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Tuesday, December 18, 2007

UK Home Office:
Search for Gay Asylum Stats Exceeds £600
[The following letter was sent today to the campaign people and reporters at the Freedom of Information desk at The Guardian newspaper.]
Dear Friends,
I am a San Francisco-based gay human rights advocate who is trying to pry loose data from the Foreign Office about over all gay-specific asylum claims and those made by gays from Iran, versus claims from non-gay asylum seekers.
Last week I received a reply from the Freedom of Information Team at the Foreign Office, explaining that my request exceeded the £600 cost limit. With many caveats and a degree of discouragement, the FOI Team says I can refine my request, but they are not certain doing so would produce the answers I am seeking, and under the cost limit.
Before I proceed further, I would like advice from your organization about proceeding with more manageable and smaller requests, or an appeal.
Frankly, I believe the Foreign Office should already be keeping statistics related to reasons why asylum is asked for, especially when based on sexual orientation, and the resolution of claims based on homosexual persecution or torture in one's native land.
Does your organization believe the financial burdens cited by the Foreign Office are legitimate? How would you recommend I work with the FOI Team to persuade them to search for the records I want, and then produce them, without charging a large sum of money?
Furthermore, I see The Guardian recently ran a story about FOI requests declining by 8% this year over the same time period last year. Needless to say, I am doing my part to use the FOI law to bring more transparency to the business of the UK government, particularly as it deals with gay asylum requesters.
Any guidance you can share with me would be greatly appreciated.
Sincerely yours,
Michael Petrelis

Copy of the letter from the Home Office's FOI Team:

Dear Mr Petrelis,


Thank you for your email dated 3/12/07 where you have requested information on specific reasons for claiming asylum and their outcomes. This falls to be dealt with under the Freedom of Information Act 2000. I have listed your questions below for reference [in italics].


How many cases based on claims on the grounds of sexual orientation and transgender status, have been made, from all countries? How many of those claims were successful in obtaining asylum and how many failed?


Also, since I wish to compare the success and failure rates of gay-specific claims with the overall rate of claims made for non-gay reasons, please provide me with the success and failure statistics for all other asylum claims made with the BIA.


I am very interested in learning specific information on claims made by GLBT persons from Iran. How many claims from Iranian GLBT persons were made, the number granted asylum status, the number that have been refused, the number that later succeeded on appeal?


Furthermore, if the BIA has deported GLBT people back to Iran, individuals whose claims were based on sexual orientation or transgender status, how many were deported, and how many returned voluntarily?


Please also give me comparable figures for all other non-gay claimants from Iran; how many filed, success and failure rates, how many deported.


I also request statistics for all claimants from all countries who put in a claim based on sexual orientation or transgender status. How many claims made, success and failure rates, number of GLBT deported?


Please release to me the figures for all asylum claimants on all grounds over the same period for the purpose of comparison.


How many general non-GLBT claims accepted, how many outstanding claims, how many refused, how many awaiting removal, how many formally deported, how many returned voluntarily?


Unfortunately, I am not able to provide you with the information you have requested because the information is not centrally recorded. Whilst the number of claims and their outcomes are centrally recorded and published on the Research and Development Statistical Website (RDS), personal information and the reasons cited for claiming asylum are not. This information would be held on the person’s personal file.


Therefore, in order to answer your request it would be necessary to examine manually all asylum files to retrieve the information, which due to the numbers involved is not possible.


Additionally, as part of the Home Office, the Border and Immigration Agency is not obliged under section 12 of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 to comply with any information request where the estimated costs involved in supplying the information exceed the £600 cost limit.


I regret that we cannot supply you with the information that you have asked for, as to comply with your request would exceed this cost limit. This limit applies to all central Government Departments and is based on work being carried out by one member of staff at a rate of £25 per hour, which equates to 3½ days work per request.


The costs involved include locating and retrieving information you requested, and preparing our response to you. They do not include considering whether any information is exempt from disclosure, overheads such as heating or lighting, or disbursements such as photocopying or postage.


Your request would at present be too costly to answer. This is due to the fact that the data to these questions would be held on individual case files and is not held separately.


However, if you were to refine your request further so that it falls under the £600 cost limit, we will be pleased to consider it further. Although, on this occasion I am unable to suggest how you could refine your request.


Should you wish to refine your request, so that we can provide you with answers to your questions within the £600 cost limit, please write back to me at the above address.


I should also point out that if you were to break your original request down into a series of smaller applications, we might, depending on the circumstances of the case, decline to answer if the aggregated cost of complying would exceed £600.


You should also bear in mind that even if any new request were to fall below the £600 cost limit, some information which we hold on this matter which you have requested may fall to be withheld under the terms of a number of the substantive exemptions contained in Part II of the Freedom of Information Act 2000.


These exemptions could also make it necessary for us to extend the period for responding beyond the usual 20 working day target if they involve having to consider the public interest balancing test.


If you are dissatisfied with this response, you may request an independent internal review of our handling of your request by submitting your complaint to:


Border and Immigration Agency Customer Focus Team

11th Floor, West Wing, Block 'C'

Whitgift Centre

Wellesley Road

Croydon CR9 1AT


During the independent review the department’s handling of your information request will be reassessed by staff who were not involved in providing you with this response. Should you remain dissatisfied after this internal review, you will have a right of complaint to the Information Commissioner as established by section 50 of the Freedom of Information Act.


Yours faithfully,

Mr Feakins,

Freedom of Information Team,

Resource Management Directorate

1 comment:

  1. Anonymous2:02 PM

    Seems like an interesting subject. Its a pity that you couldn't get any information, but it does seem clear that reading every case file to find the information would in fact take considerable time (although most people would consider that running a search for a few key words would be reasonably quick if the files are held in electronic form).

    When the reply stated "...if you were to break your original request down into a series of smaller applications..." it suggested an approach I was considering would be an acceptable compromise. If a random subset of the asylum applicants was chosen, then it may be possible to find statistically significant information.
    I would suggest breaking the request into smaller chunks, with asylum seekers sorted by date, ie all asylum seekers who applied between Jan 1st,2005 -> Jan 31, 2005, so that by adding the results of several requests you can receive the results for a large number(all ?)of the asylum seekers, but this approach is probably not possible as the combined cost would quickly exceed 600 pounds. (if it is possible for many people to file requests and collate the results this option may be workable, also depending on the length of the period that could be covered by a 600 pound request, and the frequency with which you can make the requests it may be possible for a single person to do this over some period of time.) I suggest sorting by date rather than name so that asylum seekers who apply afterwards could later be added to the information more easily.

    If you are interested in persuing this information I would suggest getting help from a statistian to help with determining the amount of data required for statistically significant results, and/or requesting more information on the format in which the records are stored, so as to be able to design a database query, or script which can search through the data for selected keywords. Possibly the keyword search could be performed on a subset which is also checked manually, then if the results of both methods are consistent the keyword searches results when run on the whole data set would be more reliable.

    Apologies for the length of this comment, and goodluck with this inquiry.

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