Human Rights Campaign and National Advocacy Partners Galvanize 10,000+ Supporters Urging Biden-Harris Administration to Protect LGBTQI Afghans

by Henry Berg-Brousseau

Today, in a powerful demonstration of public concern, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) along with the Council for Global Equality, Immigration Equality, IRAP, Rainbow Railroad, and ORAM presented the Biden-Harris Administration with 10,500 signatures on a petition urging the adoption of a 10-point action plan to expedite and ease the refugee process for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex (LGBTQI) Afghans following the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan.

This petition from the Human Rights Campaign and its partner organizations is part of a broader call for support of LGBTQI Afghan refugees — including from members of Congress, who have written twice to Secretary Blinken with similar requests. However, without any progress made on these requests there continue to be alarming reports about LGBTQI Afghans facing increased violence and persecution.

“We reiterate our call for President Biden to adopt the 10-point policy plan which will expedite and ease the refugee process for LGBTQI Afghans,” said JoDee Winterhof, Human Rights Campaign Senior Vice President for Policy and Political Affairs. “The 10,000+ people who signed our petition have demonstrated that they want the United States, long a beacon of refuge for those fleeing persecution, to take action to protect LGBTQI Afghans-- a vulnerable group who risk oppression, even death, simply for who they are or who they love. Now is the time for action.”

The appeal, which was originally sent to President Biden on September 9, urges his administration to adopt ten policy positions to increase its immediate-, medium-, and long-term efforts on behalf of the vulnerable LGBTQI community in Afghanistan. The policy recommendations are:

  1. Prioritize the evacuation and resettlement of vulnerable refugee populations, including LGBTQI people, and ensure that any transitory stay in a third country is indeed temporary by expediting refugee processing.

  2. Provide and effectively implement explicit “Priority 2” (P-2) access to the U.S. refugee program for the highly vulnerable population of LGBTQI individuals fleeing Afghanistan. Waive the application fee for any LGBTQI Afghan applying to relocate to the United States on an expedited basis via humanitarian parole and look favorably upon those emergency requests. Initiate a new program of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Afghans in the United States, including those paroled into the United States on an emergency basis.

  3. Ensure that existing lists that have been collected by various governments of at-risk Afghans, including those who wish to flee because of their sexual orientation or gender identity, are carefully safeguarded so that they do not fall into Taliban or third-country hands and are not used to target individuals or family members. Use the lists as a basis for expedited P1 or P2 refugee processing or humanitarian parole for those who seek protection abroad.

  4. Lift or expand the FY 2022 refugee cap of 125,000 refugees accepted into the United States.

  5. Work with our allies to coordinate refugee protection for LGBTQI Afghans, open avenues to other countries for migration and asylum, and provide assistance to neighboring countries that have acted as points of first entry for thousands of refugees as well as countries where LGBTQI Afghan refugees will be processed.

  6. Provide funding to support the temporary housing, livelihoods, and security of LGBTQI refugees in third countries while they are being processed for refugee resettlement in the United States or elsewhere.

  7. Recognize NGOs that have been reliable partners in identifying and recommending LGBTQI Afghans to the State Department for protection and instruct U.S. embassies to process LGBTQI refugee applications on-site when referred by these designated partners.

  8. Recognize for the purposes of refugee relocation, humanitarian parole, or any other entry into the United States any same-sex Afghan partner as a spouse. Take an equally expansive view of the definition of family for LGBTQI relocation given the lack of legal recognition for LGBTQI partnerships in the region.

  9. Expand LGBTQI-sensitive resettlement programs in the United States and engage with NGOs and local communities to expand the U.S. capacity to absorb larger numbers of LGBTQI Afghan refugees in supportive and inclusive environments, including through new refugee sponsorship programs.

  10. Speak out forcefully against human rights abuses by the new Taliban regime and any increased targeting of vulnerable communities, including LGBTQI people, and use existing mechanisms to sanction and hold accountable perpetrators of human rights abuse. Negotiate explicit human rights monitoring access, with a particular focus on vulnerable communities including LGBTQI Afghans, when the mandate of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan is renewed by the Security Council later this month.

HRC launched an issue brief and webpage with more information on the plight of the LGBTQI Afghan community and ways that people can help.

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