

It is well accepted that the social group cannot be solely defined by the type of current persecution.Footnote 125 However, this does not mean that the form of persecution is irrelevant. Those who have suffered past gender-related persecution such as rape ‘are linked by an immutable characteristic which is at once independent of and the cause of their current ill-treatment’.Footnote 126 A characteristic or an attribute expressed visibly may reinforce a finding that the individual belongs to a particular social group, but it is not a pre-condition for recognition of the group, especially given that those targeted for persecution may take pains to remain as invisible as possible.Footnote 127 Thus, ‘persecutory action toward a group may be a relevant factor in determining the visibility of a group in a particular society.’Footnote 128 This may be of special assistance in cases dealing with gender-related harm in conflict because women and girls who suffered war-related sexual violence or were conjugal slaves (‘bush wives’) may be stigmatized within society and therefore become part of a visible group. That said, some adjudicators seem to struggle with drawing the line between when a proposed particular social group is defined improperly by reference to conflict-related persecution and when a past form of conflict-related persecution might be a relevant factor in creating visibility for the immutable characteristic.Footnote 129

Contrary to these concerns, MPSG may also be a good category in which to analyse the types of conflict-related social and cultural harms identified by many women as central to their persecution.Footnote 130 This is illustrated, for example, in cases identifying relational social groups, especially family.Footnote 131 That said, women and girls should not be essentialized as solely social and cultural beingsFootnote 132 – obviously their lives are complex, and their suffering in conflict is also complex. It is for this reason that it is also important to consider the applicability of other 1951 Convention grounds in conflict-related refugee claims by women and girls.Footnote 133

Political Opinion and the Remaining Convention Grounds

The 1951 Convention ground of political opinion is particularly useful in conflict-related claims. Nine of the cases studied seriously considered political opinion as an applicable 1951 Convention ground.Footnote 134 This ground captures different ways in which a woman or girl may have political opinion imputed to her by a party to the conflict. This may occur when the claimant worked with, or for, a political party or a politician in her country of origin. For example, in the case of LM Congo (United Kingdom), the applicant had served as secretary for youth and in other roles for an opposition group.Footnote 135 Persecutors may also impute political opinion based on familial relationships. In the Australian case of MZXQS, the applicants claimed a well-founded fear of persecution because of their link to their sister, a well-known Tamil opposition Member of Parliament in Sri Lanka representing an LTTE-controlled area.Footnote 136 The original tribunal considered this claim as falling under MPSG and dismissed the claim on this ground.Footnote 137 The court found that the tribunal had incorrectly characterized the claim, which was actually a claim of imputed political opinion on the basis of their relationship with their sister.Footnote 138 Another way in which political opinion may be imputed to a woman or a girl is for appearing to hold views different from those of the warring factions.Footnote 139 In the UK case of LM Iraq, the applicant was perceived by Iraqi militia as supporting or collaborating with the West in part because she was a high-profile working woman who did not wear the hijab at work.Footnote 140 In addition, political opinion has been deemed to be imputed based on racial or ethnic identity. In the Australian case of 1203764, the tribunal found that there was a real risk that the applicant, a Tamil from the north, would be sexually assaulted or otherwise harmed if she returned to Sri Lanka for reasons of the political opinion imputed to her (membership of or sympathy for the LTTE).Footnote 141

The applicant herself may not classify her actions as political. It is therefore important for refugee decision-makers to recognize when a claim is, in fact, based on political opinion by examining the applicant’s actions. For example, in the case of 73894 et al., the female applicant, who was from the DRC, indicated that she ‘has not been interested in politics’.Footnote 142 However, she and her husband disagreed with the government’s policy of persecuting Rwandan Tutsis, and the applicant therefore helped to shelter Rwandan Tutsis (while her husband helped them to flee).Footnote 143 The Refugee Status Appeals Authority characterized this as ‘an overt political act opposing the policies of the Kabila regime’.Footnote 144 As a result of her actions and those of her husband, her home was searched several times, and the female members of her family were raped and sexually abused.Footnote 145 Despite the conclusion that sheltering Rwandan Tutsis was a political act, the authority felt that the applicant’s case was derivative of her husband’s and based its grant of refugee status on imputed political opinion (due to her husband’s actions).Footnote 146

Women’s political activity during conflict may take forms different from that associated with male political activity – and the political activity by women must be recognized as such. In the US case of Lopez, the applicant joined the Colombian Liberal Party, providing humanitarian assistance to residents of poor communities and conducting seminars on the principles of the Liberal Movement.Footnote 147 She was subsequently attacked by the FARC in retaliation for these activities.Footnote 148 The immigration judge found that these activities were ‘community-based and not political in nature’, and therefore the 1951 Convention ground of political opinion did not apply.Footnote 149 This categorization of women’s political activities as something other than political, such as community work, is also recognized as a serious problem for non-conflict-related female refugee claims.Footnote 150

Finally, the cases demonstrated that in the context of racially or religiously motivated conflicts, the 1951 Convention grounds of race and religion are particularly helpful.Footnote 151 While the 1951 Convention ground of nationality was not represented in the cases studied, it also would be a useful ground in the context of nationality-driven conflicts.

Lessons Learned

This section has explored the hazards associated with over-reliance on MPSG in cases dealing with both gender and conflict, such as a tendency towards creating artificial subgroups of women rather than relying on ‘women’ generally.Footnote 152 Additionally, there appears to be a focus on the ‘private’ side of the gender-related harms to the detriment of an analysis of the nature of the conflict. It is important for adjudicators to avoid an automatic reliance on MPSG and instead consider the other 1951 Convention grounds, especially political opinion. Race, religion and nationality may also be useful grounds when considering cases stemming from racial, religious or nationality-driven conflicts. However, there are benefits to using MPSG, as it draws attention to social and cultural harms.

Lack of State Protection

When adjudicators evaluate the risk of future persecution in gender-related claims, one issue they assess is whether the applicant can benefit from state protection against the actions of non-state actors. The cases studied revealed some gender-sensitive analysis of whether or not state protection is available, especially consideration of the dangers faced by a lone woman (sometimes with children) returning to a conflict-ridden society rife with discrimination against women, in which women (and girls) may be common targets for gender-related violence (such as rape, forced prostitution and trafficking).Footnote 153 However, there were also disturbing examples of non-sensitivity. In the UK case of PS, the second immigration judge found that the Tamil applicant’s rapists, despite being Sri Lankan soldiers, were comparable to ‘three civilian criminals’.Footnote 154 The judge concluded that there was no threat of future persecution and that, in the event the applicant had difficulties from them again, she could seek state protection from the Sri Lankan government.Footnote 155 This was overturned on appeal, with the judges finding that ‘[t]he whole point was that, unlike ordinary criminals, the soldiers were in a position to commit and repeat their crime with no apparent prospect of detection or punishment.’Footnote 156 The lesson from this case is that the analysis of future risk must be undertaken in a gender-sensitive manner with a full appreciation of the nature of the conflict, including whether the state permits impunity for gender-related violations.

