HRC MS Statement on Federal Judge’s Refusal to Block Discriminatory H.B. 1523

HRC MS Statement on Federal Judge’s Refusal to Block Discriminatory H.B. 1523

Today, HRC responded to news that a federal judge refused to block Mississippi’s discriminatory H.B. 1523 law, one of the most draconian and hateful pieces of anti-LGBTQ legislation passed in recent history. H.B. 1523, deceptively titled “The Religious Liberty Accommodations Act,” enables almost any individual or organization to discriminate against LGBTQ Mississippians at work, at school and in their communities. HRC Mississippi State Director Rob Hill issued the following statement in response to U.S. District Judge Carlton Reeves’ decision not to block the bill from taking effect next week on July 1:

“H.B. 1523 represents the worst of Mississippi. If allowed to go into effect next week, it will lead to widespread discrimination against LGBTQ Mississippians at work, school and in family life.  The business community — including local and national companies and organizations such as Nissan, General Electric, the Mississippi Economic Council, the Mississippi Manufacturing Association and more — has roundly condemned this dangerous bill. It will do harm to our community, our families and our economy and we must not allow it to stand. In the coming weeks, HRC will continue our ongoing efforts to ensure this bill is ultimately struck down or repealed.”

Earlier this year, hundreds of fair-minded Mississippians — including representatives from faith communities and civil rights organizations — rallied against the bill outside Gov. Phil Bryant’s residence alongside HRC and its allies. H.B. 1523 will go into law on July 1. Read more about the law here.

As LGBTQ people across the state brace for H.B. 1523 to take effect, media report the Ku Klux Klan has flyered several communities with threatening anti-LGBTQ leaflets.

Hill added, “This is another example of just how dangerous this hateful HB 1523 law is; it sends a message that LGBTQ people are second class citizens in our own state, and it lends credence to groups that prey on hate, ignorance and fear.”

In 2014, HRC launched Project One America, an initiative geared towards advancing social, institutional and legal equality in Mississippi, Alabama and Arkansas. HRC Mississippi continues to work to advance equality for LGBTQ Mississippians who have no state level protections in housing, workplace, or public accommodations. Through HRC Mississippi, we are working toward a future of fairness every day — changing hearts, minds and laws toward achieving full equality.

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-ms-statement-on-federal-judges-refusal-to-block-discriminatory-h.b.-152?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

GLAAD working in Orlando with families affected by gun violence

GLAAD working in Orlando with families affected by gun violence

GLAAD

More than a week following the tragic shooting in Orlando, GLAAD is still on the ground in Orlando. GLAAD is now working with families affected by gun violence prior to Orlando, reaching out to families of the victims and survivors of the Orlando attack.

“GLAAD is pleased to play a part of connecting these families who have experienced tragic gun violence with the victims, survivors, and families here in Orlando as they begin to try to recover from this horrific attack on the LGBT community,” said GLAAD Vice President of Programs Zeke Stokes, who is in Orlando with the families.

In addition, GLAAD and this group of families are speaking with media and city leaders about the importance of preventing gun violence and ensuring that the victims, survivors and their families are never forgotten. 

These are the families working with GLAAD on the ground in Orlando:

  1. Sandy and Lonnie Phillips (representing Aurora): Sandy and Lonnie are the mother and stepfather of 24-year-old daughter Jessica Ghawi, who was murdered in the Aurora Theater shooting on July 20, 2012: 12 killed; 70 injured.
  2. Amardeep Kaleka (representing Oak Creek Sikh Temple shooting): His father, Satwant Kaleka Singh, was the founder/head of the temple who saved the lives of others in Oak Creek, Wisconsin on August 5, 2012: 6 killed; 4 injured.
  3. Eric and May Kay Mace (representing Northern Illinois University shooting): Their 19-year-old daughter Ryanne was murdered in the mass shooting on the NIU Campus in Dekalb on February 14, 2008: 5 killed; 21 injured.
  4. Lori Hanky Haas (representing Virginia Tech): Lori’s daughter Emily was shot twice in the head and survived in the shooting on April 16, 2007: 32 killed; 23 injured.
  5. Erin Nikitchyuk (representing Newtown): Erin is the mother of Bear who escaped violence at Sandy Hook Elementary School on December 14, 2012: 26 killed (20 children, 6 educators); 2 injured.
  6. Bob Weiss (representing Isla Vista, CA mass shooting): His 19 year-old daughter Veronika was killed in the shooting on May 23, 2014: 6 killed; 14 injured.

