"If the applicant were to return and try to relocate, this would result in his being disowned by his family and probably they would seek to find and harm him," the tribunal found. The Refugee Review Tribunal ruled that if he returned to Hyderabad it was "reasonable to believe he would be assaulted and probably forced to marry, and if he were to refuse he would probably face more serious harm and be killed". It also observed that he could safely move to another Indian city to escape danger. Australia's immigration department in July 2012 accepted that the asylum-seeker was homosexual but rejected the claim that the mistreatment amounted to persecution. He hid in her house until he got a return ticket to reach Australia, the report said. The student escaped his family home with the help of a female friend. The student claimed that he was also threatened by a local Islamic cleric. He alleged that his male cousins also assaulted him, twisting his nose and holding a knife against his throat. When the man last returned to his home city of Hyderabad in India in 2011, he claimed that his father locked him in a bedroom and pressured him to enter into an arranged marriage. Stay tuned for all the latest updates on Ram Mandir! Click here
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