Friday, March 07, 2008

Gay Iranian Faces Deportation from Netherlands

From the Associated Press - March 7, 2008

Gay Iranian Faces Deportation From Netherlands

(The Hague) Mehdi Kazemi was waiting in a Dutch center for asylum seekers Friday as the country's highest court mulled his fate — in what campaigners fear could be a life or death decision for the gay Iranian teen.

Kazemi, 19, says he traveled to London to study English in 2005 and applied for asylum in Britain after learning that his lover in Iran had been executed for sodomy, his lawyer Borg Palm said.

Kazemi's case highlights not only the plight of homosexuals in Iran, but also differences in the way European Union allies deal with asylum seekers.

After Kazemi's application was rejected by British authorities, he fled to Europe and applied for asylum in the Netherlands, where usually strict immigration authorities are more liberal when dealing with Iranian gays because of persecution they face at home.

"When the immigration service hears about you being gay, they will be less strict," said Justice Ministry spokeswoman Karen Temmink.

However, because Kazemi had already applied for asylum and been rejected in Britain, the Dutch government is refusing to consider his case and insists he must be sent back to Britain, citing the European Union's 2003 Dublin Regulation, which declares that the member state where asylum seekers first enter the EU is responsible for processing their claims.

Palm has applied to the Supreme Court for a provisional ruling to let Kazemi stay here until Dutch authorities have considered his asylum request. The court is expected to issue a decision some time next week.

Palm said Kazemi was in such despair about the case he is on suicide watch in a center for rejected asylum seekers in the port city of Rotterdam.

Even if he is granted more time, the Dutch still appear likely to send Kazemi back to Britain.

"We believe the U.K. system to be fair and honest," said Temmink.

Britain's Home Office declined comment on the case, saying it does not discuss individual asylum applications, but it seems unlikely authorities would reverse their earlier rejection.

"If you apply for asylum a second time, the general rule is that you have to have something new," said Palm. "He does not have anything new."

Campaigners in the Netherlands fear that means Kazemi could be sent back to Iran from Britain.

"Now he is here, we cannot allow him to go back to England where he might run the risk of being sent back to his own country, which we consider so dangerous for him," said Rene van Soeren of the Dutch gay rights group, COC.

However, Britain's Border and Immigration Agency has issued a statement that could give Kazemi hope.

"We examine with great care each individual case before removal and we will not remove anyone who we believe is at risk on their return," the agency said.

Matteo Pegoraro, president of Italian-based gay rights group EveryOne that is lobbying for Kazemi, said he knew of 10 gay people executed in Iran since 2005, based on reports from nongovernment groups and activists.

When asked about the executions last year on a controversial visit to New York's Columbia University, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad drew derisive laughter by saying: "In Iran we don't have homosexuals like in your country ... I don't know who's told you that we have this."

Soeren laments the fact that Kazemi did not apply for asylum first in the Netherlands.

"If he had only applied in Holland his case would be over and he would be granted a residence permit without a hesitation," he said.

Asylum for Mehdi - No Deportation to Iran

From: Peter Tatchell <press@petertatchell.net>
Date: Fri, Mar 7, 2008 at 8:10 AM

Mehdi must stay – No deportation to Iran

The Home Office bid to deport an Iranian gay asylum seeker will put
him at risk of arrest, imprisonment, torture and execution

London – 7 March 2008

Gay Iranian asylum applicant Mehdi Kazemi is in detention in the
Netherlands. He is fighting attempts by the Dutch government to return
him to the UK.

Mehdi fled Britain and sought asylum in the Netherlands because the
British government wants to deport him back to Iran.

The gay human rights group OutRage! campaigns on asylum issues and
supports Mehdi Kazemi's claim for refugee status.

OutRage! spokesperson Peter Tatchell said:

"The Home Office decision to deport Mehdi back to Iran is shameful and
reckless.

"If returned to Tehran, he will be at risk of imprisonment, torture
and execution.

"Gay men in Iran are hanged from public cranes using the barbaric
method of slow strangulation, which is deliberately designed to cause
maximum suffering.

