Gay Persecution Rising Around The World- Book

Queersetti

Bastardo Suave
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By Kate Kelland

LONDON (Reuters) - Gay Pride marches are mainstream in some countries and gay politicians, actors and pop stars are out and proud -- but homophobia is growing across the world with increasing numbers of countries making it punishable by death.

A new book published by human rights group Amnesty International says despite widespread acceptance of gays and lesbians in some countries, violent persecution of homosexuals is on the rise and has reached "epidemic" levels in others.

"Lesbian and gay people who form or join organizations, be they political or social, are being violently persecuted in many parts of the world where before they might have been unnoticed," writes the book's British author Vanessa Baird.

She singles out Uganda, Zimbabwe, Jamaica, El Salvador and Latin America in particular, where she says "the targeting and killing of transgender people has become an epidemic on streets."

The book, "Sex, Love and Homophobia," offers an overview of the experiences of gay, lesbian and transgender people around the world and gives a snapshot of their status in various societies today.

One British gay man interviewed describes how he was subjected to "aversion therapy" as a teenager in the 1960s because his mother could not accept her son was gay.

"I was locked up alone in a mental institution for 72 hours with supposedly gay pornography and given drugs to make me vomit and become incontinent," he said. "They said the next part of the treatment was to apply electrodes to my genitals. After three days I begged to be let out."

In the United States, Baird notes an increasing polarization of attitudes. "While San Francisco boasts the largest openly gay community of any city in the world, anti-homosexual movements in Kansas, Ohio and Colorado advocate as a 'Christian duty' the rejection, and in some cases even killing, of gay people."

"And this is not all just a small group of nutters in the mid-West," she told Reuters. "This kind of evangelism is growing, and unfortunately a substantial part of it is homophobic and says homosexuality is a sin or a disease."

Baird's book also focuses on countries where homosexuality is punishable by death -- Iran, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Mauritania, Sudan, Pakistan, United Arab Emirates, Yemen and northern provinces of Nigeria.

Baird quotes Iran's 1991 Islamic penal law, which states "sodomy is a crime" and "punishment is death if the participants are adults, of sound mind and consenting."

South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu uses a foreword to the book to condemn homophobia as "every bit as unjust as that crime against humanity, apartheid."

"I could not have fought against the discrimination of apartheid and not also fight against the discrimination homosexuals endure," he wrote.

South Africa became the first country in the world in 1996 to include a clause in its constitution to guarantee freedom from discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation.
 
Gays Warned Not To Get Complacent
by 365Gay.com Newscenter Staff

Posted: June 29, 2004 8:06 pm ET

(Madrid) Gays and lesbians in the developed must have an obligation to help those struggling to attain rights in the Third World a Spanish Pride audience was told Monday.

Leonardo Fernandez, the coordinator of sexual minority issues for Amnesty International in Spain, said that simply being gay or trans is a criminal offense in 70 countries around the world.

"Some 70 countries still prosecute homosexuals under their law", said Fernandez as he marked World Pride Day in Madrid.

"The majority of Muslim countries have bans in place as does much of sub-Saharan Africa", added Fernandez, noting that the absence of the word homosexuality in a country's penal code does not mean they are not repressed through "legal hairsplitting" methods, such as in Egypt.

In nine of the 70 countries where homosexuality it a crime, the punishment id death.

In 2002 "Saudi Arabia condemned 44 people and executed four for the crime of homosexuality," Fernandez said.

"There are countries where it is penalized and prosecuted, and others where it is penalized, but de facto not prosecuted, and still others where it is not penalized but is de facto prosecuted," said Fernandez.

The majority of countries who track down gays and lesbians are in Africa and Asia, Fernandez said.

In the New World, Nicaragua is the only Hispanic country that still officially punishes homosexuality. In several English-speaking Caribbean countries it is still possible to be prosecuted for homosexuality.

As gays and lesbians attain their basic civil rights in the Developed World, Fernandez said, they must not become complacent while tens of thousands of gays are persecuted elsewhere.
 
Gay Students Give Schools Failing Grade
by 365Gay.com Newscenter Staff

Posted: June 28, 2004 2:02 pm ET

(New York City) Harassment, bullying and physical abuse of LGBT students goes unabated at most schools across the country according to the first major study of schools in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

The study was conducted by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, or GLSEN, and released today in New York.

Forty-two states received failing grades, or grades of “F”, in the report. New Jersey was ranked first with a score of 95 and one of only two “A”s on the list. Mississippi was at the bottom of the list, and the only state with less than zero points, with a score of –3.

“In classrooms where ‘faggot’ is heard more often than the pledge of allegiance and 39% of LGBT students report being physically assaulted because of their sexual orientation, our schools and the state’s that govern them are failing,” said GLSEN Executive Director Kevin Jennings.

The grade system was based on six categories, including existence of statewide safe schools laws, statewide non-discrimination laws, support for education on sexual health and sexuality, local safe schools policies, general education issues (e.g. student/teacher ratios, graduation rates) and existence of laws that stigmatize LGBT people.

“This report highlights what many safe schools advocates have feared – that our nation’s policymakers have failed to give schools the policies and programmatic support they need to change environments where bullying and harassment based on sexual orientation and gender identity are the rule and not the exception,” Jennings said.

The report found that the vast majority of students do not have legal protections against anti-LGBT bullying and harassment. Only 8 states and the District of Columbia currently have statewide legal protections for students based on sexual orientation. Only California, Minnesota and New Jersey include protections based on gender identity or expression. More than 75% of the approximately 47.7 million K-12 students in the U.S. go to schools that do not include sexual orientation and gender identity/expression as statewide protected classes alongside federally mandated protections based on religion, race, and national origin.

Seven states had their scores reduced for their respective laws that stigmatize LGBT people by specifically prohibiting any positive portrayal of LGBT issues or people in schools. Alabama, Arizona, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas and Utah have these laws.

The report also found that a growing number of states and school districts are making initial efforts to curtail harassment and discrimination in schools through legislative and policy change, but laws and policies have not been passed in numbers necessary to match the pervasive levels of harassment and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity/expression in America’s schools. 4 out of 5 LGBT students report being verbally harassed because of their sexual orientation – while 83% of LGBT students note that faculty and staff never or only rarely intervene when they are present and homophobic remarks are made.

STATE OF THE STATES
(In ranked order according to score. States with matching scores have been given matching ranks)

1 New Jersey
2 Minnesota
3 Washington, DC
4 Vermont
5 California
6 Connecticut
7 Wisconsin
8 Massachusetts
9 Rhode Island
10 Maryland
11 Nevada
12 Washington
13 New York
14 New Hampshire
15 Alaska
15 Hawaii
17 New Mexico
18 Iowa
19 Maine
19 Virginia
21 Florida
21 Illinois
23 Pennsylvania
24 Delaware
24 Tennessee
26 Missouri
26 North Dakota
26 West Virginia
29 Oregon
30 Kansas
30 Wyoming
32 Nebraska
32 North Carolina
34 Georgia
35 Colorado
36 Kentucky
37 Michigan
38 Indiana
39 Ohio
40 South Dakota
41 South Carolina
42 Utah
43 Texas
44 Montana
45 Arkansas
45 Oklahoma
47 Louisiana
48 Idaho
49 Alabama
50 Arizona
51 Mississippi
 
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