The recent Supreme Court verdict in Koushal, which led to an outpouring of outrage across India, ironically has been instrumental in re-scripted the lives of Jagdish Kumar and Sukhwinder, a gay couple from Chandigarh, who were languishing in an immigration jail in Texas.
Kumar was a married man when he first met Sukhwinder, a dancer. Fearing that they would be killed if their families found out about their relationship, the couple fled in June 2012. After travelling for a year through Dubai, Cyprus and several other countries, the two arrived on foot at the Texas border and applied for asylum on the grounds of their sexual orientation. They were immediately detained and their case was kept pending for nearly six months. They were put in separate cells and denied parole four times even though the routine procedure is to parole asylum-seekers from custody pending the decision of their case. Despite the best efforts of the couples’ lawyer and civil society groups campaigning for their release, their case was stuck. On December 20, days after the Koushal verdict was pronounced, their case was assessed swiftly and they were granted asylum. The US accepted that the couple’s fear of being persecuted in India was now legitimate.
Under the Refugee Convention (1951), a person in order to obtain asylum must prove a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, social group or political opinion. A “social group” is a group sharing a common characteristic that is fundamental to their individual identities and which cannot be altered. Under refugee law and asylum-granting practices worldwide, sexual orientation has been accepted as a characteristic defining a social group, and asylum claims based on this ground have been entertained by many countries including India itself.