Jeremiah Chin: Silencing Children’s Rights (Repost from Verfassungsblog) – United States

Jeremiah Chin: Silencing Children’s Rights (Repost from Verfassungsblog) – United States

The U.S. Supreme Court decided Mahmoud v. Taylor on June 27, 2025. In doing so, it dramatically expanded parental rights over students and education without concern for the rights of children or consideration of pedagogy and curriculum. While the current era of the Supreme Court under Chief Justice John Roberts has repeatedly blurred lines dividing religious groups and state power under the First Amendment, Mahmoud rewrites the First Amendment for children entirely. The Court concluded that the government burdens the religious exercise of parents by failing to provide mandatory notice and opt-out policies when school materials include Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, or Transgender (LGBTQ+) topics. Instead of addressing the plurality of views around sexual orientation and gender, the Court indirectly, but unsubtly, installs a traditional values framework that imposes norms of heterosexuality, religious fundamentalism and parental micromanagement of curriculum. This simultaneously threatens the expression, learning, and community built in schools for everyone.

The stories of Mahmoud v. Taylor

Decided on June 27, 2025, Mahmoud v. Taylor represents a struggle between religious parents and secular public education over curriculum in Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) in Maryland. Maryland incorporated several suggested texts for instructors that would include LGBTQ+ characters to better reflect the diverse community of students and parents within the district. Several parents objected on religious grounds, requesting the school provide notice and offer an opt-out option when such materials are used in the classroom. At first, MCPS was willing to provide the option to parents but found the measures administratively unfeasible and potentially stigmatizing to students, concluding that no notice or opt-out was required because parents had access to book lists prior to every school year.

The different justices’ retellings of the case reveal their radically different framings of the facts. In the majority opinion of the Court, Justice Samuel Alito describes the origins of the conflict as rooting “in the years leading up to 2022”, when the MCPS “apparently ‘determined that the books used in its existing English and Language Arts curriculum were not representative of many students and families in Montgomery County’” because they did not include LGBTQ characters. According to Alito, this prompted the school district to include five storybooks for children between 5 and 11 years old. The pointed use of “apparently” and the lack of context make the MCPS decision appear abrupt and arbitrary rather than a good-faith effort by the school district to provide a more robust curriculum.

Justice Sotomayor’s dissent, in turn, reveals that the Court’s framing obfuscates a long effort by MCPS in reconciling the fact that “certain perspectives…were absent from its English language curriculum,” and only the latest in a broad effort to promote a “fully inclusive environment for all students’ by using instructional materials that reflect [the] diversity of the global community, including persons with disabilities, persons from diverse racial, ethnic, and cultural backgrounds, as well as persons of diverse gender identity, gender expression, or sexual orientation.” Justice Sotomayor’s telling of the facts focuses on the MCPS Board, subject matter experts, and teachers building a diverse and inclusive curriculum. Justice Alito’s framing in turn assumes the position of the plaintiffs, a religiously diverse coalition of parents whose sincerely held religious beliefs’ most apparent common thread is anti-LGBTQ bias.

Though Justice Alito is rhetorically deeply concerned with impressionable “young children, like those of [the plaintiff parents],” he spends little time talking about the rights, experiences, or issues faced by children in the classroom. Instead, he accuses the dissent of trying to “divert attention from…children subject to the instruction” by emphasizing the texts, characters, and importance of the curriculum. According to Justice Alito, the dissent takes on a “deliberately blinkered view” and is “air-brushing the record” by arguing that the inclusion of books with LGBTQ characters is “just about exposure and kindness.” Justice Alito’s framing of the issues for the majority views the books as “impos[ing] upon children a set of values and beliefs that are ‘hostile’ to their parents’ religious beliefs.” In this light, the mere inclusion and existence of these five books with LGBTQ characters and themes and instructional guidance for teachers presents an existential threat to religion. These books only make up a small percentage of the curriculum – with guidance for classroom discussion that affirms that Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and other people exist and have rights to exist.

