May 172012
 

Yangon – Following the success of low key events for Burmese GLBT living in Thailand, organisers have received government permission for two GLBT events to be held today in Yangon and Mandalay.

It will mark a turning point for rights in Burma (Myanmar) as the country is to hold its first-ever public LGBT Pride. The celebrations are scheduled as part of the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia.

The upcoming Pride has attracted UN officials, artists, writers and LGBT people from the entertainment industry, who will discuss LGBT rights around the world.

The guest speakers will also share their own experiences facing the violence that stems from homophobia and transphobia.

Aung Myo Min, one of the Myanmar Pride organizers, told Gay Star News that LGBT people in Burma regularly encounter “silent homophobia” even as anti-gay policies have been relaxed in recent years.

“We’re not going out on the street for a parade,” Min said. “It will be an indoor event because of the situation in Burma. But we hope that we will have a gay parade in the future.”

Min’s group, the Human Rights Education Institute Burma (HREIB), had organized three previous IDAHOT events for Burmese living in Thailand. This year, HREIB is hosting dual celebrations in Rangoon and Mandalay, the country’s two largest cities.

“This year there have been some changes in Burma,” Min said. For the celebration in Mandalay, HREIB received permission from local authorities.

Asked if he is concerned about conservative backlash, Min insists that the Pride events will not be political. “This is just a celebration of a historic event, when homosexuality was removed from the list of mental diseases,” he told Gay Star News. “It’s just about the dignity of the LGBT people.”

“Our message is just to end homophobia,” he added.

A poster designed by HREIB to commemorate IDAHOT 2012 reads, “Homosexuality is not a sickness, but homophobia is.”

May 172012
 


Bangkok – (AFP) – Nearly half of transgender people in the Asia-Pacific region could have HIV as poor healthcare and high-risk lifestyles push infection rates to “critical levels”, a UN report said on Thursday.

The region’s estimated 9-9.5 million transgender population is “bearing the brunt of the HIV epidemic”, the UN Development Programme study said, adding that figures suggest 49 percent of the community could be infected.

The figure is drawn from anecdotal evidence of infection rates among trans-women — men who become women — taken from the “scattered and often small-scale research” available across the region, the UNDP said.

Report author Sam Winter, of Hong Kong University, urged governments to take note of the “burning need to address a very human crisis”, pointing out many transgender people end up working as prostitutes and having unsafe sex.

“Social exclusion, poverty and HIV infection contribute to what we call a ‘stigma sickness slope’ — a downward spiral that is difficult to reverse,” he said in the “Lost in Transition” study.

Transgender people also routinely suffer violence and prejudice while being offered narrow economic opportunities and scant psychological support, the report found.

Billed as the region’s most comprehensive study, the report collates information from the last 12 years, painting a picture of hardship for many transgender people, who lack basic healthcare and emotional help.

It recorded cases of “backyard” sex change surgery including castration and the widespread use of unsafe industrial silicone for breast implants among those who cannot afford quality healthcare.

Often transgender people leave home at a young age in response to family disapproval, drop out off school because of bullying and struggle to find work, which pushes them into prostitution, it said.

But the study also highlighted positive developments, noting an increasingly confident transgender identity has taken root. It also detected greater will from the community to engage with mainstream services and policy discussions.

“The creation of advocacy networks, community-based organisations and non-government organisations devoted to empowering our communities is a source of joy,” according to Thai transgender activist Prempreeda Pramoj Na Ayutthaya.

Apr 182012
 
Taiwan Gays High Suicide Risk

Taipei – Nearly 20 percent of homosexuals in Taiwan have attempted suicide due to discrimination, a survey showed on Tuesday, dealing a blow to the island’s reputation as a liberal haven for gays. About 30 percent have considered taking their own lives, and of these 18 percent have actually tried to kill themselves, according to [...]

Mar 272012
 
Third Sex Option On Facebook

Kathmandu – A prominent gay rights activist in Nepal says he has asked Facebook to include a third option for people who do not identify themselves as male or female. Sunilbabu Pant said he has written to Facebook founders Mark Zuckerberg and Chris Hughes asking an option as “third gender” or “others” when signing up [...]

Mar 202012
 
Nepal 2nd To Launch GLBT Games

Kathmandu – Nepals’s Blue Diamond Society, the country’s LGBT support group, has announced the launch of a two week long GLBT sporting event in be held in the capital Kathmandu. Claims are that it’s the first GLBT sporting event hosted in Asia. Unfortunately it seems the organisers are unaware of the highly successful Straits Games [...]

Mar 142012
 
TG Starts Political Party

Delhi – Rose Venkatesan, India’s first transgender television and radio host plans to set up a new political party aimed at helping women and the GLBT community in the country. Venkatesan said she had big plans for her Sexual Liberation Party of India which she hoped to launch in the next two months. It would [...]

Feb 132012
 
Nepali Boy Becomes Happy Girl

Kathmandu – A top Nepali comedy actor told how he helped his son become one of the country’s first post-operative transexuals and a “perfect lady” with a US$26,000 sex change. Santosh Pant said 18-year-old Caitlin, born as Pratik, was recovering at home in Kathmandu after successful surgery in Thailand last month. “My son from childhood [...]

Dec 072011
 

Yangon – Myanmar (Burma) has worked out a national strategic plan (2011-15) to fight HIV/AIDS in the next five years, which highlights the creative use of diverse types of mass media to reduce stigma and discrimination and to reduce the risk of HIV transmission among key affected population and youths. The plan was developed in [...]

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