Siskind Susser

Green Card LotteryABCs of ImmigrationHiring A LawyerHealth Care Info CenterImmigration SitesFashion, Arts & / Sports Newsletter

Siskind Immigration Bulletin Request Consultation Ask Visalaw Client Login
About the Firm
Our Offices
Our Team
In the News
Practice Areas and Services
Scheduling a Consultation
ABCs of Immigration
Requests For Proposals
Press Room


Immigration Forms
Government Processing Times
State Department Visa Bulletin
Siskind's Immigration Professional
Working in America
Washington Updates
Publications
The Visalaw Blog

MEMBER OF THE
AMERICAN
IMMIGRATION
LAWYERS
ASSOCIATION


LAUNCH CHAT

< back

Click for more articlesBOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS APPROVES ASYLUM CASE BASED ON FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION

On June 13, 1996 in the case of In re Fauziya KASINGA, the Board of Immigration Appeals (the appeals court overseeing the nation's immigration judges), overruled an immigration judge and held that the practice of female genital mutilation ("FGM") can be the basis for a grant of asylum under section 208 of the Immigration and Nationality Act. The case involved a female member of the Tchamba-Kunsuntu Tribe of Togo. The case involved a nineteen year old woman who fled Togo for Germany after she learned that her guardian was planning to force the woman to undergo the tribe's customary ritual of genital mutilation. The woman also presented evidence showing she was sold into a polygamous marriage to a husband twenty-six years her senior. According to the court records, this normally occurs for women at the age of fifteen, but the girl was protected from this by her then living father. According to the Board of Immigration Appeals (the "BIA"), the background materials submitted with the application document that the female genital mutilation practiced in some African countries, such as Togo, is of an extreme nature causing permanent damage, and not just a minor form of genital ritual. The BIA further held that this practice clearly inflicts harm or suffering upon the girl or woman who undergoes it. The BIA approved the application holding that the applicant was eligible for asylum because she has a well-founded fear of persecution on account of her membership in a particular social group in Togo.

Click for more articles

Siskind Susser Bland
1028 Oakhaven Rd.
Memphis, TN 38119
T. 800-343-4890 or 901-682-6455
F. 901-682-6394
Email: info@visalaw.com

Home | Immigration Bulletin | Green Card Lottery Center | ABCs of Immigration | Hiring A Lawyer
Hot Topics | Health Care Info Center | Immigration Sites | Search



This is an advertisement. Certification as an Immigration Specialist is not currently available in Tennessee. Siskind Susser Bland limits its practice strictly to immigration law, a Federal practice area, and we do not claim expertise in the laws of states other than where our attorneys are licensed. Siskind Susser Bland does not retain clients on the strength of advertising materials alone but only after following our own engagement procedures (e.g. interviews, conflict checks, retainer agreements). The information contained on this site is intended to educate members of the public generally and is not intended to provide solutions to individual problems. Readers are cautioned not to attempt to solve individual problems on the basis of information contained herein and are strongly advised to seek competent legal counsel before relying on information on this site. Siskind Susser Bland and its advertisers are independent of each other and advertisers on this site are not being endorsed by Siskind Susser Bland by virtue of the fact that they appear on this page. Site is maintained by Siskind Susser Bland's Memphis, TN office and overseen by Gregory Siskind. Copyright © 2003-2006 Siskind Susser Bland. All rights reserved.