The hyperbolic disaster-framing by Justice Alito, therefore, concludes that because “the storybooks unmistakably convey a particular viewpoint about same-sex marriage and gender” and instructional materials “specifically encouraged teachers to reinforce this viewpoint” and discuss disagreements with students, the policy of inclusion, therefore, burdens the parents’ right to the free exercise of religion and is subject to strict scrutiny, which means that a government must demonstrate that its policy advances compelling government interests and is narrowly tailored to achieve those ends. The failure to permit an opt-out when including these LGBTQ storybooks thus unconstitutionally burdens the parents’ rights of control over their children. The Court disclaims that the Board’s proposed curriculum has any educational value. It simply states that it places an unconstitutional burden on the parent’s religious exercise if it is imposed without the chance for opt-outs. In doing so, it sidesteps any good-faith balancing of interests. Worse: It fails to recognize that including and discussing books from different perspectives in a school curriculum has value in an educational environment.

Faith, parents, and the first amendment

The Court’s broad reading of the parental rights to control the upbringing of their children paradoxically narrows the understanding of the First Amendment to be strictly a relationship between parents and the government. Fundamentally, the First Amendment to the United States Constitution is a restriction on the power of the state. It proclaims that Congress shall make no law “respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or of the right of people to peaceably assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” Later applied to State governments and municipalities, the amendment’s broad language reflects the importance the authors placed on resistance to state suppression of religious, expressive, and associational freedoms.

Theoretically, this freedom to believe, express, and associate should also apply broadly to a variety of perspectives. No single religion or type of speech is singled out, and the only subject of restriction is the state. That is, First Amendment rights should impose restrictions on the state, not compulsion for individuals to act, talk, believe, or associate in specific ways. But despite its expansive declaration of freedom that would prohibit governmental interference with expression or religion, the First Amendment has often faced limiting principles to facilitate the practical governance of a diverse, pluralistic society.

In Employment Division, Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith (1990), the Court recognized that “neutral laws of general applicability” could be constitutionally imposed on religious conduct and beliefs. The decision prohibited members of the Native American Church from receiving unemployment benefits. The plaintiffs were Indigenous persons who practiced their faith by taking peyote as part of a traditional ceremony. Justice Scalia claimed that the policy in question, prohibiting persons taking drugs from receiving unemployment benefits, did not unconstitutionally burden the plaintiffs’ religious practice. The reason was that this practice was “unconnected” to other valid constitutional rights and to “any communicative activity, or parental right.” Neutral laws of general applicability are therefore presumed valid unless they compel expression or interfere with other constitutional rights, in which case they are subjected to closer scrutiny.

Even when neutrally worded and generally applicable, state laws that compel expression and conduct can be unconstitutional. In West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette (1943), for example, the Court struck down a state law requiring compulsory flag salutes and recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance – practices that violated the beliefs of a Jehovah’s Witness student whose faith prohibits pledging allegiance to symbols like the flag. State laws that compel school attendance, on the other hand, are generally constitutional. Exceptions to this are state laws that restrict parents’ rights to choose private religious schools over public schools (Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 1925) and laws compelling school attendance that directly contradict religious beliefs (Wisconsin v. Yoder, 1971).

Critically, none of these cases, which articulate the free exercise of religion and parental rights, give parents total control over their children. Both Barnette and Pierce emphasize the importance of public education in preparing children to participate in society and sustain democratic governance. The answer in these cases was not to isolate children but to ensure the curriculum was inclusive of their religious practices. In Barnette, for example, the Court did not bar schools from including the pledge in their curriculum – it simply held that students could not be compelled to recite it.

In Justice Alito’s account in Mahmoud, students are exposed to a curriculum and instructions acknowledging the existence and rights of LGBTQ individuals – an exposure he suggests amounts to a violation of religious tenets. Yet even on his own terms, the burden on parents lies in the mere exposure to viewpoints that may conflict with their beliefs, not in any form of compelled activity. No assignment requires students to affirm a particular viewpoint, and the schools do not evaluate students based on what they say, think, or believe. The stories are readily available and read to the class, accompanied by instructions for teachers on how to engage with students in a way that validates both the story and the student.

