national
World News Briefs
Published Thursday, 16-Apr-2009 in issue 1112
Gays killed in Iraq
Seven gay men were murdered in Baghdad’s Sadr City district in late March and early April, activists and media reported.
Three men were shot by fellow Shiite tribe members on April 2 and four were killed by tribe members around March 26.
Some of the bodies were found with notes attached that said “pervert.”
The killings came after influential clerics in the district preached against homosexuality.
The New York Times reported April 8 that in the past two months as many as 25 gays have been killed in the area.
Police believe relatives of the deceased have committed most of the murders, to alleviate family shame.
The Times and CNN also reported that a café that served as a meeting place for Sadr City gays was recently torched.
Meanwhile, the London-based group Iraqi GLBT says five of its members in Baghdad have been sentenced to death by the government for running or belonging to a banned organization – and that the executions will be carried out promptly.
Group founder Ali Hili said he isn’t sure what statute might make belonging to a banned organization a capital offense.
“That’s what they have been told by a judge in a brief court hearing,” Hili said in a phone interview. “I don’t think this is in the Iraqi constitution as a death penalty (crime). The court is ... kangaroo-style. It was brief, and people weren’t able to present legal representation or defend themselves in that kind of court. Our information is that these five members have been convicted to death for running activities of a forbidden organization on Iraqi soil.”
Scott Long, director of Human Rights Watch’s LGBT Rights Division, said:
“We are trying urgently to determine who they (the condemned men) are and what has happened. ... This is a situation that’s both desperate and extremely dangerous, given that lives may be at stake. Together with other groups, members of Congress and concerned activists, we’re doing everything we can to investigate and determine who’s jailed and what their fates may be. The Iraqi government and the U.S. government must both investigate these charges immediately.”
It is unclear if gay sex is illegal in Iraq. Some news reports have said it isn’t; some have said the punishment is up to seven years in prison, and some have said engaging in gay sex is a capital crime. A lengthy Wikipedia entry on the question reflects the confusion.
The International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association’s quasi-definitive report “State-Sponsored Homophobia – A world survey of laws prohibiting same-sex activity between consenting adults” says: “Iraq reinstated the Penal Code of 1969 after the American invasion in 2003. The Penal Code does not prohibit sexual activities between consenting adults of the same sex. However, as the country is under war, and law enforcement is not functioning properly, death squads operate in the country, killing homosexuals.”
Hili called the question of whether gay sex is illegal in Iraq “a very gray area.”
“They haven’t mentioned clearly (in the law) about punishment or legalization for homosexuality,” he said. “But from what we hear and what we see on the ground, it is clearly illegal.”
In response to the reports from Baghdad, San Francisco’s Gays Without Borders chapter consecrated the base of the rainbow-flag pole at Castro and Market streets in Harvey Milk Plaza as “The Tomb of the Unknown Gay” on April 6.
“We took this action because of wire reports from Baghdad about the murder of at least six gay men in the last two weeks, killed because of their homosexuality and (because of) repugnant religious hatred stirred up by Muslim clerics,” said Michael Petrelis, one of 15 activists who attended the ceremony. “The names of the dead have not been reported in any news accounts; hence, the designating of the area for unknown and unnamed gays.”
City Supervisor Bevan Dufty took part in the demonstration and later introduced a resolution in the Board of Supervisors calling “on the U.S. Department of State to use all diplomatic channels to stop the persecution of Iraqi GLBT citizens and immediately stop the murders of Iraqi GLBT citizens.”
The resolution instructs the board’s clerk to send the resolution to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the State Department’s Iraq desk and San Francisco’s congressional delegation.
Pro-gay moves at European Parliament
The European Parliament’s Intergroup on Gay and Lesbian Rights has praised the Parliament’s recent adoption of two reports.
A report on “Rights of EU citizens and their family members to move and reside freely within the territory of the Member States” calls on member nations to recognize the freedom of movement of all European Union citizens, including same-sex partners.
A second report backs the European Commission’s Equality Treatment Directive proposal, which would outlaw discrimination based on sexual orientation and other factors in housing, health care, education, social benefits and protections and access to goods and services.
Employment discrimination based on sexual orientation already is prohibited by EU law.
“We warmly welcome both reports,” said Intergroup President Michael Cashman. “When extremism is on the rise throughout Europe, we must speak out for those who suffer inequality, harassment and outright discrimination every single day. Now it is up to the (European Union’s) Council to once and for all end the hierarchy of discrimination in Europe and affirm that all Europeans must be equally protected.”
Samoa bans ‘Milk’
The Samoa Film Control Board has banned the award-winning movie ‘Milk’
in the South Pacific island nation.
The move came after a movie shop submitted the film for approval and a rating.
No explanation was given for the decision.
Assistance: Bill Kelley
E-mail

Send the story “World News Briefs”

Recipient's e-mail: 
Your e-mail: 
Additional note: 
(optional) 
E-mail Story     Print Print Story     Share Bookmark & Share Story
Classifieds Place a Classified Ad Business Directory Real Estate
Contact Advertise About GLT