Ending homophobia – stopping discrimination

Published: 17 May 2010 y., Monday

Stop
What do countries as geographically diverse as Saudi Arabia, Uganda and Jamaica have in common? All of them criminalised homosexuality. Ahead of the International Day Against Homophobia on 17 May, attention focuses on what can be done to end discrimination and stigmatisation of LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) people within and outside EU borders
"Homophobia is a blatant breach of human dignity that questions fundamental rights, and thus it must be strongly condemned," Parliament's President Jerzy Buzek told us ahead of the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia (IDAHO). Mr Buzek will deliver a video message on combating discrimination of sexual minorities on the day itself.

The map of persecution

Homosexuals can face fines, long-term imprisonment and even the death penalty in many (mostly African and Arab) countries.

Spanish Green MEP Raül Romeva points the finger at some Middle East, Caribbean, Far East and African countries including Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya. As a rule, he said, LGBT rights are most strongly suppressed in countries with a state religion. He is responsible for trying to broker a deal with EU ministers on a proposed antidiscrimination directive,

Ending prejudice (hatred, rejection and violence) within EU

As recently as the second half of the 20th century, homosexual acts were illegal in many European countries. Have Europeans moved far beyond labelling homosexuality an "illness and mental disorder"? Occurrences of hate speech, bullying, prohibitions of equality and gay pride marches, indicate progress is still needed.

Mr Romeva notes that in some EU countries LGBTs are forced to "either live in hiding or total denial, so many of them are deprived of fundamental rights and risk their job and sometimes even life, to live openly as LGBT".

He told us that hate-crimes are the clearest sign of homophobia and discrimination and supports campaigning, dialogue and proper anti-discrimination legislation as the way towards tolerant societies which are "united in diversity".

"The anti-discrimination directive is not only a sign to discriminatory societies to change their behaviour - it is also a message to the outside world that the EU is serious about protecting fundamental rights and about not creating a hierarchy of peoples,", he added.

Stopping discrimination

The most acute problem in this area in the EU is "the clash between, on one hand very liberal policies in some countries, where society, politicians and authorities have a tolerant, open and inclusive approach and on the other hand the member states where none of this is the case", Mr Romeva said.

"The bottom line is that LGBT people in all EU member states should be protected from discrimination by the treaty, the Charter of Fundamental Rights, and where necessary, the Commission and Council should take action to inform and educate politicians and authorities to lead and show a good example".

An informal intergroup on LGBT issues gathers MEPs from across the political spectrum. Members Michael Cashman, Ulrike Lunacek, Sophie in’t Veld and Christofer Fjellner took part in the Baltic Pride march in Vilnius on 8 May.

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Kazakhstan party office bombed

Two powerful blasts have rocked the headquarters of President Nursultan Nazarbayev's ruling Otan party in Almaty's central district more »

Estonian immigrant pimp gets maximum sentence

An Estonian pimp who turned illegal immigrants into sex workers at his Brighton massage parlor got the maximum 41-month federal prison sentence more »

The Election Crisis

Pro-Yanukovych Region Sets Autonomy Referendum more »

The Court Order

Zmitser Bandarenka: "It was Kuchma`s Administration Order to Seize Us" more »

Ukrainian opposition leader warns of civil war

The Ukrainian opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko has warned the country is on the verge of civil war more »

Rally On Maidan in Kyiv

Now from 150,000 to 200,000 people have gathered on the Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square) more »

Ukraine's key election 'rigged'

Ukraine's opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko has accused the authorities of rigging Sunday's fiercely fought presidential run-off more »

Polish woman hostage freed in Iraq

A Polish woman who was kidnapped in Iraq more than three weeks ago has been released more »

91,000 EU workers register in UK

About 91,000 people from new eastern member states of the EU registered to work in the UK in the five months since the May expansion more »

Holland to ban Muslim immigrants

Maverick right-wing lawmaker Geert Wilders said on Friday he would weed out radical Muslims by sealing the border to non-Western immigrants for five years and shutting down mosques advocating fundamentalism more »