 

June 21, 2016

www.glaad.org/blog/glaad-working-orlando-families-affected-gun-violence

Christian Pastor Hopes God “Finishes The Job” And Kills Orlando Survivors

Christian Pastor Hopes God “Finishes The Job” And Kills Orlando Survivors

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One of the many unfortunate aspects of the Pulse nightclub massacre is the number of antigay wingnuts and all-around creepos crawling out of the woodwork in order to capitalize on the attack and make a name for themselves as timely hate merchants.

A recent case in point: Pastor Donnie Romero of Stedfast Baptist Church, who Raw Story reports told his congregation he agrees “100 percent” with Roger Jimenez, the Baptist pastor whose recent sermon suggests taking the survivors out to a firing squad to “blow their brains out.”

Related: Pastor Rick Scarborough Will Set Himself On Fire If The Supreme Court Legalizes Marriage. Partaaaay!

Impossibly, Romero has added horrific new depths to this already inhuman sentiment:

“These 50 sodomites are all perverts and pedophiles, and they are the scum of the earth, and the earth is a little bit better place now,” Romero said on Sunday.

“And I’ll take it a step further, because I heard on the news today, that there are still several dozen of these queers in ICU and intensive care. And I will pray to God like I did this morning, I will do it tonight, I’ll pray that God will finish the job that that man started, and he will end their life, and by tomorrow morning they will all be burning in hell, just like the rest of them, so that they don’t get any more opportunity to go out and hurt little children.”

In other key moments of Romero’s sanctimonious hate-mongering, he calls Sodom and Gomorrah the first ever “queer mass murder,” and says he thinks other mega-churches are soft-pedaling the antigay rhetoric and should step up on the unstoppered evil.

Related: Man Sues For The Right To Marry Laptop In Effort To Dismantle Gay Marriage

Unsurprisingly, The Southern Poverty Law Center has categorized Romero’s church as an anti-LGBT hate group.

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Doctor Explains Why You’re Addicted To Grindr

Doctor Explains Why You’re Addicted To Grindr

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“Your phone is an addiction machine,” Dr. Greg Carson, a psychologist based in Los Angeles, writes in a new article titled Are You Addicted to Your Phone? “It’s like having a casino in your pocket with lots of little slot machines (apps) that continually beg for your attention with buzzes, dings and flashes. Then it rewards you for glancing at it with treats in the form of texts, pics and likes.”

OK. So what exactly does this have to do with us?

Well, it turns out that gay men are especially susceptible to becoming addicted to their phones because of dating apps.

Related: Scientific Survey Confirms Boston Bisexual Boom, Seattle Blowjob Addiction

Dr. Carson explains that there’s this thing called Variable Ratio Reinforcement, or as he describes it, “a fancy psychological term that means your treats come in an unpredictable pattern (just like slot machines). So the more you play, the more your brain thinks something good is just around the corner. Eventually you’re hooked.”

“Dating apps are the worst offenders,” he continues. “Much like the more generic slot machines of Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat, dating apps give you unpredictable reinforcements like woofs, unlocks and matches—and lots of ‘Hey’ and ‘Sup.’ But unlike those other platforms, dating apps center around one primary goal: sex.”

“The resulting sexual arousal when looking at these apps makes us feel more powerful, more alert and more alive,” he continues. “That makes them the most enticing slot machines (slut machines?) in your pocket casino.”

Related: Pastor Spends $60K Of Church’s Money To Feed His Addiction To Gay Dating Websites

Of course, it’s not just dating apps feeding our addictions to our phones. Dr. Carson says apps, in general, contribute, as well as good old fashioned text messages.

So what can be done about this?

The answer: Not much. Sure, you could delete your Grindr account, but you’ll probably just download it again next week.

“I’m not saying you need to enter rehab or give up apps altogether,” Dr. Carson says, “but I am saying you might want to wake up to the fact that you’re less in charge of your obsession with that little brick in your pocket than you think. It’s hijacking your brain.”

Noted.

Thanks, Dr. Carson.

