Lesbian.com : Connecting lesbians worldwide | human rights https://www.lesbian.com Connecting lesbians worldwide Sat, 07 Dec 2013 16:53:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 LGBT community mourns death of Mandela https://www.lesbian.com/lgbt-community-mourns-death-of-mandela/ https://www.lesbian.com/lgbt-community-mourns-death-of-mandela/#respond Fri, 06 Dec 2013 14:00:53 +0000 http://www.lesbian.com/?p=18854 Human rights leader, former South African President dies at 95.

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Nelson MandelaBY MICHAEL K. LAVERS
Washington Blade

Former South African President Nelson Mandela on Thursday passed away at the age of 95.

“Our nation has lost its greatest son,” said South African President Jacob Zuma as he announced on South African television that Mandela had passed away at his Johannesburg home. “Nelson Mandela brought us together. And it is together that we will bid him farewell.”

Born in Cape Province on July 18, 1918, Mandela spent 27 years in jail for opposing South Africa’s apartheid-era government until his release in 1990. Mandela was the country’s president from 1994-1999. South Africa in 1994 became the first country in the world to add a ban on discrimination based on sexual orientation into its constitution.

Read more at Washington Blade

Washington Blade is America’s leading gay news source.

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Athletes gather in Antwerp for worldOutgames III https://www.lesbian.com/athletes-gather-in-antwerp-for-worldoutgames-iii/ https://www.lesbian.com/athletes-gather-in-antwerp-for-worldoutgames-iii/#respond Tue, 13 Aug 2013 23:00:01 +0000 http://www.lesbian.com/?p=16322 Photos from the international sporting event and interview with GLISA's Julia Applegate.

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Love United sign at worldOutgames III

‘Love United’ was the theme for worldOutgames III in Antwerp, Belgium.

BY CANDY PARKER
Lesbian.com

The worldOutgames III, a quadrennial global event hosted by the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, questioning and intersex (LGBTQI) community for open-minded athletes of all sexual orientations, were held August 3 – 11 in Antwerp, Belgium. The event, conceived by the Gay and Lesbian International Sports Association (GLISA), is designed to promote three pillars of activity: fair play in sports, cultural engagement, and universal human rights awareness.

The games offer athletes, arranged according to respective skill level, the opportunity to compete in approximately 35 different sporting events. The event also features an international cultural festival and international human rights conference. Last week, the conference resulted in the adoption of the “From Safe Harbours to Equality” document promoting global LGBTQI rights.

Recently GLISA Co-President and Director-at-Large Julia Applegate shared her thoughts on the games.

What do the worldOutgames mean to you personally?

For me they represent three of the most important aspects of my life. I am an athlete, a lesbian, a feminist and a performer. There is no better place for all of those elements of my identity to come together than at the Outgames.

Do you have any words or advice for young LGBTQ athletes?

Be safe, do your best and get to know fellow athletes from around the world. Some of my strongest friendships have been developed through LGBT sport. In fact, I met my partner of 12 years through LGBT swimming. Don’t make the mistake of hanging out with only your team mates from home. Reach out and get to know someone new. Learn about cultures from all over the world. Have fun and eat lots of yummy Belgian chocolate!

What message do you want the worldOutgames to send to the world?

The LGBT community worldwide is strong. We are working across geographic, economic and cultural barriers to build a movement for LGBT liberation that celebrates our similarities, but is cognizant of our differences. We are not going away and we want to be treated with the dignity and respect fitting any of the worlds’ peoples. We believe OUTgames events bring us closer in that struggle.

“Love United” was the theme for this year’s games and the spirit of the event was evident on the faces of the participants.

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Human Rights Conference adopts ‘From Safe Harbours to Equality’ https://www.lesbian.com/human-rights-conference-adopts-from-safe-harbours-to-equality/ https://www.lesbian.com/human-rights-conference-adopts-from-safe-harbours-to-equality/#respond Sun, 11 Aug 2013 05:00:40 +0000 http://www.lesbian.com/?p=16227 Document precedes WorldOutgames III in Antwerp, Belgium.

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Kathy Wolfe (L) and Barb Verhage (R) of Lesbian.com make their first friend at the Antwerp Human Rights Conference – Anita Kartosemito of Surinam (middle).

Kathy Wolfe (L) and Barb Verhage (R) of Lesbian.com make their first friend at the Antwerp Human Rights Conference – Anita Kartosemito of Surinam (middle).

