and
exposed: a celebration of queer artistry / friday, april 4th / 7pm
HaLo Studios /
exposed is an arts-based fundraising event that will feature the work of 20 of
and
exposed: a celebration of queer artistry / friday, april 4th / 7pm
HaLo Studios /
exposed is an arts-based fundraising event that will feature the work of 20 of
| For Immediate Release |
Hate Crimes Awareness Press Conference 2/1 at 2pm - Jan 29, 2008
(Seattle, WA) In November 2007, a broad coalition of community groups sponsored a safety forum addressing the issue of gay bashing and hate crimes on Capitol Hill. As a result of the forum, many actions have been implemented. In one action, the King County Prosecutor’s Office, Gay City Health Project, and CHCC decided to take further steps to increase public awareness. A Hate Crimes Awareness poster and matching palm cards listing community resources were created for the express purpose of protecting the neighborhood and encouraging others to report anti-gay hate crimes.
A press conference will be held on Friday, February 1, at 2 PM at Kaladi Brothers Coffee located at 511 East Pike Street between Belmont and Summit Avenues. The Hate Crimes Awareness posters and palm cards will be distributed at this time. Kaladi Brothers Coffee is located in the Center for LGBT Health, where Gay City Health Project is also located.
Speakers will include sponsors Jack Hilovsky of the CHCC, Fred Swanson of Gay City Health Project, and Dan Satterberg, King County Prosecuting Attorney.
Partners in the original forum included Bailey Coy Books, Broadway BIA, Broadway Video, Capitol Hill Chamber of Commerce, Equal Rights Washington, Gay City Health Project, Greater Seattle Business Association, Kaladi Brothers Coffee, Seattle Commission for Sexual Minorities, Seattle Gay News, Seattle LGBT Community Center, Seattle Office for Civil Rights and Rosebud Restaurant
Please come to learn more about our efforts and help spread the word about how to keep our neighborhood safe.
For more information, please contact Jack Hilovsky at 328-6646.
Urgent Action: Call for Release of 11 Men and Decriminalization of Homosexuality in
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January 2008
Eleven men were arrested and detained in
Between 19 and
On
On
On
ADDRESS APPEALS TO:
Minister of Justice
Mr Amadou Ali
Deputy Prime Minister
Minister of Justice
Yaoundé
Salutation: Dear vice-Prime Minister/ Monsieur
le Vice-Premier Ministre
WITH COPIES TO :
Minister of Interior
Mr Marafa Hamidou Yaya
Minister of Territorial Administration Decentralization
Ministry of Territorial Administration Decentralization
Yaoundé
Salutation: Dear Minister/Monsieur le Ministre
Director of Kondengi prison
Monsieur le Directeur
Prison Centrale de Kondengui,
BP 100,
…and to diplomatic representatives of
PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the International Secretariat, or your Amnesty International section office, if sending appeals after
State's gay caucus is 2nd-largest in U.S.
By RACHEL LA CORTE
The Associated Press
OLYMPIA — The Washington Legislature has the second-largest gay caucus in the country after a new representative was appointed to the House this year.
Marko Liias, a 26-year-old Democrat from Mukilteo, started the legislative session earlier this month, replacing former Rep. Brian Sullivan, who left the Legislature for the Snohomish County Council.
Liias' arrival gives Washington six openly gay lawmakers, ahead of California's five, but still one shy of the seven gay lawmakers in New Hampshire.
That gives Washington state the second-largest Capitol gay caucus, according to the Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund, a Washington, D.C.-based political action committee.
Read the full story here.
By Bruce Crumley
The European Court of Human Rights overturned French court rulings that
prevented a single lesbian woman from adopting a child; the move opens the
way for legal challenges in other European states, but does not oblige all
countries to allow gay adoption.
Thursday 01.24.08
http://www.time.com/time/world
Social and political conservatives have tended to be more cautious European
enthusiasts than their leftist peers. This week provided another example
why that’s the case. In a decision setting precedence not just across the
27-nation European Union, but indeed throughout the entire 47-member
Council of Europe, the European Court of Human Rights overturned French
court rulings that prevented a single lesbian woman from adopting a child.
The move, gay and lesbian groups say opens the way for legal challenges in
other European states with adoption laws similar to those of France — yet
falls well short of a blanket ruling that would oblige all countries to
allow adoption by homosexuals.
In a 10-7 vote, the European Court of Human Rights ruled in Strasbourg
Tuesday that a plaintiff identified only as Emmanuelle B. had been the
victim of illegal discrimination when successive French authorities denied
her request to adopt a child in 1998. The court faulted French criticism
over “the lack of a paternal referent in the household”, and elsewhere said
the woman’s homosexuality had been “if not explicit, at least implicit” in
France’s rejection of her adoption request. The Court judged France had
violated the European Convention on Human Rights — to which France and the
other 46 Council of Europe members are signatories — based on its refusal
to allow a single lesbian adopt in a manner it allows straight singles to.
