- NEW ZEALAND IMMIGRATION EQUALIZES GAYS Wockner October 13, 2003
-
Gay and heterosexual couples are now treated equally under
immigration rules, New Zealand Immigration Minister Lianne
Dalziel announced Sept. 29.
All couples must prove they have lived together in a
genuine and stable partnership for one year when they seek
a permanent-residency application for a foreign partner.
In the past, there was a two-year wait for de-facto and
same-sex couples and no wait for married couples.
Couples who have been together less than a year can seek
temporary permits.
- UGANDAN GAYS MAY FORM POLITICAL PARTY Wockner October 13, 2003
-
The Gay and Lesbian Alliance of Uganda has informed the
government that gays will form their own political party if
they are not granted equal rights, Kampala's The Monitor
reported Oct. 6.
"We believe criminalizing us because of our nature is
unfair," GALA Chairman S.W.I. Lule said. "If you fail to
honor our request, we will be forced to form our political
party to represent our interests."
In response, Justice and Constitutional Affairs Minister
Janat Mukwaya told The Monitor: "I would advise them to
read the Constitution. I don't think gays have a right in
our Constitution."
- EGYPTIAN ARRESTS CONTINUE Wockner October 13, 2003
-
Egypt continues to round up and arrest gay men by the
hundreds, Human Rights Watch said Oct. 6.
In the latest incident, Cairo police blocked both ends of a
bridge known for gay cruising and arrested 62 men found on
the structure.
They were held for three days and released on bail after
being charged with "habitual practice of debauchery." They
face up to three years in prison.
"These arrests are only the latest in a two-year official
campaign against homosexual conduct," said Joe Stork,
acting executive director of Human Rights Watch's Middle
East and North Africa division. "Many of those detained in
the past have been tortured in detention."
Stork charged police also continue to entrap Internet
cruisers and provided details on several men jailed
recently after seeking same-sex partners online.
- SEX OFFENDERS DELISTED Wockner October 13, 2003
-
Britain is removing more than 300 people from its
sex-offender registry because they were convicted of crimes
that will no longer exist come next May -- buggery and
gross indecency between men.
The crimes will disappear when the sex-offenses bill now
moving through Parliament reaches the statute book, said
The Guardian.
- GAY WEDDING PRIEST DEFROCKED Wockner October 13, 2003
-
The Russian Orthodox priest who conducted the nation's
first known same-sex wedding was defrocked Oct. 6.
Father Vladimir Enert accepted $450 to marry Denis Gogolev,
27, and Mikhail Morozov, 23, in the city of Nizhny Novgorod
Sept. 1.
"I simply wanted to marry the man I love," Gogolev told
Reuters.
The church quickly voided the wedding and suspended Enert.
Now it has stripped him of his priesthood altogether.
"We have decided to expel Father Vladimir Enert from sacred
office after he voluntarily carried out this blasphemous
act," a spokesman said.
Nizhny Novgorod, previously named Gorky, is 248 miles (400
km) east of Moscow on the Volga and Oka rivers. It is
Russia's third-largest city.
- GAY KISS IS RATINGS HIT Wockner October 13, 2003
-
A gay kiss on an evening soap opera that has aired in the
United Kingdom for 43 years grabbed 54.7 percent of all TV
viewers Oct. 6.
Fourteen million people tuned in to see Coronation Street
character Todd Grimshaw (Bruno Langley) plant one on Nick
Tilsley (Adam Rickett).
Sixteen viewers called in to complain about the snog.
- TRANNIES DENIED REGISTRATION Wockner October 13, 2003
-
The Argentine transvestite-transsexual organization ALITT
(Association for the Fight for Transvestite-Transsexual
Identity) was denied governmental registration Sept. 23.
In rejecting the application, Justice Ministry Inspector
General Ricardo Augusto Nissen wrote: "I consider that the
aims listed by ALITT ... do not fall into the category of
'public good' required of legally registered organizations
under Article 33 of the Civil Code. It does not seem to me
that 'to fight for recognition of transvestism as an
identity by both society and the State' nor 'building
transvestite-transsexual citizenship' offer a valuable
framework for the development of coexistence."
- ARTIST ATTACKS GAY GROUP Wockner October 13, 2003
-
Lithuanian sculptor Bronius Vysniauskas wants $300 from the
Lithuanian Gay League because it snapped a photo of one of
his public sculptures of muscular, square-jawed Communist
workers and put it on the cover of its magazine.
Vysniauskas says if the group doesn't hand over the money,
he will sue them for $8,000 for defamation.
"I created a monument of two socialist workers, not gays,"
Vysniauskas said, according to Advocate.com. "I don't know
how homosexuals came to the idea my models were gay."
- GAYS PICKET ORDINATIONS Wockner October 13, 2003
-
Members of the London gay group OutRage! picketed the
consecration of two bishops at Westminster Abbey Oct. 29 to
protest the Anglican hierarchy's rejection of gay bishop
appointee Jeffrey John earlier this year.
They carried posters reading, "[Archbishop of Canterbury
Rowan] Williams is a coward," "Where is Jeffrey John?" and
"Stand up to the Church Nazis."
"There will be no peace for an archbishop who refuses to
take a stand or to show moral leadership," said OutRage!'s
Brett Lock. "No spin-doctoring will make the issue
disappear."
John would have been consecrated at the ceremony as bishop
of Reading, England, if Williams had not forced him to
stand down from his appointment to placate homophobes in
the worldwide Anglican Communion. They were horrified that
John is openly gay and lives with a partner, although he
has said they no longer have sex.
The conservatives threatened that the Anglican Communion
would break apart if John were allowed to take the job.
John was appointed by the Bishop of Oxford.