Friday, 29 June 2012

Pink News: Malta: Gender identity and sexual orientation included in hate crime laws

http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2012/06/21/malta-gender-identity-and-sexual-orientation-included-in-hate-crime-laws/
21.6.2012 by Stephen Gray


Two attacks against lesbians took place on the archipelago this year

The Maltese parliament has extended its hate crime laws for the first time to protect citizens on the grounds of sexual orientation and gender identity.

The amendment to the hate crime laws, which until now made motives based only on religion, race and disability an aggravating factor in a criminal incident, came after a pair of attacks on lesbian women.

In January, a 16-year-old lesbian and her girlfriend were assaulted in a public square. The following month, another lesbian couple were physically attacked on a bus.

Aditus: Protecting the Rights of the Minority Groups is a Human Rights Success for Everyone

Press Release: Date: 21st June, 2012

aditus foundation is extremely happy to welcome the recent amendments brought about to Maltese law in terms of offering better protection to lesbians, gays, and transgender persons living in Malta. The amendments add sexual orientation and gender identity to the list of circumstances aggravating certain types of crimes, and also to the legal mandate of Malta's national equality body, the Nation Council for the Promotion fo Equality (NCPE).

Parliament: Bill 107/2012 - Att li jemenda l-Att dwar l-Ugwaljanza għall-Irġiel u n-Nisa - An Act to amend the Equality for Men and Women Act

11th Legislature, Parliamentary Session no. 493, 25.6.2012

Excerpt from the Parliamentary Minutes


1. ABBOZZ TA’ LIĠI LI JEMENDA L-ATT DWAR L-UGWALJANZA GĦALL-IRĠIEL U N-NISA - ABBOZZ NRU 107

Il-Ministru tal-Ġustizzja, Konsultazzjoni Pubblika u l-Familja ppropona t-Tielet Qari ta' l-Abbozz ta' Liġi msejjaħ "Att li jemenda l-Att dwar l-Ugwaljanza għall-Irġiel u n-Nisa, Kap. 456”.

Il-Ministru tal-Edukazzjoni u x-Xogħol issekondat.

Il-mozzjoni għaddiet nem.con. u l-Abbozz ta’ Liġi nqara t-Tielet Darba u għadda.

[Nota: Nem.con. tfisser unanimament.]

Abbozz / Bill 

[View Pdf version here.]

ABBOZZ TA’ LIĠI msejjaħ

Att li jemenda l-Att dwar l-Ugwaljanza għall-Irġiel u n-Nisa, Kap. 456. 


IL-PRESIDENT, bil-parir u l-kunsens tal-Kamra tad-Deputati, imlaqqgћa f’dan il-Parlament, u bl-awtorità tal-istess, ћareġ b’liġi dan li ġej:-

Di-ve: Gay rights movement welcomes Hate Crime law

http://www.di-ve.com/Default.aspx?ID=72&Action=1&NewsId=93306
by di-ve.com - editorial@di-ve.com
20 June 2012 - 08:25CEST

The Malta Gay Rights Movement (MGRM) welcomed the passing of Hate Crime Legislation approved by Parliament last night and said that the act extends the scope of the law from race and creed to also include sexual orientation and gender identity.

In a statement MGRM thanked both sides of the House for supporting the bill and sending a strong message to society that targeting someone because of their sexual orientation or gender identity is unacceptable and will incur tougher penalties.

Malta Today: Gay rights movement welcomes passing of hate crimes amendments

‘Next step is ensuring police adequately trained in dealing with such crimes and reaching out to LGBT community’ – MGRM 
http://www.maltatoday.com.mt/en/newsdetails/news/national/Gay-rights-movement-welcomes-passing-of-hate-crimes-amendments-20120620
Wednesday 20 June 2012 - 09:02


The Bill was proposed during a protest following the incident against two young lesbians in Hamrun earlier this year.

The Malta Gay Rights Movement has welcomed the passing of hate crime amendments to the Criminal Code which extend the scope of the law from race and creed to include sexual orientation and gender identity.

The bill was approved by parliament last night.

Wednesday, 27 June 2012

Malta Right Now: Preżentat l-ewwel qari tal-abbozz ta' liġi dwar il-Koabitazzjoni

http://www.maltarightnow.com/?module=news&t=a&aid=99838405&cid=58
27 ta' Ġunju, 2012 12:43 CET

Il-Ministru tal-Ġustizzja, il-Konsultazzjoni Pubblika u l-Familja Chris Said ressaq quddiem il-Parlament mozzjoni dwar il-koabitazzjoni.

Il-mozzjoni, li ppreżenta l-Ministru responsabbli mill-familja, tipproponi l-ewwel qari tal-abbozz ta' liġi imsejjaħ Att li jipprovdi għar-regolamentazzjoni tal-Koabitazzjoni. Din il-mozzjoni ġiet ippreżentata lill-iskrivan tal-Kamra t-Tlieta filgħaxija.

Fost affarijiet oħrajn, din il-liġi mistennija jkollha provvedimenti biex koppji mhux miżżewġin, li jgħixu flimkien, jingħataw l-istess drittijiet ċivili li jkollhom il-miżżewġin.

Barra minn hekk, bir-reġistrazzjoni ta’ civil partnership, ikunu magħrufa dawk il-persuni li quddiem l-Istat jidhru li qegħdin f’koabitazzjoni

Kien fl-1998 li l-Partit Nazzjonalista wiegħed fil-Programm Elettorali tiegħu li jdaħħal liġi dwar il-koabitazzjoni. Imbagħad f’Marzu ta’ sentejn ilu, il-Kumitat Parlamentari għall-Affarijiet Soċjali tal-Kamra tar-Rappreżentanti għamel pubbliku għadd ta’ proposti li kien irċieva mingħand in-nies dwar liġi fuq il-koabitazzjoni, wara li kien nieda konsultazzjoni pubblika.

Times: MGRM welcomes approval of hate crime law

http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20120620/local/mgrm-welcomes-approval-of-hate-crime-law.425092
Wednesday, June 20, 2012, 08:34


The Malta Gay Rights Movement has welcomed the passing of Hate Crime legislation in Parliament that extends the scope of this law from race and creed to also include sexual orientation and gender identity. The Bill was approved by parliament last night.

"We thank both sides of the House for supporting this bill and sending a strong message to society that targeting someone because of their sexual orientation or gender identity is unacceptable and will incur tougher penalties."

MGRM: Hate Crime Legislation approved by Parliament

PRESS STATEMENT MGRM. Gabi Calleja; Coordinator; MGRM; MOB 9925 5559

The Malta Gay Rights Movement welcomes the passing of Hate Crime Legislation that extends the scope of this law from race and creed to also include sexual orientation and gender identity. The bill was approved by parliament last night.

We thank both sides of the House for supporting this bill and sending a strong message to society that targeting someone because of their sexual orientation or gender identity is unacceptable and will incur tougher penalties. This Bill was proposed during a protest following the incident against two young lesbians in Hamrun earlier this year and was supported by aditus, We Are, LGBT Labour, Drachma and Drachma Parents, Graffitti, ADZ and Integra Foundation. The courage of these young people to report the crime played an important role in providing the required impetus to move forward with this legislative proposal which had been on MGRM's agenda for a number of years.

The next step is ensuring that police are adequately trained in dealing with such crimes and in actively reaching out to the LGBT community to ensure that victims feel safe to come forward and report such incidents. Adequate data collection is also essential.

We also look forward to the passing of a second bill which will extend the remit of the National Commission for the Promotion of Equality to also cover sexual orientation and gender identity. This is expected to take place this week. It will allow the Commission to act as mediator and to investigate allegations of discrimination in employment on the grounds of sexual orientation and gender identity.

