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Nigerian Lesbian Asylum Seeker, Aderonke Apata Facing Deportation From UK Wants To Submit Sex Tape
June 9, 2014 – Nigerian Lesbian Asylum Seeker, Aderonke Apata Facing Deportation From UK Wants To Submit Sex Tape
A desperate Nigerian woman seeking asylum in the United Kingdom on the ground of sexuality and persecution is about to send a personal home video of herself and her girlfriend to prove to the United Kingdom Home Office that she’s indeed gay.
According to Independent UK report, Aderonke Apata claimed she has tried everything to convince the home office that she’s a lesbian which include letters from her ex-girlfriends in Nigeria and Britain.
But after being turned down for asylum, she feels the only way to convince the Immigration is to send over her home video.
Sitting with her girlfriend, Happiness Agboro, in a bar on Manchester’s Canal Street, Ms Apata, 47, revealed the traumatic ordeal she has experienced:
“I was asked to bring my supporting documents for my judicial review for the court to look at. What evidence do we have to compile apart from letters from people? I knew we
had a home video of ourselves, so I thought why not just put it in? I cannot afford to go back to my county where I will be tortured, so if I have to prove it with a sexual video, then I have to do it.”
“I feel so bad it’s got to this stage. It’s such a desperate and precarious situation to be in, very dangerous, because anything could happen to those pictures, those videos.”
When she came to the United Kingdom in 2004, she sought asylum on religious grounds She came from a Christian family and married a Muslim man in what she says was a sham arrangement to cover up her long-term relationship with another woman.
According to Ms Apata, her husband’s family turned against her as they suspected she was gay. They took her to a sharia court, where she was sentenced to death for adultery. She says her brother and three-year-old son were killed in related vigilante incidents.
Ms Apata ran away and went into hiding after two appeals for asylum were rejected, living on the streets in Manchester to make sure she would not be deported. In 2012, after being caught working as a care manager with a false visa, she tried again to apply for asylum – saying she feared returning to Nigeria and being persecuted for her sexuality.
This latest asylum claim was also rejected, despite the fact that Ms Apata gave testimony that her ex-girlfriend in Nigeria was killed in a vigilante attack in 2012 and the country’s law now punishes homosexuality with up to 14 years’ imprisonment.
Ms Apata’s story has rapidly garnered mass support, with one petition demanding Theresa May halt her deportation already attracting more than 230,000 signatures. A judicial review has now been granted in her case and she is hopeful she will finally have the right to live freely in Britain with her girlfriend.
A Home Office spokeswoman said:
“We do not remove anyone at risk of persecution because of their sexuality. We provide dedicated guidance and training to those dealing with such asylum claims, and all applications are carefully considered in line with our international obligations.”
Deportation threat for Aderonke Apata has proved too much and she has recently been hospitalised with complex post-traumatic stress disorder. “I want sanctuary,” she says. “I just want to be protected. I want to be who I am.”