"This deportation order borders on a criminal decision. It violates
the government's legal obligations under the Refugee Convention.

"The Home Office country report on Iran ignores the true scale of
homophobic repression, in order to justify the deportation of lesbian
and gay Iranians.

"I have been tipped off by a senior Home Office official that
government orders are to cut asylum numbers at almost any price.

"Staff are encouraged to assume that all asylum applicants are bogus
and to play down the merits of individual cases, such as Medhi's,"
said Mr Tatchell.

Background

Here is the Everyone organisation's link about Medhi's case. Please
scroll down to read Mehdi's own statement, as given to the Iranian
Queer Rights Organisation:

http://www.everyonegroup.com/EveryOne/MainPage/Entries/2008/2/25_Iranian_gay_refugee_risks_deportation_from_the_United_Kingdom._Urgent_appeal_to_Europe.html


Need to reform the handling of LGBT asylum claims

"The Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith MP, must urgently remedy her
department's five failings with regard to the treatment of LGBT asylum
claimants," added Mr Tatchell.

"Currently, the Home Office stands accused of:

-  No training on sexual orientation issues for asylum staff and adjudicators
-  No explicit official policy supporting the right of refugees to
claim asylum on the grounds of sexual orientation
-  No action to stamp out the abuse of LGBT refugees in UK asylum
detention camps
-  No accurate, up-to-date information on the victimisation of LGBT
people in violently homophobic countries
-  No access to adequate legal representation for LGBT asylum applicants

"These are systemic failings by a callous and indifferent government
that is more interested in cutting asylum numbers than in ensuring a
fair, just and compassionate asylum system," concluded Mr Tatchell.


ENDS

--
Peter Tatchell is the Green Party parliamentary candidate for Oxford East
http://www.greenoxford.com/ and www.petertatchell.net

Last Refugee Bid Refused to Gay Malaysian (Who Fled to Canada)

From the CBC in Canada - March 5, 2008

Last refugee bid refused to gay Malaysian


A Malaysian man who is to be deported Thursday after being refused refugee status is pleading with the federal government to intervene and let him stay in Canada.

Kulenthiran Amirthalingan made a last-ditch appeal to Immigration Minister Diane Finley, asking her to stay the March 6 deportation order to his native Malaysia. He fears persecution because he is gay.

Amirthalingan, who lives in Montreal, appeared in Ottawa at a news conference Wednesday along with New Democrat MP Thomas Mulcair to request Finley's intervention.

"I am deported back to Malaysia, and I fear my imprisonment, so I would like to ask Ms. Finley to let me stay in Canada," he said.

The soft-spoken Kulen, as he is known to his friends, says he fears for his life if he is sent back to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, where he experienced discrimination, was harassed and abused for being gay.

Homosexuality is a crime in Malaysia, and punishable by 20 years in jail or caning.

Section 377 of Malaysian's Penal Code states anal and oral sex are illegal whether it's between men, or heterosexual couples.

The penal code also outlaws any sex that is against the "order of nature," whether it is sex between two men, two women or in a heterosexual relationship.

Amirthalingan moved to Montreal in 2003 and applied for refugee status in Canada on humanitarian grounds, arguing his life was in danger because his homosexuality made him a target of Malaysian police who detained him for five days, and abused him, physically and sexually.  

"They were punching me, pushing me down to the floor and putting their leg on me to confess that I am a gay," he told CBC last week.

Being gay in Malaysia is difficult, and he is "a bit afraid for my safety" if he's forced to go back.

"I don't have family support too, because my brothers and sisters are against [me] because I'm gay."

Amirthalingan lost his refugee status case because the judge was not convinced he was gay. He filed for a humanitarian appeal and a pre-removal risk assessment, which were both rejected by the Quebec Immigration Board.

Mulcair made a public plea to Finley on Wednesday after Amirthalingan's supporters contacted his Outremont riding office.

"What is really shocking is that they're threatening to deport Kulen not for something he did but for who he is," he said in French at the Ottawa news conference.