One key issue arising in the cases studied related to the impact the end of a conflict had on consideration of the risk of future persecution and state protection. This is demonstrated in the US case of Mambwe, in which the end of the civil war in Angola was considered to eliminate any future risk of persecution.Footnote 157 This was despite the applicant’s assertion that the civil war ‘was not put to rest’ by the peace accord and disarmament of UNITA.Footnote 158 Rather than consider persecutory risks in Angola facing young female rape victims of UNITA with a child by rape who have no relatives, the court instead only considered whether UNITA is still a military threat.Footnote 159 Thus, state protection from sources of persecution other than UNITA were not considered, even though the applicant is likely to face severe societal stigma from those on both sides of the conflict.Footnote 160 It is important to recognize that the timelines of persecution do not necessarily accord with the timelines of cease-fires or peace agreements. One court explained, ‘Regime changes may be less effective in protecting women from such dangers [as rape] than they are for men.’Footnote 161 The Canadian guidelines correctly state, ‘A change in country circumstances, generally viewed as a positive change, may have no impact, or even a negative impact, on a woman’s fear of gender-related persecution.’Footnote 162 Peace processes may marginalize women’s concerns and may not touch deep-seated discrimination directed against women and girls.Footnote 163 When considering risk of future persecution in cases where conflict has ceased, it is relevant for an adjudicator to consider whether conflict-related sexual violence has been addressed in any cease-fire or peace agreement in the country of origin.Footnote 164 If it has not, then this is a potential indicator of state unwillingness to counter sexual violence.

Procedural and Evidentiary Issues

Procedural and evidential barriers ‘often inhibit women’s access to the determination process and may serve to limit the quality of information gathered about the claim and, in turn, the quality of the decision-making process’.Footnote 165 This proved true in the cases reviewed. The most challenging issue arising in conflict- and gender-related claims appears to be lack of gender-sensitive country-of-origin information, followed closely by an inability to establish credibility.

Country-of-Origin Information

The lack of gender-sensitive country-of-origin information is an overarching problem affecting all gender-related claims,Footnote 166 but the problem seems to be compounded in conflict-related claims. Where there was adequate gender- and conflict-related country-of-origin information available to decision-makers, the analysis of the cases tended to be more thorough and sensitive.Footnote 167 Where such information seemed to be lacking, the analysis was less thorough and more speculative, and the female applicants had serious difficulties proving their cases.Footnote 168

Female claimants typically would benefit from pre-conflict information on the legal, political, social, cultural and economic position of women and girls and the consequences for non-adherence to socio-cultural gender norms; information on how these aspects have changed for women and girls during the conflict; the incidence and forms of reported violence (in both the private and public spheres) against women and girls pre-conflict and during the conflict; the protection available to them during the conflict or post-conflict; any penalties imposed on those who perpetrate the violence and detailed information about the nature of the conflict and the parties to the conflict.Footnote 169 It is not always possible to collect this information on countries at peace, but getting accurate, up-to-date information on the situation of women and girls during a conflict can be extremely difficult, and if it is collected, it likely reflects under-reporting and therefore underestimation.Footnote 170

The cases studied tended to rely on specific types of country-of-origin information, especially from UNHCR,Footnote 171 so it is crucial that UNHCR continue to provide as much guidance in this respect as possible.Footnote 172 Other sources included international NGOsFootnote 173 and certain UN reports.Footnote 174 There is certainly scope for improving country-of-origin information on both gender and conflict issues to include a wider range of UN documents, such as Security Council resolutions referring to gender-related ill-treatment,Footnote 175 reports of the UN Secretary General written pursuant to Security Council resolutions 1889 (and its indicators) and 1960Footnote 176 and other UN reports providing qualitative and quantitative information on women and girls in conflict settings. Finally, reports from international and domestic nongovernmental women’s organizations (including those located in the country of origin) should be considered.Footnote 177 All refugee-receiving countries should aim to systematically collect and make available to applicants and their representatives up-to-date and accurate information on the situation and experiences of women and girls, including in conflict.Footnote 178 Where there is a lack of information, decision-makers should be cautioned against drawing speculative conclusions or assuming lack of persecution.Footnote 179

Credibility

The second most challenging procedural barrier relates to credibility. Within the cases studied, a number of claims were not accepted due to rulings of lack of credibility, either at the initial stages or on appeal.Footnote 180 This was due to a number of factors, most often inconsistenciesFootnote 181 or perceived implausibilities in testimony, ‘incorrect’ demeanour (e.g. being matter-of-fact when the adjudicator expects an applicant to be distressed)Footnote 182 or lack of corroborative country-of-origin information. When found credible, it was often due to a combination of ‘correct’ demeanour,Footnote 183 relative consistency in the applicant’s storyFootnote 184 and corroborative country-of-origin information.Footnote 185 The cases mirror concerns expressed about similar experiences with claims by women and girls more generally.Footnote 186 For example, previous studies have shown that most female claimants are simply not believed at first instance.Footnote 187 This is due to many factors: a hostile environment negatively affecting how detailed the applicant can be in explaining her case,Footnote 188 undue concentration on perceived inconsistencies without consideration for the impact of trauma and dislocation on memory or for culturally different ways of expression,Footnote 189 disincentives for women and girls to reveal sexual violence (due to being traumatized, feelings of shame or fear of stigma) with late disclosure of sexual violence sometimes being held against the applicant,Footnote 190 difficulty in evidencing gender-specific forms of harm and the absence of state protectionFootnote 191 and incorrect assumptions about the meaning of an applicant’s demeanour.Footnote 192 Credibility findings are clearly affected by gender-insensitive refugee claim processes and procedures.

Lessons Learned

The cases revealed two major procedural problems facing women and girls making refugee claims based on a combination of gender- and conflict-related harms. The first challenge for these applicants was in accessing and presenting accurate and up-to-date country-of-origin information containing relevant facts about the conflict and its gender dimensions. The second difficulty was in establishing credibility in the claim procedure. These problems are not exclusive to conflict-related claims, but the fact that a claim involves conflict heightens these challenges.