BY Lesbian.com

The Human Rights Conference preceded the worldOutgames in Antwerp, Belgium, last week. The conference included three days of sharing and discussion among representatives from 118 countries, resulting in the the adoption of the “From Safe Harbors to Equality” document, the full text of which follows.

PREAMBLE
Considering that GLISA (the Gay & Lesbian International Sports Association) and WOGA2013 (the organizing committee of the worldOutgames III, Antwerp 2013) share the dream of a world where equality is a reality for everyone;

Considering that all human rights deserve equal attention, as members of the global LGBTI community we appreciate the freedom to be able to strive for our rights, we believe there is no ranking in fundamental rights and we affirm our solidarity with other groups striving for fundamental human rights from other perspectives;

Considering that it is the corporate responsibility of the LGBTI community around the globe to support dedicated agents of small step driven change everywhere in the world;

Considering that the right to equality achieved at a small scale level make sense only where it happens in interaction with the larger world and the global discourse on equality make sense only when it enables daily life improvement for LGBTI people;

Considering that protection against persecution, the fight against discrimination, full recognition of family relationships, responsible and inclusive education, inclusion in public bodies as well as the right to self identification to a gender and legal affirmation of that gender, correspond to the will of LGBTI people;

Considering that all over the globe LGBTI people of all ages are still subject to flagrant violations of their fundamental rights and that consensual same-sex sexual activity is still criminalized in 76 countries;

Considering that stigma, self-stigma and discrimination obstructs LGBTI access to healthcare, education and other public services;

Considering that every individual should be free to make choices concerning religion, spirituality and faith independently of sexual orientation and gender identity;

Considering that LGBTI people are full members of society and have multiple facets of their identities, such as their gender identity, sexual orientation, ethnicity, health, gender, STD and HIV-status, age, religion, disability and other, they may be subject to multiple discriminations, and that such facets of identity can be a source for partnerships and involvement of other members of society;

Considering the gender policy as elaborated by GLISA to enable all participants to participate in a safe and welcoming environment;

GLISA and the third worldOutgames edition commit, in the name of the participants in this conference, to create and stimulate meaningful progress in the achievement of equality by the inspiring assembly of change workers around the world, in particular every time that anywhere around the world, an Outgames takes place, be the event a regional Outgames or a world Outgames.

Consequently, and taking into account the aforementioned, the participants to the third edition of the worldOutgames Conference on Human Rights adopt, this Friday 2 August 2013, the guiding principles which shall lead our future actions and which we entitle: “THE ANTWERP GUIDELINES: FROM SAFE HARBOURS TO EQUALITY”.

INTRODUCTION
The conferences held during the worldOutgames will be occasions for co-creating a sense of solidarity among the participants as well as a shared vision for the future. We will stimulate participants to develop new ways of efficient strategizing around short and middle-term objectives whilst being aware that strategically important events for LGBTI people may occur at any time, at any place. We want the conferences to contribute to our collective preparedness grounded in our common values.

We will, together with all participants, identify the dominant trends in society affecting LGBTI people at the global level and thus identify the common challenges related to the striving for equality.

Human rights, culture and sports are the three equally valued sources of an inspiring, ambitious and clear vision on the future of LGBTI movement and for the people striving for equal rights at all levels.

WE THEREFORE WISH TO AFFIRM THE FOLLOWING GUIDING PRINCIPLES:

1. OBJECTIVES
We will collaborate in a way that all the events leading up to and taking place during this conference may serve as learning opportunities which contribute to the personal ability of each and every person to be an agent of change for the equality which some people continue to seek and which for others is an achievement to be sustained. We consider it as fundamental that individuals who are victims of criminalization because of sexual orientation or gender identity, victims of discrimination, of stigmatization, of trauma and other serious violence are the primary experts to share knowledge, insights and experience. We will continuously emphasize that their right to respectable living conditions is our collective struggle.

2. VALUES
We demand respect of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as well as the Yogyakarta Principles and other relevant international declarations. Our values are based on mutual respect, of cultures and of differences. We fully make ours the GLISA’s policy on gender.

3. PARTNERSHIP
We commit to work together with all people – at whatever level of expertise, education and experience – to share our research and our sources across the different networks we represent.

We will interact with governments, NGO’s, health and human rights organizations, as well as with local communities and grassroots initiatives to extend our knowledge of the challenges we share in coping with equality, both at the level of sports, culture and human rights.

