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As the public health emergency ends, a humanitarian crisis begins for LGBTQ asylum seekers

LGBTQIA+ people from around the world who come to the U.S. Southern border seeking safety from escalating discrimination and violence are now met with an impossible new system that denies us our human rights. Under Title 42, we struggled to find pathways from persecution in our home countries. When it was lifted on May 11, Biden replaced it with an asylum ban that forces us to stay in unsafe conditions while we try, and fail, to make an appointment on an app that does not work.

A gay asylum seeker myself, I experienced first-hand the challenges of proving my worthiness of protection under Title 42. Homosexuality is criminalized in a third of the world’s countries, forcing LGBTQIA+ people to face violence, harassment and discrimination, sometimes from our own government authorities. The Title 42 policy launched at the beginning of the COVID emergency prevented us from making an asylum case properly, leaving us in a state of vulnerability and without the protection we desperately needed. We faced increasing risks as we navigated detention or processing centers and were forced to return to countries where our lives were in danger.

I am now the client services manager at Lawyers for Good Government’s Project Corazon, where we coordinate legal services for thousands of LGBTQIA+ people fleeing danger, like I once did. Every day, I see how Biden’s new asylum ban makes pleading such claims nearly impossible. One of our clients, Mario, poses the perfect example. 

Mario, a gender non-conforming Guatemalan asylum seeker from the Maya Qʼeqchiʼ community, carries on their late father’s legacy as a traditional herbal medicine expert and human rights advocate. In March 2022, they organized peaceful protests against the country’s

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Donald Trump Says He Will Deny Visas for Transgender Olympic Athletes
Donald Trump announced Wednesday that he would direct Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to "reject any and all visa applications made by men attempting to fraudulently enter the United States while identifying as women athletes."After campaigning heavily about transgender issues, one of Trump's first executive orders declared that there are only two genders, "male and female."Last week, Trump signed another executive order instructing agencies to ensure that hospitals receiving federal research and education grants "end the chemical and surgical mutilation of children." He also signed an order to prevent transgender service members within the military.With Trump's other executive orders about transgender rights, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) started to remove language around gender identity and sexual orientation from its website.The president made the statement as he spoke about the 2028 Summer Olympic Games that will take place in Los Angeles, just before signing an executive order that would prevent transgender athletes from competing in women's and girls' sports."I'm also directing our Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem...to deny any and all Visa applications made by men attempting to fraudulently enter the United States while identifying themselves as women athletes," Trump said. "Trying to get into the games maybe where they are unable to get into the games."The Summer Olympics will be held from July 14 to 30, 2028.
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