The President-elect of Namibia, Hage Geingob is said to be supportive of equal rights for gays and lesbians. According to journalist Clemans Miyanicwe, the 73-year-old statesman, who will be sworn into office in March next year, is “a well-known defender of the rights of sexual minorities.” Read More
Should You Speak Up When Someone Makes a Gay Slur at a Memorial Service?
Since his death on Nov. 23, Washingtonians have continued to mourn the passing of Marion Barry, Washington, D.C.’s idiosyncratic four-term mayor and longtime city councilmember. Earlier this week, a group of Barry’s colleagues and supporters held a small public memorial service on the steps of the mayor’s office.
But remembering Barry’s life was suddenly sidetracked when the event’s emcee unexpectedly spouted homophobic and sexist sentiments. Some prominent event participants are now taking flack for not intervening. But when is it appropriate to confront a person who unleashes offensive speech? Read More
Documentary about transwoman and her troupe gets warm welcome by cinema-goers in Vietnam
Described by a local newspaper as a 'respectful, true, and positive perspective on the LGBT community' in Vietnam, The Last Journey of Madam Phung tells the story of chi Phung, a trans-woman (another news report however describes Phung as a gay man) who leads a troupe of 'transvestite "social outcasts" just like himself' performing from central to southern Vietnam to earn a living. Read More
Tunisia's New Gay Rights Fight
First gay-themed series on Aussie television
A landmark new Australian series with LGBTI high school students could potentially appear on national TV screens in the near future.
Should it be successful, it would be the first time a show on national TV where most of the leading characters are LGBTI.
Executive producer and director Daniel Mercieca has said his show, Subject to Change, would be a coming-of-age drama. An online crowdfunding campaign via Pozible for the series pilot was successful, reaching just over $27,000 on the November 27 deadline and surpassing the initial target of 15,500. Read More
Gays make gains in China: survey
There's a growing acceptance of gay people in China, the latest survey on LGBT shows. 59% of surveyed city residents said that society should accept homosexuals according to the first annual survey on the social acceptance toward LGBT people by the Shanghai LGBT Professionals and Work For LGBT and Parents, Families, Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG).
Ah Qiang, a well-known gay rights activist and founder of PFLAG China, said that the report revealed that gay people can win more acceptance and understanding by coming out: "I appeal to the large number of gay people who are still hiding to come out for the public to better understand the group," Ah Qiang said. Read More
Church members charged with beating gay man
For Matthew Fenner, a crowd of parishioners gathering around him in a church sanctuary after a prayer service was a sign of trouble. Within minutes, he said they began to berate him because he was gay. One woman told him he was "disgusting." Then for two hours, they pushed and hit Fenner, screaming at him as they tried to "break me free of the homosexual 'demons,'" he said in a police affidavit.
Nearly two years later, five Word of Faith Fellowship church members have been indicted for kidnapping and assault in connection with Fenner's beating. But the case has opened new wounds in the rural North Carolina community where the church has been a lightning rod of controversy. Read More
Op-ed: An Open Letter to Mainstream LGBT Organizations That Have Remained Silent on Black Lives Mattering
Why did we feel the need to write this open letter to mainstream LGBT organizations with a reference to the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act? Because it illuminates the dangers of focusing on one type of identity-based violence -- the violence that impacts LGBT people -- while willfully ignoring the police and vigilante violence that impacts Black queer- and trans-identified people, as well as all Black people:
Mike Brown's bloodied and lifeless body was left on a hot Missouri street for 4.5 hours; the world bore witness to video clips of Eric Garner uttering his final words, "I can't breathe!", as a police officer choked him to death. Read More
Why it is not a sin to be gay
Nigerian pastor Elizabeth Funke Obisanya explains why Jesus loves gays but African Christians do not:
To win the struggle to change men and women’s hearts and minds, one must consider what the Bible calls strongholds – ideologies, views or thinking that have been held on to for a long time. When that thinking is wrong, the challenge is great.
Many African strongholds include the view that homosexuality is paganistic and paganism is bad. The second is that gay white men want to pollute black children (see the justifications for Uganda's anti-gay laws). The issue is not whether one agrees with them or not, but that these perceptions are there and need to be dealt with. Read More
The first LGBT Shelter opened in Tirana, Albania
The first residential shelter for LGBTI who are left homeless, suffer domestic violence because of their sexual orientation or gender identity, or live in a non safe environment was open in Tirana, marking a milestone for the human rights movement in Albania. Through this temporary housing, beneficiaries will be offered different services including life skills training, vocational training opportunities and psycho-social support. Read More
Protesters Kiss-In At Madrid Burger King After Gay Couple Is Kicked Out
Over 100 people participated in a gay kiss-in at a Burger King franchise in Spain after a same-sex couple was reportedly kicked out of the restaurant for kissing. A security guard had asked two gay men, ages 18 and 19, to leave the Burger King in Madrid's Plaza de los Cubos last month after a patron who was eating there with his kids complained about them kissing, according to El Pais.
“He said to us that we couldn’t do things like that. That there were children around," one of the men told the publication, adding that the pair ultimately left the restaurant because they did not want to cause trouble. Arcópoli, a Madrid-based LGBT rights group, organized the event. Read More
The hidden and the hunted: Uganda's war on gay men
Reporter Jonathan Heaf takes an intimate view on the lives of Ugandan gay men in the wake of the Anti-Homosexuality Act (AHA) - or the "Kill The Gays Bill", as it has become known - passed by the Parliament of Uganda:
There must be no distinguishable markings on the outside of the building. Nothing indicative of what happens within. The room is airless and empty. Michael Bashaija slumps between his boyfriend - an older man named Apollo - and a lawyer, knees wide apart, on a green plastic garden chair that is cracked and worn. Read More