Multiple organizations are our allies. Among these, democratic trade unions are a progressive force supporting LGBTI groups. The partnership between them and us has proven to be efficient and a bearer of hope and action. Their fight for equality is our fight.

Numerous woman’s and feminist groups and associations opposed to racial discrimination or involved in adult as well as child education, pursue struggles which we support.

4. METHOD
We will create frameworks, processes and environments which enable effective collaborative learning opportunities, for demonstrating and promoting equality in a global LGBTI context in perpetual evolution. We need to forge alliances around world following emerging trends, thus strengthening ourselves to defend common objectives and translating our actions in a more effective collaboration around strategic opportunities. Action may be diverging from one place to another, though always focused on the same common purpose.

5. DIALOGUE
We will facilitate and support dialogue with sectors of equal importance such as authorities, the corporate world, trade unions, educational institutes, cultural actors, media, civil society and faith organizations . Dialogue will be our perpetual lever for promoting understanding and commitment, whatever the circumstances are.

6. SAFETY
We are conscious that throughout the world, many LGBTI people still run enormous risks as a result of their commitment, as do their friends and families. The LGBTI community in every countries has the duty to provide security and protect those whose fundamental human rights may be in danger. International pressure by governments on other governments away from the glare of cameras as well as the assignment of budgets and human resources often brings more results than public debate.

7. HEALTH
We should create environments that enable effective integration and participation of people with physical or mental illness within the LGBTI community and we should actively support and organize prevention and solidarity activities and reach out to health organizations supporting people living with sexual transmitted diseases. Transgender and gender-non conforming individuals and categories (ICD, DSM) related to sexual orientation should be removed from the international statistical classification of diseases and related health problems, preferably during the eleventh revision.

8. FREEDOM
All the aforementioned principles should serve to enhance freedom and equality for all. No single effort to achieve equality should be detrimental to other core values.

Keynote Speakers at the Human Rights Conference. L to R: Nigerian Gay Rights Activist Bisi Alimi; Keynote Speaker Alice N’Kom of Cameroon; and Phyll Opoku-Gyimah, Executive Director of UK Black Pride.

Keynote Speakers at the Human Rights Conference. L to R: Nigerian Gay Rights Activist Bisi Alimi; Keynote Speaker Alice N’Kom of Cameroon; and Phyll Opoku-Gyimah, Executive Director of UK Black Pride.

CONCLUSION
The Antwerp Conference entrusts to GLISA, but also to each and every participant and to every person who receives this charter, the responsibility to pursue the work initiated years ago. Since Montreal in 2006 – the largest assembly of LGBTI activists so far — and Copenhagen in 2009, where the concept of interrelatedness of all LGBTI people was highlighted, Antwerp is the city in which we say to the whole world: every human being is equal to all others.

We have chosen, through GLISA, to build solidarity based on three pillars: sports, culture and human rights. They are not exclusive to each other and open up the path to a life fully lived in freedom.

Conscious that we are and will remain a minority across the world and not withstanding this reality, we want no LGBTI person anywhere on our planet to feel isolated or singled out. Each of us shall know that we are a global community which no perverse law or ongoing injustice can stop. No struggle is meaningless. No tear is lost. No action is small. We will continue to offer our talents, our diversity and our wealth to the human community of our planet.

POSITION
This Antwerp worldOutgames Conference solemnly declares:

1. We want to emphasize the uniqueness of each individual and consequently the right to their own choices and their right to develop their creativity as they wish within the framework of respecting that of others. This is a lever, we believe, to enable systems to evolve and change.

2. We express the highest level of solidarity towards and our concern over LGBTI individuals and groups which, most particularly in Russia, Eastern Europe and in so many African and Muslim countries, face homophobic and transphobic governments and attitudes.

3. We commit to jointly support LGBTI individuals and groups in full respect of their own strategies. This solidarity shall never cause collateral damage putting to suffer those we wish to support.

4. We will establish links with any allied group struggling for the principles of health, freedom and equality and we will offer them the opportunity to move forward together.

5. We will actively involve the people from the Diaspora to start up dialogue and to promote equality as a critical potential of expertise, experience and networking and we will always believe that in each and every country, whatever it’s regime and reputation is, it is possible to find allies for the struggle.

6. We demand that the governments and parliaments of this world and their representatives systematically put the issue of equal rights in relation to gender and sexual diversity on the agenda in local, regional and international meetings.