“French law allowed single parents to adopt a child, thereby opening up the
possibility for adoption by a single homosexual,” the judgment found. In
addition to opening the way for the 45 year-old nursery school teacher, who
has lived with her female partner for nearly 20 years, to see through her
desire to adopt, the Court also ordered France to pay Emmanuelle B. $14,600
in damages, and $21,210 in legal costs.
Gay rights organizations in France and across Europe hailed the ruling for
taking on one of the main kinds of discrimination homosexuals continue to
face. Some conservatives, however, were as equally outspoken in the
condemnation of the decision. Michèle Tabarot, a parliamentarian for the
ruling conservative Movement for a Popular Majority Party and the president
of France’s Superior Council on Adoption, reacted with charges “the judges
are over-stepping their role by going beyond what the law says, and by
imposing their conception” of justice. Tabarot also noted that if French
rules allowing singles to adopt children as a means of increasing the
number of potential homes for orphans, they weren’t intended to alter
official French views on gay parenting. “In France the parliament never
sought to open adoption to homosexuals,” she noted.
Indeed, Tuesday’s ruling, in many ways, represents a back door to equal
treatment starkly contrasting the more traditional attitudes and laws
prevalent in most of Europe. Franck Tanguy, spokesman for France’s
Association of Gay and Lesbian Parents, confirms “this ruling is a step in
the right direction”, in that it “requires countries that, like France,
allow singles to adopt children to treat unmarried homosexual and
heterosexual applicants in exactly the same manner.” Failure to do so in
any country with such legislation, Tanguy says, means they’d “find
themselves condemned again and again for discrimination by the many single
homosexuals who’d use this precedent to base a legal defense on”. However,
Tanguy regrets the ruling “won’t change anything in countries that don’t
allow any singles to adopt, nor force nations that don’t allow homosexual
couples to adopt to change their laws”.
There are currently nine European countries that permit gay and lesbian
couples to adopt children: Germany, Belgium, Denmark, Spain, Iceland,
Norway, the Netherlands, the U.K., and Sweden. Though a boon for single
homosexuals seeking to adopt children where unwed heterosexuals are allowed
to do so, Tanguy says Tuesday’s ruling may cause countries considering
allowing adoption by non-married straight couples to shelve such plans in
order to maintain the prohibition for gays and lesbians.
FRESH OUT OF AIUSA:FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: January 19, 2008
MULTI-DRUG-RESISTANT MRSA BACTERIA STRAIN
Pink News:(New York, January 17, 2008) – Authorities should immediately release more than a dozen persons jailed under Kuwait’s new dress-code law, Human Rights Watch said today. The law, approved by the National Assembly on December 10, 2007, criminalizes people who “imitate the appearance of the opposite sex.” Read full story here
16th January 2008 18:35
PinkNews.co.uk staff writer
Morocco court upholds jail for 6 for homosexual acts
Tue 15 Jan 2008, 21:00 GMT
RABAT, Jan 15 (Reuters) - A Moroccan appeal court on Tuesday upheld the convictions of six men jailed for homosexual acts after video images of a man dressed as a woman dancing at a party sparked street protests and a police investigation, lawyers said.
The six were arrested in late November after rumours spread that a party they had held in the northern town of Ksar el Kebir was really an illegal gay wedding.
The national press pounced on the story, and Islamist groups condemned what they saw as an attack on public morals and demanded an official investigation.
Hundreds of angry residents marched through Ksar el Kebir to demand "justice" and put pressure on the authorities to hand out harsh sentences.
The six men were found guilty and given jail sentences by a lower court last month. They had all pleaded not guilty.
The appeal court upheld a 10-month sentence against the party's alleged organiser, identified as F., for homosexuality and the illegal sale of alcohol, defence lawyer Mohamed Sebbar said.
The five others had their jail terms cut to between two and four months from between four and six months, he said. All six had pleaded not guilty to the charges.
"It's a very severe judgment because this case is empty," said Sebbar. "There is no proof that these men practised homosexuality in the affair of Ksar el Kebir."
"Lewd or unnatural acts" between people of the same sex are crimes under Moroccan law and those found guilty face between six months and three years in jail and a fine of up to 1,000 Moroccan dirhams ($130).
Amnesty International said it considered the men to be prisoners of conscience and called for their immediate release.
"We're also concerned for their safety," said Amnesty's Benedicte Goderiaux. "Some of them should get out of prison within about 15 days -- what will happen to them after all the public threats against them?"
Let me know if you are interested in attending. I need roommates! blogazar