The Netherlands'
highest court rejected Tuesday a gay Iranian asylum
seeker's last-ditch bid to avoid deportation to Britain,
where he fears authorities will send him back to
Tehran and possible execution.
In a ruling
published on its website, the Council of State said Britain
is responsible for Mehdi Kazemi's case, because it was there
that the 19-year-old first applied for asylum.
Gay rights
campaigner Rene van Soeren said Kazemi's Dutch lawyer was
considering an appeal to the European Court of Human Rights.
The lawyer, Borg Palm, did not immediately return
calls seeking comment.
Boris van der
Ham, a lawmaker who has taken up Kazemi's cause, has tabled
questions in Parliament asking the junior minister for
immigration, Nebahat Albayrak, to lobby British
authorities on Kazemi's behalf.
Albayrak should
either urge Britain not to send Kazemi back to Iran or
offer him asylum in the Netherlands, Van der Ham said in a
telephone interview.
''There should be
some political leadership,'' he said. ''I hope in
Britain they will do it and otherwise we should take the
boy.''
Kazemi is not
expected to be deported before Albayrak has answered Van
der Ham's questions.
Justice Ministry
spokeswoman Karen Temmink said Albayrak is studying the
court ruling and drawing up answers to Van der Ham's
questions.
Kazemi's case
highlights not only the plight of homosexuals in Iran, but
also differences in the way European Union allies deal with
asylum seekers.
The Netherlands
relaxes its tough asylum laws for Iranian gays --
virtually guaranteeing asylum to any who apply here --
because of persecution they face at home. Britain, on
the other hand, rejected Kazemi's original asylum
request.
Kazemi, 19, says
he traveled to London to study English in 2005 and
applied for asylum in Britain after learning that his lover
in Iran had been executed for sodomy.
After British
authorities rejected Kazemi's application, he fled to
mainland Europe and applied for asylum in the Netherlands.
However, because
Kazemi had already applied for asylum and been rejected
in Britain, the Dutch government is refusing to consider his
case and insists he must be sent back to Britain. It
cites the European Union's 2003 Dublin Regulation,
which declares that the member state where an asylum
seeker first enters the EU is responsible for processing
that person's claim.
Tuesday's court
ruling upheld the Dutch position.
Palm said last
week that Kazemi was in such despair he was on suicide
watch in a center for rejected asylum seekers in the port
city of Rotterdam.
Britain's Home
Office has declined comment, saying it does not discuss
individual asylum applications, but it is unlikely
authorities would reverse their earlier rejection.
However,
Britain's Border and Immigration Agency has issued a
statement that could give Kazemi hope.
''We examine with
great care each individual case before removal and we
will not remove anyone who we believe is at risk on their
return,'' the agency said.
Matteo Pegoraro,
president of the Italian-based gay rights group
EveryOne, which is lobbying for Kazemi, has said he knows of
10 gay people executed in Iran since 2005, based on
reports from nongovernment groups and activists. (AP)