|

|
Veteran gay journalist
Doug Ireland has asked us to publish this article which he posted on his
website earlier today. We are happy to do so and urge our readers to help
in whatever way is possible.
The
Persian Gay and Lesbian Organization
(PGLO) has appealed to North
American activists for help in mobilizing support for their campaign against
the vicious, lethal, anti-gay crackdown taking place in the Islamic Republic
of Iran. The anti-gay pogrom in Iran includes arrests and torture of gay
people, executions of gay Iranians on trumped up charges, and a
well-organized Internet entrapment campaign by Iran's religious sex police
that is ensnaring gay Iranians daily.
In his latest e-mail sent to me today from
Turkey, the secretary of the PGLO's Human Rights Commission, Arsham Parsi,
wrote: “Dear Doug, Would you please introduce PGLO to your activist friends
and groups and organizations? We need it, we are going to make a big
campaign. We need their e-mail addresses. We reach out our hands of need to
you!”
The PGLO is an outgrowth of an earlier, smaller Iranian gay
group called Rainbow, which first organized in 1981. But PGLO, in its
current form, has existed only since 2004. “We are a young team yet,” said
Parsi in a telephone interview. With secretariats in
Norway
and Turkey, the PGLO claims a mailing list of over 29,000 Iranians. It
maintains a trilingual website in Persian, German, and
English.
PGLO conducts educational and mutual aide activities inside Iran, and
provides support for Iranian gays who have escaped from the Islamic Republic
– the world's largest religious prison – and tries to help them obtain
asylum in a country where they won’t be persecuted for who and how they
love.
PGLO edits a monthly magazine in Persian,
Cheragh and
produces Persian-language radio programs for webcast – a dozen so far –
which are beamed into
Iran
on the Internet and redistributed there on cassettes. To give [ … ] readers
some sense of the content of these PGLO productions, I asked my invaluable
Persian translator – the Iranian-American Dr. Houman Sarshar, a
psychotherapist by profession who has been of enormous help to me in my
reporting on the tragic persecution of Iranian gays by their government – to
read the magazine and listen to the webcasts. He reports: “Both the magazine
and the webcasts are focused predominantly on activism. The last issue of
Cheragh is about 35 pdf pages. It is fairly substantial in terms of
material. Both the magazine and the webcasts deal mostly with legal,
social, and ethnographic issues concerning the Iranian gay and lesbian
community.”
Dr. Sarshar adds: “They also have a strong teaching undertone:
teaching about safe sex; translating segments from self-help books and
articles about coming out, dealing with the family after you do, etc. The
radio programs I’ve listened to in passing, are mostly talk radio programs.
I guess the best way to put it is that both the ‘zine and the Internet
radio programs are essentially aiming to raise consciousness about the state
of homosexuality in
Iran
today. But their primary focus is definitely legal matters and activism
around the absence of the gay rights in Iran today, and the horrible
persecutions gay people face today in the Islamic Republic.”
Parsi, PGLO's human rights secretary – who has also been of
great help to me in my reporting on
Iran
– has been granted asylum in
Canada,
and is moving there from
Turkey
in December to establish a PGLO secretariat. (Turkey, whose government –
after eight decades of secular rule – is now controlled by an Islamist
political party, is becoming increasingly hostile to gays, and
Turkey is now in the process of banning gay
groups. So it’s not
the best place for an Iranian gay group to operate in.)
The PGLO and Parsi will need material and political help –
both in
Canada
and from the U.S. and the rest of the world – in setting up the PGLO
secretariat when Parsi arrives in Canada. And he pleads with North American
activists in both countries – and elsewhere – to add their names to the PGLO
e-mail list so that the group can keep them informed of the developing gay
tragedy in Iran, receive alerts when protests are mobilized, and help secure
asylum and support for fleeing Iranian gays. The PGLO says:
“Please do not leave us alone and try to
be our everyday supporters and friends. Hoping for the day, when
homosexuality does not carry social contempts and hate any more and would be
accepted as a social fact, we ask you to join us and stay with us to
struggle for reaching this vital goal. We need your supports and the warmth
of your hands.”
