Oct 142011
 

Washington – Frank Kameny, 86, a persistent and often brash activist who was one of the leading figures of the gay rights movement in the US, was found dead on October 11 at his home in Northwest Washington.

His death was confirmed by Charles Francis, a founder of the Kameny Papers Project, and by Marvin Carter, a longtime friend. The cause of death could not immediately be learned.

Mr. Kameny, a Harvard PhD whose homosexuality led to his discharge from a federal government job more than half a century ago, lived to see his years of determined advocacy rewarded through the success of many of his campaigns and through his ultimate welcome by a political establishment that had rejected him.

His death, apparently on National Coming Out Day, occurred in a year when gay men and lesbians were accorded the right to serve openly in the armed forces, which the D.C. Council’s first openly gay member, David A. Catania (I-At Large), noted Tuesday night.

Through his efforts over the years, Mr. Kameny deserved to be known as one of the fathers of that shift from the policy of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” Catania said.

Mr. Kameny enlisted in the Army during World War II; in an interview last year with Richard Sincere on the Charlottesville Libertarian Examiner Web site, he said, “They asked, I didn’t tell.”

In what appeared to be one of the great triumphs of Mr. Kameny’s often lonely, uphill struggle, protest signs that he once carried in front of the White House were put on display in the Smithsonian Institution four years ago, to be viewed along with the museum’s other reminders of the course of U.S. history.

Mr. Kameny said he created the slogan “Gay Is Good.” In their pungent succinctness, the words both suggested his rhetorical skills and embodied the beliefs that he championed.

Years before the gay rights movement existed in any widely recognized form and in an era in which open assertion of homosexuality could invite physical harm, Mr. Kameny worked to increase the acceptance of gay men and lesbians in mainstream American society and to win recognition of their equality under the law.

Rather than shrink from revealing his sexual orientation, Mr. Kameny made it plain. He won attention and respect by the vigorous but unsuccessful campaign he waged 40 years ago for election as the District’s non-voting delegate to Congress.

“Out for Good,” a history of the gay rights movement in the United States, made Mr. Kameny the central figure in several chapters.

One of the book’s co-authors, Dudley Clendinen, has called him an “authentic hero” of American culture. In summarizing Mr. Kameny’s precarious position after the loss of his job, Clendinen noted that Mr. Kameny subsisted on a diet of baked beans. But, the author said, “he didn’t despair.”

In addition to the White House, he picketed at the State Department and at Independence Hall in Philadelphia. He did not accept his federal dismissal without a fight, appealing through the courts, and writing his own briefs.

“He was a stubborn and impatient person, and that was the recipe for his success,” Catania said. “He was never going to be content with second-class citizenship.”

Known for shunning blandness and apology in favor of outspoken militancy, Mr. Kameny was credited with playing an important part in the achievement of what were regarded as several signal milestones passed by gay men and lesbians on the road to full inclusion in American society.

With more than a hint of irony, he once described Dec. 15, 1973, as the date on which “we were cured en masse by the psychiatrists.” That was the date associated with the decision of the American Psychiatric Association to stop classifying homosexuality as a mental disorder. Mr. Kameny was credited with a major role in the effort to bring about that change.

Among other victories for gay rights with which he was associated was an executive order signed by President Bill Clinton that permitted gays to be given security clearances.

He considered the District’s repeal of an anti-sodomy law in early 1990s to be another achievement. In addition, he was credited as a co-founder of the Mattachine Society of Washington in 1961, a pioneering gay activist group.

The federal government, which had cast him aside, issued a formal apology in 2009 for letting him go.

The story of his struggle, chronicled in 77,000 pages of papers and memorabilia, was accepted in 2006 by the Library of Congress.

Living into his 80s, he was able to recognize and revel in the turnaround of American actions and attitudes towards the gay community.

Although he was aware that obstacles remained, he told a reporter last year that “it’s like a storybook ending.”

“Frank was active at a time when he had no backup,” said Rick Rosendall, a longtime gay rights activist in the District. “There was no significant organizational support. It was his sheer nerve, his patriotic indignation” that carried him.

His home, the site of the interview in which he reflected on the turnabouts in his life, was, in a further testament to the esteem in which he was held, designated as a D.C. Historic Landmark.