Parliament: Homophobia and Transphobia included in the Criminal Code [Bill 105/2012]


Bill 105, Sitting 491, 11th Legislature, 19th June 2012

Audio Recording

Audio Clip of Dr Chris Said presenting the third reading of the Bill.
Complete Recording of the whole session [Go to: 1:55:24]

Excerpt of the Parliamentary Minutes

[Source: http://www.parlament.mt/file.aspx?f=21208]
[Nota minn P. Attard: nem. con. tfisser unanimament]

MINUTI; KAMRA TAD-DEPUTATI; IL-ĦDAX-IL PARLAMENT; SEDUTA NRU 491
It-Tlieta, 19 ta’ Ġunju 2012

Il-Kamra tad-Deputati ltaqgħet fis-Sala tal-Parlament, il-Palazz, il-Belt Valletta, fis-6.04 pm.  
L-iSpeaker, l-Onor Michael Frendo, ippreseda.

PREŻENTI: Il-Ministri u l-Membri kollha kienu preżenti minbarra l-Ministru għal Għawdex, il-Ministru għat-Turiżmu, l-Ambjent u l-Kultura, is-Segretarju Parlamentari l-Onor Mario Galea, l-Onor Anthony Agius Decelis, l-Onor Robert Arrigo, l-Onor Charlò Bonnici, l-Onor Owen Bonnici, l-Onor Leo Brincat, l-Onor Charles Buhagiar, l-Onor Stefan Buontempo, l-Onor Luciano Busuttil, l-Onor Chris Cardona, l-Onor Justyne Caruana, l-Onor Gino Cauchi, l-Onor Marie Louise Coleiro Preca, l-Onor Louis Deguara, l-Onor Anglu Farrugia, l-Onor Marlene Farrugia, l-Onor Michael Farrugia, l-Onor Beppe Fenech Adami, l-Onor Michael Gonzi, l-Onor Gavin Gulia, l-Onor Charles Mangion, l-Onor Peter Micallef, l-Onor Philip Mifsud, l-Onor Carmelo Mifsud Bonnici, l-Onor Jesmond Mugliett, l-Onor Silvio Parnis, l-Onor Jeffrey Pullicino Orlando, l-Onor Anton Refalo, l-Onor Joseph Sammut, l-Onor Stephen Spiteri, l-Onor Adrian Vassallo, l-Onor George Vella, l-Onor Anthony Zammit, l-Onor Ninu Zammit u l-Onor Francis Zammit Dimech..

...

ORDNIJIET TAL-ĠURNATA

1. ABBOZZ TA’ LIĠI LI JEMENDA L-KODIĊI KRIMINALI – ABBOZZ NRU 105

Il-Ministru tal-Ġustizzja, Konsultazzjoni Pubblika u l-Familja ppropona t-Tielet Qari ta’ dan l-Abbozz ta’ Liġi.
L-Onor Franco Debono ssekonda.

Il-mozzjoni għaddiet nem. con. u l-Abbozz ta’ Liġi msejjaħ “Att biex jemenda l-Kodiċi Kriminali” inqara t-Tielet Darba u għadda.

...

RAYMOND SCICLUNA, SKRIVAN TAL-KAMRA
KONFERMATI: ONOR MICHAEL FRENDO, SPEAKER

Text of the Bill [Malti / English]


Bill No. 105 - Criminal Code (Amendment) Bill [pdf]
[Source: http://www.parlament.mt/file.aspx?f=19839]

ABBOZZ TA’ LIĠI msejjaħ ATT biex jemenda l-Kodiċi Kriminali.

IL-PRESIDENT bil-parir u l-kunsens tal-Kamra tad-Deputati, imlaqqgħa f’dan il-Parlament, u bl-awtorità tal-istess, ħareġ b’liġi dan li ġej:-

1. (1) It-titolu fil-qosor ta’ dan l-Att huwa l-Att tal-2012 li jemenda l-Kodiċi Kriminali, u dan l-Att għandu jinqara u jinftiehem ħaġa waħda mal-Kodiċi Kriminali, hawnhekk iżjed ’il quddiem imsejjaħ "il-Kodiċi". [Kap. 9.]

2. L-artikolu 82A tal-Kodiċi għandu jiġi emendat kif ġej:

Tuesday, 26 June 2012

MGRM: Pride Week Film Fest & Schedule

18.6.2012, Gabi Calleja, MGRM Co-ordinator

The Malta Gay Rights Movement (MGRM) would like to invite you/your organisation to this year’s Pride March. This year’s event is planned to take place on Saturday 30th June 2012, gathering at 10:30 in front of Surfside in Sliema.

Pride is a symbolic manifestation which is held in many different cities around the world. It aims to increase the visibility of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons and their integral role in the societies where they live.

This year’s theme is I am. It is meant to remind everyone that LGBT individuals are part of society as much as everyone else is. Being an integral part of society, MGRM believes LGBT people should have access to rights that other people take for granted – but that all too often sexual minorities still need to struggle for.

This is the ninth consecutive year that this event is being organised and your participation is a clear sign of your commitment to respect for diversity and equality in Maltese society and around the world.

For further information please contact MGRM on 9925 5559 or visit our website at: www.maltagayrights.org. You can also follow us on Twitter: @MGRM_Malta. 


[Click on the images to enlarge.]


Tuesday, 19 June 2012

Telegraph: Chinese government official becomes a woman aged 84

An 84-year-old retired government official from southern China has become an unlikely trailblazer for transgender rights after speaking out about his decision to become a woman – in his ninth decade of life.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/9330965/Chinese-government-official-becomes-a-woman-aged-84.html
10:09AM BST 14 Jun 2012 By Tom Phillips in Shanghai

Qian Jinfan was born in Jiaxing, a city around 50 miles from Shanghai, in 1928. A Chinese calligrapher, literary theorist and art collector, he built a career as a mid-ranking civil servant in Foshan, in southern Guangdong province, and married aged 54. Four years ago, aged 80, he decided he wanted to be a woman.

This week Mr Qian spoke publicly for the first time about his decision, transforming himself into an unusual symbol of changing attitudes toward sex and sexuality in China.

"This is my real-self. I have covered myself up for the past 80-ish years," Mr Qian, who now prefers to be called Yi Ling, uses female lavatories and is reputedly China's oldest openly transgender person, told Guangzhou's Southern Metropolis Daily.

"I hope to stand up against the prejudice people hold towards transsexuals. I want to eliminate it," he added.

Mr Qian told the newspaper he had felt female since he was a child. But his transformation from Jinfan to Yi Ling only began in December 2008 when he started taking hormones to enlarge his breasts and wearing women's clothes.

The following year he sent a letter to his former employers at Foshan's cultural bureau complaining he had been forced to wear men's clothes all his life. He received no official response, but took that as tacit support.

His income and welfare benefits were unaffected, he said.

In 2010 Mr Qian, who is still married, wrote another letter informing authorities that he was a woman. Liu Chunling, head of the HR department for Foshan's cultural bureau, told the Southern Metropolis Daily Mr Qian's choice was "private". "We all see it with an open attitude [and can] understand and accept [it]."

Chinese LGBT activists praised Mr Qian's decision to go public.

"I think it's definitely really brave – it is great news for the transgender community that people are speaking out," said Wei Jiangang, a Beijing-based activist and founder of Queer Comrades, an online television channel about LGBT issues.

"Compared to 10 years ago there has been a big improvement. There are more and more LGBT organisations doing different things. There is more and more space for LGBT people and more help." Mr Qian's revelations came a few days after tens of thousands of people attended a government-backed sex fair in Xi'an, northern China – to some, another sign that conservative attitudes towards sex were changing.

