The short answer is yes. I believe in relation to the internally displaced we especially need to have in-country processing for LGBTQ persons. Requiring people to flee to Canada almost requires them to be rich before they can be refugees. They have to prove that they have assets tying them to their home country and that they do not need to flee.
The catch-22 is that many people who are as vulnerable as I have described, especially if they are trans, will not be getting a stable job that will allow them to acquire those ties. Allowing in-country processing is one very important special measure that I would propose.
Yes, in many contexts, certainly in the Caribbean, the worst thing you can be is LGBT. There are parents who will say, “at least my child is not gay”, even if they are a murderer, “at least my child is not gay”. The worst insult that you can give to a person in Jamaica is to call them a “batiman”, which is the equivalent of faggot. We are the lowest on the totem pole and, therefore, I do agree that in the urgent situation we're facing now, a special measure would be appropriate. I think a specific one that might help would be in-country processing.