Author Archives: Andreas R. Ziegler

Inter-American rights body finds Jamaica violated LGBT rights

Inter-American rights body finds Jamaica violated LGBT rights

Bildergebnis für Inter-American Commission on Human Rights

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) found in a landmark decision released Wednesday that the Jamaican government is responsible for violating the human rights of two of its nationals within the LGBT community.

The Human Dignity Trust (HDT), a charity composed of international lawyers championing LGBT rights, brought the case in 2011 on behalf of two individuals. Gareth Henry is a gay man, who, after facing police brutality and repeated attacks by homophobic gangs and mobs, sought asylum in Canada in 2008. Henry was beaten by a policeman while a crowd of 200 people stood by. Simone Edwards is a lesbian woman who was forced to flee Jamaica after being shot multiple times outside her house in 2008. The two perpetrators wanted to kill her and her brothers, one of whom is gay. After the government continually failed to protect them, Edwards was granted asylum in Europe.

The commission found the Jamaican government responsible for the violation of the rights to humane treatment, privacy, freedom of movement and residence, equal protection, and judicial protection, set down in the American Convention of Human Rights. It recommended that the Jamaican government provide full reparation, including economic compensation, to Henry and Edwards. It also called for homophobic laws to be repealed on an immediate basis (sections 76-79 of the Offenses Against the Person Act, 1864). There are no legal safeguards against discrimination in the country, and, for that reason, the commission called for an anti-discrimination legal framework. It recommended that the government gather statistical data on violence and discrimination based on gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, and body diversity; train public officials; and give a comprehensive sexuality education inclusive of sexual and gender diversity. It also called for applying the standard of due diligence.

Henry and Edwards had argued that the laws prohibiting “buggery,” or anal sex, and “gross indecency”—remnants of the colonial era—not just violate their rights, but also legitimize violence against LGBT persons.

“This is a major legal victory for Gareth, Simone and the entire LGBT community in Jamaica and the wider Caribbean, where nine countries continue to criminalise consensual same-sex intimacy,” said Téa Braun, Director of the HDT. “It is a highly significant step forward that must now accelerate the repeal of these stigmatising and discriminatory laws.”

It is the first decision by the commission to find that laws criminalizing LGBT people violate international law. Consequently, it sets a precedent for the Caribbean region.

The post Inter-American rights body finds Jamaica violated LGBT rights appeared first on JURIST – News – Legal News & Commentary.

Join the Williams Institute Team! (Summer Law Fellowships)

Join the Williams Institute Team! (Summer Law Fellowships)

Williams Institute Summer Law Fellowship This fellowship is a unique opportunity for law students to develop expertise in sexual orientation and gender identity law and public policy. Summer fellows will provide research and writing support to Williams Institute scholars who focus on state, federal, and international legal issues that impact the LGBT community.

Deadline to apply: February 20, 2021 Gleason/Kettel Summer Law Fellowship For the summer of 2021, the Williams Institute will award the Gleason/Kettel Summer Law Fellowship to provide a law student, or recent law school graduate, with a stipend of up to $5,000 for 10 weeks of full-time work with an organization, or research center focused on sexual orientation and gender identity law and public policy.

Deadline to apply: May 1, 2021
Learn More and Apply

Finland violated rights of a lesbian mothers’ child by rejecting his asylum application, UN finds

Finland violated rights of a lesbian mothers’ child by rejecting his asylum application, UN finds

The image shows Palais Wilson in Geneva and reads: United Nations - historic decision in favour of a child and his lesbian mothers who saw their asylum application rejected

(Geneva, 17 February 2021) – The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child found that Finland failed to consider the best interests of the child of a lesbian couple when rejecting his asylum request, and to protect him against a real risk of irreparable harm when the family had no other choice but to return to Russia.

“This is a ground-breaking decision: it is the first asylum-related case from the UN system involving a child who is facing specific risks on the grounds of his mothers’ sexual orientation, and of the family they form together”, said Kseniya Kirichenko, Programme Coordinator at ILGA World. “This is also the first time that the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child made a decision on sexual orientation issues, and the first case on children in same-sex families in Treaty Bodies’ practice altogether”.

The Committee’s decision was informed by a third-party intervention submitted jointly by ILGA World, ILGA-Europe, the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ), Child Rights International Network (CRIN) and Network of European LGBTIQ* Families Associations (NELFA).

The Committee’s decision concerned an application filed on behalf of A. B., now 11, who had fled Russia together with his mothers after the family faced harassment and threats, and he had started to suffer from bullying and isolation at school.  These were the years when regions across Russia had started to introduce so-called “anti-propaganda laws”, which have contributed to an increasingly hostile environment against people of diverse sexual orientations, gender identities and expressions. Legislation that bars “promoting non-traditional sexual relationships” was eventually adopted in 2013 at the national level.

Fearing for their safety, the family fled to Finland, where the child started to attend school, made friends, and no longer had to live in fear of calling both of his parents “mother” and of talking to anyone about his family.  However, Finland rejected their application for asylum: authorities recognised the past experiences of threats, bullying and discrimination; nonetheless, they concluded that these could not be considered as amounting to persecution. 