The event reportedly included "an exhibition of ancient sexual artefacts, an exhibition of sexual arts and painting, live body painting, a sexy lingerie show, an exhibition of ancient Chinese erotic pictures, seminars on sexual knowledge and an exhibition of nude photography." "As China develops socially and economically, the Chinese are becoming less likely to view sex as a taboo subject," Xinhua, the government news agency, reported.

"Sex was a taboo subject when we were young, and now it can be openly discussed. I think that's an example of social progress," said Zhao Guiyao, a 61-year-old local.

Mr Zhao's wife, named as Liang, appeared less open-minded. "I do not think some of the fair's contents really embodied progress, such as the sadomasochistic show and homosexuality," she told Xinhua.

Mr Qian's experience suggests prejudice remains. While colleagues had been broadly supportive when he began attending meetings in female clothes, Mr Qian said he had suffered abuse from children near his home. He reported them to the local neighbourhood committee after being called a "man-monster." "I don't think I am inferior to others. I will not give up easily. I am not wrong," he said.

Online responses to Qian's story were mixed.

"It is individual freedom to live as one wishes in this world, as long as it does not harm other people's interests," wrote one user of the Chinese internet portal, NetEase. "This old man lives freely." Others were less receptive. "This guy might be mental. There are all kinds of birds in a big forest," wrote one.

"There has been progress but [the LGBT community] is still facing lots of problems," said Mr Wei, the activist, pointing to continued government censorship of LGBT issues and events and widespread prejudice among ordinary Chinese. "People are still afraid of other people being different."

Independent: Political card games and the forgotten cohabitation bill

http://www.independent.com.mt/news.asp?newsitemid=145840
13 June 2012 by Raymond Sammut, Mellieħa

As the crucial date of the divorce referendum was fast approaching, our Honourable Prime Minister decided to play another trump card. On realising that his gamble of relying on the strong influence of the local Roman Catholic Church to dissuade the local faithful from approving the proposed divorce legislation in the referendum was faltering, his party came up with another proposal – the cohabitation bill. This seemed to be intended to appease the sufferings of thousands of separated couples who had been denied the worldwide acknowledged right to divorce (except in the Philippines) and who had opted to form a “loose” partnership with other spouses/partners. These unfortunate couples thought that finally, they could breathe a sigh of relief, and that what formerly society had looked askance, their cohabitation status would now be regularised. This would consequently entitle them to the benefits and entrust them with obligations of a so-called “normal” married couple in the Maltese community. Little did they realise however that this was not to be, because the peoples’ representatives held the pack of cards in their hands.

L-Orizzont: Jiddaħħlu iżjed reati fil-Kodiċi Kriminali

http://www.orizzont.com.mt/FullArticle.php?ID1='Ahbarijiet'&ID2=91663
13.6.12

Matul il-laqgħa tal-Kumitat Per manenti għall-Kunsiderazzjo ni ta’ Abbozzi ta’ Liġi, intlaħaq qbil unanimu bejn il-membri, li jiġi emendat l-abbozz dwar l-Att tal-2012 tal-Kodiċi Kriminali.
Il-Kumitat kien ifformat mill-Ministru Chris Said, mid-Deputa ti Laburisti Evarist Bartolo, Michael Falzon u Josè Herrera, u minn Beppe Fenech Adami u Karl Gouder.

L-Orizzont: Aħbarijiet: Ma kienx ipprovat bħala reat ta’ mibegħda

Żewġ żgħażagħ immultati €500 talli ħebbew għal żewġ tfajliet fil-Ħamrun
http://www.orizzont.com.mt/FullArticle.php?ID1='Ahbarijiet'&ID2=91604
12.6.12

Żewġ żgħażagħ li f’Jannar li għadda kienu ħebbew għal żewġ tfajliet fil-Ħamrun, kie nu mmultati €500 kull wie ħed. Madankollu l-Qorti sos tniet li ma kien hemm l-ebda evidenza li dan kien reat ta’ mibegħda. Il-Qorti qalet ukoll li lanqas ma kien hemm prova li t-tfajliet kienu koppja leżbjana.

Min-naħa tagħhom, iż-żewġ tfajliet li għandhom 17-il sena u 16-il sena rispettivament ġew illiberati minn akku ża li offen dew liż-żgħa żagħ subien u anke li kkaġunaw feriti fuq wie ħed minn hom.
Minn barra ż-żewġ tfajliet u ż-żewġ ġuvintur, f’dan il-każ kien hemm involuta Mary Aquilina ta’ 35 sena, li ġiet im multata s-somma ta’ €50 wara li nstabet ħatja ta’ theddid bil-kliem fuq waħda mit-tfajliet.

Independent: Court: Court amazed at fight being classed a hate crime

http://www.independent.com.mt/news.asp?newsitemid=145807
12 June 2012

Two young men were each fined €500 for assaulting two young women as a way of showing off, with Magistrate Joseph Apap Bologna expressing amazement that the case had been reported in the media as some hate crime because of the girls’ sexual orientation.

No evidence had been produced to show that the girls were in fact lesbian, and the young men’s behaviour towards them was their way of showing off, the magistrate said.

Times: ‘No proof’ that girls assaulted for being lesbian - One of girls had broken nose

http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20120612/local/-No-proof-that-girls-assaulted-for-being-lesbian.423910
Tuesday, June 12, 2012 by Matthew Xuereb


Two brothers were fined €500 each for attacking and slightly injuring two teenage lesbians, although the court decided the assault had nothing to do with their sexual orientation.
The incident was the result of bullish behaviour of the two underage and idiotic boys
A 35-year-old woman,who also participated in the assault, albeit limitedly, was fined €50 after being found guilty of threatening one of the girls and breaching the peace.
The brothers, aged 15 and 17, were found guilty of all the charges but in a separate judgment, the girls were cleared of slightly injuring the older brother, assaulting the boys and the woman, and breaching the peace.

Times: Straight talking on gay rights

http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20120612/local/Straight-talking-on-gay-rights.423915
Tuesday, June 12, 2012 by Bertrand Borg

Leading gay rights activist GABI CALLEJA speaks of the emergence of a gay vote, describes civil partnership legislation as a“deal-breaker” and warns that homophobic attacks are likely to increase. Bertrand Borg reports.


Malta Gay Rights Movement coordinator Gabi Calleja. Photo: Matthew Mirabelli


Leading gay rights activist Gabi Calleja speaks of the emergence of a gay vote, describes civil partnership legislation as a “deal-breaker” and warns that homophobic attacks are likely to increase. Bertrand Borg reports.
Malta Gay Rights Movement coordinator Gabi Calleja may pepper her conversation with coy smiles, but behind the self-effacing exterior lies a woman unwilling to minceher words.
Anyone arguing against equality is already on the wrong side of history
“I think we can now speak of agay vote. And we’ve reached apoint where the LGBT [lesbian, gay bisexual and transgender] community is fed up,” she says at themention of seemingly elusive civil partnership legislation.

Malta Star: Fined €500 after assaulting lesbians in Hamrun

http://www.maltastar.com/dart/20120611-fined-500-after-assaulting-lesbians-in-hamrun
Tuesday, 12 Jun 2012, 05:57


Two young men who assaulted a lesbian couple in Hamrun were fined €500 each but the court said there was no evidence that this was a hate crime or that the couple was lesbian.

The two young women were not found guilty of offending the men or that they injured one of them. 35 year old Mary Aquilina was fined €50 after she was found guilty of threatening one of the young women.

Times: Boys fined €500 for assault - no evidence this was hate crime

http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20120611/local/boys-fined-500-for-assault-no-evidence-this-was-hate-crime.423805
Monday, June 11, 2012, 13:38



One of the girls who was head-butted in the assault.

Two teenage boys who assaulted two girls in a Hamrun public garden in January were each fined €500 today, but a court said that no evidence had been presented to show that this was a case of hate crime. Nor had it been proven that the girls were a lesbian couple.