"That's a transgression of Canada's fundamental values, and we're having a hard time understanding the government's attitude, and we want this to transcend all partisan considerations."

Montreal human rights lawyer Julius Grey believes Amirthalingan's case merits the immigration minister's review, because "in Canada it is well-established that homosexuality can be a motive for refugee status."

"It would be contrary to my conscience to send back a homosexual to an openly Muslim country," he told CBC last week. "I would say chances of something terrible happening are so high, that it would be unconscionable to not act."

The Malaysia co-ordinator for Amnesty International Canada, Margaret John, said it's not clear whether Amirthalingan's life is at risk "but certainly his right to freedom of expression is at risk" she said.

"He may be charged with being a homosexual, he may be fined, he may be imprisoned."

Petitions to Save Mehdi from Deportation

He a link to a petition to save Mehdi.

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/

And here's another.

 www.ipetitions.com/petition/UKMADHI

Background Information on Mehdi Kazemi, Gay Iranian Facing Deportation from the Netherlands

Some background information on Mehdi's case:

'A gay teenager from Iran who fled the UK for the Netherlands last
year after his appeal for asylum was refused is expected to be
returned to the UK today by Dutch authorities.

London Liberal Democrat MEP Baroness Sarah Ludford has written to the
Home Secretary to request her to urgently review the case of
19-year-old Medhi Kazemi, who faces possible execution by stoning if
he returns to Iran.

Baroness Ludford, who is the Liberal Democrat European justice
spokesperson and a member of the European Parliament's Gay and Lesbian
Rights Intergroup, said:

"Jacqui Smith must recognise and act on the real threat of persecution
and even execution which Mr Kazemi would face if he was to be deported
to Iran.

"As with Ms Pegah Emambakhsh, an Iranian lesbian who was granted a
reassessment of her own asylum case after I and other parliamentarians
intervened, we need the Home Office to accept the facts and genuinely
consider the risks of deportation.

"We cannot on the one hand claim that we live in a modern and liberal
society if on the other hand we are willing to send asylum seekers
back to face stoning purely because of their sexuality."

At the end of last year a court in the Netherlands ruled Medhi must be
returned back to the UK.

He fled England last spring after his visa ran out and a Home Office
tribunal dismissed his appeal against deportation.

It is feared that if Medhi is ordered to be deported back to Iran he
may face execution for being gay.

Medhi left Iran in 2004 to travel to England on a student visa and
continue his education.

While he was in the UK he learned that Iranian authorities had
arrested his boyfriend Parham back in Iran, and that his boyfriend had
been forced to name Medhi as someone with whom he had had a
relationship.

Medhi's father had then received a visit from the Tehran police, with
an arrest warrant for his son as they wanted to put him on trial.

In late April, Medhi's uncle told him Parham had been put to death.

The Canada-based Iranian Queer Organisation, said:

"The European governments claim to be the champions of human rights
and democracy and condemn Iran frequently for its violation of human
rights; and yet they willingly pave the road for the government of
Iran to go ahead with its human rights abuses, and
arrest and execute an identified Iranian gay.

"Today, they sentence Medhi to torture and possible death by deporting
him to Iran, and tomorrow they issue statements commending this
violent and unlawful act of execution."

Human rights group EveryOne has started a campaign to save Medhi.

"We are asking the European Union to adopt a tough stance and overrule
the decision taken by Gordon Brown's Government," the group in a
statement.

"The United Kingdom is continuing undaunted to violate the
international conventions on human rights and the rights of refugees,
as well as the European directives and laws which determine the
requests for political asylum.

"They did it with the Iranian lesbian Pegah Emambakhsh, when they
refused her refugee status, claiming she was unable to prove her
homosexuality."

EveryOne is making an official appeal to the European Union and the UN
High Commissioner for Refugees, António Guterres, to put an immediate
stop to the deportation and ensure Medhi is given refugee status.

On January 31st the European Commission said:

"Member states cannot expel or refuse refugee status to homosexual
persons without taking into account their sexual preferences, the
information relevant to the situation in their country of origin,
including the laws and ways in which they are applied."