Related: Guys Fed Up With Grindr Turn To Whisper To Release Steam

 

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Vandals Desecrate Gay Texas Man’s Memorial to Orlando Victims – VIDEO

Vandals Desecrate Gay Texas Man’s Memorial to Orlando Victims – VIDEO

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One gay Texas man’s tribute to victims of the Orlando terror attack has been repeatedly vandalized in an apparent hate crime.

Scout Register, 20, erected a rainbow flag outside his family’s home in Tomball, a conservative suburb of Houston, in the wake of the attack. But less than 24 hours later, the flag was stolen.

Register, a student at Texas Tech University, immediately replaced the flag. “You can take my flag, but you’re not going to take my pride,” he told KHOU-TV.

But the second flag was also stolen, and this time it was returned hours later — cut, burned and spray-painted with a swastika.

“They threw the flag out and were yelling gay slurs and other profanities, honking and screaming,” Register said.

Register posted a photo of the desecrated flag that’s been shared more than 3,200 times on Facebook.

“This kind of backfired for them,” he said. “Now I feel stronger than I did before. … This just makes me want to put out as many flags as I can. You’re not going to stop me.”

Watch KHOU’s report below.

The post Vandals Desecrate Gay Texas Man’s Memorial to Orlando Victims – VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.



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Frank Ocean Pens Emotional Response to Orlando Shooting

Frank Ocean Pens Emotional Response to Orlando Shooting

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Frank Ocean has penned an emotional response to the Orlando shooting on his Tumblr page, which meditates on LGBT oppression and the suffering it causes.

“Many hate us and wish we didn’t exist,” Ocean writes. “Many are annoyed by our wanting to be married like everyone else or use the correct restroom like everyone else. Many don’t see anything wrong with passing down the same old values that send thousands of kids into suicidal depression each year. So we say pride and we express love for who and what we are.”

Ocean’s full post:

I read in the paper that my brothers are being thrown from rooftops blindfolded with their hands tied behind their backs for violating sharia law. I heard the crowds stone these fallen men if they move after they hit the ground. I heard it’s in the name of God. I heard my pastor speak for God too, quoting scripture from his book. Words like abomination popped off my skin like hot grease as he went on to describe a lake of fire that God wanted me in. I heard on the news that the aftermath of a hate crime left piles of bodies on a dance floor this month. I heard the gunman feigned dead among all the people he killed. I heard the news say he was one of us. I was six years old when I heard my dad call our transgender waitress a faggot as he dragged me out a neighborhood diner saying we wouldn’t be served because she was dirty. That was the last afternoon I saw my father and the first time I heard that word, I think, although it wouldn’t shock me if it wasn’t. Many hate us and wish we didn’t exist. Many are annoyed by our wanting to be married like everyone else or use the correct restroom like everyone else. Many don’t see anything wrong with passing down the same old values that send thousands of kids into suicidal depression each year. So we say pride and we express love for who and what we are. Because who else will in earnest? I daydream on the idea that maybe all this barbarism and all these transgressions against ourselves is an equal and opposite reaction to something better happening in this world, some great swelling wave of openness and wakefulness out here. Reality by comparison looks grey, as in neither black nor white but also bleak. We are all God’s children, I heard. I left my siblings out of it and spoke with my maker directly and I think he sounds a lot like myself. If I being myself were more awesome at being detached from my own story in a way I being myself never could be. I wanna know what others hear, I’m scared to know but I wanna know what everyone hears when they talk to God. Do the insane hear the voice distorted? Do the indoctrinated hear another voice entirely?

The post Frank Ocean Pens Emotional Response to Orlando Shooting appeared first on Towleroad.



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Donald Trump to Campaign, Again, with Anti-LGBTQ Leaders and Designated Hate Groups

Donald Trump to Campaign, Again, with Anti-LGBTQ Leaders and Designated Hate Groups

Today, presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is scheduled to meet with hundreds of anti-LGBTQ activists, just days after he repeatedly bragged about being right about predicting the tragedy in Orlando and campaigning as “far better” for the LGBTQ community than Hillary Clinton. Among the activists Trump is courting — Tony Perkins, head of the Family Research Council, which has been designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

“Donald Trump continues to prove that he is no friend of the LGBTQ community, and his plan to meet with some of the most virulent anti-LGBTQ activists in the country underscores the terrible reality that, if elected, he would put everything our community has gained under President Obama at risk,” said JoDee Winterhof, HRC’s Senior Vice President for Policy and Political Affairs. “Aligning himself with hate group leader Tony Perkins and his anti-LGBTQ ilk should leave no doubt that Donald Trump stands on the wrong side of history when it comes to equality.”