A 35-year-old woman who was involved in the same case with the boys was fined €50.

The two girls, aged 15 and 16, had alleged they were attacked by the two brothers, aged 15 and 17, who started calling them names when they saw them kissing.

The boys were arraigned along with the 35-year-old woman. The girls too were taken to court, accused of slightly injuring the boys. They were found not guilty.

It had been the two girls themselves who had told the press that they were assaulted because of their sexual orientation.

The case caused a strong public reaction, with a public protest against hate crime having been held in Hamrun . There was also condemnation by politicians and the Church.


[Click on the hyperlink above to view the comments on the Times website.]

Malta Today: The new Nationalist | Charlò Bonnici

http://www.maltatoday.com.mt/en/newsdetails/news/interview/The-new-Nationalist-Charlo-Bonnici-20120609
Sunday 10 June 2012 - 10:12, by Jurgen Balzan

Nationalist MP Charlò Bonnici not only agrees with the bill on party financing drafted by Franco Debono but insists that controversial laws such as IVF and civil partnerships should be pushed through by the government.


Nationalist MP Charlò Bonnici.

Nationalist MP Charlo Bonnici is not one who minces his words. In the past he has publically questioned whether it was acceptable in this day and age for political parties to own television stations, supported calls to amend censure laws in Malta, opposed the Ghadira road project and last year attended an anti-Gaddafi march before government took a clear stand on the Libyan situation.

Malta Right Now: Ipprojbit il-marċ tal-Gay Pride fir-Russja

http://www.maltarightnow.com/?module=news&at=Ipprojbit+il%2Dmarc+tal%2DGay+Pride+fir%2DRussja&t=a&aid=99837961&cid=47
11 ta' Ġunju, 2012 12:41 CET

Qorti Russa ikkonkludiet li l-projbizzjoni ta' 100 sena kontra l-marċ tal-gay pride li kien deċiż mill-amministrazzjoni tal-belt ta' Moska legalment validu. Dan fl-isfond li saru madwar 120 talba għall-permess sa biex isir dan il-marċ bejn l-2012 u l-2112 li kollha għandhom isiru fi pjazza Balotnaja.

Nikolai Alexeev il-mexxej tal-moviment omosesswali Russu qal li ħa jagħmel rikors fil-qrati Russi u fil-qorti Ewropea għad-Drittijiet tal-Bniedem.

Malta Right Now: Qorti - Żewġ żgħażagħ immultati €500 u żewġ tfajliet illiberati wara ġlieda

http://www.maltarightnow.com/?module=news&at=%26%23379%3Bew%26%23289%3B+%26%23380%3Bg%26%23295%3Ba%26%23380%3Bag%26%23295%3B+immultati+€500+u+%26%23380%3Bew%26%23289%3B+tfajliet+illiberati+wara+%26%23289%3Blieda&t=a&aid=99837957&cid=39
Ray ABDILLA, 11 ta' Ġunju, 2012 10:50 CET

Żewġ żgħażagħ, wieħed ta' 17 u l-ieħor ta' 16, kienu mmultati €500 kull wieħed wara li nstabu ħatja li ħebbew għal żewġ tfajliet u li kkaġunawlhom feriti ħfief. Min-naħa tagħhom it-tfajliet ma nstabux ħatja li offendew liż-żgħażagħ subien u li kkaġunaw feriti ħfief fuq wieħed minnhom u għaldaqstant ġew illiberati.

Il-Qorti ppreseduta mill-Maġistrat Joseph Apap Bologna qalet li tinsab mistagħaġba kif dan il-każ ġie rrappurtat f'diversi mezzi ta' kommunikazzjoni bħala qisu xi "hate crime" minħabba l-orjentazzajoni sesswali tat-tfajliet, waħda ta' 17 u l-oħra ta' 16-il sena.

Dissett: Iż-Żwieġ tal-Gays dritt?

8 ta' Junju 2012

Ara l-video hawn:
http://www.dissett.tv/Dissett_11_12/Dissett.html

TVM
Reno Bugeja, Gabi Calleja, Mario Gerada, Fr. Rene Camilleri

Monday, 11 June 2012

Malta Star: Bill to recognise same sex relationship

http://www.maltastar.com/dart/20120610-bill-to-recognise-same-sex-relationship
Sunday, 10 Jun 2012, 05:41

Within the life of this parliament government intends moving legislation recognising same-sex couples. After the debate on the bill to remove all forms of discrimination, including that based on sexual orientation, Said told Opposition MP Evarist Bartolo that such legislation is being prepared and will soon be brought to parliament.

So far the PN had refused to protect the rights of same sex couples and had reacted very negatively when the Labour Party proposed the recognition of such rights when the rent law was amended. But after opposing the introduction of divorce last year and losing the divorce referendum, the PN decided to reposition itself on gay rights.

The European Commission has said Maltese nationals who acquire free movement rights elsewhere in the EU – including institutional same-sex relationship – may continue to exercise those rights on return to Malta.

On 24 August 2011 the Commission replied to a complaint of an EU citizens residing in Malta and said: "It should, however, be noted that the Court of Justice of the European Union has extended the application of EU rules on free movement also to those Union citizens who return to their home Member State after having exercised their right and resided in another Member State.'

Last year the Freedom of Movement directive was fully transposed in Maltese law but left Maltese in same-sex relationships with third country nationals enjoying less protection.

The Malta Gay Rights Movement and Human Rights group Aditus had welcomed the full transposition of the Freedom of Movement Directive, but said the updated law now creates an anomalous situation where relationships of Maltese citizens with a third country national of the same sex enjoy less protection than those of other EU nationals in the same situation moving to Malta.

The MGRM and Aditus said they regretted that the change only came about after infringement proceedings by the European Commission.

Since April 2010, Malta and EC officials had been locked in talks on the interpretation of the free movement directive (2004/38/EC) as Maltese legislation that was supposed to have transposed EU law only recognised partners "in a durable relationship" with EU citizens if such relationships were not in "conflict with the public policy of Malta".

This meant that same-sex couples moving to Malta would not enjoy the same rights they are entitled to across the EU even though recognition of gay registered partnerships or gay marriage is obligatory in the EU.

A legal notice was published last year, deleting the discriminatory clause.

The MGRM and Aditus had said that the removal of the clause did not go far enough and in fact the situation now had created an anomalous situation where, a South African national in a relationship with a Belgian citizen would be allowed to enter, reside and work in Malta; whereas the same person in a relationship with a Maltese citizen would not.

"This amendment is welcome but it in no way replaces the necessity for the introduction of comprehensive legislation recognising same-sex couples. It is regrettable that a number of same-sex couples are forced to leave Malta in order to sustain their relationship each year," Gabi Calleja, MGRM coordinator said.

Malta Today: The new Nationalist | Charlo Bonnici

http://www.maltatoday.com.mt/en/newsdetails/news/interview/The-new-Nationalist-Charlo-Bonnici-20120609
10 June 2012 - 10:12 Jurgen Balzan

Nationalist MP Charlo Bonnici not only agrees with the bill on party financing drafted by Franco Debono but insists that controversial laws such as IVF and civil partnerships should be pushed through by the government.


Nationalist MP Charlo Bonnici is not one to mince his words. In the past he has publically questioned whether it was acceptable in this day and age for political parties to own television stations, supported calls to amend censure laws in Malta, opposed the Ghadira road project and last year attended an anti-Gaddafi march before Government took a clear stand on the Libyan situation.

While Bonnici played a central role in standing up for Carm Mifsud Bonnici during the Parliamentary debate on Labour's motion calling for the former minister's resignation, he aligns himself to the party's liberal and reformist faction by backing legislation regulating party financing,  in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and civil partnerships.  