Conclusions

Women and girls fleeing conflict clearly face a number of obstacles to presenting a successful claim for refugee status. In the second section, this chapter indicated that some forms of gender-related ill-treatment in conflict have been found to amount to persecution, especially rape. And yet many applicants have difficulty establishing conflict-related rape as persecution for two reasons. Firstly, some adjudicators incorrectly characterize rape in conflict as a ‘private’ act and therefore outside the realm of persecution, and secondly, not enough attention is paid by decision-makers to the after-effects of past rape in creating related yet different future risks of persecution. Another challenge relates to the current relatively narrow perception of what qualifies as a gender-related form of persecution in conflict. Rape and some other forms of sexual violence are recognized, but it is less common for decision-makers to recognize non-sexual but still gendered violations. A third obstacle is that some decision-makers classify gender-related violence as part of the general indiscriminate consequences of conflict and therefore not targeted enough to amount to past persecution or present a risk for future persecution. However, refugee decision-makers may be less likely to classify such violence as untargeted if they have an in-depth understanding of both the gendered nature of the conflict and the nature of gender-related discrimination before, during and after the conflict, provided through country-of-origin information. While it is not clear whether there are forms of gender-related ill-treatment in conflict that may properly be considered as indiscriminate, it is evident that more cases of such ill-treatment should be considered as targeted (rather than indiscriminate) than is currently the case.

The third section continued the discussion of obstacles, focusing on the 1951 Convention grounds. As with all gender-related claims, there is a tendency for adjudicators to rely on MPSG as the main ground for analysis. The use of MPSG can be acceptable, but it can also be problematic. For example, while some decision-makers have accepted that ‘women’ can be a valid particular social group, others create narrower, sometimes artificial, subgroups, which can distort the resulting analysis. As well, some adjudicators focus on the ‘private’ side of the gender-related harms to the detriment of an analysis of the nature of the conflict. These obstacles may be overcome in conflict-related cases with a more fulsome focus on the other 1951 Convention grounds, such as political opinion.

The fourth section considered obstacles arising with the consideration of whether or not there is state protection in the country of origin. There is some positive case law considering the risks to lone females returning to conflict-affected countries of origin. However, there are also cases in which the judges failed to understand the actual vulnerabilities of women and girls in relation to their own conflict-affected or post-conflict state. Additionally, some positive case law recognizes that a cease fire or peace agreement does not necessarily mean the end of gender-related persecution in a country of origin, but other case law demonstrates that some decision-makers do not pay enough attention to the actual post-conflict circumstances of women and girls. Women and girls fleeing conflict therefore face more difficulties than they should in demonstrating lack of state protection and risk for future persecution.

Finally, the last section examined procedural and evidentiary difficulties arising in conflict- and gender-related claims. Women and girls face significant hurdles in accessing and presenting accurate and up-to-date country-of-origin information containing relevant facts on the conflict and its gender dimensions; this has a significant impact on their ability to demonstrate persecution, a 1951 Convention ground, and lack of state protection and therefore their credibility. On the latter, some decision-makers took into account the effects of conflict-related trauma on memory or demeanour, but others unfortunately did not.

In conclusion, while there are welcome developments in international and domestic refugee law under which claims by women and girls fleeing conflict have been accepted, there is also significant room for improvement. There is a need for a deeper understanding of gender-related persecution and its future risks, such that seemingly indiscriminate and/or seemingly gender-neutral ill-treatment of women and girls is more correctly recognized as persecution. There is also a need for expanded conceptions of the 1951 Convention grounds as they relate to women and girls fleeing conflict. Lastly, while women and girls fleeing conflict face problems similar to those making peacetime-related claims, they may also face specific conflict-related evidentiary and credibility hurdles. There have been many recent studies outlining proposed improvements to domestic refugee determination processes involving either women and girls or gender-based claims more generally.Footnote 193 The hurdles identified in this chapter might be (partly) removed by implementing the recommendations in these studies, but it may be necessary for decision-makers to be provided with (more) conflict- and gender-specific guidance on persecution, applicable 1951 Convention grounds and state protection to assess country-of-origin information and credibility.

Footnotes

* I thank Alexandra MacKenzie for her valuable research assistance and UNHCR’s Sanne Andersen, Alice Edwards and Gisela Thater, as well as Margaret Martin, for their helpful suggestions. Any errors are my own. A more detailed version of this chapter is available in UNHCR’s RefWorld online database.

1 UN Secretary-General, ‘Conflict-Related Sexual Violence: Report of the Secretary-General’, 13 January 2012, UN Doc. S/2012/33, para. 6.

2 Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, ‘Concept Note: General Discussion on the Protection of Women’s Human Rights in Conflict and Post-Conflict Contexts’, 18 July 2011, 6–7.

3 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (adopted 28 July 1951, entered into force 22 April 1954), 189 UNTS 137 (1951 Convention), Art. 1A(2); Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees (entered into force 4 October 1967), 606 UNTS 267 (1967 Protocol), Art. 1(2). On the history of this, see A. Edwards, ‘Transitioning Gender: Feminist Engagement with International Refugee Law and Policy 1950-2010’, RSQ 29(2) (2010), 21, 22–3.

4 Recent examples include UNHCR, ‘Handbook for the Protection of Women and Girls’, January 2008; UNHCR, ‘Sexual and Gender-Based Violence against Refugees, Returnees and Internally Displaced Persons: Guidelines for Prevention and Response’, May 2003; and UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on International Protection: Gender-Related Persecution within the Context of Article 1A(2) of the 1951 Convention and/or Its 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees’, 7 May 2002, HCR/GIP/02/01, para. 6 (UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on International Protection No. 1’).

5 For example, Refugee Act of 1996 (Ireland), sec. 1 (in defining membership of a particular social group).

6 For example, ‘Guidelines on Gender Issues for Decision Makers 1996’ (Australia); and ‘Gender Guidelines 2012’ (Australia); ‘Guidelines for Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender-Related Persecution 2003’ (Canada) (‘Guidelines for Women Refugee Claimants’); ‘Gender Guidelines for Asylum Determination 1999’ (South Africa); ‘Asylum Gender Guidelines 2000’ (United Kingdom) (‘Asylum Gender Guidelines’) and ‘Gender Issues in the Asylum Claim 2006’ (United Kingdom); and ‘Considerations for Asylum Officers Adjudicating Asylum Claims from Women 1995’ (United States) and ‘Gender Guidelines for Overseas Refugee Processing 2000’ (United States) (‘Considerations for Asylum Officers’).