Viewpoint discrimination

The Court has often found that the answer to disfavored speech, or expression that might be contrary to the views of others, is still protected speech. As Justice Alito explained in Matal v. Tam: “giving offense is a viewpoint.” Freedom of speech and free exercise of religion under the constitution, therefore, must include even those ideas that some might find offensive, with limited exceptions for speech that imminently incites lawless activity (Brandenburg v. Ohio, 1969) or obscenity (though the Court struggles to find a solid definition of the concept). The requirement of neutral laws of general applicability guards against so-called content- or viewpoint-based regulations of speech.

Mahmoud v. Taylor launders viewpoint discrimination through parental rights, allowing the regulation of classroom content through parental opt-outs while completely ignoring the students as learners, participants, or even people with rights. In Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969), the Court built upon cases like Barnette and Pierce, highlighting the importance of children’s speech within schools and validating that students hold First Amendment rights in schools. It found the suspension of young persons for wearing black armbands to protest the Vietnam War unconstitutional. Justice Abe Fortas explained for the majority that “it can hardly be argued that either students or teachers shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate. This has been the unmistakable holding of this Court for almost 50 years.”

Justice Alito in Mahmoud extends this to parents. As he notes, the parent’s “right to free exercise, like other First Amendment rights, is not ‘shed . . . at the schoolhouse gate.’” This paraphrase of Tinker excludes the fact that students and teachers possess the same rights of free exercise, expression, and association in schools as well in not-so-subtle ways. A constitutionally mandated parental opt-out that the Court provides in Mahmoud defies the reasoning of West Virginia v. Barnette, which Justice Alito relies on as the foundation of his analysis of parental rights. In Barnette, Justice Robert Jackson explained, “If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion or force citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein.” Yet Justice Alito’s decision in Mahmoud allows parents to compel teachers and school officials to ensure their prescribed orthodoxy, meaning students no longer may discuss, express, or associate with LGBTQ storybooks as part of the official curriculum.

For those who come after

The Court’s opinion in Mahmoud v. Taylor sacrifices student’s First Amendment rights in the name of parental control. This enables parents to compel the speech and beliefs of students rather than let students develop their own thoughts, views, and beliefs – free to conform or disagree with the beliefs of their parents and classmates. This type of compelled speech would otherwise be prohibited. Mahmoud allows parents to compel the state to engage in viewpoint discrimination – something neither the parents nor the state could achieve alone, whether as a matter of constitutional law or practical enforcement.

Mahmoud decides on a vision of the future that is very much rooted in the past, severely restricting students from engaging with views that they may or may not share. Elsewhere, I have discussed how the history and traditional uses of originalism by the current Supreme Court bind us to narrow historical reasoning rather than an expansive historical understanding of the future – proposing Constitutional Futurism as a remedy to the originalism that has overturned reproductive rights, gun control, and now even children’s right to inclusive education and expression in Mahmoud v. Taylor. Justice Alito’s majority opinion endorses robust parental control over students, teachers and schools, when those parents already have curriculum oversight through ordinary democratic processes. The Court fails to recognize students – and children generally – as persons with rights, thoughts, and opinions that also deserve consideration. Rather than relying on tradition and compulsion, instruction can provide students with a way of questioning that can interrogate or even affirm their beliefs. This failure to recognize the personhood of children misses the expansive potential of future generations, all in the name of history and tradition.

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UK: Football Assocation requires trans men to say they are ‘biologically female’

UK: Football Assocation requires trans men to say they are ‘biologically female’

  • 8 July 2025

The Football Association’s updated requirements for transgender men who want to play in male sport requires players to agree they are a “biological female” and “have a greater risk of injury when playing against adult biological males”.

The FA changed its rules on trans people’s participation in English football earlier this year following the UK Supreme Court’s ruling on 16 April that the legal definition of a woman is based on biological sex.