Medhi will have to be repatriated to his country of origin because
according to the British government, he does not run any risk there.

Medhi fled in secret from England, intending to take refuge in Canada,
but was blocked by the German border police.

After hearing his story, he was sent to Holland, a country known for
granting refugee status to Iranian homosexuals, and again handed over
to the police.

However, the United Kingdom sent a formal request to Holland asking
for Medhi's return to Britain, in order to proceed with his
deportation to Iran.'

Canada: "Don't Send Me Back to Malaysia," Gay Man Pleads

From the Montreal Gazette

Friday » March 7 » 2008
 
Don't send me back to Malaysia, gay man pleads

Montrealer scheduled to be deported today fears he will be imprisoned in homeland

ELIZABETH THOMPSON
The Gazette

Thursday, March 06, 2008

This case has triggered an uproar on Parliament Hill. Check Elizabeth Thompson's blog to find out more about it.

-----

His voice cracking and his eyes filling with tears, Montreal resident Kulenthiran Amirthalingam made a last-ditch effort yesterday to avoid being deported today to his native Malaysia, saying he fears he will be thrown in prison simply because he is gay.

But his trek through a driving snowstorm to Ottawa in a bid to persuade Immigration Minister Diane Finley to grant him a ministerial certificate to allow him to stay in Canada appears to have been for naught.

An Immigration Department spokesperson simply said people are expected to leave once their options have run their course.

Finley's office didn't return a phone call from The Gazette.

Amirthalingam's case highlights what some say is an emerging trend by homosexuals who face imprisonment or danger in their home countries to claim refugee status in Canada.

Amirthalingam said he first arrived in Canada in July 2002, then applied for refugee status in January 2003 after he returned to his home country on a visit only to be harassed by the family of his former lover and thrown into jail.

"For five days, I was physically, verbally, sexually harassed by the police there," Amirthalingam told reporters.

His refugee claim was rejected, however, on the ground the panel hearing his claim did not believe it was credible.

Outremont MP Thomas Mulcair of the New Democratic Party called on Finley yesterday to allow Amirthalingam to remain on humane and compassionate grounds. Amirthalingam was learning French and volunteering with local community groups, he noted.

"In Parliament, despite the profound differences that sometimes exist on issues involving our society or the economy, there are some human values that unite us. And stopping somebody from being deported to face imprisonment and possibly torture, not for anything he has done but because of who he is, goes against Canadian values," Mulcair said, a tremor in his voice.

In addition to the problems Amirthalingam faces because of his homosexuality, he is diabetic, has a heart condition and is blind in one eye, Mulcair added.

Mulcair wrote a letter to Finley last week and received a verbal response Monday in which her office refused even to consider the request not to deport Amirthalingam.

Amnesty International and Montreal lawyer Julius Grey have also written letters to Finley, asking her to use her ministerial powers to stop the planned deportation.

In its travel report for Malaysia, the Canadian government warns Canadians that homosexuality is against the law in that country.

"Homosexuality is illegal," the department's website says.

"Convicted offenders may face lengthy jail sentences and fines."

Matthew McLauchlin, co-chairman of the NDP's gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender positive action committee, said Amirthalingam's case illustrates an emerging trend in refugee issues and highlights the shortcomings in Canada's refugee system in evaluating their cases.

"There is a young man in Toronto who was told the judge didn't think he was gay because he wasn't having sex at age 14 when he was living non-status with Seventh-day Adventists," McLauchlin said.

"There have been women told they couldn't be lesbian because they have long hair and showed up for the interviews in high heels.

"These people have no training whatsoever in how to deal with these issues."

There were an estimated 2,000 gay and lesbian refugee claimants in 2004, McLauchlin said.

Immigration and Refugee Board officials did not return a phone call from The Gazette.

HIV and Gay in Tunisia: A Twin Taboo

From Reuters - March 7, 2008

TUNIS (Reuters Life!) - Homosexual men living with HIV/AIDS In the Arab world face a twin taboo, but Karim doesn't look like someone burdened by stigma.