As the government comes out from a busy week in which it lost one of its ministers and won a vote of confidence, Charlo Bonnici refuses to get caught up in the Franco Debono whirlwind and looks ahead at the coming months with a cautious sense of optimism.

Read the full interview in today's edition of MaltaToday

Independent: Long-awaited Cohabitation Bill at Cabinet level

http://www.independent.com.mt/news.asp?newsitemid=145734
10 June 2012 by Annaliza Borg

The long awaited Cohabitation Bill is being discussed at Cabinet level and will be presented to Parliament shortly, a spokesman for the Justice Ministry has confirmed to this newspaper.

"The government's position is that the relationship between homosexual couples should be regulated by the law regulating cohabitation, including the institute of civil partnerships," he said.

While cohabitation is becoming increasingly popular, the subject is still sensitive as the Catholic Church considers cohabitation a threat to the marital happiness that engaged couples seek. Since the divorce law was introduced last year, the Cohabitation Bill is no longer the sole possibility for heterosexual couples living together to legally regulate their relationship.

The main focus of the upcoming Bill has now shifted to the provision of rights for homosexual couples, although they are not the only people living together outside marriage who wish to be recognised by law.

The Bill currently being discussed by Cabinet is said to reflect feedback from those specifically involved and the general public alike.

Last November, the Nationalist Party's General Council was told that the party would seek to legislate in favour of homosexual rights. In an interview with this newspaper the following week, Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi said that the issue "is about the recognition of responsibilities in a relationship that are borne between two persons, and the lack of regulation at present is creating an unjust scenario which we should no longer allow.

"My position has been clear on this from the very start and this is what we will be doing. Now we have legislated for divorce, we need to regulate the responsibilities of cohabiting couples. Whether they are heterosexual or homosexual is quite beside the point – it is about couples who are in a relationship where responsibilities exist.

"A relationship is a relationship and I hope that when people say they are in a relationship it is not just a one night stand – a relationship creates duties, responsibilities and rights which we need to recognise in our society.

"Our laws are failing us in this area. Today a couple builds a relationship over five, 10 years and there is nothing in the law that places any responsibility on partners in that relationship. That is morally wrong and we need to legislate."

Meanwhile, a private members' bill on gender identity, which mainly covers transgender rights, has been presented to Parliament. Since this is based on a Private Members Bill presented by the Labour Party's spokesman for Education and Civil Rights, Evarist Bartolo, the House Business Committee is to schedule it for discussion.

The Bill is intended to establish a register of transgender people and the procedure to be adopted for the recognition of a person's gender.

It is not clear whether these two Bills will be discussed before Parliament rises for the summer recess next month. The House currently has a list of 12 Bills on its agenda but the items may change according to priorities established by the House Business Committee.

Guardian: Medical body in fight to extend HPV vaccination to gay men

Including young homosexuals would reduce deaths from preventable cancers and lessen demand for costly treatments
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2012/jun/10/hpv-vaccination-gay-men-lobby

Barry Neild, The Observer, Sunday 10 June 2012

Pub gay men















Sexually active gay men are the only group still at high risk of contracting HPV. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

A group of influential doctors, men's health charities and senior politicians is calling for the vaccination of gay men against a cancer-causing sexually transmitted virus from which the NHS already protects young heterosexuals.

The British Association of Sexual Health and HIV, backed by the British Medical Association, the Terrence Higgins Trust and several MPs, wants government health advisers meeting this week to recommend extending a vaccination scheme currently restricted to adolescent girls.

Guardian: 'Sexual depravity' of penguins that Antarctic scientist dared not reveal


Landmark polar research about the Adélie penguin's sex life by Captain Scott's expedition, deemed too shocking for the public 100 years ago, is unearthed at the Natural History Museum

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jun/09/sex-depravity-penguins-scott-antarctic 
Robin McKie, science editor
guardian.co.uk, Saturday 9 June 2012 11.31 BST

Dr George Murray Levick's notebook

Dr George Murray Levick's observations of Adélie penguins were recorded in his notebook. Photograph: R Kossow/NHM

It was the sight of a young male Adélie penguin attempting to have sex with a dead female that particularly unnerved George Murray Levick, a scientist with the 1910-13 Scott Antarctic Expedition. No such observation had ever been recorded before, as far as he knew, and Levick, a typical Edwardian Englishman, was horrified. Blizzards and freezing cold were one thing. Penguin perversion was another.

Telegraph: Homosexuality akin to rape and prostitution, Polish nursing teaching books claim

Homosexuality is on a par with rape and prostitution, according to official teaching materials for Poles studying to be nurses and midwives.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/poland/9319151/Homosexuality-akin-to-rape-and-prostitution-Polish-nursing-teaching-books-claim.html
12:08PM BST 08 Jun 2012 By Matthew Day, Warsaw

Teaching books refer to homosexuality as a "pathology" and the subject often comes under the section of "sexual problems" where students are instructed on "how to identify and provide assistance in situations of sexual assault and sexual disorders".

A multiple choice question from a 2011 exam paper on gynaecology read: "Homosexuals are particularly dangerous socially and seduce individuals by ..." Students are then given a number of options including "abnormal sexual drive" and "prostitution".

The curriculum content has been condemned by equal rights campaigners in Poland, a country where conservative attitudes towards homosexuality still hold sway over large parts of the population.

"This is a particularly dangerous incident of homophobia," said Agata Chaber, president of the Campaign Against Homophobia. "Official information in course curriculum is regarded as reliable and verified, and therefore very few people will question it." Their anger has been intensified by the fact that the material went unchallenged for some 10 years despite reviews by leading Polish medical scientists.

Agnieszka Kozlowska-Rajewicz, the Polish government's plenipotentiary for equal treatment, described the course content as "unacceptable", adding that she had written to the health ministry calling for an "immediate cease" to its teaching.

The health ministry has said it will initiate a review of the teaching material with the aim of bringing it up to date but this may take some time owing to legal procedures.

This response promoted immediate accusations of foot-dragging.

"For 10 years the ministry did not mind that nurses and midwives learnt content that was both discriminatory and hurtful for sexual minorities, and now it doesn't seem to mind that the content will still be taught until it ends a bureaucratic procedure for establishing new programmes," commented Zosia Jablonska, an equal-rights campaigner.

The scandal raises further question marks over Poland's liberal credentials following racism allegations in a BBC Panorama documentary. Although homophobic attitudes in Poland are on the wane they are still encounter conservative opposition, especially in the countryside.

LA Times: Gay teens less likely to be happy, nationwide survey finds

Even as barriers to equality fall, gay and lesbian teens report they still struggle with harassment and identity issues more than their straight peers do.

http://www.latimes.com/health/la-me-gay-youth-20120607,0,4443551.story

By Rebecca Trounson, Los Angeles Times
June 6, 2012, 9:02 p.m.

It's not easy growing up gay in America, despite the nation's increasing acceptance of same-sex marriage and other issues of gay equality.

Gay and lesbian teenagers across the United States are less likely to be happy, more likely to report harassment and more inclined to experiment with drugs and alcohol than the nation's straight teens, according to a new nationwide survey of more than 10,000 gay and lesbian young people.

The survey, which will be released Thursday by the Human Rights Campaign, aWashington, D.C.-based civil rights group, is described as one of the largest ever to focus on the nation's gay youth. It was conducted online and involved 10,030 participants aged 13 to 17 who identified as gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender. It also included interviews with about 500 13- to 17-year-olds who composed the poll's "straight" population.

The study paints an often stark picture of the challenges of growing up gay in this country, even as same-sex marriage gains support among many Americans and other legal and cultural barriers to gay equality begin to fall.