7 For example, C. Querton, ‘“I Feel Like as a Woman I’m Not Welcome”: A Gender Analysis of UK Asylum Law, Policy and Practice’, Asylum Aid, January 2012; H. Muggeridge and C. Maman, ‘Unsustainable: The Quality of Initial Decision-Making in Women’s Asylum Claims’, Asylum Aid, January 2011; H. Cheikh Ali, C. Querton and E. Soulard, ‘Gender-Related Asylum Claims in Europe: Comparative Analysis of Law, Policies and Practice Focusing on Women in Nine EU Member States’, GENSEN, May 2012; and UNHCR, ‘Improving Asylum Procedures – Comparative Analysis and Recommendations for Law and Practice: Key Gender-Related Findings and Recommendations’, March 2010.

8 This chapter does not focus on some related areas that deserve greater scrutiny, such as gender-related refugee claims by men and boys fleeing conflict and the reliance on subsidiary or complementary protection as a ‘safety valve’ for gender and conflict cases (on this, see, Cheikh Ali et al., ‘Gender-Related Asylum Claims in Europe’, 57).

9 1951 Convention, Art. 1A(2).

10 UNHCR, ‘Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Determining Refugee Status under the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees’, January 1992, HCR/1P/4/Eng./Rev.1, para. 51. Such human rights would include those listed in the 1981 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (entered into force 3 September 1981), 1249 UNTS 13 (CEDAW).

11 UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on International Protection No. 1’, para. 9.

12 OCHA Policy Development and Studies Branch, ‘Sexual Violence and Conflict: Understanding the Motivations’, 20 June 2008.

13 X. Agirre Aranburu, ‘Sexual Violence beyond Reasonable Doubt: Using Pattern Evidence and Analysis for International Cases’, Leiden Journal of International Law (2010), 609, at 613–14, 622.

14 For example, as carried out by the Revolutionary United Front during the civil war in Sierra Leone: Prosecutor v. Sesay et al., Case No. SCSL-04–15-T, Trial Judgement, 9 March 2009, paras. 1181, 1185, 1193–4, 1205–7, 1289 and 1347, n. 2509 (Sesay Trial Judgement).

15 M. Eriksson, Defining Rape: Emerging Obligations for States under International Law? (Boston: Martinus Nijhoff, 2011), 171.

16 Footnote Ibid. 126; Sesay Trial Judgement, paras. 1349–50.

17 Prosecutor v. Akayesu, Case No. ICTR-96–4-T, Judgement, 2 September 1998, at para. 731 (Akayesu Trial Judgement).

18 For example, Prosecutor v. Krstić, Case No. IT-98–33-T, Judgement, 2 August 2001, paras. 617–18.

19 Rape is explicitly listed as a crime against humanity and sometimes also as a war crime in international criminal statutes: e.g., Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (entered into force 1 July 2002), 2187 UNTS 90 (Rome Statute), Arts. 7(1)(g), 8(2)(b)(xxii) and 8(2)(e) (vi).

20 UNGA Res. 48/104, 20 December 1993, Art. 2.

21 UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on International Protection No. 1’, para. 9.

22 For example, Canada, ‘Guidelines for Women Refugee Claimants’, Art. B ‘Assessing the Feared Harm’; United Kingdom, ‘Asylum Gender Guidelines’, Art. 2A.16–8; and United States, ‘Considerations for Asylum Officers’, 9.

23 SS (Burundi) CG, [2004] UKIAT 00290 (29 October 2004) (United Kingdom), para. 16 (SS (United Kingdom)).

24 1203764, [2012] RRTA 312 (18 May 2012) (Australia) (1203764 (Australia)); TA6-00022, [2007] RPDD No. 233 (29 October 2007) (Canada) (TA6-00022 (Canada)); JXV (Re), [2008] RPDD No. 3 (23 January 2008) (Canada) (JXV (Canada)); VA8-01482, [2010] RPDD No. 105 (8 March 2010) (Canada) (VA8-01482 (Canada)); VA9-00148, [2010] RPDD No. 512 (30 June 2010) (Canada) (VA9-00148 (Canada)); MA8-07482, [2010] RPDD No. 145 (17 September 2010) (Canada) (MA8-07482 (Canada)); Kika v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, [2011] FC 1039 (2 September 2011) (Canada) (Kika (Canada)); Refugee Appeal Nos. 73894, 73895, 73896, 73897, (24 January 2005) (New Zealand) (73894 et al. (New Zealand)); Refugee Appeal Nos. 76464 and 76465, (28 June 2010) (New Zealand) (76464 & 76465 (New Zealand)); AB, [2011] NZIPT 800019 (24 August 2011) (New Zealand) (AB (New Zealand)); SS (United Kingdom); NS Afghanistan CG, [2004] UKIAT 00328 (30 December 2004) (United Kingdom) (NS (United Kingdom)); In re B (FC) (Appellant) (2002) Regina v. Special Adjudicator (Respondent) ex parte Hoxha (FC) (Appellant), [2005] UKHL 19 (10 March 2005) (United Kingdom) (In re B (FC) (United Kingdom)); BK DRC CG, [2007] UKAIT 00098 (September 2007) (United Kingdom) (BK (United Kingdom)); LM Republic of Congo (Congo-Brazzaville) CG, [2008] UKAIT 00064 (4 August 2008) (United Kingdom) (LM Congo (United Kingdom)); PS (Sri Lanka) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, [2008] EWCA Civ. 1213 (23 October 2008) (United Kingdom) (PS (United Kingdom)); AMM and others Somalia CG, [2011] UKUT 00445 (IAC) (15 July 2011) (United Kingdom) (AMM and Others (United Kingdom)); Mohammed v. Attorney General, [2005] 400 F.3d 785 (10 March 2005) (United States) (Mohammed (United States)); Mambwe v. Attorney General, [2009] 572 F.3d 540 (16 July 2009) (United States) (Mambwe (United States)); and Kante v. Attorney General, [2011] Fed. App. 0014N (6th Cir.) (7 January 2011) (United States) (Kante (United States)).

25 Kika (Canada); 73894 et al. (New Zealand); AB (New Zealand); NS (United Kingdom); In re B (FC) (United Kingdom); LM Congo (United Kingdom); PS (United Kingdom); and AMM and Others (United Kingdom).

26 73894 et al. (New Zealand), paras. 35, 43 and 97 (it was unclear whether the applicant herself had been raped).