Smiling and self-assured, the healthy looking Tunisian says his peace of mind comes from accepting what he cannot change, living in the moment and taking care to present a normal face to the world.

The 34-year-old draws the menace from his infection by seeing it as his offspring.

"Personally, I accept the illness. I consider the virus my little baby. Together, we make up the same person," he said.

Dressed in jeans and a V-neck pullover, Karim sounds matter-of-act about his condition, but acknowledges that it wasn't always so easy.

Karim first learned he had HIV when he returned to his native country from France in 2005. He was infected during an eight-year relationship with a French man.

"First, I thought I had flu. But my health kept worsening and analysis showed I had AIDS. A person who was so important to me had infected me," he said.

"I WAS FURIOUS"

"At the beginning, I was furious. I hated everything. But afterwards, I thought that it's better to be hopeful than crying."

He decided to face up to the illness, sensing that a positive mental attitude would translate into stronger physical health. Also, he is on anti-retroviral medication.

"I'm quite good. My health situation is stable. HIV-positives who can't move or even walk are people who refuse the fact that they're infected with HIV. They suffer because they're in very low spirits and not because of the virus."

"I have a principle in my life which says we must make the most of life while we still have its advantages. So, I still enjoy my life. I consider AIDS a flu."

He lives with his Tunisian boyfriend, who is uninfected. They have protected sex.

"I was sincere. I told him the truth and he accepted. His attitude really moved me," said Karim.

"ENJOY THE MOMENT"

Unlike most Tunisians, Karim refuses to draw up plans for his future, even in the short-term, as he doesn't know when AIDS will bring his life to an end.

"I can't do long-term projects. I can't even plan for the summer holidays. I think just about what I can do in the next week and enjoy the moment."

HIV/AIDS is a common topic of conversation widely discussed in many Western countries. But it is still an invisible disease in north Africa and many other parts of the world.

Karim, one of 1,428 Tunisians who live with HIV, has learnt to keep his status a tightly guarded secret in a society where fear, prejudice and ignorance about the disease prevail.

Seventy new cases are declared per year in the North African country, according to official figures.

HIV-positive people who become known as such are shunned by society.

"To live in Tunisia, people infected with HIV have to lie and never say they suffer from AIDS," he said.

"I told my boss, because he's French. If I told a Tunisian about that he'd have a cardiac arrest," said Karim.

"I hate the Tunisian way of thinking. They present themselves as open-mind people and cultured. But it's just a mask," he said.

"In reality, they still think they can be infected via the air."

Pakistan: Women Push for Political Space in Patriarchy

Global Poll Shows Strong Support for Gender Equality

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Organization of Islamic Conference Calls for Action Against Blasphemous Cartoons

From the Daily Times of Pakistan - March 5, 2008

OIC calls for action against blasphemous cartoons

OIC calls for action against blasphemous cartoons




UNITED NATIONS: Pakistan, as chairman of the Organisation of Islamic
Conference (OIC), on Monday urged UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to
call on governments to take a firm stand against the publication of
blasphemous cartoons in the western media.

“The
right to freedom of expression carries with it special duties and
responsibilities, and does not provide a licence to insult and hurt the
sentiments and beliefs of others,” a statement issued by the chairman
of OIC in New York said.

The OIC urged the secretary-general to
“call upon the governments of the states that condone the publication
of these blasphemous caricatures and media material, as well as the
campaigns for anti-Islamic regulations, to take all possible legal and
administrative measures to prevent the repetition or continuation of
these deliberate offensive acts, which impinge greatly on the right to
freedom of thought, conscience and religion, of the followers of Islam”.

Tajikistan Moves to Curb Prostitution

From the Institute for War & Peace Reporting - March 4, 2008

Tajikistan Moves to Curb Prostitution

The police ministry wants to criminalise the sex industry, while experts insist the root cause is poverty.

Full article...

French Muslims Promote 'Cool' Islam


Medine in the municipal dance hall, Le Havre
Medine's raps set out to sell Islam to French society


French Muslims promote 'cool Islam'

From BBC - March 5, 2008


Amel Boubekeur of the School of Social Studies in Paris








They are trying to promote an Islamic identity - but also an ethic of solidarity, charity, responsibility for each other












Amel Boubekeur

Full article...