If you want to
express your solidarity with the Iranian LGBT community,
individuals as well as organizations are asked to
send an e-mail to the PGLO
at
hrc@pglo.org
and join their mailing list. And if you are in a position to make a
financial contribution, you may do so by bank transfer to the PGLO bank
account in
Turkey:
Bank Name: KOC BANK;
USD. Account NO.: 422 65 193; Branch Code: 975 Turkey
Doug
Ireland's article then recaps the escape of Amir from Iran following severe
lashings because he was gay. Click
here for the full article
I.G.L.H.R.C.
and IRAN - A Reply to Paula Ettelbrick, by Doug Ireland.
The September 23 Washington Blade reprints as a column a press release from
Paula Ettelbrick, executive director of the
International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC), headlined
“Standing Up for Gays in Iran.” I found Ettelbrick’s column
disingenuous and hypocritical in the extreme. Here’s why...
|
| |
Recent Articles
September 29:
UK:
Anti-Gay Christian Voice Director on BBC’s Question
Time. Stephen Green, the national director of the
vehemently anti-gay Christian fundamentalist Christian Voice, is one of the
panellists on tonight’s Question Time (BBC1 at 10.35pm), which comes live
from Brighton at the end of the Labour Party conference.
UK:
Increase in HIV Sexual
Risk Behaviour in Scottish Gay Men. The prevalence of
“risky” sex in Scotland has doubled in the space of six years, while
unfounded confidence in the HIV negative status of casual partners has also
increased, reveals research in Sexually Transmitted Infections.
September 28:
Nepal:
OutRage! Condemns
Police Brutality Against Gays in Nepal.
The UK LGBT human rights group OutRage! has today condemned the police assaults of
gay metis last weekend in Kathmandu, Nepal.
Turkey:
Gay Rights Violated by
Turkey, Says Human Rights Watch. The threat by Turkish
officials to close down an organization defending lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender people’s rights violates basic freedoms of association and
expression, Human Rights Watch said last night.
Belarus/Sweden/UK:
European Push to
Help Belarus Gays. Concerns are growing over human rights
of gays in Belarus, dubbed by activists as “Europe’s last dictatorship”.
September 27:
USA:
Gay
Pioneers to Be Guests of The Falls Church News-Press at HRCs Silver
Anniversary Dinner. Two of the original ‘gay pioneers’ who
kicked off the modern civil rights movement for lesbians and gays with
demonstrations in Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia in the mid-1960s, will
be the special guests of the Falls Church News-Press, a progressive weekly
newspaper in Northern Virginia suburbs of the nation's capital, at the Human
Rights Campaign’s 25th Anniversary National Dinner in Washington, D.C., on
Saturday (October 1).
Nepal:
HIV Victim Beaten As
Police Taunt Gays In Nepal. A Nepalese meti afflicted with
HIV, the virus that can lead to AIDS, was savagely beaten by police and detained
in a Kathmandu police station for a day before being released on payment of
what was effectively a bribe.
Jamaica/UK:
Buju Banton In Court
Friday After Gay-Bashing Attack. UK gay human rights group
Outrage! will be paying particular attention to a trail in a Jamaican court
on Friday when Mark Myrie, better known as reggae
singer Buju Banton, answers charges of assault.
September 26:
Moldova:
Moldova: Discrimination
Against Gays, Lesbians Is Inadmissible, Says Council of Europe.
Moldova must guarantee the fundamental rights of gays and lesbians, a report
from the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) says.
September 25:
UK:
Time For Tribute
Website for Gay Community To Be Noticed, by Steven Kay. It seems natural for anyone to
place a tribute into the local paper when a loved one dies. But when
Nigel Barnes, the founder of gaytributes.com tried, he was refused at
every stage, all owing to one little word “gay”.
September 24:
Russia:
Cashman Pledges Support for Moscow Gay Pride.
Michael Cashman, the out-gay Member of the European Parliament, has invited
the Moscow mayor Yuri Luzhkov to Strasbourg for a “summit” on gay pride
events and of LGBT rights to expression, demonstrations and meetings.
September
23:
Iran:
Holding Iran
Accountable for Violating Gay Human Rights, by Paula Ettelbrick.
The president of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, joined the largest
gathering ever of world leaders last week at the United Nations without one
question being asked about his country’s continued violations of
international human rights law. Iran has signed both the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the UN Convention on the Rights
of the Child. Both forbid the execution of any person under the age of 18
for any crime. Yet there has been a rash of public executions in Iran that
have involved youth or were related to sexuality and gender identity.
|
|