A group of up to 17 countries led by Belarus has blocked a plan to include the rights of gay, lesbian and transgender communities in a new urban strategy drawn up by the United Nations, according to sources close to negotiations.
UN appoints first expert to protect LGBT people from discrimination
LGBTI vote at the UN shows battle for human rights is far from won
UN: On the fast track to ending the AIDS epidemic
States block gay groups from UNAIDS meeting
Tunisia: UN Panel Condemns Forced Anal Exams
A community guide to the Global Fund’s strategy in relation to sexual orientation and gender identities
This week, we are releasing our third community guide on the Global Fund. The Community Guide to the Global Fund’s Sexual Orientation and Gender Identities (SOGI) Strategy has important human rights components that are essential for an effective response to HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria, at all levels.
This community guide is a basic overview of the Global Fund’s SOGI Strategy.
In this guide you will find: 1) What is sexual orientation and gender identity? 2) Some fast facts on how HIV/AIDS disproportionately impacts sexual minorities 3) Four strategic actions that the Global Fund takes to ensure grants meet the needs of SOGI communities Read more via Global Fund
UNESCO: Report shows homophobic and transphobic violence in education to be a global problem
In some countries, 85% of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) students experience homophobic and transphobic violence in school, 45 % of transgender students drop out. Homophobic violence also targets 33% of students who are wrongly perceived to be LGBT because they do not appear to conform to gender norms.
These are the findings from Out In The Open, a global report on education sector responses to violence based on sexual orientation and gender identity or expression. Compiled by UNESCO, the report reveals the nature, scope and impact of the violence, the status of education sector responses and recommendations for the way forward. Read more via UNESCO
World Bank: To fight poverty, we need to fight homophobia and transphobia
Due to persistent stigmatization and discrimination, LGBTI people are likely overrepresented among the poor. When people are left behind – including due to sexual orientation or gender identity – everyone misses out on their skills and productivity
As part of its commitment to social inclusion and shared prosperity, the World Bank is scaling up efforts to make sure LGBTI people can be fully integrated into development. Because of its consequences on the lives and poverty levels of an entire group, but also due to its adverse impacts on economies and societies at large, LGBTI exclusion is very much a development issue.
“Eliminating extreme poverty and boosting shared prosperity requires coordinated action by all segments of society to eradicate the root causes of exclusion. The exclusion that affects indigenous peoples, persons with disabilities, LGBTI people, and other marginalized groups,” said Ede Ijjasz-Vasquez, Senior Director for the World Bank’s Social, Urban, Rural, and Resilience Global Practice. “We will not be able to achieve our mission of fighting poverty and boosting shared prosperity unless everyone can participate in the development process and reap the benefits of economic growth.” Read more via World Bank
"Pathologization – Being lesbian, gay, bisexual and/or trans is not an illness"
Speaking ahead of the International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia on 17 May, a group of United Nations and international human rights experts* call for an urgent end to the pathologization of lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans (LGBT) adults and children.
The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, a group of UN human rights experts, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council of Europe urge Governments worldwide to reform medical classifications and to adopt measures to prevent all forms of forced treatments and procedures on LGBT persons....
Pathologizing and stigmatizing medical classifications relating to gender identity and expression are used to justify subjecting trans people, even at young ages, to forced or coercive sterilization, hormone therapy, surgeries, and psychiatric evaluations, and in other ways abusively conditioning their human rights. Read more via OHCHR
UNAIDS Executive Director's Message on IDAHOT 2016
The key pillar of the Sustainable Development Goals is ensuring that no one is left behind. But LGBT people continue to face challenges in many parts of the world. Embrace diversity on this day against homophobia, transphobia and biphobia. Learn & watch more via UNAIDS
UNAIDS Caribbean: All human beings are born free and equal
Excerpt of statement by Dr. César Núñez, UNAIDS Latin America and Caribbean Regional Support Team Director:
[IDAHOT] comes at a critical time for Latin America and the Caribbean. This year the world started its 15-year journey toward achieving the Sustainable Development Goals with their emphasis on dignity, equality and security for all. Yet recent events in the region demonstrate that entire communities remain degraded, discriminated against and excluded.
[...]Here’s an idea of the fallout. According to UNESCO almost half of LGBT students in Latin America do not finish secondary school. Global AIDS Response Progress Report data show that in some countries HIV rates among men who have sex with men and transgender women are as much as twenty times the national average. Globally, there were more than 1300 reported killings of transgender people between 2008 and 2013. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights notes that four of every five such murders occurred in this region.
Discrimination increases the vulnerability of entire communities by driving them away from life-saving services like health. Our words, actions and attitudes really do hurt. We have learned over the last three decades that HIV is not just about sex. Social exclusion, gender-based violence, poverty, unemployment and unmet health needs are among the contributing factors. Read his full statement via UNAIDS Caribbean