7. We demand governments to facilitate the development of a more diversified provision of (community based) services and to lower the threshold to access healthcare;

8. We integrate in our position the unions propositions find in the addendum;

9. We request GLISA, in collaboration with other LGBTI organizations, to establish partnerships with universities, health and research centers in order to better document through medium-term research the statistics, reasons and means of action which affect the level of homophobia, transphobia, sexual orientation and gender;

10. We request GLISA to include on the agenda of the next worldOutgames Conference in Miami Beach in 2017 an assessment of LGBTI rights, country by country.

11. We propose GLISA to take the necessary steps with relevant public and private partners to establish a global foundation, in a sustainable and transparent manner, to benefit the Outreach programs of future worldOutgames.

12. We proclaim that we will never cease our quest for equality, nobody will stop equality.

13. We invite all participants and allied organizations to distribute this declaration in all possible global networks.

We call for all participants to turn the massive amount of energy behind an event such as the worldOutgames human rights conference into worldwide solidarity for the achievement of our dream, the realization of our striving, health, freedom and equality for every LGBTI. Solidarity based upon respect for each other’s differences and strategies. It is thus and only thus that we will be able to navigate from safe harbors to equality.

We, the participants of the Antwerp conference, pass on this legacy to the organizers of worldOutgames IV in 2017 in Miami Beach.

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Petition to NBC: Include Maddow as Olympic correspondent https://www.lesbian.com/petition-to-nbc-include-maddow-as-olympic-correspondent/ https://www.lesbian.com/petition-to-nbc-include-maddow-as-olympic-correspondent/#respond Sun, 04 Aug 2013 16:30:47 +0000 http://www.lesbian.com/?p=16023 A new petition calls for NBC to name Rachel Maddow as human rights correspondent for their 2014 Olympic coverage.

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Rachel MaddowBY Huffington Post Gay Voices

A nonprofit LGBT rights organization has called for NBC to make Rachel Maddow part of the network’s Sochi 2014 Olympics coverage.

Truth Wins Out launched a petition earlier this week urging NBC to name Maddow as a “special human rights correspondent” to ensure “fair and accurate coverage” of the Sochi games. The petition read:

“NBC’s Olympic coverage has long featured myriad human interest pieces, about the athletes competing, and about all aspects of life in the home nation. There is more than enough time in prime time Olympic coverage for hard-hitting pieces exposing the reality of what LGBT people, political dissidents and other minorities face every day under the Putin regime.

Rachel Maddow is one of the most respected television journalists in the United States, with a reputation for being thorough, fair, informative and entertaining.”

Read more at Huffington Post Gay Voices

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Rice includes LGBT in Human Rights statement https://www.lesbian.com/rice-includes-lgbt-in-human-rights-statement/ https://www.lesbian.com/rice-includes-lgbt-in-human-rights-statement/#respond Tue, 11 Dec 2012 10:16:03 +0000 http://www.lesbian.com/?p=8711 Remarks by U.S. Ambassador on International Human Rights Day.

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Susan Rice

Ambassador Susan Rice

BY DOT429.COM
dot429

Statement made by Ambassador Susan E. Rice, U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations, on International Human Rights Day:

On Human Rights Day, we celebrate a simple but powerful declaration that “all human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.” Adopted 64 years ago today, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights stands as a monument to the courage of its founders and to freedoms longed for by every human being. But the fight for these freedoms—from demagogues and from tyrants, from the shackles of slavery and from the censor’s pen—did not end with the historic adoption of the Universal Declaration on December 10, 1948. As Eleanor Roosevelt said, success in the struggle “is a question of actually living and working in our countries for freedom and justice for each human being.”

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Phillipines cited for LGBT rights violations https://www.lesbian.com/phillipines-cited-for-lgbt-rights-violations/ https://www.lesbian.com/phillipines-cited-for-lgbt-rights-violations/#respond Sat, 20 Oct 2012 15:23:20 +0000 http://www.lesbian.com/?p=6992 Delayed legislation, institutionalized homophobia and arbitrary prosecutions noted.

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Phillipine flagBY THE SEATTLE LESBIAN

The United Nations Human Rights Committee completed its fourth periodic review of the compliance of the Government of the Philippines with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) in Geneva this week.

The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC), TLF Share, and a coalition of 39 Filipino human rights organizations and 13 LGBT activists submitted a report, entitled Human Rights Violations on the Basis of Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity, and Homosexuality in the Philippines, to the Committee. Representatives Ging Cristobal and Jonas Bagas presented their findings at the session. The government delegation consisted of 26 representatives of diverse branches of government and was headed by Department of Justice Secretary Leila de Lima.