At every turn during his campaign for the Republican nomination,Trump has vowed to roll back and block LGBTQ equality. Here are five key ways:

The last time Trump reached out to anti-LGBTQ activists, he reaffirmed his opposition to nationwide marriage equality, telling CBN’s David Brody that evangelical voters can “trust me” to oppose marriage equality. Here are highlights from last week underscoring how Trump continues to court anti-LGBT activists in the days after the massacre in Orlando:

Buzzfeed, 6/15/16: “In a speech in Greensboro [North Carolina], Trump noted the earlier meeting, then said, ‘Pat, your governor — he’s doing a fantastic job.’ Earlier this year, though, [Gov. Pat] McCrory signed into law one of the most aggressively anti-LGBT pieces of legislation in the country. The law overrides local LGBT nondiscrimination ordinances in the state by stating that state nondiscrimination law preempts local ordinances and bans transgender people from government restrooms that don’t match their birth certificate….Even before the praise for McCrory, several LGBT advocates questioned Trump’s Monday comments, contrasting them with his statements opposing marriage equality during the campaign, his support for the First Amendment Defense Act, and the records of several of his proposed judicial nominees as being hostile to LGBT rights.”

Politico, 6/16/16: “Donald Trump on Wednesday declared himself the biggest champion of LGBT community, saying he’s gotten huge praise for his response to the Orlando massacre at a gay nightclub. On Thursday, a swarm of protesters told him to shove it. Forced to take a break from the campaign trail to give a deposition at a law firm in Washington, Trump was met with dozens of protesters from the Human Rights Campaign…”

The Advocate, 6/17/16: “If Donald Trump is a friend to “the gays,” he has a downright clueless way of showing it. The Republican presidential candidate, who has been making the case these days that he’s better for LGBT people than Hillary Clinton, retweeted a thumbs-up photo of him Friday with his good pal, antigay pastor Robert Jeffress. The pastor said he was ‘honored to pray for my friend’ at a Dallas rally together. In the past, he’s also said 70 percent of gays have AIDS, that there’s a direct link between homosexuality and pedophilia, and a lot more….The church is well known in the city and worldwide…for its extremely, extremely homophobic pastor.”

Here is more on the five ways Donald Trump remains committed to rolling back LGBTQ equality if he succeeds in his quest to become president.

1.) Trump Vows to Roll Back Nationwide Marriage Equality

Donald Trump has long opposed nationwide marriage equality, calling himself a “traditional” guy, even waffling on whether he supports civil unions. Heading into the South Carolina Primary, Trump tripled down on his opposition to nationwide marriage equality.

In late January, Trump told Fox News Sunday he would appoint justices to the Supreme Court who would reverse nationwide marriage equality and when asked to clarify by ABC’s George Stephanopoulos a week later, Trump again doubled down.

Trump also told CBN’s David Brody that evangelical voters can “trust me” to oppose marriage equality, saying:

“I think they can trust me. They can trust me on traditional marriage. I was very much in favor of having the court rule that it goes to states and let the states decide. And that was a shocking decision for you and for me and for a lot of other people. But I was very much in favor of letting the states decide….”

2.) Trump to Sign a Law Sanctioning Kim Davis-style Discrimination

Donald Trump supports the so-called “First Amendment Defense Act,” (FADA), a bill to enable Kim Davis-style discrimination against LGBTQ people nationwide. FADA would undermine the rule of law and promote taxpayer-funded discrimination against same-sex couples. In a letter to the far-right organization the American Principles Project, Trump wrote in December, “If Congress considers the First Amendment Defense Act a priority, then I will do all I can to make sure it comes to my desk for signatures and enactment.”

FADA would allow organizations and businesses contracting with the federal government to circumvent critical federal protections designed to protect same-sex couples and their families from harmful discrimination. It would also enable federal employees to refuse to fully perform their duties if they believe they conflict with their objection to same-sex marriage. For example, an employee at the Department of Veterans Affairs could refuse to process a claim for survivor benefits for the same-sex spouse of a servicemember.

