The commerce graduate, who lives with his boyfriend in New South Wales, arrived on a student visa in March 2009 to study business management but he withdrew from the diploma course after six months.
He claimed that his father locked him in a bedroom and demanded that he enter the arranged marriage with an Indian woman when he last went to his home in Hyderabad in 2011.
He alleged that his male cousins also assaulted him, twisting his nose and holding a knife against his throat as a threat against his life unless he changed his sexuality.
He was granted refugee status by Australia's Refugee Review Tribunal, The Australian reported today.
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The Immigration Department in July 2012 accepted that the asylum-seeker was homosexual but rejected the claim that the mistreatment amounted to persecution.
It also found that he could safely move to another Indian city to escape danger.
The tribunal in January 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".
"His father works for (a government department). It is reasonable to accept that he would engage the police to find him.
"I also accept that he would not be able to live openly as a homosexual in India at any location, as if he did this would result in ostracism and probable further significant harm."
The young man also feared persecution in employment and the rental market, and faced the being laughed at and mocked for living with his boyfriend, the tribunal heard.
"We are committed to be together for life...The law in Australia treats everyone as equal," his boyfriend told the tribunal.