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Uganda: Georgina Risks It All
May 4, 2009| Contributed by
The recent anti-gay crusade underway in Uganda has been fueled by the participation of a number of Ugandan men who claim to be "reformed" from homosexuality. Most prominent in this hate-filled campaign is George Oundo, formerly known as Georgina. George has participated in a series of press conferences, interviews and television appearances to make public the names, addresses and workplaces of men and women accused of being homosexual.
Iraq: Torture, Cruel, Inhuman and Degrading Treatment of LGBT People
April 20, 2009| Contributed by
The following is a translation of a story from Alarabiya, a UAE-based media network, which was published on its Arabic website a few hours ago. While IGLHRC has not verified all of the allegations, many are consistent with patterns of human rights violations being reported from within the country.
More Hateful Rhetoric in Uganda
April 2, 2009| Contributed by
Yesterday started explosively. The headline of The New Vision, the state-owned newpaper in Uganda, read, "Father Musaala named homosexual." The paper showed a picture of the well-respected priest and another of the ex-gay activists at their March 31 press briefing. The story talks about the ex-gay activists’ allegation that Father Musaala is a homosexual. It was very disturbing.
We do NOT recruit
April 1, 2009| Contributed by
Yesterday at 10:00 a.m., the Ugandan LGBTI community held a press conference at the Metropole Hotel in Kampala to refute recent allegations that its members recruit youth into homosexuality and receive lots of money from international donors for this practice.
Fundamentalism in Indonesia
March 12, 2009| Contributed by
A coalition of human rights groups is pushing for a judicial review of the new Indonesian Pornography Law, which was passed in November 2008. The coalition is being brought together by Yayasan Lembaga Bantuan Hukum Indonesia, the Indonesia Legal Aid Foundation—a well-known NGO that advocates for democracy, human rights and justice and has a broad-based constituency. It includes national groups Arus Pelangi and Ardhanary Institute, representing the LGBT community.
Scott Lively Speaks
March 9, 2009| Contributed by
SMUG's Frank Mugisha reports on the final day of the anti-gay seminar in Uganda
The main presenter for day 3 of the anti-gay workshop was Scott Lively, a 51-year old pastor with training in theology and law.
‘Healing’ by Harming
March 6, 2009| Contributed by
Today was the second day of the anti-gay conference currently taking place in Uganda. The workshop started at 9:00 a.m. but with fewer participants than yesterday (about 43). The facilitators for the first half of the day were still members of the Ugandan organization Family Life Network, together with Don Schmierer, a member of the board of the American “ex-gay” organization, Exodus International.
Spreading Lies in Kampala
March 5, 2009| Contributed by
The long awaited anti-gay workshop featuring some of the most virulent homophobes from the U.S. religious right started today at the Triangle Hotel in Kampala. The workshop, which is scheduled to last 3 days, attracted about 50 participants, including counselors from schools and churches, students, clergy and representatives from NGOs and Christian organizations. Five participants attended on behalf of the LGBTI community.
The State Department Publishes its Annual Human Rights Report; The U.S. Can Do More
March 3, 2009| Contributed by
The U.S. Government has just published its annual human rights report documenting violations committed in all countries throughout the world (except the United States). In the early 1990s, IGLHRC worked with the State Department to include explicit reporting about the persecution of LGBT people in their annual country reports on human rights.
Congratulations Colombia!
February 24, 2009| Contributed by
Almost a month ago, the Colombian Constitutional Court ruled that same-sex couples are entitled to the same rights as unmarried heterosexual couples in common law marriages. Colombia Diversa have sent us this beautiful letter thanking us for our help in drafting an amicus curea to support their successful case. We send our congratulations to Colombia Diversa and to all the other Colombian activists fighting for equal rights for sexual minorities.
Back from Brazil
February 10, 2009| Contributed by
I just got back from Belem, Brazil, where I attended the World Social Forum. I presented on two panels: the first one, held with Catholics for a Free Choice (Argentina) - Católicas por el Derecho a Decidir (Argentina), was on religious fundamentalisms and sexual diversity in the era of the globalization, and the second was on a panel with representatives from five social movements in dialogue with each other on how to take up each other’s issues within their own movements.
Watching and Waiting at the UN
January 29, 2009| Contributed by
I’ve spent most of this week watching and assisting the Brazilian group ABGLT in the formal process of trying to get consultative status at the United Nations. Consultative status enables NGOs to deliver oral and written reports at UN meetings, organize events on UN premises, and speak out about abuses and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. ABGLT is the first LGBT NGO from the Global South considered for consultative status.
Welcome to our Blog!
January 21, 2009| Contributed by
If you are reading this, a big welcome to our new website and blog.
These are momentous times. Change is in the air. Yesterday we saw the swearing in of a new president of the United States -- a change that has resonance throughout the world.