Difference between revisions of "Sonia Burgess"

From LGBT Archive
Jump to: navigation, search
 
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Sonia Burgess''' (1947–2010)<ref name='Guardian obituary'>http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/2010/nov/02/david-burgess-obituary Fiona Bawdon, "David Burgess obituary: Influential lawyer and tenacious defender of asylum seekers' rights" ''The Guardian'' 2 November 2010</ref>  was an immigration lawyer, who obtained a number of landmark decisions from British courts and the [[European Court of Human Rights]] (ECHR) on behalf of immigrant clients. As a result of an ECHR decision<ref>Vilvarajah and others v. The United Kingdom, application no. 13163/87.</ref> in favour of 52 Tamil asylum seekers represented by Burgess, British law was changed to allow asylum seekers to appeal against refusal of asylum before having to leave the country.<ref name='Guardian obituary' />
+
[[File:David-Sonia-Burgess.jpg|thumb|Sonia Burgess]]'''Sonia Burgess''' (1947–2010)<ref name='Guardian obituary'>http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/2010/nov/02/david-burgess-obituary Fiona Bawdon, "David Burgess obituary: Influential lawyer and tenacious defender of asylum seekers' rights" ''The Guardian'' 2 November 2010</ref>  was an immigration lawyer, who obtained a number of landmark decisions from British courts and the [[European Court of Human Rights]] (ECHR) on behalf of immigrant clients. As a result of an ECHR decision<ref>Vilvarajah and others v. The United Kingdom, application no. 13163/87.</ref> in favour of 52 Tamil asylum seekers represented by Burgess, British law was changed to allow asylum seekers to appeal against refusal of asylum before having to leave the country.<ref name='Guardian obituary' />
  
She was born '''David Burgess''', was married for 20 years with two children. In 2005 she and her wife separated, and she began transition from male to female. She continued to use teh name David in her legal career.
+
She was born '''David Burgess''', was married for 20 years with two children. In 2005 she and her wife separated, and she began transition from male to female. She continued to use the name David in her legal career.
  
In 2010 she was murdered by being pushed under a train at [[King's Cross]] Underground station.
+
In 2010 she died after being pushed under a train at [[King's Cross]] Underground station. He friend Senthooran Kanagasingham, a trans woman known as Nina, whom Sonia Burgess had befriended, was jailed for life for manslaughter in December 2011.<ref>http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-16305570 "Man jailed for killing Sonia Burgess at King's Cross station" ''BBC News'' 22 December 2011</ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
Line 11: Line 11:
  
 
[[Category:Lawyers]]
 
[[Category:Lawyers]]
[[Category:Immigration and asylum]]
+
[[Category:Immigration]]
 
[[Category:Trans women]]
 
[[Category:Trans women]]
 
[[Category:Murder/manslaughter victims]]
 
[[Category:Murder/manslaughter victims]]
 +
[[Category:1947 births]] [[Category:2010 deaths]]

Latest revision as of 22:42, 12 January 2014

Sonia Burgess
Sonia Burgess (1947–2010)[1] was an immigration lawyer, who obtained a number of landmark decisions from British courts and the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) on behalf of immigrant clients. As a result of an ECHR decision[2] in favour of 52 Tamil asylum seekers represented by Burgess, British law was changed to allow asylum seekers to appeal against refusal of asylum before having to leave the country.[1]

She was born David Burgess, was married for 20 years with two children. In 2005 she and her wife separated, and she began transition from male to female. She continued to use the name David in her legal career.

In 2010 she died after being pushed under a train at King's Cross Underground station. He friend Senthooran Kanagasingham, a trans woman known as Nina, whom Sonia Burgess had befriended, was jailed for life for manslaughter in December 2011.[3]

References

Partly based on a Wikipedia article.

  1. 1.0 1.1 http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/2010/nov/02/david-burgess-obituary Fiona Bawdon, "David Burgess obituary: Influential lawyer and tenacious defender of asylum seekers' rights" The Guardian 2 November 2010
  2. Vilvarajah and others v. The United Kingdom, application no. 13163/87.
  3. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-16305570 "Man jailed for killing Sonia Burgess at King's Cross station" BBC News 22 December 2011