27 Kika (Canada), para. 5.

28 Footnote Ibid., para. 14.

29 NS (United Kingdom), para. 16.

31 Footnote Ibid. Paras. 26, 28.

32 Footnote Ibid. para. 29 (she was still being harassed by the militia, who killed her sister).

33 Footnote Ibid. Paras. 31 and 68.

34 Footnote Ibid. para. 69.

35 Footnote Ibid. para. 101.

36 PS (United Kingdom), para. 1.

40 Footnote Ibid., para. 7.

41 Footnote Ibid., paras 15 and 16.

42 LM Congo (United Kingdom), paras. 1, 2 and 114.

43 In re B (FC) (United Kingdom), para. 30.

44 NS (United Kingdom), para. 16.

45 Najjemba v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, [2002] EWCA Civ. 1082 (15 July 2002) (United Kingdom), para. 9.

46 Footnote Ibid., para. 2.

47 PS (United Kingdom), at para. 7; VA9-00148 (Canada), para. 16. More generally, see H. Crawley and T. Lester, ‘Comparative Analysis of Gender-Related Persecution in National Asylum Legislation and Practice in Europe’, May 2004, EPAU/2004/05, para. 167.

48 A. Macklin, ‘Refugee Women and the Imperative of Categories’, Human Rights Quarterly 17(2) (1995), 213, 226.

49 T. Spijkerboer, Gender and Refugee Status (Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2000), 94–5, 97–9. The assumption that rape is ‘private’ can lead to three incorrect assumptions: a denial that the rape amounts to persecution, that it is not linked to the conflict and that it has no state connection. H. Crawley, Refugees and Gender: Law and Process (Bristol, UK: Jordan Publishing, 2001), 89.

50 Crawley, Refugees and Gender, 44.

51 In re B (FC) (United Kingdom), para. 30; and N (FC) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, [2005] UKHL 31 (5 May 2005) (United Kingdom), para. 58 (N (United Kingdom)).

52 For example, even though NS (United Kingdom) contains strong gender analysis, the Immigration Appeal Tribunal did not consider the specific future risk of further victimization (including stigmatization) raised by the applicant’s previous rape. However, it did consider the risk to the applicant and her children of living in Kabul on her own without family or community support. See NS (United Kingdom), paras. 64–5, 93–4, 96.

53 For example, in societies where virginity is highly valued, ‘loss of virginity for women often means loss of marriage opportunities, which can have severe social-cultural repercussions for them and their families’. International Centre for Transitional Justice, ‘Across the Lines: The Impact of Nepal’s Conflict on Women’, December 2010, 27.

54 Crawley, Refugees and Gender, 43.

55 Mambwe (United States), 2.

57 Rape victims with children are often severely stigmatized and ostracized (as are their children). See M. Turshen, ‘Women’s War Stories’, in M. Turshen and C. Twagiramariya (eds.), What Women Do in Wartime: Gender and Conflict in Africa (New York: Zed Books, 1998), 1, at 16.

58 In re B (FC) (United Kingdom), para. 36.

59 Footnote Ibid., para. 39.

60 For example, trafficking for sexual slavery or enforced prostitution: UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on International Protection: The Application of Article 1(A)(2) of the 1951 Convention and/or 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees to Victims of Trafficking and Persons at Risk of Being Trafficked’, 7 April 2006, HCR/GIP/06/07, para. 15; United Kingdom, ‘Asylum Gender Guidelines’, para. 2A.18, which lists, apart from rape, ‘enforced nakedness, mechanical or manual stimulation of the erogenous zones; the insertion of objects into the body openings; the forced witnessing or commission of sexual acts; forced masturbation; fellatio and oral coitus; a general atmosphere of sexual aggression, the loss of the ability to reproduce plus threats of the above’.

61 For example, Rome Statute, Arts. 7(1)(g), 8(2)(b)(xxii) and 8(2)(e)(vi); Sesay Trial Judgement, paras 143–72, 1205–8, 1291–7, 1465–75, 1579–83; Prosecutor v. Tadić, Case No. IT-94–1-T, Opinion and Judgement, 7 May 1997, paras. 45, 198, 206; Akayesu Trial Judgement, para. 697.

62 Prosecutor v. Taylor, Case No. SCSL-03–01-T, Trial Judgement, 18 May 2012, paras. 427–30 (Taylor Trial Judgement); Sesay Trial Judgement, paras 1154–5, 1178–9, 1291–7, 1406–13, 1459–75, 1579–83. See also NS (United Kingdom), paras. 31 and 69, on attempted forced marriage.

63 Rome Statute, Arts. 7(1)(g), 8(2)(b)(xxii) and 8(2)(e)(vi); Mambwe (United States), 2, containing facts related to pregnancy resulting from rape.

64 Rome Statute, Arts. 7(1)(g), 8(2)(b)(xxii) and 8(2)(e)(vi).

65 M. Deen, ‘Pregnant Girls Forced to Abort’, The Lubanga Trial, Open Society Justice Initiative, 18 March 2009.

66 Prosecutor v. Furundžija, Case No. IT-95–17/1-T, Trial Judgement, 10 December 1998, para. 163.

67 Taylor Trial Judgement, paras. 1066, 1072–5, 1094, 1098, 1108, 1144–6, 1828, 1833.

68 Prosecutor v. Kunarac et al., Case No. IT-96–23-T and IT-96–23/1-T, Judgement, 22 February 2001, paras. 747–55, 760–6.

69 Sesay Trial Judgement, paras 1347–52; and Taylor Trial Judgement, paras 2034–8, 2051–2, 2175–8.

70 See 73894 et al. (New Zealand), para. 41; and EB (Ethiopia) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, [2007] EWCA Civ. 809 (31 July 2007) (United Kingdom), para. 8 (EB (United Kingdom)).

71 F. Ní Aolaín, D. F. Haynes and N. Cahn, On the Frontlines: Gender, War, and the Post-Conflict Process (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), 48, 154. This is illustrated in the observation that ‘[f]emale claimants may also fail to relate questions about “torture” to the types of harm which they fear’: UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on International Protection No. 1’, para. 36(vii).

72 Ní Aolaín et al., On the Frontlines, 46.

73 H. Baillot, S. Cowan and V. Munro, ‘“Hearing the Right Gaps”: Enabling and Responding to Disclosures of Sexual Violence within the UK Asylum Process’, Social and Legal Studies 21(3) (2012), 269, 289.

74 See Footnote ibid. Proper listening requires training: UNHCR, ‘Improving Asylum Procedures – Gender’, 10.

75 For example, SS (United Kingdom); HH & Others, Somalia CG, [2008] UKAIT 00022 (November 2007) (United Kingdom) (HH (United Kingdom)); LM Congo (United Kingdom); Mohammed (United States); and Mambwe (United States).