While transgender women have been banned from female football in FA-affiliated competitions since 1 June, trans men are still allowed to play in men’s matches.

However they must fill out a statement, available from the FA since June following the policy coming into place, declaring they are transgender and more liable to be injured than other players.

More: https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/articles/cvg89449lv7o

Ukraine: Kyiv court sets precedent by recognizing marriage rights for queer couple, challenges Foreign Ministry stance 

Ukraine: Kyiv court sets precedent by recognizing marriage rights for queer couple, challenges Foreign Ministry stance 

A Kyiv court has officially recognized the same-sex partnership of a Ukrainian diplomat and his longtime partner as a family, the news outlet Bukvy posted on Instagram on July 3.

The Desnianskyi District Court ruled in June 2025 that the men, who married in the U.S. in 2021 and have lived together since 2013, meet the legal definition of a family under Ukrainian and European human rights law.

More: https://english.nv.ua/life/kyiv-court-recognizes-gay-couple-as-family-rules-in-favor-of-diplomat-s-same-sex-partner-50527272.html#goog_rewarded

ICC Pre-Trial Chamber II issues arrest warrants on gender grounds against girls, women and other persons non-conforming with the Taliban’s policy on gender, gender identity or expression

ICC Pre-Trial Chamber II issues arrest warrants on gender grounds against girls, women and other persons non-conforming with the Taliban’s policy on gender, gender identity or expression

Today, 8 July 2025, Pre-Trial Chamber II of the International Criminal Court (“ICC” or “the Court”) has issued,  in the context of the Situation of Afghanistan, warrants of arrest for Mr Haibatullah Akhundzada, Supreme Leader of the Taliban, and Mr Abdul Hakim Haqqani, Chief Justice of the Taliban, who have exercised de facto authority in Afghanistan at least from 15 August 2021. 

The Chamber has found that there are reasonable grounds to believe that Mr Haibatullah Akhundzada and Mr Abdul Hakim Haqqani have committed by ordering, inducing or soliciting the crime against humanity of persecution, under article 7(1)(h) of the Rome Statute, on gender grounds against girls, women and other persons non-conforming with the Taliban’s policy on gender, gender identity or expression; and on political grounds against persons perceived as “allies of girls and women”. These crimes are believed to have been committed on the territory of Afghanistan since the Taliban seized power on 15 August 2021, and have continued until at least 20 January 2025. 

Pre-Trial Chamber II considered that the Taliban have implemented a governmental policy that resulted in severe violations of fundamental rights and freedoms of the civilian population of Afghanistan, in connection with conducts of murder, imprisonment, torture, rape and enforced disappearance. While the Taliban have imposed certain rules and prohibitions on the population as a whole, they have specifically targeted girls and women by reason of their gender, depriving them of fundamental rights and freedoms. Specifically, the Taliban severely deprived, through decrees and edicts, girls and women of the rights to education, privacy and family life and the freedoms of movement, expression, thought, conscience and religion. In addition, other persons were targeted because certain expressions of sexuality and/or gender identity were regarded as inconsistent with the Taliban’s policy on gender. 

In assessing the evidence before it, the Chamber has taken into account the object and purpose of Article 7(1)(h) of the Rome Statute. This provision reflects the Statute’s broader aim to protect civilian populations from serious and systemic violations of fundamental rights, particularly those targeting vulnerable groups. In this context, the Chamber considered that the protection of victims of such crimes – especially women and girls who are often disproportionately affected by gender-based persecution – is central to the provision’s purpose. The Chamber found that gender persecution encompasses not only direct acts of violence, but also systemic and institutionalised forms of harm, including the imposition of discriminatory societal norms.

Furthermore, the Chamber found that individuals perceived as opposing these policies, even passively or through omission, were also targeted by the Taliban. This included those described as “allies of girls and women”, who were viewed as political opponents. 

