Showing posts with label activists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label activists. Show all posts

Aug 31, 2007

Iowa's Gay Marriage Ban Overturned

Good news for North-american gays living in Iowa. Article from Associated Press.

A Polk County judge on Thursday struck down Iowa's law banning gay marriage.
The ruling by Judge Robert Hanson concluded that the state's prohibition on same-sex marriage is unconstitutional and he ordered the Polk County recorder to issue marriage licenses to six gay couples.
"This is kind of the American Dream," said plaintiff Jen BarbouRoske, of Iowa City. "I'm still feeling kind of shaky. It's pure elation, I just cannot believe it."
Camilla Taylor, an attorney with Lambda Legal, a New York-based gay rights organization, said the ruling requires "full equality for all Iowans including gay and lesbian Iowans and their families."
"The Iowa Constitution has lived up to its promises of equality for everyone," she said.
Gay couples from anywhere in Iowa could apply for a marriage license from Polk County. The process takes three days, however.
Polk County is expected to appeal the ruling to the Iowa S upreme Court.
County Attorney John Sarcone said the county would immediately seek a stay from Hanson, which if granted would prevent anyone from seeking a marriage license until an appeal could be heard.
The case will be appealed to the Iowa Supreme Court, which could refer it to the Iowa Court of Appeals, consider the case itself or decide not to hear the case.
Des Moines lawyer Dennis Johnson represented the six gay couples who filed suit after they were denied marriage licenses. He called the ruling "a moral victory for equal rights."
Johnson argued that Iowa has a long history of aggressively protecting civil rights in cases of race and gender. He said the Defense of Marriage Act, which the Legislature passed in 1998, contradicts previous court rulings regarding civil rights and should be struck down.
Johnson called the Defense of Marriage law "mean spirited" and said it was designed only to prohibit gays from marrying. He said it violates t he state constitution's equal protection and due-process clauses.
Lambda Legal, which spearheaded a same-sex marriage drive across the country, filed the lawsuit on behalf of the gay and lesbian couples in Polk County District Court on Dec. 13, 2005.
Roger J. Kuhle, an assistant Polk County attorney, argued that the issue is not for a judge to decide.
Rachel Cunningham, a spokeswoman for the conservative Iowa Family Policy Center, which opposes gay marriage, said the decision will be appealed.
"We're very disappointed and will pursue to the next level of courts," she said.
In his ruling, Hanson said the state law allowing marriage only between a man and a woman violates the constitutional rights of due process and equal protection.
"Couples, such as plaintiffs, who are otherwise qualified to marry one another may not be denied licenses to marry or certificates of marriage or in any other way prevented from entering into a civil marriage... by reason of the fact that both person comprising such a couple are of the same sex," he said.
The judge said the state law banning same-sex marriage must be nullified, severed and stricken from the books and the marriage laws "must be read and applied in a gender neutral manner so as to permit same-sex couples to enter into a civil marriage..."
State Sen. Ron Wieck, R-Sioux City, said he was surprised by the ruling and promised the Legislature would take another look at the issue.
"We'll look at something we can do legislatively," Wieck said.
House Minority Leader Christopher Rants, R-Sioux City, said the judge's ruling only illustrates the need for a state constitutional amendment banning gay marriage.
"I can't believe this is happening in Iowa," he said. "I guarantee you there will a vote on this issue come January."
Sarcone, the Polk County attorney, said the arguments in the case were similar to those made in litigation around the cou ntry.
"I know Judge Hanson took a lot of time with it," Sarcone said. "He made his decision and we respectfully disagree."
Kate Varnum, another plaintiff, said she was elated but expected more legal battles.
"I don't expect this to be the last one," said Varnum, of Cedar Rapids.

