Sure. I'll tell you one.
One case we had was of a Roma woman from Hungary, and the board found she was completely truthful. She'd had a terrible life experience of being beaten up repeatedly by skinheads. She'd gone to the police. She had never been protected, and eventually she came to Canada.
The board found that she was truthful, that she had had a terrible experience, that she shouldn't be going back to Hungary. One board member told her, “You have a very strong humanitarian case. I find that you're basically in fear of severe discrimination that is still continuing in your country, but I can't accept you as a refugee in danger of persecution.” Another board member might have made a different decision, but that board member said that discrimination in her case didn't reach the level of persecution, but it was a strong humanitarian case.
So that case came to us. She was a wonderful person in her community. She actually organized the Hungarian Roma in Toronto.