The Osaka District Court on July 4 recognized an African man in his 30s who fled to Japan from his own country fearing persecution for his homosexuality as a refugee, overturning a government decision not to grant him asylum.

According to the man’s complaint and other sources, his country bans same-sex sexual acts. After his family found out that he was gay, he was confined in his home and beaten by his father and younger brother. He came to Japan in 2019 and applied for refugee status, but the government rejected his application, prompting him to file a lawsuit objecting to the decision

  • Jessica
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    fedilink
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    156 months ago

    According to this article via the same source as OP, Japan grants just 0.5% of asylum requests.

    From the article

    Ministry of Justice statistics show that between 2016 and 2019, more than 10,000 people applied for asylum in Japan every year, but only 20 to 44 individuals were granted refugee status. The recognition rate falls below 0.5%, and it is difficult to acquire refugee status in Japan.

    For any country, that is shameful. For a country with an aging population, it is just plain stupid.

    • @AnUnusualRelic
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      96 months ago

      The numbers would be higher if only the asylum seekers were Japanese…