Jun 4, 2007

Riga: celebrating rights, fighting prejudice

«Gay rights are Human rights»

We are in Gay Pride season, and this weekend it was Riga's turn. It is important to remind that Baltic states are highly homphobic and Riga's Gay Pride March was the first one to be allowed in a baltic state 2 years ago.
This year, as usual, members of groups on the far right in Latvia staged a noisy demonstration in front of the Parliament on Wednesday (May 30) demanding that lawmakers ban the gay pride parade. The groups included skinheads, extreme nationalists, neo-Nazis and churchgoers. Nothing so new... More than 100 protestors shouted homophobic slogans and handed out T-shirts to passersby bearing anti-gay messages.
However, this year - on Sunday June 3 - the march took place. Amnesty International members from all over Europe, some MEPs representing the European Parliament, the Swedish Minister for Migration Affairs and some other Danish and Norwigian politicians participated in Riga Pride 2007 in solidarity with the Latvian LGBT individuals, who are facing widespread hostility and discrimination. There were around 500 people in the march that was restrited to Riga city park due to secutiry reasons.
The events organized by Mozaika, a Latvian LGBT organization, started on 31 May and included speeches, workshops and parties, culminating with the march on Sunday 3 June. In the last two years Gay Pride parades organized by the GLBT group Mozaika exposed Latvian intolerance to homosexuality on the international arena.
Following two consecutive years of Riga Pride that have seen attacks on supporters of the march, the Latvian authorities protected the participants' safety and their right to freedom of assembly. These rights, as well as the right not to be discriminated against, must be respected not just on the day of the march but all year round.

Interview with Mozaika co-founder (Real Player)

Last years...
In 2006 the capital city of Riga refused to grant a parade permit citing security reasons following a recommendation from Latvian Interior Minister Dzintars Jaundzeikars.
Pride organizers organized a service at a local church instead of holding a parade. As they left the church dozens were attacked by an angry mob.
They were pelted with bags of excrement and verbal abuse as police stood by watching.
Latvian President Vaira Vike-Freiberga denounced the violence and said that it was unacceptable for the Riga City Council to refuse the parade permit.
In 2005 gays went to court and got an injunction after the city also refused a parade license. The march was marked by violence and a number of protestors were arrested.
A labor law passed in 2004 as a condition of European Union membership and as required by the EU contained protections for gays was never implemented. Last year Parliament revised it stripped out the LGBT protections and sent it to the president for her signature.
After a heated battle in Parliament the clause was reinstated and the bill was signed into law.

May 27, 2007

Arrests at Russian gay protests

Fresh report from several News Agencies
27. May.2007


The gay rights demonstrators were trying to deliver a petition to the mayor of Moscow, demanding the right to stage public marches in order to allow a Gay Pride march to go ahead.
MPs from Germany and Italy were reportedly among those arrested.
British gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell was arrested, along with the leader of GayRussia, Nikolai Alexeyev. Tatchell was punched in the face before being detained.
Italian MEP Marco Cappato was kicked by an anti-gay rights protester and then arrested when he demanded police protection. "Where are the police? Where is the protection? I'm a member of European Parliament," he shouted before he was led away.
Several demonstrators were punched and kicked by the anti-homosexual protesters who threw kicks, punches and eggs at the gay rights group, chanting "Moscow is not Sodom" and shouting "Death to homosexuals".
Moscow mayor Yury Luzhkov has called homosexuality "satanic" and said he will never allow gay rights parades in Russia's capital.
Gay activists were also attacked by right-wing protesters and arrested during a march in 2006.
Sunday's protest was to commemorate the 14th anniversary of the decriminalisation of homosexuality in Russia. Moscow city police spokesman Viktor Bryukov had warned the organisers not to go ahead.
"Moscow police don't have the right to encroach on the law to pander to a group of citizens who exploit the theme of human rights while distorting this notion," he said.
On Saturday, right-wingers and members of the Russian Orthodox Church held an anti-gay demonstration in Moscow.The head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Alexy II, supports the ban on gay parades.


Video from Associated Press:


If you want to see more related videos click here. (BBC video)