The family was left with no other choice but to return to Russia. However, the complaint against Finland reached the United Nations, where in February 2021 the Committee on the Rights of the Child concluded that Finland “failed to adequately take the best interests of the child as a primary consideration when assessing the author’s asylum request based on his mothers’ sexual orientation, and to protect him against a real risk of irreparable harm in case of return to the Russian Federation”. 

“This is an important decision, setting out necessary standards for the protection of children in LGBTI families who are at heightened risk of discrimination, especially in countries like Russia, where LGBTI people face stigmatisation and hostilities in their everyday lives”, said Arpi Avetisyan, Head of Litigation at ILGA–Europe. “States must always ensure that the best interests of the child are effectively and systematically taken into account in the context of asylum proceedings, and that they are not discriminated based on their parents’ sexual orientation.”    

While finding Finland in violation of articles 3, 19, and 22 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the UN committee pointed out that the state “is under an obligation to provide an effective reparation to the author, including adequate compensation.”

The decision has the potential to bring about change. “In the past, we have seen that international decisions on lesbian, gay and bisexual asylum seekers actually led to giving the applicants residency in the respondent States”, concluded Kirichenko. “We hope that Finland will also ensure that this family will be able to come back and to finally have a happy and safe life”.

See: https://ilga.org/Finland-violated-rights-lesbian-mothers-child-asylum-UN?fbclid=IwAR1FJrLMk5Th4CyqlUlfr1QsKKd7ZZsnYwjfPo-3GDRVtdUUcct11mPUEEA

Liechtenstein: Prince gives interview and says he finds adoption of a boy by two men problematic

Liechtenstein: Prince gives interview and says he finds adoption of a boy by two men problematic

15.02.21 | Liechtenstein

Verein Flay kritisiert Fürsten-Aussage zur “Ehe für Alle”

Lukas Oehri vom Verein Flay (Foto: Radio L)

Die Aussage des Landesfürsten zur „Ehe für Alle“ stösst in Liechtenstein zum Teil auf grosses Unverständnis. 

Wir sind sprachlos, so Vorstandsmitglied Lukas Oehri vom Verein Flay für Anders-Sexuelle kurz nach der Veröffentlichung des Interviews auf Radio Liechtenstein. 

Er sei entsetzt über den Vergleich zwischen Schwulen und Pädophilen, so Oehri.

Der Fürst hatte im Interview mit Radio Liechtenstein gesagt, er fände es problematisch, wenn zwei Homosexuelle einen Knaben adoptierten.

Er habe sich als homosexueller Vater persönlich angegriffen gefühlt, so Oehri.

Der Verein Flay setzt sich für die  Gleichstellung von LGBTI’s in Liechtenstein ein. Audio Player00:0000:00Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume.

Die Zeit ist Reif für die Ehe für alle   |  15.02.2021, 13:16 Audio Player00:0000:00Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume.

Fürst Hans-Adam II zur Ehe für Alle   |  12.02.2021, 17:52

Free Webinar: Male Survivors of Wartime Sexual Violence – Philipp Schulz 25 February 2021 , 18:30 – 20:00

Free Webinar: Male Survivors of Wartime Sexual Violence – Philipp Schulz 25 February 2021 , 18:30 – 20:00

Thursday 25 February

Barbed wire and rusted door

Free Webinar: Male Survivors of Wartime Sexual Violence – Philipp Schulz 25 February 2021 , 18:30 – 20:00

Online event Add to calendar

JOIN THIS EVENT ONLINE
Meeting number: 1212696364
Password: pm3UpAqX

Although wartime sexual violence against men occurs more frequently than is commonly assumed, its dynamics are remarkably underexplored, and male survivors’ experiences remain particularly overlooked. This reality is poignant in northern Uganda, where sexual violence against men during the early stages of the conflict was geographically widespread, yet now accounts of those incidents are not just silenced and neglected locally but also widely absent from analyses of the war.

Based on rare empirical data, Philipp Schulz’s book Male Survivors of Wartime Sexual Violence. Perspectives from Northern Uganda seeks to remedy this marginalization and to illuminate the seldom-heard voices of male sexual violence survivors in northern Uganda, bringing to light their experiences of gendered harms, agency, and justice.

The book is published in open access and can be read here.

Speaker

  • Philipp Schulz, Institute for Intercultural and International Studies, University of Bremen

Discussant

  • Paula Drumond, Institute of International Relations at Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro

This event is organised jointly by the Gender Centre and the Centre on Conflict, Development and Peacebuilding.

Council of Europe: New reports show increasing discrimination and attacks on LGBTI people in Poland and Europe as a whole

Council of Europe: New reports show increasing discrimination and attacks on LGBTI people in Poland and Europe as a whole

New reports show increasing discrimination and attacks on LGBTI people in Poland and Europe as a whole

A report on a fact-finding mission to Poland in November last year draws attention to increasing attacks and discrimination against LGBTI people in the country, focusing on cities, provinces and regions that are adopting family charters and resolutions against so-called “LGBT ideology”. Another, more general report on “The role and responsibilities of local and regional authorities in the protection of LGBTI persons” denounces the “backsliding” observed in Council of Europe member states with regard to the rights of LGBTI persons.

More: https://www.coe.int/en/web/portal/-/new-reports-show-increasing-discrimination-and-attacks-on-lgbti-people-in-poland-and-europe-as-a-whole