Franklin Edward Kameny, was born in the New York area on May 21, 1925. In the interview with the Charlottesville Libertarian Examiner, he told of enlisting in the Army at the height of World War II, a few days before he turned 18.

In discussing how he had been “asked,” but “didn’t tell,” he said that “as a healthy, vigorous teenager,” there were indeed “things to tell.” (Although, he said, there were not many.)

“I have resented for 67 years that I had to lie in order to serve in a war effort that I strongly supported,” he said. “I did serve and I saw combat in Europe.”

Mr. Kameny was born in New York. After his Army service he received a doctorate in astronomy in 1956.

He came to Washington to work for the Army Map Service. His dismissal from that job came in 1957.

Published accounts say the dismissal was based on his homosexuality. One report said that he was arrested in Lafayette Square, which was known at that time as a place for cruising.

The loss of the job subjected him to deprivation, and he recalled surviving on 20 cents’ worth of food a day in some of the most difficult times. It forced his life into new paths.

On one occasion, he permitted himself to speculate on how things might have turned out if he had not been dismissed at a time when interest in space exploration was growing.

He suggested that he might have become an astronaut. “I might have gone to the moon,” he said.

 

 

 

Oct 122011
 

Beijing – If we can believe any official statements from China, then we are asked to believe that the recent ‘gay kiss’ photos were only a prank by bored students.

China’s major training facility for airline pilots has denied allegations that the university banned three male students from flying after pictures of two of them kissing were posted online.

The Civil Aviation Flight University of China said in a statement that the students involved were not gay and were just doing “kuso,” or the Internet culture of parody.

“The students were too excited after passing a final exam to be able to fly airplanes as intern pilots early this year, so they did some boring things and were taking pictures by classmates just for kidding,” said Li Zhongliang, a press officer of the university.

The statement said the university told the three students, who enrolled in 2009, to take a break to adjust themselves because they were emotionally affected by the wide online disputes. That could represent a safety threat to their flight training, the university said.

“The flying training needs stable condition and good mental quality, and the students will not be banned from flying like online rumors said,” Li said.

Two pictures appeared online on September 15 where two male students in university uniforms are hugging and kissing. Another student is taking a photo of the pair in the other picture. He also was told to take a rest.

Many netizens assumed the pair were gay and sent them blessings.

The pictures caught wider public attention on Saturday, when an insider claimed on the microblog that the university had banned the three from flying for life because they were gay.

The insider’s microblog posts were retweeted more than 5,000 times, with most criticizing the university.

“How can the university launch sex education in the future if it punished the students only because they were gay?” said Lei Gang from Sichuan Province.

But some people also said the students should behave, especially while in uniform. “As soon as you take on the uniform, you are on behalf of a group,” they said online.

The students are regretful and said they would remember the lesson forever, Li said. He didn’t say why two men kissing should regret it.

Oct 122011
 

Hanoi – In an unusual move, a gay themed local film will be released today in movie theaters across the country.

The highly anticipated film Hotboy Noi Loan va Cau Chuyen ve Thang Cuoi, Co Gai Diem va Con Vit (Lost in Paradise) boldly depicts the hardships of those living on the fringes of society by telling the story of Khoa, a rural man, who falls into the world of prostitution after being raped by two homosexual men.

Viewers are unsure if Khoa is lucky or unlucky when another gay man named Lam appears to help Khoa escape from his life on the edge.

The film is scheduled to screen at the Busan International Film Festival 2011′s A Window on Asian Cinemaon from today to Thursday.

This year, A Window on Asian Cinema section, which invited 49 films from 16 countries, will feature the next generation of filmmakers who will lead the Asian film industry into the future. Entries from countries such as Viet Nam, India, the Philippines, Indonesia and China will reveal some of the newest in Asian film.

“Vu Ngoc Dang, a filmmaker popular for his entertaining drama series and films, directs [Lost in Paradise], and so this heavy subject with its fringe group is viewed through a lovely and light gaze. Their unusual lives become understandable and universally recognisable,” said Park Sung-ho on the festival website.

Last month, Lost in Paradise was shown at the 36th Toronto International Film Festival’s Discovery Programme and it was also short listed for the Dragons and Tigers award at the Vancouver International Film Festival (VIFF) 2011 which will close on Friday.

“After two Vietnamese films screened at VIFF in 2009 and 2010, Adrift and Bi, Don’t Be Afraid, which were both daring in tackling sexual themes with a degree of candour, Lost in Paradise takes a step further,” said Tony Ryans, a cinema critic.