The survey showed, for example, that half of all gay and lesbian teens reported being verbally harassed or called names at school, compared with a quarter of non-LGBT kids. About twice as many gay and lesbian respondents as straight teens also said they had been shoved, kicked or otherwise assaulted at their schools, with 17% of LGBT teens and 10% of straight youths reporting such assaults.

Fewer than half of gay teenagers said they believe their community is accepting of people like them, and 63% said they would need to move to another town or part of the country to find acceptance. Just 4 in 10 gay teens reported being happy, compared with nearly 7 in 10 of their straight peers.

And more than twice as many gay (52%) as non-gay (22%) respondents said they had experimented with drugs or alcohol.

Child welfare advocates who reviewed the study before publication praised it for shedding light on a population that is difficult to reach and in need of help from government agencies and others.

Linda Spears, vice president of policy for the Child Welfare League of America, said the study bears out "our worst fears about LBGT kids. These kids are often so vulnerable in the way their lives are being led because of the lack of support they have. They need what all young people need, parents and others who are there for them and nurture their development."

Chad Griffin, the new president of the Human Rights Campaign and an advocate for same-sex marriage, said the survey "is yet another reminder that we still have a lot to do in this country so that young people can grow up healthy."

Griffin, who helped organize the legal fight against Proposition 8, California's ban on gay marriage, said he hopes the report will inform policymakers and serve as a reminder to parents, schools and elected officials about the challenges facing a vulnerable population.

"These are young people," he said. "They worry about which hall they can walk down at school, which table they have to avoid in the lunchroom, what happens at church on Sunday and whether they need to hide their identity from their family."

But the survey also showed that many gay teens find safe havens among their peers, on the Internet and in their schools. Nearly 3 in 4 gay teenagers said they were more honest about themselves online than elsewhere and 67% said their schools were "generally accepting" of gay people.

In interviews this week at L.A.'s Gay and Lesbian Center, several young people spoke about the survey's findings and their own experiences coming to terms with their LGBT identity.

Jonathan McClain, a 22-year-old from Altadena, said he identified strongly with part of the study showing that many young gays and lesbians feel forced to change their identities almost hour by hour, depending on where they are and who's around. Many LGBT kids are more likely to be "out" at school than they are with their families.

"Sometimes you're out of the closet, sometimes you have to put yourself back in and watch what you say and how you act," said McClain, who volunteers at the center.

McClain, who came out after he graduated from high school, said he had never directly experienced harassment.

That was not the case with others interviewed, including Edwin Chuc, from Los Angeles, who said he had been beaten up in middle school and ended up with broken ribs. Chuc said he had lived on the streets for several years and abused drugs and alcohol before turning his life around.

Now a confident 19-year-old who will attend USC in the fall, Chuc said his parents are much more supportive now than they were when he first came out. "I'm happy and I have people I can turn to," he said.

Logan Woods, 18, of Manhattan Beach, said middle school was tough for him too, but high school, at the private Vistamar School in El Segundo, has been much better, with good friends and a strong gay support group among the students.

"It's getting easier for me to live spontaneously and not feel like I have to plan everything out for fear of being hurt," he said.

The survey was conducted online from April 16 through May 20. It was advertised through social media, as well as through LGBT youth centers across the country. The researchers said the survey method is not unusual for targeting hard-to-reach populations but may not represent a truly random sample.

rebecca.trounson@latimes.com

Copyright © 2012, Los Angeles Times

Friday, 8 June 2012

Malta Today: Transgender rights, cohabitation bills expected in coming days – MP

Labour MP Evarist Bartolo says justice minister to present two important bills for House agenda within coming days.

http://maltatoday.com.mt/en/newsdetails/news/national/Transgender-rights-cohabitation-bills-expected-in-coming-days-MP-20120606
Friday 8 June 2012 - 07:30 by Karl Stagno-Navarra

A bill drafted by the Malta Gay Rights Movement to facilitate the legal rights and inclusion of transgender people, is expected to tabled in the House in the coming days.

Labour MP Evarist Bartolo told MaltaToday that justice minister Chris Said had informed him both the transgender bill, which he presented to the House, and the cohabitation bill are to be put on the agenda of the House in the coming days.

"It's brought me great joy learning that the transgender rights bill will be finally on the agenda, having piloted this bill," Bartolo said.

One of the biggest problems facing transgender individuals is seeking a change of their sex in birth certificates after having undergone gender reassignment surgery.

Aditus chairperson Neil Falzon, who drafted the bill for the MGRM, had said transgender individuals face an "unwarranted and unnecessary interference and imposition" in their private lives after having undergone costly gender reassignment surgery, which is not available in Malta, and does not fall under the national social security health care.

The proposed act would morph the process from a judicial one to an administrative one, as well as removing the prerequisite that the individual seeking to have their birth gender changed be unmarried.

The bill also proposes that any changes to one's gender does not influence or affect any obligations a person might have as a parent. The bill proposes a secret register of transgender people, so that the act itself does not incur legal or administrative burdens.

Transgender is the state of one's gender identity and does not imply any specific form of sexual orientation.

Gay couples are also set to have their relationship recognised at law in a cohabitation law, first promised in 1998, which will legislate for civil partnerships.

The draft law will provide legal recognition to non-married co­habiting individuals.

Thursday, 7 June 2012

Malta Today: Gay Christians disappointed at Vatican’s censure of nun’s ‘sexual ethics’ book

http://www.maltatoday.com.mt/en/newsdetails/news/national/Gay-Christians-disappointed-at-Vatican-s-censure-of-nun-s-sexual-ethics-book-20120607
Thursday 7 June 2012 - 11:51

Maltese gay Christian group Drachma says Roman Catholic Church is limiting 'good news' to elite group of people.

Drachma, the Maltese gay Christian group, has joined a call by the European Forum of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Christian Groups, warning the Roman Catholic Church that it was limiting the teachings of the Christ to "a select, elite group of people within society".

The group was replying to the censorship of the book 'Just Love' by theologian Sr. Margaret Farley, which deals with Christian sexual ethics, by the Vatican's former inquisition office, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

 "We believe that the good news is universal and is to be shared with all people of good will. Sr. Farley's book 'Just Love' succeeded to reach out to such people who would otherwise think they have no place in the Church and it offered hope," Diane Xuereb, the co-president of the European forum, said.

According to the Vatican, Farley's book - now an Amazon.com top 20 bestseller - affirms positions that are in direct contradiction with Catholic teaching in the field of sexual morality, and has warned the faithful that her book is not in conformity with the teaching of the Church.

Farley broadly argues in her book that divorce, homosexual acts and unions, and masturbation cannot be contrary to the faith under certain conditions.

"Farley's book offers fresh perspectives and practical tools to navigate amidst the various moral dilemmas that millions of faithful may encounter, in their daily, real, day-to-day lives. It also enhances ecumenical dialogue.

"Whilst Sr Farley retains a solid Christian framework she opens up immense possibilities for those who are honest about their lives and sexualities and want to retain their Christian faith," Xuereb said.

The European forum also said the Congregation's censorship was a sign that the Vatican refuted to engage in matters on human sexuality, denying decades of scientific data and sing force against those trying to espouse faith and reason on human sexuality.

"The CDF dismisses the faith experience of thousands of LGBT Christians, our families and friends. It is interesting to note that in a time of regular scandals by the hierarchy and those at the Vatican - also about sexual matters, it is an ethicist that is being punished!" Xuereb said.

"Many people who have been censored in the past received apologies later - usually after their death, some have also been canonized. We believe that history repeats itself.  Unfortunately it seems that the hierarchy does not want to learn from its past mistakes."