Anglican Bishop Visits Kuwait

From the Arab Times - March 4, 2008

Anglican Bishop visits Kuwait

Malaysian Voters Wooed with Islam

Turkey Strives for 21st Century Form of Islam

From the Guardian Unlimited - March 4, 2008
Turkey Strives for 21st Century Form of Islam

"They see this not as a revolution, but as a return to the original
Islam, away from the excessive conservatism that has stymied all
reforms for the last few centuries. It's somewhat akin to the Christian
reformation, although not the same."



Full article...

Visiting Scholar Disputes Notions About Islam

March 4, 2008

The Hays Daily News







By WILL MANLY

Hays Daily News

Her very existence and her presence on the Fort Hays State
University campus defeats some of the notions that isolated
Midwesterners have about Islam, says Ruksana Kibria.

A visiting Fulbright Scholar in town for about a month, Kibria has
visited philosophy classes and will lecture to interested audiences.
The Fort Hays philosophy department drafted her to try and dispel
misconceptions about Muslims.

Much of what Americans hear about Islam comes from Iraq, Iran and
Saudi Arabia -- where terrorism and abuse of women catch the headlines.
But Islam is much more than the Arab world, much more than the plight
of women in Saudi Arabia, much more than Sunnis fighting Shiites in
Iraq, she said.


"There is a tendency to equate Islam with the Arab world and the
Arab world with Islam," Kibria said. "That is far from true. All
Muslims are not Arab, and all Arabs are not Muslims."

Kibria, for instance, is from Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority nation
just east of India. It's a part of the world where women have equal
opportunities, moderate Muslims rule the day, government works to
achieve stability and people generally prosper.

"It is a moderate Muslim country, and if this moderation could be
sustained. it could act as a model for other Muslim countries," Kibria
said.

Kibria's public speaking engagements include a community lecture at
7 p.m. Thursday at Hays Public Library. She will discuss perceptual
gaps between the West and the Muslim world. She also will lecture at a
Times Talk on campus at noon March 11 in the Memorial Union's Stouffer
Lounge. There, she will discuss U.S. interests in south Asia. And she
will discuss religion in democracy at 7 p.m. March 13 at the library.

That she is allowed to do so indicates how modern and open a Muslim country like Bangladesh can be, she said.

"Women are free to get employment in any service they want. Women
have equal opportunity in all government services, even the armed
forces. Two of our former prime ministers have been women," Kibria
said. "I'm a Muslim woman, but I'm teaching at a university. And I've
come to a western country, the United States, to talk about my country.
That says a lot about liberal political-social system of Bangladesh."

Senegalese Anti-Gay Protestors Teargased

Senegalese Homosexuals Flee

afrol News - Senegalese homosexuals flee - February 25, 2008

Dozens of Senegalese homosexuals are
reported to have fled to the neighbouring countries [The Gambia and
Mali] to escape the looming threats on their lives.
The
Gambia may not be a safe hideout for homosexuals, considering President
Yahya Jammeh's personal hatred of homosexuality. He had earlier
threatened to crush any act of homosexuality in the country.

Full article...



Africa's Lesbians Demand Change



Anti-gay protest in Kampala
Homosexuality remains taboo across much of Africa








From BBC - February 27, 2008

Lesbians from across Africa have called on African governments to stop treating homosexuals like criminals.


The demand came as about 75 activists gathered at a conference in Maputo, the capital of Mozambique.


The Coalition of African Lesbians called the conference to highlight discrimination across the continent.

Full article...


Related Links:












African Lesbians Fight for Decriminalization

Ms. Magazine, CA - Feb 27, 2008

... and Gay Association report, "Thirty-eight of the 85 UN members that outlaw homosexuality are in Africa." Senegal, one of the countries that criminalizes ...

Full article...

