Thursday, December 10, 2009

Lesbian soldier seeks asylum after death threats

Lesbian soldier seeks asylum after death threats

http://salon.com/mwt/broadsheet/feature/2009/12/07/bethany_smith/index.html?source=newsletter

Private Bethany Smith became a deserter after colleagues said they
would kill her in her sleep

By Kate Harding
Dec 7, 2009

A couple of months after learning that she was about to be deployed
to Afghanistan, Private Bethany Smith received an anoymous death
threat. Smith, a 21-year-old lesbian who enlisted in the Army in
2006, was stationed at Fort Campbell, Ky., the same base where Barry
Winchell was murdered in 1999. Like Winchell, Smith was continuously
harassed about her sexuality, "receiving hundreds of anonymous
"gay-bashing" notes," according to Women's eNews. She was also
"grabbed, shaken and thrown on the ground by a male soldier daily."
The taunts of "dyke" had started as soon as she arrived, but "the
abuse worsened exponentially after a soldier spotted her holding
hands with another woman at a local shopping mall." So when she got a
note in 2007 that described how some of her fellow soldiers planned
to steal keys to her room and beat her to death during the night,
Smith fled Fort Campbell to seek asylum in Canada. "It was at that
point," she says, "that I knew I was more afraid of the people who
were supposed to be on my side than people we were supposed to be
fighting overseas."

Although Smith's first appeal for protected status was rejected,
Federal Court Justice Yves de Montigny recently ruled that Canada's
refugee board should reconsider her case. He noted Winchell's murder,
the fact that gay sex violates the military code, and "evidence that
[Smith] was afraid that her superiors may have been involved in the
harassment and threats targeted at her" as reasons to give her
another hearing, after the original findings stated that somehow a
written death threat on top of regular beatings and hundreds of
lesser threats did not constitute "a risk to her life or risk of
cruel and unusual treatment or punishment upon return to the United
States." Smith's lawyer, Jamie Liew, emphasizes that Smith is not
looking to avoid going to Afghanistan, but to avoid going there with
people who mean her harm. "The idea that she would be deployed with
people who were giving her death threats is a problem. If people in
your unit are not there to have your back, you would be killed in a
war and you wouldn't even know if it was because of friendly fire, of
enemy fire or because of someone deliberately firing at you . . . Her
situation is unique in that way."

It may be, in that she's the first to seek asylum because of
persecution from fellow soldiers, but what drove Smith to Canada is
far from unique. The Human Rights Campaign's website says in its FAQ
about the "don't ask, don't tell" policy, "Although gay, lesbian and
bisexual service members have been held to the 'Don't Tell' portion
of the policy, reports show that the 'Don't Ask, Don't Pursue, Don't
Harass' parts of the policy are often ignored. A 2000 Defense
Department inspector general survey showed that 80 percent of service
members had heard offensive speech, derogatory names, jokes or
remarks about gays in the previous year, and that 85 percent believed
such comments were tolerated. Thirty-seven percent reported that they
had witnessed or experienced direct, targeted forms of harassment,
including verbal and physical assaults and property damage.
Overwhelmingly, service members did not report the harassment. When
asked why, many cited fear of retaliation." And speaking of DADT, in
October, the University of California, Santa Barbara's Palm Center
released data that showed, in the words of Salon's Tracy Clark-Flory,
"women are disproportionately punished under the military's
fingers-in-your-ears policy toward homosexuals." Meanwhile, violence
against female soldiers in the military is rampant, and questions
often surround the deaths of gay soldiers, like Ciara Durkin, whose
death was ruled a suicide by the Army, even though shortly before she
died, she told her family another soldier had pulled a gun on her and
asked them to investigate if anything happened to her.

Even if Smith had no evidence of specific threats to her life, it's
reasonable to conclude that her being a lesbian would pose serious
risks to her safety in such a hostile environment. We can hope
Canada's refugee board recognizes that and allows her to stay, but
until the U.S. does something to address a military climate that
supports harassment and violence against female and gay soldiers,
many more will remain in danger.

.

No comments: