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12 Dec 2008

UN General Assembly to address sexual orientation and gender identity

The reading of the statement will be the first time the General Assembly has formally addressed rights violations based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

Statement by Human Rights Watch (December 11, 2008):

As the world celebrates the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), the UN General Assembly will hear a statement in mid-December endorsed by more than 50 countries across the globe calling for an end to rights abuses based on sexual orientation and gender identity. A coalition of international human rights organisations today urged all the world's nations to support the statement in affirmation of the UDHR's basic promise: that human rights apply to everyone.

Nations on four continents are coordinating the statement, including: Argentina, Brazil, Croatia, France, Gabon, Japan, the Netherlands, and Norway. The reading of the statement will be the first time the General Assembly has formally addressed rights violations based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

"In 1948 the world's nations set forth the promise of human rights, but six decades later, the promise is unfulfilled for many," said Linda Baumann of Namibia, a board member of Pan Africa ILGA, a coalition of over 60 African lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) groups. "The unprecedented African support for this statement sends a message that abuses against LGBT people are unacceptable anywhere, ever."

The statement is non-binding, and reaffirms existing protections for human rights in international law. It builds on a previous joint statement supported by 54 countries, which Norway delivered at the UN Human Rights Council in 2006.

"Universal means universal, and there are no exceptions," said Boris Dittrich of the Netherlands, advocacy director of Human Rights Watch's lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights program. "The UN must speak forcefully against violence and prejudice, because there is no room for half measures where human rights are concerned."

The draft statement condemns violence, harassment, discrimination, exclusion, stigmatisation, and prejudice based on sexual orientation and gender identity. It also condemns killings and executions, torture, arbitrary arrest, and deprivation of economic, social, and cultural rights on those grounds.

"Today, dozens of countries still criminalise consensual homosexual conduct, laws that are often relics of colonial rule," said Grace Poore of Malaysia, who works with the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission. "This statement shows a growing global consensus that such abusive laws have outlived their time."

The statement also builds on a long record of UN action to defend the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people. In its 1994 decision in Toonen v. Australia, the UN Human Rights Committee - the body that interprets the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), one of the UN's core human rights treaties - held that human rights law prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation. Since then, the United Nations' human rights mechanisms have condemned violations based on sexual orientation and gender identity, including killings, torture, rape, violence, disappearances, and discrimination in many areas of life. UN treaty bodies have called on states to end discrimination in law and policy.

Other international bodies have also opposed violence and discrimination against LGBT people, including the Council of Europe and the European Union. In 2008, all 34 member countries of the Organization of American States unanimously approved a declaration affirming that human rights protections extend to sexual orientation and gender identity.

"Latin American governments are helping lead the way as champions of equality and supporters of this statement," said Gloria Careaga Perez of Mexico, co-secretary general of ILGA. "Today a global movement supports the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, and those voices will not be denied."

So far, 55 countries have signed onto the General Assembly statement. Others include: Andorra, Armenia, Australia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Canada, Cape Verde, the Central African Republic, Chile, Ecuador, Georgia, Iceland, Israel, Japan, Liechtenstein, Mexico, Montenegro, New Zealand, San Marino, Serbia, Switzerland, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Uruguay, and Venezuela. All 27 member states of the European Union are also signatories.

"This statement has found support from states and civil society in every region of the world," said Kim Vance of Canada, co-director of ARC International. "In December a simple message will rise from the General Assembly: the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is truly universal."

The coalition of international human rights organisations that issued this statement includes:
Amnesty International; ARC International; Center for Women's Global Leadership; COC Netherlands; Global Rights; Human Rights Watch; International Committee for IDAHO (the International Day Against Homophobia); International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC); International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex Association (ILGA); International Service for Human Rights; Pan Africa ILGA; and Public Services International.

Fridae editor's note: In a statement issued by Nepal's Sunil Pant on Dec 11, an openly gay Member of Constituent Assembly and Parliament, Nepal will be the 56th signatory to the statement. Meanwhile, in the US, activists are lobbying the US State Department to sign the U.N. statement. In Italy last week, the Vatican created a stir when it denounced the statement as a disguised attempt to pressure countries into recognising same-sex marriage. Vatican officials further urged countries not to sign the statement. The presentation of the declaration for the worldwide decriminalisation of homosexuality is expected to take place at the UN General Assembly between 15 and 20 December.

讀者回應

1. 2008-12-13 02:32  
It is certainly good to see this

Gavin (working for UN)
2. 2008-12-13 12:18  
Hardly surprising the Vatican makes an irrelevant comment. They do not respect even first principles such as "love thy neighbour"

They cannot understand that "God made all men in his image"

Well they did take 100 years to admit that the earth is round and goes round the sun!!!!!!!

Colin
Manila
回應#3於被作者刪除。
4. 2008-12-13 23:48  
"colin_20001 says : they did take 100 years to admit that the earth is round and goes round the sun!!!!!!!"

I think they actually took about 360 years, from Galilieo's trial for heresy in 1633, to an implied admission in 1992; even then the Pope didn't actually come out and say the Church had been wrong. I think there are still literalists who believe the Sun goes around the Earth.

There's a report here:
:


http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1252/is_n6_v120/ai_13606956



- And yes, it is good to see that there are over 55 countries in favour of universal decriminalisation, including all 27 in the EU. If the US doesn't sign up it will be a huge disgrace, especially given that their own constitution is against criminalisation.
5. 2008-12-15 11:06  
It offers a glimmer of hope, and a real chance for change. But we must still be cautious and alos hope for the best for the outcome, eventually the PLU community the world over will rejoice and celebrate. Peace.
6. 2008-12-15 11:20  
Why should the Vatican comment when it is not even a member of the UN? Religious politics is the next dangerous thing the world should be careful with, and it is already happening.
7. 2008-12-15 12:29  
Of course Catholicism would seek to achieve hatred in the name of love...its a tradition.

Great to see Brazil (under the leadership of a left wing President) has been able to rise above the religion of its Catholic majority and support human rights.

Well done to Israel which shows itself to be independent of its Jewish roots in supporting gay rights.

For the rest, it seems human rights are recognised most easily where religion is least powerful.

Noticeably, not one of the major Muslim countries can accept human decency towards PLU over Middle Age dogma and ignorance.
8. 2008-12-15 14:43  
Historically, Catholic Doctrine had always been a few decades or centuries behind the advancement in human rights, e.g. the denunciation against slavery and Nazism came years after the US Civil War and Hitler's demise, respectively. This will be no different so, the best thing member states of the UN can do, in my personal view, is to IGNORE the bloody Vatican :-)! Just go ahead and sign the bloody UN statement on the decriminalization of homosexuality because you will be taking a giant leap into the 21st century and doing your respective nations a favour :-) !

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