Police Violence In India Drives A Gay Couple To The U.S.

Millions of gay Indians suddenly became criminals when the Indian Supreme Court 
restored the country’s sodomy law in December. But the ruling actually helped 
set one couple free.
When the ruling was issued, two men from northwest India had spent
more than six months in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center 
in El Paso, Texas, waiting for a judge to decide on their
petition for asylum. It was a bitter ending to their yearlong journey 
across more than 10 countries to reach the United States. They had left
India after death threats from their family and being targeted for
police abuse because of their sexual orientation, though at the time the law 
criminalizing same-sex relationships was suspended by a lower court ruling. And 
when they finally reached the country that they expected to protect their 
rights, they wound up in a facility that felt exactly
like prison.
The whole experience had felt cruelly backward to the couple, so it
was perhaps fitting that the U.S. released them from detention only when they 
formally became criminals at home.
A U.S. judge granted the pair asylum on Dec. 20 based on their
experience of police abuse and threats from their families to kill them
if they returned. But even now they don’t feel that much safer than when they 
left India, which is why they only agreed to speak to BuzzFeed
under names they chose for themselves, Manoj and Maninder, rather than
their real names....

(full story):

http://www.buzzfeed.com/lesterfeder/a-gay-couple-flees-police-violence-in-india-only-to-wind-up

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