Where I live now
This is the list of incidents I am experiencing in where I live now. It seems I have been surrounded by the people working gaslighting against me. Anyway, this is from my observations.
-
I visited the immigration center in Geneve on the day of heavy snowing. When I asked the clerk at the information center how to get to the area I showed her the map, she asked me why I wanted to visit there and told me there was nothing around. She gave me the direction using bus later. Next day, I took a bus to that area and talked with a male clerk in the building. I showed him my Japanese passport and told him I was looking for political asylum. He told me if I have no plan for staying in this country, he suggested me to become a refugee. He refared me another address and told me to visit there. Since it was Friday, I visited another office on Monday.
-
During the weekend, I stayed in my hostel room and try to prepare my evidences. I had no wallet since someone stole it in Amsterdam, I just bought water and milk at the grocery store. I had traveler's check and the US dollars in my porch, I was using them for while to find a way to get my credit cards and other stuffs from Japan. I had two visitors of UN from England as my room mates. They are Chinese and Taiwanese and told me that they were studying masters in linguistics.
-
On Monday, I visited the building. Because the hostel provided me the free bus ride ticket around the city, I had no problem visiting the office with my language. Outside of the building, I saw a woman with two dogs. I thought it was a type of anchoring in my case. When I went in, there was a large line. I stayed on the line, and when it was my tern, I told the clerk that I am looking for asylum for the problem happened in the United States. Then, he referred me another building several blocks away.
-
I reached this building pretty early and they had a lunch break till 1:45pm. I sat on the large stone near the entrance and and I wrote down some more information for political asylum seeking. I saw several people walked out and into the building while I was there. Later, I went in and told the female clerk I was looking for political asylum. Then she asked me my passport and gave me some papers to fill in. After I submitted these documents, she gave me a paper and told me to visit the particular train station to travel to the refugee center. The document is valid for 24 hours and I must arrive at the center in that period. At the train station, the clerk handed me a “government-issued” train ticket and told me to take train to Verlobe. I took a wrong train and made some problem finding out the right train station. When I exit the station just before the correct one, I saw dozens of people walked out from the train with me. Then they took another train and went back. Picture. While I was waiting another train, I saw a military tank stopped by at the station and some solders walked around and then they left. It was about 5:30pm I reached the refugee center. It was just off from the train station. I saw an elderly African woman in waiting room. I submitted my Japanese passport there. Then the female guard checked my belongings. They kept all electronic devices including cell phones and PC as well as pens and pencils. The people are talking in French there. Later, the African woman and I had instruction together as we were the ones to
- to be continued..