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| International News - October 6, 2003 |
- LESBIAN-ONLY EVENT LOSES EXEMPTION Wockner October 6, 2003
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The Civil and Administrative Appeals Tribunal in the
Australian state of Victoria has revoked an exemption
it granted to Lesfest 2004 that would have allowed the
week-long January event to ban attendees and service
providers who are not female-born lesbians.
The exemption from state human-rights laws was
withdrawn because Lesfest organizers failed to inform
the tribunal that a transsexual organization had
objected to the waiver, the Australian Associated
Press reported Sept. 30.
The Australian WOMAN Network had complained that the
exemption was offensive because male-to-female
transsexuals are legally and medically women.
Lesfest spokeswoman Anna Holland-Moore expressed
disappointment at the new ruling.
"We just wanted a week together to consolidate our
culture and discuss relevant issues," she told AAP.
The rural festival will feature political forums, art
performances, healing space, workshops and talking
circles. Boys over age eight and heterosexual girls
over age 15 also were to be banned.
- SEX CLAMPDOWN PROPOSED IN INDONESIA Wockner October 6, 2003
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Indonesia's Justice Ministry has drafted laws to ban
premarital sex, extramarital sex, living together
without being married, reneging on a promise to marry,
visiting a prostitute, performing as a stripper,
witchcraft, and promotion of communism, local media
reported Sept. 30.
Although the proposed legislation reportedly would
allow gay sex between adults, it was unclear why gay
sex would not be considered to be premarital or
extramarital sex.
The proposed new crimes would draw penalties of two to
20 years in prison.
The Indonesian Bar Association and the Indonesian
Lawyers Association oppose the proposals. IBA Chairman
Gayus Lumbuun told a local newspaper, "Not all ethical
and moral offenses are crimes."
Some Muslim groups and political parties have been
pushing for the incorporation of Islamic law into
legal codes. Indonesia is the world's most populous
Muslim nation.
The 600 pages of proposals face at least a year of
discussion in parliament before they could become law,
according to a report in the Sydney Morning Herald.
- LAWMAKERS PROTEST TORONTO INCIDENT Wockner October 6, 2003
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Four members of the U.S. House of Representatives with
responsibility for overseeing immigration policy wrote
the commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Customs and
Border Protection Oct. 1 urging repeal of the policy
under which a married Canadian gay couple was refused
entry to the United States when they insisted on
filling out a single Customs form designed for
families.
Kevin Bourassa and Joe Varnell were turned back by
U.S. Customs Sept. 18 at the Toronto airport, where
the Department of Homeland Security clears U.S.-bound
passengers in order to avoid operating customs and
immigration facilities in smaller U.S. cities where
the only international flights arrive from Canada. The
couple got married this summer in Ontario after full
same-sex marriage was legalized by court order.
U.S. officials said the two men were legally single
and needed to fill out separate forms.
In the letter to Commissioner Robert Bonner,
Democratic U.S. Reps. Barney Frank of Massachusetts,
Sheila Jackson-Lee of Texas, Jerrold Nadler of New
York and Loretta Sanchez of California said: "We do
not understand why it should be American policy to
insist that people seeking to enter our country as
tourists from another country repudiate their own
country's rules and engage in what are to them wholly
inaccurate self-descriptions, and in a way that they
understandably found to be degrading. Forcing people
to deny their own important values, when this has no
legal bearing in the U.S., serves no public purpose,
and whatever its motivation, becomes a form of
meanness -- inflicting emotional pain on people for no
reason other than to express our official disapproval
of them."
Jackson-Lee is the senior Democrat on the Judiciary
Committee's Subcommittee on Immigration, Border
Security and Claims. Sanchez is the senior Democrat on
the Homeland Security Committee's Subcommittee on
Infrastructure and Border Security. Nadler is the
senior Democrat on the Judiciary Committee's
Subcommittee on the Constitution. Frank, who is gay,
is the senior Democrat on the Financial Services
Committee.
- KOREAN GAY ACTOR IS DE-BLACKLISTED Wockner October 6, 2003
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Well-known South Korean actor Hong Suk-chon, who was
blacklisted from the television industry three years
ago after coming out as gay, is appearing in a new
program.
He plays a gay designer on the SBC network's
twice-weekly miniseries Perfect Love.
"The night before [we started taping], I didn't sleep,
I was too nervous," Hong told The New York Times. "I
was terrible. ... I made a lot of bloopers. But the
other actors, they understood.
"Before I came out, no one talked about homosexuality
in Korea," Hong added. "But then everybody was talking
about it. I think Koreans are starting to accept
homosexuality."
- ILGA TARGETS VATICAN Wockner October 6, 2003
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The European branch of the International Lesbian and
Gay Association says the Vatican should be denied
membership in organizations such as the United Nations
and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe because of its hostility to human rights.
"We ... consider its recent attacks on lesbians and
gays as incitement to hatred, and its call upon
lawmakers and politicians to oppose legislation in
favor of same-sex couples as an assault on human
rights, disqualifying the Holy See to be a serious
part of such organizations", said ILGA-Europe Co-chair
Kurt Krickler.
"The Vatican is one of the fiercest opponents to
non-discrimination and equal rights for lesbians,
gays, bisexuals and transgender people," ILGA said.
"We strongly doubt that the Vatican, with such
attitudes, can make any credible and convincing
contributions to the international human rights and
anti-discrimination discourse."
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