76 For example, NS (United Kingdom), paras. 60–4; and NA Iraq CG, [2008] UKAIT 00046 (2 January 2008) (United Kingdom), paras. 91–9 (NA (United Kingdom)).

77 For example, In re B (FC) (United Kingdom), paras 30–9; N (United Kingdom), paras 56–8 (the only issue considered was whether the appellant would be able to access treatment for HIV but not the fact that she had been kidnapped by the Lord’s Resistance Army and then raped by government soldiers); JXV (Canada), para. 91; 0901064, [2009] RRTA 373 (4 May 2009) (Australia), para. 54 (0901064 (Australia)) (unclear whether her torture was gendered despite country of origin information on gendered abuse in detention, and whether she was chosen to deliver the parcels because of a gendered assumption that a woman would attract less attention or would be less at risk); 1010754, [2011] RRTA 320 (4 May 2011) (Australia), para. 30 (the gendered aspects of the applicant’s status as a widow and of the harassment were not explored) (1010754 (Australia)); and EB (United Kingdom), Footnote note 70 above, para. 8 (the potentially gendered aspects of torture were not explored); AB (New Zealand), Footnote note 24 above, paras. 6, 7, 14 62–4; and 73894 et al., (New Zealand), paras. 35, 43, 97–104.

78 Baillot et al., ‘Gaps’, 270, 289–91.

79 1002652, [2010] RRTA 557 (15 July 2010) (Australia), para. 68 (1002652 (Australia)); TA8-00963, [2009] RPDD No. 395 (22 September 2009) (Canada), para. 7 (TA8-00963 (Canada)); TA8-18792, [2010] RPDD No. 374 (17 June 2010) (Canada), para. 36 (TA8-18792 (Canada)); VA9-00148 (Canada), para. 20; Kika (Canada), para. 9; PS (United Kingdom), para. 7; Camara v. Attorney General, [2009] 580 F.3d 196 (4 September 2009) (United States), 8 (Camara (United States)); SS (United Kingdom), para. 22.3; and Gomez v. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 947 F.d 660; 1991 US App. LEXIS 25697 (28 October 1991) (United States), 6604 (Gomez (United States)).

80 VA9-00148 (Canada), para. 10.

83 Footnote Ibid., para. 11.

84 Footnote Ibid., paras. 15 and 16.

85 Footnote Ibid., para. 20.

86 There are numerous reports by international organizations and NGOs detailing varying political and ethnic reasons for militia violence. For example, on motives for sexual violence by the Mai Mai, see J. Kelly, ‘Rape in War: Motives of Militia in DRC’, United States Institute of Peace, June 2010. The adjudicator did not appear to refer to any country-of-origin information in making this decision.

87 G. S. Goodwin-Gill and J. McAdam, The Refugee in International Law, 3rd edn. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007), 126.

88 VA9-00148 (Canada), para. 10.

89 There are many layers to this: she may have been targeted for rape because she is of the female sex (and therefore has the genitalia to rape); because of her gender (e.g. due to patriarchal assumptions by the perpetrators that women are there to serve the needs of men); to punish her in a psychological and physical manner without the use of physical weapons; to humiliate her male family members (that they cannot protect her, that the enemy has power); and/or to humiliate her community.

90 This requires detailed country-of-origin information. For more on this, see the part on country-of-origin information later.

91 For example, AA (Uganda) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, [2008] EWCA Civ. 579 (22 May 2008) (United Kingdom), para. 17 (AA (United Kingdom)), in which in humanitarian protection (but not refugee status) was granted to the applicant based on a future risk that the applicant (originally from northern Uganda and a victim of rape) would be forced into prostitution if returned to Kampala: ‘Even if it is the fate of many of her countrywomen, I cannot think that either the AIT or the House of Lords that decided AH (Sudan) would have felt able to regard enforced prostitution as coming within the category of normal country conditions that the refugee must be expected to put up with.’

92 Crawley, Refugees and Gender, 88.

93 Footnote Ibid. This comment is from 2001, but the analysis in this section demonstrates that it is still applicable.

94 This does not directly answer the question of whether violence directed against women and girls during conflict can ever be described as indiscriminate. The discussion suggests that many more forms of ill-treatment in conflict may be considered gender based and that the fact that the ill-treatment is gendered may reflect at least a modicum of targeting of the victim on the basis of gender, sex or both.

95 1951 Convention, Art. 1A(2).

96 UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on International Protection No. 1’, paras. 22–34. Note that ‘sex’ may be relevant as a category: A. Edwards, ‘Distinction, Discretion, Discrimination: The New Frontiers of Gender-Related Claims to Asylum’, remarks presented at Gender, Migration and Human Rights Conference, Florence, Italy, 18–19 June 2012, 11–12. Where sex is a factor, gender may also simultaneously be a factor. There are often socially constructed assumptions accompanying the choice of biologically female individuals for persecution.

97 A. Roberts, ‘Gender and Refugee Law’, Australian Yearbook of International Law 22 (2002), 159, 185.

98 Goodwin-Gill and McAdam, The Refugee in International Law, 82.

99 T. Inlender, ‘Status Quo or Sixth Ground? Adjudicating Gender Asylum Claims’, in S. Benhabib and J. Resnick (eds.), Migrations and Mobilities: Citizenship, Borders, and Gender (New York University Press, 2009), 359.

101 This is the tendency in all claims by women and girls and not only conflict-related claims: see Querton, ‘I Feel Like’, 32–3; Cheikh Ali et al., ‘Gender-Related Asylum Claims in Europe’, 58–60; C. Querton, ‘The Interpretation of the Convention Ground of “Membership in a Particular Social Group” in the Context of Gender-Related Claims for Asylum’, Refugee Law Initiative, January 2012, 4; and Edwards, ‘Transitioning Gender’, 28.

102 Chiekh Ali et al, ‘Gender-Related Asylum Claims in Europe’, 55.

103 UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on International Protection: “Membership of a Particular Social Group” within the Context of Article 1A(2) of the 1951 Convention and/or Its 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees’, 7 May 2002, HCR/GIP/02/02, para. 11 (UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on MPSG’). Note that some countries require both or add an additional requirement: Querton, ‘I Feel Like’, 35–6; Cheikh Ali et al., ‘Gender-Related Asylum Claims in Europe’, 62; and Crawley and Lester, ‘Comparative Analysis of Gender-Related Persecution’, para. 388.

104 UNHCR has indicated that ‘women’ can be a valid group: UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on MPSG’, para. 12.

105 1002091, [2010] RRTA 469 (7 June 2010) (Australia), para. 69 (1002091 (Australia)).