Violence Leaves Young Iraqis Doubting Clerics

From the New York Times - March 4, 2008


Johan Spanner for The New York Times


Muath, 19, a Sunni, joined an insurgent group in Baghdad last spring to help support his family.

Full article...


Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Danish Art Show in Berlin Reopens After Muslim Threat

From Bloomberg

Danish Art Show in Berlin Reopens After Muslim Threat, DPA Says

By Catherine Hickley

March 4 (Bloomberg) -- Berlin authorities said a Danish art show that caricatures Islam's holiest place will reopen with private guards after protests by Muslims, Deutsche Presse Agentur reported, citing the local council for the city's Mitte district.

The protesters had demanded the removal of a poster showing the Kaaba in Mecca with the caption ``Stupid Stone,'' DPA said. Police will patrol the gallery, which is run by the Kunstverein Tiergarten, once an hour, DPA said.

The exhibition, by the Danish artists' group Surrend, opened on Feb. 22 and was closed a few days later after a group of Muslims disrupted it and threatened violence if the Kaaba poster was not removed, DPA said.

IGLHRC Announces 2008 Felipa de Souza Award Winners

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March 4, 2008
 

INTERNATIONAL GAY AND LESBIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION

IGLHRC Announces 2008
Felipa de Souza Award Winners


For Immediate Release
Contact: Hossein Alizadeh, IGLHRC Communications Coordinator, 212-430-6016
Sarah Tobias, IGLHRC Communications and Research Manager, 212-430-6034

(New York, NY, March 4, 2008) - The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) announced today that it would award its 2008 Felipa de Souza Award to two outstanding nominees-the Iranian Queer Organization (IRQO) and Chilean trans activist Andrés Ignacio Rivera Duarte. IGLHRC's Felipa Award recognizes the courage and effectiveness of groups or leaders dedicated to improving the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex (LGBTI) and other individuals stigmatized and abused because of their sexuality or HIV status. Each award winner will receive a $5,000 stipend. The awards will be presented at a special ceremony in New York on April 28, 2008.

"We are so honored this year to be able present this award to two extraordinarily powerful voices for LGBTI human rights," said Paula Ettelbrick, IGLHRC's executive director. IRQO provides absolutely vital assistance for lesbian and gay Iranians fleeing the threat of death in their home country, literally helping to save and rebuild countless lives and Andrés Rivera has been an enormously courageous pioneer for the rights of trans people in Chile. It is truly our pleasure to honor all that these remarkable activists have done to promote human rights and dignity for LGBTI people."

Andrés Ignacio Rivera Duarte
Andrés Ignacio Rivera Duarte,
Organización de Transexuales por la Dignidad de la Diversidad

In 2005, Andrés Ignacio Rivera Duarte, a trans man, founded Organización de Transexuales por la Dignidad de la Diversidad, the only NGO in Chile dedicated to fighting for trans people's rights, which he currently heads. He has worked with government and the local health system to facilitate the evaluation, treatment and surgery of trans people, and organized the first Rancagua debate on the Civil Union Pact. But his work is not just with high-level officials; he also provides direct support to sex workers-visiting them nightly to distribute coffee, food and information about HIV/AIDS. Himself the victim of employment discrimination, he fought a landmark lawsuit, bringing issues of gender identity into the public view, finally winning the right for trans people to legally change their name and sex in 2007.

Founded in 2001 as the Rainbow Group, and known as the Persian Gay and Lesbian Organization until 2006, IRQO serves as the representative of thousands of Iranian queers, giving visibility to a population the Iranian government is aggressively trying to silence. Based in Toronto, Canada, with members working out of Europe and Iran, IRQO has played a key role in documenting LGBT rights violations in Iran and in mobilizing public opinion to pressure Iranian authorities to end the inhumane treatment of sexual minorities. The organization also helps gay and lesbian refugees around the world to fight deportation orders that would return them to Iran-where they could face torture or the death penalty-and helps them obtain asylum in friendly countries. IRQO strives to increase the self-esteem of Iranian queers by offering phone counseling inside Iran and raising awareness of homosexuality in the Persian-speaking media.