This is not the first time that Donald Trump has vowed to support sham religious refusal bills designed to enable discrimination against LGBTQ people. In a March debate, Trump said he agreed with Cruz’s answer on religious liberty and agreed that when it comes to opposing nationwide marriage equality and the right of same-sex couples to adopt,“I would certainly have rather left it to the states.”

And last fall at the Iowa Faith and Family Coalition, Trump said he would make the passage of legislation creating such broad loopholes to discriminate a priority. According to Breitbart, referencing Christians and religious liberty, Trump told the audience he would support such laws because “…We’re not being protected.” Breitbart reported, “He said his first priority if elected President of the United States would be to ‘preserve and protect our religious liberty.’ ‘We’ll be fighting as part [of a] common core, and we’re going to protect totally the First Amendment.’ ”

3.) Trump Would Let Anti-LGBTQ Governors Write Discrimination Into State Law

In one spectacular display of Trump’s brazen efforts to ‘have it both ways,’ he made nearly simultaneous statements speaking out of both sides of his mouth on North Carolina’s HB2. Almost immediately after Trump appeared on NBC and pledged his opposition to HB2, noting how unnecessary and damaging it has been to the state of North Carolina — he went on FOX later the very same day to assure conservatives he would do nothing to address it as president.

In an interview with The Today Show in April, Donald Trump opposed North Carolina’s HB 2 — saying:

“North Carolina, what they’re going through, with all of the business that’s leaving and all of the strife — and that’s on both sides — you leave it the way it is. There have been very few complaints the way it is. People go, they use the bathroom that they feel is appropriate. There has been so little trouble. And the problem with what happened in North Carolina is the strife and the economic, I mean, the economic punishment that they’re taking. So I would say that’s probably the best way.

But later that day, Trump told Sean Hannity on FOX News that ‘he would leave it up to states’ and do nothing to intervene as president. Trump doubled down in May.

The Charlotte Observer reported, “Although Kimmel pressed him five times, Trump refused to explain his personal stance on North Carolina’s law that requires people in government buildings to use bathrooms matching their birth certificates. ‘What I support is let the states decide, and I think the states will do hopefully the right thing,’ Trump said.”

Essentially, he’s suggesting that if a state wants to go through with a law that puts LGBTQ people at risk for discrimination and harassment, he will stand by and hope for the best — in a year when 201 anti-LGBTQ bills were introduced in 34 states. As far as Trump is concerned, however, states should be free to violate federal laws — such as Title IX — and deny LGBTQ people equal treatment under the law.

4.) Trump Would Repeal President Obama’s Executive Orders

Trump says he looks forward to repealing President Obama’s executive orders, meaning the executive order protecting LGBTQ employees working for federal contractors is at risk. That means under a Trump White House, a company doing business with the government and receiving taxpayer dollars could say “you’re fired” to LGBTQ employees just because of who they are. And if there’s any doubt as to urgency with which Trump would approach this, The Washington Post reports, “If he’s elected president, Trump said that within an hour of taking the oath of office — but possibly within two minutes — he would undo many of Obama’s executive orders.”

The loss of these protections is not just a hypothetical danger. Just recently the House Armed Services Committee added an amendment to the defense authorization that would undermine President Obama’s executive order banning discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity for federal contractors — an executive order that covers 20 percent of the workforce. And Trump has made clear he’s not going to fight these types of efforts.

Separate from the issue of executive orders, Trump said in an interview with the Washington Post that would rescind important guidance from the Obama administration that is intended to ensure transgender students have access to restrooms consistent with their gender identity.

5.) LGBTQ people, Women, Immigrants, Latinos/as: Donald Trump Puts us all at Risk

Throughout his campaign, Donald Trump attacked, belittled and maligned anyone and everyone he considers different. The LGBTQ community is as diverse as our nation, and includes women, immigrants, Muslims, people of color, people living with disabilities, asylum seekers and others Trump has attacked for political gain.|

Consider his attacks on immigrants, whom he has called “in many cases, criminals, drug dealers, rapists, etc.” About 30 percent of LGBTQ immigrants — some 267,000 people — are undocumented adults, according to a 2013 study from the UCLA’s Williams Institute. Donald Trump would forcibly remove these people and deport them, breaking up LGBTQ families and doing massive damage to our economy in the process.

Trump has also called women “pigs” and other offensive terms; when FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly called Trump on it, he dismissively joked that he was ‘referring to Rosie O’Donnell.’