106 NS (United Kingdom), para. 79

107 HM Somalia, [2005] UKIAT 00040 (26 January 2005) (United Kingdom) para. 35 (HM (United Kingdom)).

108 HH (United Kingdom), para. 352: ‘On the evidence, being a woman, without more, is not a sufficient differentiator to place her at such risk.’

109 1203764 (Australia), para. 85.

110 JDG (Re), [2007] RPDD No. 33 (10 July 2007) (Canada), para. 133 (JDG (Canada)).

111 HH (United Kingdom), para. 369.

112 NA (United Kingdom), paras. 93 and 97.

113 AMM and Others (United Kingdom), para. 631.

114 1110871, [2012] RRTA 131 (6 March 2012) (Australia), paras. 90–1 (1110871 (Australia)).

115 HM (United Kingdom), para. 35.

116 HH (United Kingdom), para. 352.

117 Footnote Ibid., paras. 349, 355 and 369.

118 For example, the intersection of sex and age in the case of girls can compound the harm suffered: A. Edwards, ‘Age and Gender Dimensions in International Refugee Law’, in E. Feller, V. Turk and F. Nicholson (eds.), Refugee Protection in International Law: UNHCR’s Global Consultations on International Protection (Cambridge University Press, 2003), 46, at 47. For cases involving girls, see Mohammed (United States); and AA (United Kingdom).

119 Edwards, ‘Distinction’, 10–11.

120 For example, MZXQS v. Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, [2009] FCA 97 (17 February 2009) (Australia) (see original decision, para. 24) (MZXQS (Australia)); 1010754 (Australia); AHU (Re), [2007] RPDD No. 189 (AHU (Canada)); TA8-00963 (Canada); VA9-00148 (Canada); Kika (Canada) (original decision, para. 9); EB (United Kingdom); AA (United Kingdom); SH (Palestinian Territories) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, [2008] EWCA Civ. 1150 (22 October 2008) (United Kingdom); Mohammed (United States); Lopez v. Attorney General, [2007] 504 F.3d 1341 (25 October 2007) (United States) (Lopez (United States)); Mambwe (United States).

121 Baillot et al., ‘Gaps’, 274–5.

122 For example, see the topics covered in K. Musalo, J. Moore and R. Boswell, Refugee Law and Policy: A Comparative and International Approach, 4th edn. (Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press, 2011), 689820; and Crawley, Refugees and Gender, 79–198.

123 In one case, the analysis changed from being about ill-treatment in conflict to female genital mutilation, perhaps because the decision-maker felt it was more well established as a gender-related form of harm falling within MPSG: Mohammed (United States).

124 1002091 (Australia); 1110871 (Australia); 1203764 (Australia); JDG (Canada); Camara (United States); and Kante (United States).

125 For example, In re B (FC) (United Kingdom), para. 37; and UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on MPSG’, paras. 2 and 14.

126 In re B (FC) (United Kingdom), para. 37.

127 UNHCR, ‘Matter of Valdiviezo-Galdamez, Amicus Curiae Brief in Support of Respondent’, 10 August 2012, 17–18.

128 UNHCR, ‘Guidelines on MPSG’, paras 2 and 14. This approach was applied in LM Congo (United Kingdom), para. 111 (applicant’s current vulnerability increased by fact of past rape in Congo).

129 Kante (United States), 26–7; and Gomez (United States), 663–4.

130 Ní Aolaín et al., On the Frontlines, 48 and 154.

131 MZXQS (Australia), paras. 23–4; 1010754 (Australia), para. 68; 1110871 (Australia), para. 90; TA3-24983 and TA3-24984, IRB Canada (2 February 2005) (Canada), 6–7 (TA3-24983 and TA3-24984 (Canada)).

132 Edwards, ‘Transitioning Gender’, 27–8.

133 The importance of this was demonstrated in some cases in the case set: e.g. NA (United Kingdom), paras. 91–7, which considered that being an ethnic Palestinian, former member of Ba’ath party and widow of former Ba’ath member, an academic and a lone woman with children in Iraq were risk factors (the first was enough, but the immigration judge looked at other risk factors for completeness). See also 1203764 (Australia), para. 85.

134 MZXQS (Australia); 0901064 (Australia); 1012015, [2011] RRTA 245 (1 April 2011 (Australia) (1012015 (Australia)); 1203764 (Australia); TA3-24983 and TA3-24984 (Canada); 73894 et al. (New Zealand); LM Iraq CG, [2006] UKAIT 00060 (26 July 2006) (United Kingdom) (LM Iraq (United Kingdom)); LM Congo (United Kingdom); but see Lopez (United States).

135 LM Congo (United Kingdom), para. 107. In this case, the political opinion of the applicant’s political superior was imputed to her: para. 114.

136 MZXQS (Australia), para. 4.

137 Footnote Ibid., para. 11.

138 Footnote Ibid., para. 24. The tribunal was therefore asked to deal with the political opinion claim: para. 28.

139 LM Iraq (United Kingdom), paras 73–5.

140 Footnote Ibid., paras 67, 71, 73 and 75. This was considered as perceived political opinion (rights of Iraqi women): para. 73.

141 1203764 (Australia), para. 84. See also 1012015 (Australia).

142 73894 et al. (New Zealand), para. 15.

143 Footnote Ibid., paras. 95 and 96.

144 Footnote Ibid., para. 96.

145 Footnote Ibid., paras. 41–5.

146 Footnote Ibid., paras. 100–4. The grant of status is found in para. 106. There appears to be a typographical error in the first sentence of para. 106, as the second sentence refers to a grant of refugee status.

147 Lopez (United States), 1343.

149 Footnote Ibid., 1344. Petition for review on this point not granted.

150 Crawley, Refugees and Gender, 79–83.

151 On race, see 1203764 (Australia), para. 85; NA (United Kingdom), para. 91; on religion, see JXV (Canada), para. 89.

152 Edwards, ‘Distinction’, 10.

153 For example, NA (United Kingdom), paras. 97–8; AA (United Kingdom), paras. 9–10; and AMM and Others (United Kingdom), para. 631. See also, Judgement W2K11.30330, Administrative Court of Würzburg (Germany), 16 February 2012, available online (in German) at: www.asyl.net/fileadmin/user_upload/dokumente/19769.pdf, in which the fact that a woman was single and lacked protection of a male family member led to a serious and individual threat for the applicant in Afghanistan, and there was no meaningful internal protection alternative.