Arsham Parsi
Arsham Parsi, IRQO's
executive director

"We are thrilled that the international community has come to acknowledge the LGBT rights struggle in Iran," said Arsham Parsi, IRQO's executive director. "We can no longer claim that no one cares about our plight. This is not an award just for IRQO. We accept this award on behalf of all Iranian queers who have been long fighting for their basic human rights. The stipend will allow IRQO to continue its campaign for human rights and to challenge homophobia in Iran."

"I receive this award with humility and honor," said Andrés Rivera. "On behalf of murdered trans people, of those who fight to build a more egalitarian and fair world, and of those trans people who day-by-day live with the pain of not being considered human beings."

Nominations for the Felipa Award are solicited each year from activists around the world. Nominees go through a rigorous review by the staff, board and the International Advisory Committee of IGLHRC. The award embodies the spirit of Felipa de Souza, who endured persecution and brutality after proudly declaring her intimacy with a woman during a 16th Century inquisition trial in Brazil.

Previous Felipa Award winners include: the Blue Diamond Society (BDS) of Nepal; Rauda Morcos, founder of ASWAT (Voices) the first group for Palestinian lesbians; Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe (GALZ), the first organization to push for the human rights of LGBT people in Zimbabwean society and to provide counseling services and HIV/AIDS prevention campaigns; Simon Tseko Nikoli, the famed LGBT/HIV activist from South Africa; Jamaica Forum for Lesbians, All-Sexuals and Gays, whose leader Brian Williamson was murdered in 2004; Lohana Berkins, a globally recognized transgender activist from Argentina; and Maher Sabry, the Egyptian activist who notified IGLHRC of the arrests of the Cairo 52, a group of 52 men who were arrested by the Egyptian police at a Cairo gay nightclub in 2001.

For more information regarding IGLHRC's Felipa de Souza Award and its A Celebration of Courage events, visit: www.iglhrc.org

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The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) is a leading human rights organization solely devoted to improving the rights of people around the world who are targeted for imprisonment, abuse or death because of their sexuality, gender identity or HIV/AIDS status. IGLHRC addresses human rights violations by partnering with and supporting activists in countries around the world, monitoring and documenting human rights abuses, engaging offending governments, and educating international human rights officials. A non-profit, non-governmental organization, IGLHRC is based in New York, with offices in Johannesburg and Buenos Aires. Visit http://www.iglhrc.org for more information





phone: 212-268-8040

The Mission of the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission is to secure the full enjoyment of human rights of all people and communities subject to discrimination or abuse on the basis of sexual orientation or expression, gender identity or expression and/or HIV status.

Video: The Other Side of Iran

A glimpse of Iran you don't see
A glimpse of Iran you don't see

Vatican-Muslim Talks Due in Italy

March 3, 2008

Vatican-Muslim talks due in Italy
By Frances Kennedy
BBC News, Rome

Pope Benedict XVI. File photo
The Pope has sought to improve relations since his Regensburg talk

The Pope has sought to improve relations since his Regensburg talk

Vatican officials and senior Muslims are due to meet in Rome, hoping to lay the groundwork for landmark Catholic-Islamic talks later this year.

Five senior figures from each religion will define the terms of a larger meeting involving Pope Benedict XVI.

Catholic-Muslim relations soured after a 2006 speech in Germany, in which the Pope quoted a 14th Century Byzantine emperor's criticisms of Islam.

The Regensburg speech provoked Muslim fury and triggered protests worldwide.

But it also prompted 138 Muslim scholars to launch an appeal to the Pope for greater dialogue.

Among the Muslim representatives at this week's two-day talks are a Turk, a Briton, a Jordanian, a Libyan and an Italian.

The Vatican has regular meetings with officials from Cairo's al-Azhar University, a seat of Sunni Muslim learning.

But the Pope now seems convinced of the need for a wider, if more difficult dialogue with Islam.

Sunday, March 02, 2008

A Jihad for Love Premiers in Germany


Sandi DuBowski & Parvez Sharma after the screening of A Jihad for Love in Berlin - February 2008