Apr 202012
 


Kuala Lumpur – Last week, Bayan Baru MP Zahrain Mohamed Hashim attempted to table an emergency motion in Parliament to bar people who are LGBT from becoming MPs and senators. However, the Speaker of the Dewan Rakyat, Pandikar Amin Mulia, rejected the motion as “insignificant”, citing Standing Orders 18(2) and 23(1).

A sexuality rights activist has challenged Zahrain to prove he is not gay, saying he should otherwise refrain from trying to lead a campaign against those with alternative sexual orientations.

Responding to Zahrain’s call for a ban on lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgenders (LGBT) from public office, Seksualiti Merdeka founder Pang Khee Teik said: “Why don’t he demonstrate and prove if he is LGBT first? How would we know, really?”

Pang said it was “not an impossible thing” for anyone to be gay. “We know a lot of LGBTs who have been pressured into a different life, marrying people of the opposite sex although they are gay. So how can you tell if anyone is gay or not?”

Pang also said he knew many “leaders of companies, civil societies and the civil service” who are homosexual or bisexual.

“They have contributed a lot to the country in realising the visions of democracy and diversity. Only the morally bankrupt can’t see this and is threatened by the honesty and transparency of the openly LGBT.”

Yesterday, Zahrain said Malaysians should not allow anyone who is LGBT to become prime minister or hold any other public office, in further indications that politicians in Malaysia are prepared to follow the beliefs of Adolf Hitler.

Some observers see the remark as targeting Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim, who has rejected insinuations that he is gay or bisexual and who has twice been acquitted of charges of sodomy.

“Historically, sex is the easiest, dirtiest, and cheapest way to target a political opponent when you cannot challenge someone intelligently on merit and principles,” said Pang.

A disappointed Zahrain said he would get “friends” in the Senate, including those from the opposition parties, to raise the matter in the upper house.

Apr 202012
 


Toronto – In a crime that should never have happened, a local gay activist has been murdered by a man on a one-hour release from a mental institution.

On Tuesday, Raymond Taavel, 49, was beaten to death outside a local gay bar. A passerby discovered the activist lying in the road around 2:30am and called police. The witness told the authorities that a man fled the scene and the police quickly tracked him down, the Globe and Mail reported.

Andre Noel Denny, 32, was arrested in an alley not far from the scene. Police say that Taavel was assaulted when he tried to stop an argument between two men. Witnesses say anti-gay epithets were yelled.

The Nova Scotia government will conduct a joint review with health authorities over the release of Denny, who is being held in a psychiatric facility.

“The review will determine whether all relevant policies and procedures were followed and whether they were adequate,” said a news release from the Nova Scotia government.

Police say they were looking for the suspect earlier that day when he did not return to a local psychiatric facility after a one-hour leave. Denny’s lawyer says he should not have been given permission to leave.

Some believe that Taave’s murder was a hate crime. The local authorities would not confirm or deny the allegation, the Calgary Sun reported.

“We are exploring all possibilities with regards to motives,” Constable Brian Palmeter said.

It was reported by local media that Denny claimed self-defense in court and then gave the middle finger to news cameras and to people outside the courtroom. He was then sent back to the hospital where he will undergo a 30-day psychiatric evaluation to see if he can appear in court.

Denny faces a second-degree murder charge.

But for now, hundreds are mourning the loss of the prominent gay activist.

“I was quickly overcome with grief and sat at my desk crying for about five minutes before making way to the restroom to try and compose myself,” said Laurie Murray, who met Taavel when she came out of the closet in 2007. She said he gave her work despite having no experience and took her to parties where she met other members of the LGBT community and would always make (her) feel so safe.”

“Every time there was an issue in the community, Raymond would be there. He was relentless and he let you know what he wanted. He wouldn’t stop until he got it,” said Krista Snow, a former city councilor who now runs Pride.

The community also held a vigil in Taavel’s honor.

“We’ve lost a brave man to something so evil,” Lisa Brine, a friend of Taavel’s, told CTV Atlantic at the gathering.

“Standing in the huge crowd on Gottingen Street seemed very surreal to me. It was a sea of faces of people I knew and people I didn’t. The mood of the crowd was obviously very sombre. I knew a lot of people there were feeling anger over what happened but it was clear that no one was going to let it take over. This was Raymond’s vigil and that simply was not Raymond’s way,” Murray said.

To remember the activist, Taavel’s family, friends and several members of the local community unfurled a 15-foot gay pride flag and sang “Amazing Grace.”

“When the pride flag was stretched across the road, we took over the street. Traffic stopped. I remember feeling as if the world was stopping to take notice,” Murray said. “I felt nothing but love last night and was thankful to be rid of the anger that had been building inside me all day.”

Apr 182012
 
SAS Is Favourite GLBT Airline

New York – Scandinavian Airlines was named Favorite airline at the EDGE Awards after 70,000 online votes had been cast. The annual competition features a number of categories within travel, lifestyle and entertainment, and is organized by one of the leading LGBT media houses in the US, Edge Media. SAS edged out other LGBT-friendly airlines [...]

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 [...]

Apr 172012
 
Court Overturns Police Ban on Pride March

Budapest – The Budapest municipal court last week allowed Hungary’s annual Budapest gay march to take place at its original place and time, overruling the police in a decision that highlights continued controversy over gay rights in Hungary. The Hungarian arm of Amnesty International, civil rights group Hungarian Civil Liberties Union, and organizations of homosexual [...]

Apr 152012
 
US Women  Assault Gay Man

Lexington – Two women in the US state of Kentucky have pleaded guilty to helping kidnap and assault a gay man in the first US federal case to use a hate-crime law that protects against attacks motivated by sexual orientation. Mable Ashley Jenkins and Alexis LeeAnn Jenkins, both 19, pleaded guilty this week to aiding [...]

Apr 142012
 
First Open Gay MP Retires

Sydney – Australia’s first openly gay Member of Parliament, and leader of the country’s Green Party, is to retire from politics. He will handover the leadership of the Greens party to his deputy Christine Milne and will step down from his senate seat in June. Senator Brown, 67, said in a statement: ‘I am sad [...]

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