Yahoo – AFP, Nicolas Delaunay, January 28, 2016
Amsterdam (AFP) - Omar had long dreamt of escaping discrimination in Syria, and drawn by exuberant images of the Gay Pride march in Amsterdam he hoped to find a new life in the Dutch city after fleeing war at home.
Amsterdam (AFP) - Omar had long dreamt of escaping discrimination in Syria, and drawn by exuberant images of the Gay Pride march in Amsterdam he hoped to find a new life in the Dutch city after fleeing war at home.
But four
months after arriving in the Netherlands, the 20-year-old was shocked to find
himself the victim of insults, taunts and intimidation from his fellow
travelling companions.
"Coming
to the Netherlands, which is the country of freedom and expressing yourself,
and being bullied there as a gay person, it was completely crazy," he told
AFP, speaking in English.
He is among
more than 54,000 refugees who made it to the Netherlands in 2015, crossing by
boat to Greece and then flying to Holland in September on a fake Spanish
passport.
"It
was surprising that those people, after making a long journey, tiring journey,
after they get there, they’re still capable of bullying and harassing me,"
he said.
Omar's
experience has not been unique, as gay refugees have found themselves caught
between the conservative cultural outlook of refugee families, and the more
tolerant Dutch attitude.
The
Netherlands was the first country in the world to legalise gay marriage as far
back as 2001, but acceptance of sexual diversity has not been the norm in Dutch
refugee centres.
Intimidated, isolated
For Omar, a
svelte law student from a well-off Syrian family with a carefully groomed five
o'clock shadow and neatly coiffed hair, discovering that the asylum camps did
not live up to his expectations was a shock.
"I
read all these articles that said that the Netherlands is very tolerant towards
gays and that Amsterdam is the capital of the LGBT community. I saw the images
of Gay Pride," he said.
But he says
he was insulted by other refugees. "They threatened to kill me, they told
me I was the shame of the refugees, they pushed me in the queue to get
coffee."
Intimidated
and isolated, many like Omar didn't dare leave their rooms. He would spend
hours there, headphones clamped to his ears.
"I was
lucky that I wasn't physically attacked," said Omar, who has finally found
shelter thanks to Lianda, a 25-year-old gay Dutch woman who offered him a room.
According
to the COC, an association working to defend gay rights, some gay refugees have
had even worse experiences including being sexually abused. The Dutch daily AD
reported some had their clothes set on fire or beds smeared with food and
faeces.
Another
group Secret Garden revealed two gay refugees tried to commit suicide.
One man was
so scared that he slept for a week in the woods surrounding the centre, AD
said, before like Omar, he found a place to stay with a welcoming Dutch host.
Between
mid-October and the end of December, the COC said it received 14 complaints of
mistreatment or abuse of gay refugees, compared to usually one or two every few
months.
"We
think this is only the tip of the iceberg," said COC director, Koen van
Dijk.
Most gays
refuse to lodge official complaints or to speak out publicly, fearing reprisals
or not knowing who to turn to.
Vulnerable
In a bid to
protect them, the Amsterdam municipality opened up two safe houses from October
to December for about a dozen people as an emergency measure.
The COC
welcomed the move, while insisting it should only be a temporary step. Now
those who were briefly accommodated in the safe houses have been re-lodged in
centres more adapted to their needs.
Five have
been placed in a separate wing of a smaller centre, where any abuse can be more
easily spotted and dealt with.
The Dutch
governmental organisation which receives and handles refugees, COA, has sought
to educate other migrants about the need for tolerance.
In extreme
cases the police can be called in, with COA considering gays a
"vulnerable" group along with children or victims of domestic
violence.
Omar
believes he will only truly begin his new life, once he has been granted
asylum. But he is already making new friends among Dutch society.
"I
expected to meet people who would accept me the way I am, and I did," he
said with a smile.
"Walking
in the street hand-in-hand with your boyfriend without fearing what people will
do, it's great."
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