Vatican Insider: Berlin’s cardinal and same-sex couples

http://vaticaninsider.lastampa.it/en/homepage/world-news/detail/articolo/berlino-berlin-woelki-15776/
06/ 6/2012 by ANDREA TORNIELLI, Rome

Archbishop Woelki recently gave a speech on stable same-sex relations at the Katholikentag convention, but a clarification of his statement was later given by his spokesman

Archbishop Rainer Maria Woelki, the youngest of the current members of the Sacred College of Cardinals, is at the centre of a controversy over a statement he made on homosexuality.

Fifty five year old Woelki, a bishop since 2003 and archbishop since 2011 was created cardinal by Benedict XVI at the last consistory held in February 2011. In a recent speech at the Katholikentag convention held between 17 and 20 May in Mannheim, he stated:

 "I believe we should agree and indeed we do agree on the fact that in judging this type of relation or relationship there is a big difference in judgement when people take responsibility for one another, when engaged in a long-term relationship as couples do in heterosexual relationships."

These words suggested the cardinal was opening up to stable same-sex relationships. But the Archbishop of Berlin's spokesman stated that Woelki's declaration was allegedly too "concise" and explained that the cardinal had not intended to put same-sex unions on a par with marriage. 

Readers will recall that the issue recently resurfaced in Austria, when a young man living in a registered partnership with another male was elected to the pastoral council of a small village near Vienna.

Wednesday, 6 June 2012

Politico: Gay marriage advocates gain corporate support

http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dGjiCmmWfYeziUdwfCnXbQcOyiCY?format=standard
3.6.2012 by Abby Philips

One by one, national corporations like Microsoft, Starbucks, Boeing and Google are wading into the once-risky business of taking a position supporting gay marriage in states across the country.

Nowhere is that more apparent than in the lawsuit challenging the Defense of Marriage Act, which a federal appeals court called unconstitutional on Thursday. Forty-eight companies, including Nike, Time Warner Cable, Aetna, Exelon Corp., and Xerox had signed a brief arguing that the law negatively affected their businesses.

But the real test will come in November, when voters in four states — Maryland, Minnesota, Maine and Washington — will head to the polls. To date, gay marriage advocates have yet to win a statewide ballot initiative but hope corporate support and money will help turn the tide.

Last year, 25 executives including the CEOs of Goldman Sachs, Viacom and Alcoa lobbied New York legislators to approve same-sex marriage.

In January, Microsoft, Boeing, Vulcan and RealNetworks were among those who voiced their support for a bill approving gay marriage in Washington state.

The corporate activism is a change from as little as five years ago, when major companies shied away from same-sex marriage issues in order to avoid a backlash. Social conservative groups like the American Family Association systematically targeted companies like Home Depot and Ford for their support of gay rights organizations.

"Earlier on there was more risk than reward," said Bob Witeck, a consultant who works with corporations on gay, lesbian and transgender policies. "Now there's far more talk about the reward and less about the risk."

The 48 businesses and nearly two dozen other employer organizations that signed on to a federal court brief opposing DOMA represent a "sea change" in the views of the business community, said Beth Boland, an attorney who worked on the brief.

In the brief, the companies say DOMA, which defines marriage as the legal union of one man and one woman, is expensive to comply with and forces businesses to treat legally married couples of the same sex differently from couples of different sexes.

"I see a seismic shift in the business community in the last five to 10 years," Boland said. "I can't even begin to state how different these issues are perceived within the business community.

"I think there is a symbolic factor of showing that a growing number of vocal members of the business community want to come forward and indicate that as a matter of their own internal employee policy they see this differentiation as negatively affecting their business," she added.

Gay marriage advocates like the Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders, Human Rights Campaign and Third Way, a moderate Democratic think tank, are leading the charge to hone a pro-business strategy ahead of November's referendums.

Eventually, they expect corporations to play a role in lobbying moderate Republicans and Democrats in Washington.

"There's no doubt that American businesses will be central to the dismantling of DOMA," Human Rights Campaign President Joe Solmonese said. "The business case against DOMA could not be stronger. Not only does DOMA hurt employees but it also costs businesses a significant amount of money."

Starbucks's endorsement in the Washington state campaign has been good for business, CEO Howard Schultz told shareholders in March.

"I think any decision of this type or magnitude has to be made with great thoughtfulness. I would assure you that a senior team at Starbucks discussed this and it was, to be candid with you, not something that was a difficult decision for us," Schultz told a shareholder and National Organization for Marriage representative who had expressed concern about the company's decision at the meeting.

"Candidly, since we made that decision, there has not been any dissolution whatsoever in our business," he added.

Jonathan Baker, director of the Corporate Fairness Project for the NOM, said the group, which has begun a campaign to oppose corporate support for same sex-marriage, isn't looking to recruit business support for traditional marriage.

"A lot of businesses were getting into a pro same-sex marriage position. Our goal was to support the other side of that," Baker said. "Our goal is not to have Target supporting traditional marriage. Our goal is to have Target stay neutral."

Baker added: "Marriage isn't terribly pertinent to their business."

NOM launched a "Dump Starbucks" campaign this year, challenging the coffee company's vocal support for gay marriage. It is also proposing a Bank of America shareholder resolution aimed at enshrining freedom of speech for employees who support or oppose gay marriage.

In North Carolina, all of the Fortune 500 companies in the state — including Bank of America and Duke Energy — stayed on the sidelines during last month's referendum to enact a same-sex marriage ban, The New York Times reported. The referendum passed by a double-digit margin, raising questions about whether the issue is still too hot for many corporations to handle.

Jeremy Kennedy, campaign manager for the anti-referendum organization Protect all North Carolina Families, said corporations in the state split the difference by pressuring lawmakers to include language in the amendment allowing companies to offer domestic-partner benefits to their employees. But they sat out when it went to the voters.

Duke Energy CEO Jim Rogers did make a forceful personal statement against the amendment, but his company declined to take an official position. "There was real hesitancy on the part of corporations to stick their neck out officially as a company," Kennedy said.

Many had read the tea leaves — and the polling data — that clearly showed the amendment was likely to pass by a wide margin in the heavily evangelical Christian state.

"I don't know that a Bank of America or Duke Energy would have made that big of a difference on these issues," Kennedy said. "People were looking to their pastors, their Bible and their faith on this issue."

Large corporations have also been slow to issue full-throated statements opposing a Minnesota constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage, which is on the ballot in November, but there are signs the support may eventually come.

A small group of Minnesota-based business executives, including Marilyn Carlson Nelson, CEO of Carlson Companies which owns T.G.I. Friday's and Country Inns & Suites, and Bill George, former CEO of Medtronic, have penned editorials opposing the constitutional amendment.

And Target, which faced intense backlash in 2010 for donating to a Minnesota group that supported an anti-gay candidate, appears to have made an about-face.

Target is holding a "Wear It With Pride" T-shirt promotion that would benefit groups opposing the constitutional amendment. In a statement, Target cited the company's "long history of supporting the LGBT community through giving, volunteerism and event sponsorship and participation" and encouraged its employees to "exercise their right to vote" in November's referendum.

Even if companies aren't supporting gay marriage efforts, what's important is they're not fighting them, said Marc Solomon, national campaign director of Freedom to Marry.

"I don't think you see any corporations taking stances against equality," he said. "You're either taking a stance in favor of equality or you don't take a stance at all. We've certainly defeated our opponents with respect to getting corporations to take an anti-gay stance."

© 2012 POLITICO LLC

Tuesday, 5 June 2012

Malta Today: Heartening change in attitudes to put gay unions on political agenda

Malta is joining in the shift in attitude that has spread over Europe in accepting the reality of same-sex families.

http://www.maltatoday.com.mt/en/newsdetails/news/national/Heartening-change-in-attitudes-to-put-gay-unions-on-political-agenda-20120604
National Tuesday 5 June 2012 - 11:40 by Matthew Vella

Malta is joining in the shift in attitude that has spread over Europe in accepting the reality of same-sex families, according to Silvan Agius, a policy director of the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans- and Intersex Association of Europe. A MaltaToday survey last week found 60% of 18- to 34-year-olds agreed with the introduction of marriage for same-sex couples, in a clear indication of a generation gap in values that finds just 23% of those over 55 years in similar agreement.