The Chamber has decided that the warrants will remain under seal at this stage, in order to protect victims and witnesses and safeguard the proceedings. Nevertheless, the Chamber considered that the conduct addressed is ongoing and that public awareness of the warrants may contribute to the prevention of the further commission of these crimes. Accordingly, the Chamber found that it is in the interests of justice to publicly disclose the existence of these warrants.


For further information, please contact Fadi El Abdallah, Spokesperson and Head of Public Affairs Unit, International Criminal Court, by telephone at: +31 (0)70 515-9152 or +31 (0)6 46448938 or by e-mail at: fadi.el-abdallah@icc-cpi.int

You can also follow the Court’s activities on Twitter/XFacebookYouTubeInstagram and Flickr

More: https://www.icc-cpi.int/news/situation-afghanistan-icc-pre-trial-chamber-ii-issues-arrest-warrants-haibatullah-akhundzada

The Brief – How Germany went from Pride to shaming diversity (Euractiv | THE BRIEF )

The Brief – How Germany went from Pride to shaming diversity
Germany has become a less hospitable place for minorities, even if its conservative-leaning society was never the liberal paradise that swathes of Anglo millennials mistook it for after popping a pill at a smoke-filled Berlin nightclub.

And its former leader, Angela Merkel – who voted against same-sex marriage – was never the liberal icon that international media mistook her for after the devout Christian opened the borders to thousands of refugees as a humanitarian gesture.

But where the pragmatist Merkel merely slowed Germany’s social liberalisation, the accession of Friedrich Merz to the chancellery has seen it switch from first into reverse gear.

When it comes to social and diversity politics, the staunchly conservative chancellor and his centre-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) have wasted no time in office marking their political territory.

Much of the controversy has centred around Berlin’s annual Pride parade, which the German parliament has marked since 2022 by flying the rainbow flag. Not this year: The new conservative president of the Bundestag, Julia Klöckner, a Merz ally, has halted the practice, citing concerns about political neutrality.

Shortly after, she prohibited the participation of the parliament’s queer staff network in the parade. In the latest upset, the Bundestag’s administration has ordered MPs to remove Pride flags from their window, with police sent out to enforce a mostly unenforced house rule, as revealed by Euractiv.

And it’s not just Klöckner: Merz himself has argued that Pride flags turn the Bundestag into a “circus tent” – somewhat unsurprisingly, after he had once answered a question on his stance on homosexuality with the words that it was a private matter “as long as it doesn’t affect children”. Merz’s education minister reportedly banned gender-inclusive language from her ministry’s communications. His interior minister has trained his crosshairs on liberalised naturalisation laws for foreigners.

This crackdown is certainly nowhere near Hungarian proportions, where officials have moved to outlaw Pride parades and queer freedom of expression. Participants in Berlin’s edition can still attend a typically raunchy public party, largely unbothered, followed by an equally raunchy after-party at (in some cases) publicly subsidised clubs.

But the CDU has signalled where its political priorities lie – and it’s at the expense of minorities.

It’s not difficult to find voices in the government who fear that this is not just a conservative pushback but a sinister political calculus.
Read more.

Hong Kong to introduce same-sex partnerships bill

Hong Kong to introduce same-sex partnerships bill

Hong Kong is set to introduce a bill that will recognise same-sex partnerships, in what would mark a major step forward for LGBTQ+ people in the special administrative region of China.

In 2023, Hong Kong’s top court ordered the government to legally recognise same-sex relationships and gave them two years to enact legislation. However, an appeal with regard to bringing forward full marriage equality and recognition of same-sex marriages performed abroad was unanimously dismissed.

While the government has shown little appetite for championing LGBTQ+ rights, homosexuality was decriminalised in 1991, and legal challenges have pushed the authorities to make improvements in terms of rights for LGBTQ+ people in general.

