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| International News - March 1, 2004 |
- CAMBODIAN KING: 'I AM NOT GAY' Wockner March 1, 2004
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Cambodian King Norodom Sihanouk, 81, said Feb. 24 that he is not gay.
The remark, published on his Web site, norodomsihanouk.info, followed by
four days Sihanouk's coming out in favor of same-sex marriage.
"I am not gay, but I respect the right of gays and lesbians," he said.
"It's not their fault if God makes them born like that. Gays and
lesbians would not exist if God did not create them. As a Buddhist, I
must have compassion for human beings who are not like me but who
torture nobody, kill nobody."
On Feb. 20, Sihanouk had written: "I think [Cambodia] should allow
marriage between man and man or between woman and woman if they desire
it."
Sihanouk has no executive powers but is deeply revered by many
Cambodians.
- ISRAELI GAYS GET TAX BREAK Wockner March 1, 2004
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The Israeli State Attorney's Office has extended the spousal exemption
from property-transfer taxes to same-sex couples, Haaretz and the
Jerusalem Post reported Feb. 25.
The office announced its decision during a Supreme Court hearing in the
case of two men who were hit with the tax after one transferred half of
the rights to their apartment to the other.
Tax officials had maintained the exemption was available only to
opposite-sex couples living as a family.
"It's a great step forward," activist Hagai El-Ad, executive director of
Jerusalem Open House, told the Post. "[But] it's a far cry from the
marriage-like arrangement in Western European countries.
"We can check off item number seven on our list of 200 [spousal rights
we don't have]," El-Ad said. "If we continue this way, it will take 50
years. I'm a patient person, but I'm not that patient."
- BOY GEORGE SETTLES LIBEL CASE Wockner March 1, 2004
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Gay singer and DJ Boy George paid $18,740 Feb. 25 to settle a libel suit
filed by a London nightclub employee he had accused of assault.
He also apologized to Sweet Suite membership secretary Andrew Thompson
for the accusation which appeared in a newspaper column and magazine
interview.
George punched out Thompson on June 20, 2002, and later said Thompson
had provoked him and deserved to be smacked.
- BOY GEORGE SETTLES LIBEL CASE Wockner March 1, 2004
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Gay singer and DJ Boy George paid $18,740 Feb. 25 to settle a libel suit
filed by a London nightclub employee he had accused of assault.
He also apologized to Sweet Suite membership secretary Andrew Thompson
for the accusation which appeared in a newspaper column and magazine
interview.
George punched out Thompson on June 20, 2002, and later said Thompson
had provoked him and deserved to be smacked.
- JAPAN REJECTS ASYLUM REQUEST Wockner March 1, 2004
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The Tokyo District Court Feb. 26 rejected an asylum request from a gay
Iranian who fears he will face the death penalty because of his
homosexuality when he returns home.
"Not being permitted to express himself sexually in his own way does not
fall under the kind of persecution in the refugee convention," said
Judge Yosuke Ichimura.
Ichimura also speculated that it is unlikely the man would be targeted
because of his gayness since he is closeted.
The man, age 40, had lived in Japan since 1991 and was arrested in 2000
for being an illegal alien. He plans to appeal to the Tokyo High Court.
According to The Japan Times, Iranian adults who have anal sex can be
put to death, two men who sleep naked under a cover face 99 lashes, and
two men who kiss "with lust" can get 60 lashes. Repeated lesbian sex
acts also can result in the death penalty, the paper said.
- TORIES TO STAGE GAY SUMMIT Wockner March 1, 2004
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Britain's Conservative Party will stage a gay summit to broaden its
appeal, the BBC reported Feb. 25.
Some 140 organizations are slated to attend.
"In the past we have often been seen in terms of what we are against
rather than what we are for," the Tory spokesman for young people,
Charles Hendry, told the BBC. "My hope is that people across the party
will recognize that to win elections we have to show that we are
representative."
Tory leader Michael Howard supports the summit, which will be held March
29 in the House of Commons' Grand Committee Room, the report said.
- POLAND NIXES DISCRIMINATION BODY Wockner March 1, 2004
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Poland's Council of Ministers Feb. 24 refused to create a government
office charged with promoting equality between men and women and
battling discrimination, including against gays.
The council cited budget problems.
In 2002, the council itself had instructed the Government
Plenipotentiary for the Equal Status of Women and Men to draft the
legislation that would have created the office.
The move was aimed at harmonizing Polish law with that of the European
Union, which Poland is set to join this year.
Lambda Warsaw has appealed for help from abroad to counteract the latest
development.
The group asks that letters be sent to Prime Minister Leszek Miller,
Office of the Chairman of the Council of Ministers, al. Ujazdowskie 1/3,
00-583 Warsaw, Poland. Fax: 011-48-22-625-2637. E-mail:
cirinfo@kprm.gov.pl.
- WIRE SERVICE CORRECTS MARRIAGE STORIES Wockner March 1, 2004
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The Canadian Press wire service, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation,
the Associated Press, and newspapers in Canada and the U.S. recently
reported incorrect numbers for same-sex marriages that have taken place
in Toronto since Ontario's highest court legalized same-sex marriage on
June 10, 2003. The errors were widely repeated in the gay press.
The CP wire issued a correction on Feb. 18. It states: "The Canadian
Press erroneously reported in several stories this month that city
records show that from July, 2003 until the end of December, 14,700 gays
and lesbians had been married in Toronto, 6,800 of them non-Canadians.
In fact, from June 10, 2003, until Feb. 13 of this year, there were
1,143 same-sex marriage licenses issued by the City of Toronto. Of
those, 398 licenses were issued to Americans and 61 were for couples
outside Canada and the U.S. The total number of marriage licenses issued
by the city during that period was 12,046."
Same-sex marriage also is permitted in the province of British Columbia,
where it was legalized by court order on July 8, 2003. There have been
1,400 same-sex marriages in British Columbia, 766 of them between
Americans.
Canada's federal government plans to legalize same-sex marriage
nationwide as soon as the Canadian Supreme Court signs off on the plan
by answering four procedural questions that the government sent it.
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