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World News Briefs
Published Thursday, 10-Nov-2005 in issue 933
UK partnership law may have undesirable consequences
Activists are concerned that the United Kingdom’s Civil Partnership Act, which takes effect in December, will negatively affect same-sex roommates and unregistered same-sex couples.
“All cohabiting same-sex couples will experience a reduction in state benefits as a side effect of the new Civil Partnership Act,” said the gay-rights group OutRage!. “Even couples who don’t want a civil partnership and have not registered their relationship will face cuts. In addition, same-sex friends or ex-lovers who live together will have to prove that they are not in a relationship – otherwise they, too, will lose out financially.”
The group said it fears that “the pensions and benefits agencies will assume that all cohabitees are partners and cut their benefits accordingly.”
Two people living together and receiving individual government pensions would see their benefits drop by about a third if they were recategorized as a couple, OutRage! said.
The group has written to the work and pensions secretary urging the government to offer transitional protection to existing gay and lesbian state-benefit claimants.
Same-sex couples will be able to register their relationships starting Dec. 21. The act takes effect Dec. 5 but requires couples to give advance notice of their intention to tie the knot.
Registered partners will receive all the rights and obligations of marriage. Couples who have entered a legal same-sex union overseas will not need to re-register in the U.K. to be recognized.
Singapore bans gay Web site, fines another one
Singapore’s Media Development Authority banned one gay Web site and fined another, local media reported Oct. 28.
The banned site, fluffboy.com, is hosted outside of Singapore but offers substantial Singaporean content. The authority said the site recruits underage boys for sex, promotes homosexual promiscuity and contains nude photos.
The local site sgboy.com was fined $5,000 (US$2,950) for displaying “offensive content,” and ordered to remove it.
The authority said both sites were in violation of the nation’s Internet Code of Practice, which prohibits depictions of “nudity or genitalia in a manner calculated to titillate” as well as promotion of homosexuality or pedophilia.
Singapore has a list of 100 banned Web sites – 98 of which offer porn and two of which promote religious extremism, the reports said.
Brits to crack down on homophobic soccer fans
Britain’s Football Association has announced a crackdown on soccer fans who hurl anti-gay taunts at players, referees and each other, The Observer reported Oct. 30.
The paper said such fans will be “identified and prosecuted.”
“There is a problem with homophobic abuse in the game directed at not just players but also referees and also opposing fans,” said Lucy Faulkner, the association’s ethics and sports equity manager. “Such behavior is offensive and runs totally counter to both the game’s family image and efforts to make football [soccer] more acceptable to all sectors of society.”
Fans who observe anti-gay behavior are encouraged to call the association’s toll-free hotline for reporting racist incidents.
The association also recently staged a “homophobia summit” which was attended by a wide variety of people associated with the sport, the newspaper said.
Swedish Social Democrats call for same-sex marriage
Sweden’s ruling Social Democrats have expressed support for opening marriage to same-sex couples, Radio Sweden reported Oct. 31.
The idea was put forth by Health and Elderly Care Minister Ylva Johansson and approved by a vote of delegates at the party’s annual convention.
Since 1995, Swedish gays and lesbians have had access to registered partnerships that grant nearly every right and obligation of marriage.
Gay Logo channel launches in Latin America
Pay-per-view programming from the U.S. gay cable channel Logo is being launched in Mexico and Brazil.
Six-hour programming blocks, which will change weekly, began airing on Sky Mexico on Nov. 4 and will start Nov. 19 on Sky Brazil.
“We’re really proud and excited to be the first MTVN operation outside the U.S. to launch such an innovative service as Logo TV,” said MTV Networks Latin America Managing Director Pierluigi Gazzolo. “This is an incredible opportunity to serve an audience that is currently underserved.”
Israeli couple demand recognition of their marriage
A gay couple who married in Canada filed a petition with Israel’s High Court of Justice demanding that the Population Registry recognize their marriage, the Haaretz newspaper reported Nov. 1.
Attorney Jonathan Herland, a 29-year-old Canadian, and Ayal Wallrauch, a 26-year-old Israeli, have lived together in Israel for two years. They got married in Toronto in July.
“By refusing to register the petitioners as a married couple, the Population Registry deviates from its authority, behaving with unlawful discrimination against the petitioners and same-sex couples in general,” the couple wrote in their petition.
Canada is one of four nations where same-sex couples can marry.
Latvian marriage ban passes first reading
Latvia’s Parliament approved a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage on first reading Oct. 26. The vote was 65 to 5 with 20 abstentions.
The ban would have to pass two more readings – receiving the votes of two-thirds of the MPs present each time – to be implemented.
The second reading is scheduled for Nov. 12.
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