Times Colonist

Gay Chechen men remain fearful in Canada

- The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — The head of a Toronto organizati­on that helped gay men flee torture and abuse in Chechnya says they are coming to terms with life in Canada, but remain fearful for their safety.

Kimahli Powell, executive director of Rainbow Railroad, said he believes the 22 men who have so far arrived in Canada are safe from reprisals because there are few Chechens here who could do them harm.

“In Canada, they still don’t fully realize that they’re safe. There are lots of fears about a possible Canadian Chechen diaspora,” he said Thursday.

“As far as we know, Canada does not have a Chechen diaspora,” he said.

“As far as we’re concerned, they’re safe, and can start to become integrated into the community.”

Powell said the men are traumatize­d, and the focus now is on helping the asylum seekers adjust to life in what is an unfamiliar, albeit safe country.

The men are among 31 the government has given permission to come to Canada in a clandestin­e effort that began after reports of torture and persecutio­n of gay men in the Russian republic first surfaced last spring, he said.

The final nine are expected to arrive imminently, he said.

The government has not commented on the Chechen effort, but Powell credits Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland and Liberal MP Randy Boissonnau­lt, the government’s LGBTQ special adviser, with spearheadi­ng the initiative.

Refugee advocates have been pushing the federal government to make it easier for members of the Russian LGBTQ community to come to Canada after the reports emerged this year that gay and bisexual men were being imprisoned and tortured in Chechnya.

In June, the Immigratio­n Department announced a policy change that gave some failed asylum seekers from Russia a second chance to stave off deportatio­n if they could make the case that they face harm at home.

Powell travelled to Chechnya in May to meet some of the persecuted men.

“They were in a state of constant fear,” he said.

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