Equally troubling, Donald Trump attacked U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel, claiming he had an “absolute conflict” in a case solely because of his “Mexican heritage” and his membership in a Latino lawyers association. Trump not only refused to apologize over his racist remarks about Curiel, who was born and attended law school in Indiana, he reportedly doubled down and urged campaign surrogates to continue attacking the judge for his heritage. 

Unfortunately, we’ve seen the same attacks lobbed against LGBTQ judges. When Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Vaughn Walker ruled that Prop 8 was unconstitutional, anti-LGBTQ activists in California sought to have his decision vacated. As Philip Klein, a columnist for the conservative Washington Examiner, wrote, similar attacks from Donald Trump should be viewed as an attack on all minority communities. “As an American Jew, I’m certainly familiar with the age old dual-loyalty smear… Trump could just as easily be arguing that a Jewish judge is against him because he refuses to be beholden to Jewish donors. Or an American Asian judge is against him because he wants to get tough on China. Or an Irish Catholic judge is against him because of his attacks on Pope Francis. Effectively, anybody who isn’t a white Protestant of European ancestry can be a target of Trump’s ethnic and racial attacks.”

Donald Trump’s attacks on Judge Curiel are not only an attack on the estimated 1.4 million Latino/a LGBTQ adults but a dangerous signal to all minority communities — including LGBTQ people — that they might be next.

In sum: Trump has vowed time and again to oppose LGBTQ equality and roll back our progress. His policy positions are extreme and dangerous — and he has attempted to obfuscate his views because he knows they are out of step with the vast majority of voters who’ll go to the polls in November.

In fact, support for LGBTQ equality has hit a record high in the last year. Nearly 80 percent of Americans support federal non-discrimination protections for LGBTQ people and a 55 percent majority say they would be less likely to vote for a candidate opposed to marriage equality. No matter how you look at it, Trump remains dangerously out of step with the majority of fair-minded Americans who believe that LGBTQ people should be treated equally under the law.

 

Paid for by Human Rights Campaign PAC. Not authorized by any candidate or candidate’s committee. 

www.hrc.org/blog/donald-trump-to-campaign-again-with-anti-lgbtq-leaders-and-designated-hate?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Violence Ensues at Istanbul Trans Pride After Turkey Bans Pride Parade

Violence Ensues at Istanbul Trans Pride After Turkey Bans Pride Parade

Post submitted by Associate Director, HRC Global Jordan Long

Supporters of LGBTQ equality have once again come under violent attack by Turkish authorities during Pride season. On Sunday, organizers of Istanbul Pride gathered to read a statement declaring their right to assemble before a small march planned to honor Trans Pride. Police not only failed to protect those assembled, but used tear gas, water cannons and rubber bullets to disperse supporters of the LGBTQ community.

Up to 17 activists were detained for several hours following the altercation.

This violence at the hands of police follows the Governor of Istanbul’s refusal to to recognize the right of the LGBTQ community to celebrate Pride in the central Istanbul neighborhood of Taksim, citing perceived threats to the safety of celebrants.

Istanbul Pride has been held in Taksim on the last Sunday of June since 2003 largely without incident, until last year when riot police used water cannons and rubber bullets to disperse peaceful LGBTQ marchers and their supporters. The incident drew worldwide attention, including from members of the U.S. Congress.

The government’s assertion that they cannot protect the marchers from violence in the Turkish capital fails to address its obligation to uphold the fundamental and constitutional rights of all Turkish people, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity.

“The events of the past week are demoralizing to say the least. The failure of my government to uphold our rights goes against the fundamental right to freedom of assembly,” said Istanbul-based activist Ezgi Seref, who attended HRC’s Global Innovative Advocacy Summit. “It sends the message that LGBTQ people in Turkey and their supporters are less than equal. These actions pave the way for increased discrimination and hate-motivated crimes against LGBTQ people.”

HRC has been working with the Istanbul-based group SPoD on adapting HRC’s Municipal Equality Index (MEI) for use in Turkey. The MEI urges local governments to put in place LGBTQ-inclusive policies and practices. The project to bring an MEI-like survey to Turkey emerged after HRC hosted Turkish fellow Boysan Yakar in 2014 through the HRC Global Fellowship Program.

www.hrc.org/blog/violence-ensues-at-istanbul-trans-pride-after-turkey-bans-pride-parade?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed