#LGBTQ2S+ refugees languish as Kenyan government blocks Canadians from resettling them.
The Canadian Press travelled to #Kenya as part of an investigative series looking into a global backslide in LGBTQ2S+ rights and the consequences for Canada, including the mounting difficulties Canadians face in resettling refugees.
This week, that reporting revealed that the Kenyan government has nearly halted approvals of exit permits and refugee status for people claiming the need for asylum on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.
The Kenyan government does not consider those legitimate grounds for seeking refugee status.
"It's stressful, when you don't know how long you'll be waiting," Anne told The Canadian Press.
Anne left Uganda years ago, and they now run Rainbow Family Support and Advocacy-Africa, an organization that helps LGBTQ2S+ refugee parents in Nairobi.
Its headquarters is a home that includes an office and workshop space, but also a playroom and bedrooms with bunk beds for families who have been evicted for being #LGBTQ2S+. Drawings of same-sex couples with children adorn the walls, and the staircase is painted with a rainbow flag.
The group provides workshops to help its clients navigate bureaucracy, and the questions their children face at school.
Anne's children are often asked by Kenyan schoolmates why they left Uganda, a country that is not at war. Many Kenyans assume the only reason Ugandans would move to #Kenya is because they are gay.
"They would ask intimate questions to the kids, like 'Do you see your mom with a man or with a woman? Because you are Ugandan,'" said Anne.
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