He wrote on the festival website filmguide.viff.org: “It’s the first Vietnamese film to offer a frank account of some aspects of gay life, although it’s not very sophisticated by international standards – neither sexually nor dramatically”.

Director Dang, a graduate of the HCM City Cinema School, already has blockbusters such as The Long Leg Girls (2004) and Beautiful to the last Centimetre (2009) to his credit. His first feature film was Vo Chong Chuot (Rat Couple).

He has also made several television series including Bong Dung Muon Khoc (Suddenly Want to Cry) and Ngoi Nha Hanh Phuc (Happy House), a Vietnamese version of the South Korean Full House series.

The script for Lost in Paradise was the fourth collaboration between Dang and actor Luong Manh Hai.

Oct 122011
 

Los Angeles – Matt Damon and Michael Douglas are set to play a gay couple in the new HBO film “Behind the Candelabra,” a biopic about iconic flamboyant pianist Liberace.

The movie will give viewers a “behind-the-scenes look at the tempestuous relationship between legendary entertainer Liberace and Scott Thorson, his younger live-in lover,” producers said in a statement released by HBO Films on Tuesday, October 11.

Liberace, known for his flashy outfits as much as his music, never revealed his sexual orientation and successfully sued the UK tabloid Daily Mirror for implying he was gay in a 1956 article. When asked if he “indulged in homosexual practices,” he lied in court by saying: “No, sir, never in my life. I am against the practice because it offends convention and it offends society.”

Thorson served as the entertainer’s bodyguard, chauffeur and confidant. Liberace was also linked romantically to women, including actress Mae West.

“I am thrilled that we have the incomparable Michael Douglas to inhabit the role of Liberace, as well as the exceptional Matt Damon to play the pivotal part of Scott Thorson,” executive producer Jerry Weintraub said in the statement.

The director of “Behind the Candelabra” is Steven Soderbergh, who directed Damon in “Contagion” in “Ocean’s Eleven” and its sequels and Douglas in “Traffic” and “Solitary Man.” He also helmed the films “Erin Brockovich” and “Sex, Lies, and Videotape.” The script for “Behind The Candelabra” was written by “Water For Elephants” screenwriter Richard LaGravenese.

Production on “Behind The Candelabra” is set to begin in the summer of 2012 in Los Angeles and Palm Springs in California and in Las Vegas, where Liberace often headlined stage shows before his death at age 67 in 1987.

“From the inception of this project, we’ve had two priorities: Getting it right creatively, and getting as many people as possible to see it,” Soderbergh said in a statement. “HBO’s fearless approach to original programming and their unparalleled ability to pull in viewers make them the perfect fit for us. Apart from my hair growing back, I couldn’t be happier.”

Oct 122011
 

Auckland -Glitz and glamour will combine next month at a star studded event to raise much needed cash for New Zealand’s LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) community.

The GABA Gold Charity Auction will be held at Auckland’s Langham Hotel on November 6, with TV personality Alison Mau acting as Master of Ceremonies.

The annual event raises money for health, welfare and support services that benefit New Zealand’s LGBT community, as well as one of the largest tertiary scholarships available in New Zealand that helps young people through their first year of full-time study.

Mau says she’s delighted to be involved in the event for the first time. “We all know how hard it is to fund these kinds of services and how a lot of students can’t afford to pursue their dreams and go on to study at a tertiary level, so it’s great to be part of an event like this,” she says.

The GABA Charitable Trust was established in 1999 and is the fundraising arm of GABA – the Gay Auckland Business Association – New Zealand’s largest and longest running LGBT membership organisation.

Its members include business owners, executives, professionals, academics as well as politicians, celebrities, sports stars, actors, singers and artists.

GABA President Glenn Sims says the auction is the focus of the fundraising year for GABA. “In 2010 GABA celebrated its 25th anniversary and over the past decade, hundreds of thousands of dollars have been raised for New Zealand’s LGBT community organisations including Rainbow Youth, Body Positive and The Auckland Women’s Centre.

“The GABA Charitable Trust is the only organisation dedicated solely to fundraising for LGBT causes and we are eternally grateful for the ongoing support for GABA and the trust from a vast range of donors and sponsors including ANZ, South Pacific Pictures, the New Zealand Labour Party and The Topp Twins.”