More: https://www.thepinknews.com/2025/07/10/hong-kong-to-introduce-same-sex-partnership-bill-lgbtq/?user_id=andreas.ziegler.ch@gmail.com

Semenya: ECHR confirms Switzerland violated athlete’s rights

The Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has upheld a 2023 decision that Switzerland violated the rights of South African athlete Caster Semenya. +Get the most important news from Switzerland in your inbox The judges found that the hyperandrogenic athlete’s right to a fair trial had been violated by Switzerland. As a result, the Federal Court’s review of the Court of Arbitration for Sport’s decision on appeal did not achieve the required level of attention. Two years ago, in a chamber decision, the ECHR upheld Semenya’s complaint on several points. In particular, it found that the World Athletics (WA) rules, upheld by the Swiss courts, violated the athlete’s right to privacy. The rules at issue require women with excess male hormones (hyperandrogens) to take female hormones in order to take part in competitions recognised by WA. Switzerland appealed the 2023 decision to the Grand Chamber of the ECHR. Translated from French by DeepL/mga How we work We select …

More: https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/various/switzerland-condemned-in-the-semenya-case/89659791

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Judgment: https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng#_Toc201842496

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Caster Semenya’s ECHR win lauded as landmark case for athletes’ rights

Human Rights Watch (HRW) on Tuesday commended the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR)’s decision in the case of South African runner, Caster Semenya, who challenged regulations imposed by World Athletics, the global track and field governing body that imposed discriminatory guidelines prohibiting women with Differences of Sex Development (DSD)  from competing in the female category unless they underwent medical intervention to lower their natural testosterone levels.

Minky Worden, director of global initiatives at HRW, said:

Caster Semenya’s victory is a victory for all women and all athletes because the European Court found that the Court of Arbitration for Sport and Swiss Federal Tribunal had failed to uphold human rights norms despite credible claims of discrimination.

Semenya had previously taken her discrimination case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), headquartered in Lausanne, Switzerland, which is the mandatory and exclusive jurisdiction for disputes in the sports arena, in line with World Athletics’ rules. However, her case was unsuccessful in arbitration, which led to her appealing the decision to Switzerland’s Federal Supreme Court, which later rejected her appeal on narrow grounds. In coming to their decision, the Grand Chamber found that the arbitrary set of regulations imposed a severe interference with the athletes’ privacy rights, had never undergone the proper assessment on whether they are necessary or proportionate under international human rights laws, as a result of the prior tribunals which oversaw her case not carrying out a comprehensive review.

The Grand Chamber found that Semenya’s fundamental right to a fair trial, enshrined under Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights (convention) had been violated and chided the Swiss Federal Supreme Court’s disregard for the seriousness of the personal rights at stake, namely the impact of the DSD Regulations on her bodily and psychological integrity and identity, right to self-determination and right to exercise her professional activity as “inconceivable.” Judge Šimáčková aptly summed up Semenya’s circumstances, stating that:

In conclusion, I should like to emphasise that the applicant was at a disadvantage vis-à-vis the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), not only as a professional athlete, for the reasons set out in the present judgment, but also because she is a woman, she is black, and she is from the Global South.

Her remarks are particularly important as they underscore the evolving understanding in international human rights law that true equality requires acknowledging how overlapping forms of discrimination, such as race, gender, and geography, compound disadvantage within institutional frameworks. The dismissal of medical evidence adduced by experts in the first two trials as to the invasiveness and degrading nature of sex testing regulations is alarming, as it reinforces the archaic stereotype of there being only one metric for femininity and that individuals who do not conform to this standard are less of a woman. Other than not having a legitimate scientific basis, gender verification testing has also led to cases of misidentifying individuals with genetic variations as ineligible for competition, leading to a public smear campaign.

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Russia court announces ‘LGTBQA+ propaganda’ case against bookstore

Russia court announces ‘LGTBQA+ propaganda’ case against bookstore

A Saint Petersburg court announced a case Tuesday against the bookstore “Подписные издания” (Subscription Publications) on charges of “LGBTQA+ propaganda.” No information is available yet regarding the reasons for the charges.

On its website, the bookstore shares that it has been open since 1926, with photos that capture the involvement of the store  with the people of the cultural capital of Russia. Besides selling books, the bookstore has two cafes and a stationery line, hosts events, manages a children’s literature club, produces lists of children’s books and a literary journal, and publishes novels.