Most importantly, the survey shows support for gay marriage increasing by 13 points since 2007, when the first MaltaToday survey on this issue was conducted.

But overall, an absolute majority of 51.2% is opposed to the introduction of gay marriages while 42% agree with gay marriage. And those in favour of same-sex marriages include a significant 9% who specified that they agree with the introduction of same-sex marriage but disagree with these couples adopting children.

"It may appear 'astounding' as MaltaToday reported, but only when comparing Maltese attitudes today with those of the Maltese public some time ago. The truth though is that such a shift has taken place across all Western societies, Malta included," Agius told MaltaToday.

Seven European countries have already adopted gender-neutral marriage laws, providing equal rights and recognition to same-sex and different-sex couples. Others such as Finland, Denmark and Luxembourg currently have draft laws for adoption tabled in parliament, while the French President Francois Hollande has committed France to follow suit in the next year. Scotland and the rest of the United Kingdom are conducting public consultations on the opening of marriage to same-sex couples as well.

Agius says it's representative of a huge transnational shift towards equal recognition of all families.
"It's happening all around Malta, and the Maltese public knows that and none of the doom and gloom, such as the meltdown of heterosexual marriage, forecasted by those opposed to marriage of same-sex partners has taken place."

The coordinator of the Malta Gay Rights Movement Gabi Calleja also acknowledges the shift towards greater acceptance. "With respect to the increase in acceptance of marriage equality by the younger age group, the survey seems to mirror others carried out with university students which is encouraging. We do believe there's been a shift towards greater acceptance, but less so where parenting issues are concerned."

But although support for same-sex marriages is strongest among 18- to 34-year-olds, the largest increase in support was registered among 35- to 54-year-olds. Among this category, agreement with same-sex marriage has increased by a staggering 22 points since 2007 - when MaltaToday last carried out a similar survey.

The indications are that same-sex marriage, which so far is not embraced by any party, will become a key policy that future governments will find it hard to ignore. Agius is convinced about this.
"As time goes by, the Maltese public's awareness will lead them to ask: 'Why should marriage remain a heterosexual privilege rather than a universal right for couples who want to commit to one another?'"

Joseph Carmel Chetcuti, the author of A Queer History of Malta, charts the vicissitudes of the Maltese gay community, and says the "heartening" results of the survey were a direct consequence of more gay men and lesbians coming out and taking pride in their sexuality.
"Of course, not all gay men and lesbians are in favour of marriage. Some are strongly opposed to what is, after all, a patriarchal institution as some gay men and lesbians struggle to be like the rest of society rather than taking pride in their difference. But every gay man and lesbian should have the right to decide for themselves," Chetcuti told MaltaToday from Australia, where he practices law.

But, he adds, putting same-sex marriage on the agenda is another battle to be fought. "There is little doubt that we shall win the war against a conservative establishment with its outdated traditional values: values that do not respect the needs of each and every human being."

University lecturer and gay rights blogger Patrick Attard says it is interesting to note that percentage-wise there are twice as many Labour voters in favour of gay marriage than PN voters. Although 63% majority of Nationalist voters oppose same-sex marriages, nearly a third agree with this radical social reform, while 50% of Labour voters are in favour of gay marriages.
"It is important to note that we are almost completely invisible in the PN media," Attard says, who feels same-sex unions may be a defining criteria in the upcoming election. "It is important however to remain focused and not believe any last-minute promise before the upcoming election unless there are concrete results."

Undoubtedly, the feeling of an international wave of gay pride and support prompted by Barack Obama's move in favour of gay marriage in the United States, has had powerful results.

"Malta does not exist in a vacuum. There has been a global shift in legal and social attitudes towards the recognition of same-sex partners and their families," Silvan Agius says.

"The MGRM has worked incessantly to challenge myths about gays and lesbians, and same-sex unions... but very importantly, many Maltese people have gay and lesbian couples as their friends and share the sense of injustice when they learn about discrimination on parents' days, accessing a bank loan for a family home, or in filling joint tax forms. This first-hand experience makes the issues at stake real, and the need to address them pressing."

Monday, 4 June 2012

EU: "Discrimination hampers development" – Commissioner Piebalgs launches a new initiative to fight discrimination in developing countries

http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/12/547&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en

European Commission - Press release
Brussels, 01 June 2012 - EU Commissioner Piebalgs today unveiled the launch of a new €20 million package to help fight against any kind of discrimination - whether based on gender or sexual orientation, religion or belief, race or ethnic origin, or disability - which affects millions of people around the world.
The announcement was made during an event at the European Commission. High level speakers exchanged views on how to move ahead towards tolerant democracies as well as the added value of non-discrimination and the promotion of human rights to unlock sources of development and enable inclusive growth.
The EU announced that this new package will be available for NGOs and civil society groups to tackle incidences of any kind of discrimination on the ground.
European Commissioner for Development, Andris Piebalgs, said: "It is clear that no country can develop in the long term when some minorities face serious threats, intimidation and even violence because of who they are. Since I took office, I have put the promotion of human rights and human development at the core of EU development policy. The new package launched today is a clear signal of the EU's determination to help civil society and willing partners to make diversity acceptable and an asset of our societies".
Member of the European Parliament, Michael Cashman, said: "This new call to combat discrimination is part of a shared global agenda for tolerant democracies. The European Commission is right to put so much effort into equality as part of the EU’s development strategy, and we in the European Parliament wholeheartedly support this. Soon we will have to approve the second revision of the Cotonou Agreement. We are sincerely committed to this in partnership with ACP governments and civil society.”
Participants exchanged points of views but also good practices and testimonies from the ground, both within the EU and abroad. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Ms Navanethem Pillay, Ernst & Young partner, Ms L. Bingham, as well as NGOs such as "Sexual Minorities Uganda" and Coalition Advocating for the Inclusion of Sexual Orientation (CAISO) from Trinidad and Tobago, participated.
A new support package
€20m euros will be available in the new funding package announced today. It is the first funding specifically set up for the purpose of non-discrimination under the current EIDHR. The funding will be launched through the Commission's Call for Proposals in 2013.
Through its European Instrument for Democracy and Human Rights (EIDHR), the EU is also active in combatting racism and supporting minority groups, for example through the provision of funding to support civil society projects in this area.
The EIDHR has just funded a project to help to improve conditions for the Roma community in Bosnia and Herzegovina, for example. The Roma population suffers a legacy of discrimination in these countries, resulting in widespread poverty, unemployment, homelessness and lack of access to education. The €90,000 funding through the EIDHR aims to help Roma groups achieve greater political representation, promoting the inclusion of minority group's rights in the national constitution through a series of training sessions, national debates and workshops to encourage Roma to become politically active, as well as campaigns to raise awareness of the importance of voting. As a result of the project, 90% of the Roma voted in local elections.
The EIDHR also supports Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex (LGBTI) groups around the world – monitoring information on LGBTI rights, raising awareness on this issue and supporting individual cases through prison visits and court hearings. It also provides emergency assistance (from psychosocial assistance through to medical care) to the most vulnerable LGBTI people in need of support. Around 80 countries still criminalise same-sex relations, and in seven of these it is still punishable by the death penalty.
For further information
Website of DG Development and Cooperation – EuropeAid
Website of the EU Development Commissioner, Andris Piebalgs
Contacts :
Catherine Ray (+32 2 296 99 21)
Wojtek Talko (+32 2 297 85 51)