Read more at TheSeattleLesbian.com

The Seattle Lesbian online magazine reaches more than 188,000 readers per week globally.

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Desmond Tutu calls on world leaders to protect LGBTI rights https://www.lesbian.com/desmond-tutu-calls-on-world-leaders-to-protect-lgbti-rights/ https://www.lesbian.com/desmond-tutu-calls-on-world-leaders-to-protect-lgbti-rights/#respond Tue, 26 Jun 2012 20:41:41 +0000 http://www.lesbian.com/?p=2267 BY STEVE WILLIAMS Care2.com Archbishop Desmond Tutu, alongside three other Nobel Laureates, has called upon world governments, in particular Russian...

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Desmond Tutu calls on world leaders to protect LGBTQI rightsBY STEVE WILLIAMS
Care2.com

Archbishop Desmond Tutu, alongside three other Nobel Laureates, has called upon world governments, in particular Russian and Ugandan lawmakers, to safeguard the rights of LGBTI citizens.

Says the statement:

“Collectively we represent a diverse array of countries and cultures. Today more than ever, we wish to express that the same cultural values, which have fostered and supported our lifelong quests for peace, also command us to speak out against the violence and discrimination our fellow human beings are enduring every day solely because they are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or intersex.

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News: Angelina Jolie marks World Refugee Day with donation https://www.lesbian.com/news-angelina-jolie-marks-world-refugee-day-with-donation/ https://www.lesbian.com/news-angelina-jolie-marks-world-refugee-day-with-donation/#respond Sat, 23 Jun 2012 17:34:39 +0000 http://www.lesbian.com/?p=2077 Lesbian.com, June 23, 2012 Angelina Jolie marked World Refugee Day on June 20 by donating $100,000 to assist Syrian refugees. The...

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Angelina Jolie donated $100,000 to the UNCHR on World Refugee DayLesbian.com, June 23, 2012

Angelina Jolie marked World Refugee Day on June 20 by donating $100,000 to assist Syrian refugees. The actress-cum-activist made the donation to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and released a statement through the UN calling for “durable solutions…for refugees.”

Jolie is an UNHCR Special Envoy and is assisting with the group’s
global social advocacy campaign, “Dilemmas”, which aims to help fight intolerance and xenophobia against refugees. Through the campaign Jolie and a host of other celebrities echo the same strong message: No one chooses to be a refugee.

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Angelina Jolie supporting UK anti-rape effort in war zones https://www.lesbian.com/angelina-jolie-supporting-uk-anti-rape-effort-in-war-zones/ https://www.lesbian.com/angelina-jolie-supporting-uk-anti-rape-effort-in-war-zones/#respond Sun, 10 Jun 2012 20:30:54 +0000 http://www.lesbian.com/?p=1069 BY MIRANDA PERRY Care2.com In conflict zones, sexual assault is often nearly as difficult to prosecute as it is to...

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Angelina Jolie supports United Kingdom anti-rape effort in war zonesBY MIRANDA PERRY
Care2.com

In conflict zones, sexual assault is often nearly as difficult to prosecute as it is to prevent. A new UK-lead effort announced last month will create special “flying squads” to investigate rape cases in these troubled areas and implement a network of victim support services. The proposed system has earned support from actor, director and activist Angelina Jolie.

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Ontario’s Gay-Straight Alliances vs. the Catholic Church https://www.lesbian.com/ontarios-gay-straight-alliances-vs-the-catholic-church/ https://www.lesbian.com/ontarios-gay-straight-alliances-vs-the-catholic-church/#respond Sat, 02 Jun 2012 20:13:29 +0000 http://www.lesbian.com/?p=774 BY CATHRYN WELLNER Care2.com Ontario politicians are drawing a line in the sand with publicly funded Catholic schools. On one...

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BY CATHRYN WELLNER
Care2.com

Ontario politicians are drawing a line in the sand with publicly funded Catholic schools. On one side is Bill 13, the Accepting Schools Act. The anti-bullying legislation will allow students to form “organizations with the name gay-straight alliance or another name.” On the other side is the Catholic church which insists non-specific names such as “respecting differences” are adequate. They say LGBTQ students can form groups to counter bullying, but they cannot use a name the church finds offensive.

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Care2 is the largest online community of people passionate about making a difference.

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