154 PS (United Kingdom), para. 7.

156 Footnote Ibid., para. 8.

157 Mambwe (United States), 4.

159 Footnote Ibid., 4–5.

160 See also AA (United Kingdom), para. 17, noting that the future persecution feared (in this case, forced prostitution) can be of a different category from that on which the original claim was based.

161 N (United Kingdom), para. 58.

162 Canada, ‘Guidelines for Women Refugee Claimants’, Art. C(3), ‘Evidentiary Matters’.

163 Ní Aolaín et al., On the Frontlines, 46.

164 For examples of how this might be done, see UN Department of Political Affairs, ‘Guidance for Mediators: Addressing Conflict-Related Sexual Violence in Ceasefire and Peace Agreements’, January 2012, 5.

165 Crawley, Refugees and Gender, 199.

166 Querton, ‘I Feel Like’, 32; Crawley and Lester, ‘Comparative Analysis of Gender-Related Persecution’, para. 653; H. Crawley, ‘Thematic Review on the Coverage of Women in Country of Origin Information (COI) Reports’, Centre for Migration Policy Research, 19 September 2011, 133–44.

167 For example, 110871 (Australia), para. 86; NS (United Kingdom), 10–17; LM Iraq (United Kingdom), paras 38–9 and 63–4; HH (United Kingdom), paras. 187, 188 and 192; NA (United Kingdom), paras 31 and 40; LM Congo (United Kingdom), para. 77; and SS (United Kingdom), paras. 22.4–8.

168 For example, AHU (Canada); TA8-00963 (Canada); VA9-00148 (Canada); Kika (Canada); Lopez (United States); Camara (United States); and Kante (United States).

169 Ní Aolaín et al., On the Frontlines, 45–6; Crawley, ‘COI’, 133–4.

170 Chiekh Ali et al., ‘Gender-Related Asylum Claims in Europe’, 89; and UN Women, ‘2011–2012 Progress of the World’s Women: In Pursuit of Justice’, 83.

171 For example, NS (United Kingdom), 13–14.

172 For example, UNHCR, ‘Interim Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection Needs of Asylum-Seekers from Côte d’Ivoire’, 15 June 2012, HCR/EG/CIV/12/01, 28–32.

173 For example, NS (United Kingdom), 13–15: Amnesty International and International Commission of Jurists.

174 For example, reports from the UN Commission on the Status of Women: Footnote ibid., 13–14.

175 Since the adoption of Resolution 1325, the Security Council has made reference in its country-specific resolutions to gender-based violence directed against women and girls (UNSC Res. 1325 (2000), 31 October 2000). For example, in 2012: UNSC Res. 2035 (2012), 17 February 2012, op. para. 8; UNSC Res. 2040 (2012), 12 March 2012, preamble para. 7.

176 The indicators are set out in UN Secretary-General, ‘Women and Peace and Security: Report of the Secretary-General’, 28 September 2010, UN Doc. S/2010/498, Annex. Each year, the Secretary-General addresses one-third of these indicators in his reports: e.g. UN Secretary-General, ‘Report of the Secretary-General on Women and Peace and Security’, 29 September 2011, UN Doc. S/2011/598. The Secretary-General’s reports pursuant to Resolution 1960 include a discussion of conflicts in which sexual violence has been documented: UN Secretary-General, ‘Conflict-Related Sexual Violence: Report of the Secretary-General’, 13 January 2012, S/2012/33, paras. 17–57 and Annex.

177 Crawley, ‘COI’, 137, 142.

178 Footnote Ibid., 134.

179 Footnote Ibid., 139; Cheikh Ali et al., ‘Gender-Related Asylum Claims in Europe’, 91.

180 For example, 0901064 (Australia) (found credible on appeal); 1002652 (Australia); 1203764 (Australia) (on rape); TA3-24983 and TA3-24984 (Canada); JDG (Canada); MA5-05605, [2007] RPDD No. 26 (26 October 2007) (Canada); TA6-00022 (Canada); MA8-00516, [2009] RPDD No. 148 (6 May 2009) (Canada); VA8-01482 (Canada); TA8-18792 (Canada); MA8-07482 (Canada); Kika (Canada), para. 14; EB (United Kingdom) (found credible on appeal); BK (United Kingdom); HH (United Kingdom); AMM and Others (United Kingdom); Mohammed (United States) (at initial stage); and Mambwe (United States).

181 In one case involving a claim of sexual violence, the decision-maker accepted that women can have valid reasons for giving unclear evidence about rape but felt that the applicant’s inconsistencies were too large: BK (United Kingdom), paras. 524 and 527.

182 For example, Refugee Appeal No. 75410, (7 March 2005) (New Zealand), paras 54–7 (75410 (New Zealand)); the applicant presented evidence about her fiancé’s disappearance in a matter-of-fact manner, but the adjudicator felt that she should have been distressed and so found her not credible.

183 For example, 1110871 (Australia), para. 86; and TA3-24983 and TA3-24984 (Canada), 4 (gave evidence in a straightforward and consistent manner).

184 Complete consistency is not expected: 0901064 (Australia), para. 63.

185 For example, 1012015 (Australia); 1010754 (Australia); 1110871 (Australia); JXV (Canada); 73894 et al. (New Zealand); 75410 (New Zealand); 76464 and 76465 (New Zealand); and AB (New Zealand).

186 For example, Muggeridge and Maman, ‘Unsustainable’, 34–43; Querton, ‘I Feel Like’, 55–63; and Cheikh Ali et al., ‘Gender-Related Asylum Claims in Europe’, 77–88.

187 Muggeridge and Maman, ‘Unsustainable’, 5.

188 Human Rights Watch (HRW), ‘Fast-Tracked Unfairness: Detention and Denial of Women Asylum Seekers in the UK’, 42.

189 Querton, ‘I Feel Like’, 38–9. For example, HRW, ‘Fast-Tracked’, 41, recounts the case of Jane S., who was told that her accounts of being raped and the killing of her family in Sierra Leone were not believed because she could not remember the dates.

190 Cheikh Ali et al., ‘Gender-Related Asylum Claims in Europe’, 81; Querton, ‘I Feel Like’, 41–4.

191 Cheikh Ali et al, ‘Gender-Related Asylum Claims in Europe’, 77, 172.

192 Querton, ‘I Feel Like’, 41; and HRW, ‘Fast-Tracked’, 40–1.

193 For example, Cheikh Ali et al., ‘Gender-Related Asylum Claims in Europe’; Querton, ‘I Feel Like’; Muggeridge and Maman, ‘Unsustainable’; HRW, ‘Fast-Tracked’; UNHCR, ‘Improving Asylum Procedures – Gender’.

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