The bookstore was already fined 800,000 rubles (approximately $10,000) in May under the “LGBTQA+ propaganda” charges for selling books authored by Susan Sontag, known to defend women’s rights, journalists Valery Panyushkin and Sergey Parkhomenko, who are identified as “foreign agents,” and more. The court also demanded the removal of the aforementioned literature.

The charge of “LGBTQA+ propaganda” against the bookstore is the latest issue in the journal of human rights violations under Putin’s regime. After labeling the LGBTQA+ movement as “extremist” in 2023, the government dedicated a huge amount of resources to punishing anything that resembled it. Companies like Apple have been fined several times for failing to remove undesired content. Bookstores and publishers have been targets of searches, detention, and fines. LGBTQA+ activists have been fined for social media promotions, with at least one sentence being issued for “LGBTQA+ propaganda.” Fines are also given out for messages in Telegram chats, with some people even being detained for posts in Russian social media VKontakte.

On Wednesday, a woman in illegally annexed Crimea was fined 100,000 rubles (approximately $1300) under “LGBTQA+ propaganda” charges for a meme showing men in wedding dresses. The meme depicted men who say “let’s split the bill,” “I waited for you to make a first move,” “why should I be the one to invite [a girl] on a first day?,” and “prove to and show me that you need me” as men in wedding dresses, establishing a connection between the phrases and self emasculation.

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UN renews crucial human rights expert mandate on sexual orientation and gender identity

UN renews crucial human rights expert mandate on sexual orientation and gender identity

The Human Rights Council has renewed the mandate of the only human rights expert within the United Nations system that is specifically dedicated to addressing violence and discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans (LGBT) and gender diverse persons.

More: https://ishr.ch/latest-updates/un-renews-crucial-human-rights-expert-mandate-on-sexual-orientation-and-gender-identity-2/

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The United Nations voted to renew the mandate of the Independent Expert on protection against violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) on Monday.

The UN Human Rights Council adopted the resolution with 29 votes in favor, 15 votes against, and 3 abstentions in its 59th session.

The renewal of the mandate for another three years reaffirms the core Universal Declaration of Human Rights principle that “all human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.” States are obligated to ensure the lives and rights of LGBTQ+ people are protected, enabling them to live free from discrimination and violence.

The mandate of the Independent Expert on SOGI was created in 2016 to address global discrimination and acts of violence committed against individuals based on their sexual orientation or gender identity.

Initially created for a period of three years, the mandate was renewed in 2019 and 2022. Since 2023, the mandate has been held by South African scholar, Graeme Reid, who previously acted as director for the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights Program at Human Rights Watch.

International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA World) Executive Director, Julia Ehrt, stated, “The renewal of this mandate is a spark of hope in a time when reactionary powers worldwide are trying to dismantle progress that our communities fought so hard to achieve.”

The United States, under President Donald Trump’s administration, withdrew from the UN Human Rights Council, issuing a series of executive orders earlier this year targeting the rights of transgender individuals. Rights groups have warned of the harmful impacts of such laws on transgender youth, their families, communities, and the healthcare system. Most recently, the US Supreme Court upheld legislation restricting access to gender-affirming care for transgender youth. The independent expert on SOGI issued a statement on the decision, urging that a “rights-based, person-centred approach to gender-affirming care” be upheld.

Ahead of the 59th session of the Human Rights Council, Human Rights Watch urged UN member states to support the renewal of the resolution. ILGA World delivered a statement at the session calling to “Renew IE SOGI” on behalf of a coalition of 1,259 NGOs and civil society groups from across 167 countries and territories. They noted that adopting the resolution would reiterate that “violence and discrimination against people of diverse sexual orientations and/or gender identities cannot be tolerated,” emphasizing that “specific, sustained and systematic attention” is necessary to address human rights violations perpetrated against LGBTQ+ people globally.

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