Among the items up for grabs at this year’s event is a two-night getaway at Heritage Hotel in the Bay of Islands, complete with an Alfa Guilietta for the long weekend provided by Andrew Simms Mitsubishi, which has a combined value of NZ$1800.
Also going under the hammer will be a Hyundai Santa Fe that the winner will get to cruise around in for two weeks, dinner with MP Maryan Street, and walk on parts on Shortland Street.

Trust chairman Gresham Bradley says the auction is the centrepiece of the evening and will raise vital funds that will go where it is most needed and where it will have the greatest impact.

“The GABA Gold Charity Auction has  become one of the biggest nights of our fundraising year and we are always incredibly grateful to the variety of businesses throughout New Zealand that generously donate these fabulous items, as well as all the wonderful people that don their glad rags and dig deep to bid,” he says.

The GABA Gold Charity Auction will be held at the Langham Hotel’s Grand Ballroom in Auckland on November 6 from 5.30pm.
For more information, visit www.gaba.org.nz.

Oct 122011
 

Bangkok – Australian and Thai charity workers have rescued 21 boys and girls – some as young as 12 – who were destined to be sent to work in brothels, bars and factories in Thailand’s tourist areas.

Anti-child sex trafficking organisation The Grey Man, which has operatives who work undercover in South East Asia, rescued the children with the help of local people from a village in northern Thailand.

The rescue, which was on Saturday though details only emerged this week, happened only a day or two before the traffickers were expected to take the children from the hill tribe village near the Thai-Burmese border to Bangkok or Pattaya where they would have been forced to work as prostitutes or in sweat shops.

The Grey Man president John Curtis said one of the boys had told rescuers that he had been “interviewed” by the owners of a gay bar in Pattaya and was due to have been picked up by them.

A 13-year-old girl told rescuers she had escaped from a brothel and was taken to a police station where she was held for two days and allegedly raped by a police officer before being returned to the brothel.

The child was in the process of being trafficked when she was rescued.

The charity was tipped off that a big group of children – 13 boys and eight girls – were being held in the village of Baan Khun Suay and would be taken to brothels and factories in southern Thailand.

All the children are now in a shelter run by The Grey Man and partner organisation Children of South East Asia. The charity workers will try to identify the children’s families and assist in their future care and schooling.

Oct 112011
 

Beijing – Two male students from a university that trains civil aviation pilots have been temporarily suspended after pictures of them kissing each other went viral on the Internet, a university official said, drawing fierce protests from Chinese gay rights groups.

In one of the pictures, two unidentified students wearing the uniform of the Guanghan Flight College under the Civil Aviation Flight University of China (CAFUC) in Sichuan Province are seen holding each other intimately and kissing while a third person watches. The pictures were forwarded tens of thousands of times on microblogs.

“These images have created a bad impression of the school as well as of themselves,” an official with the college’s publicity department told the Global Times.

The official confirmed that the students, both juniors, have been “temporarily suspended” to undergo moral education and criticism, but a final penalty has yet to be announced. The kissing scene was meant to be a joke and the students did it after passing one exam.

The incident has drawn the attention of Chinese gay rights groups with many calling for the penalty to be lifted.

Oct 102011
 

London – African countries which persecute gays will have their aid cut, Britain’s International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell has said.

Mr Michael was quoted by the Mail on Sunday saying that his country has already cut aid to Malawi by £19million after two gay men were sentenced to 14 years hard labour.

Mr Mitchell, one of Mr Cameron’s closest allies, is also threatening to impose further aid ‘fines’ against Uganda and Ghana for hardline anti-gay and lesbian measures.

The policy was disclosed after Mr Cameron defended his decision to legalise gay weddings when he addressed last week’s Conservative Party Conference.

It also comes at a time when Kenya gay couple, Charles Ng’ang’a Wacera and his civil partner, Daniel Chege Gichia were said to be seeking divorce, two years after their internationally debated wedding.

Mr Wacera had said that the reason why his marriage to Gichia broke down was a campaign of negative publicity by media houses back home in Kenya and in social forums.

The cut in aid to Malawi came after two gay men were convicted last year under the country’s rigidly imposed ban on homosexuality.

Pop stars Elton John and Madonna joined an international outcry when Tiwonge Chimbalanga, 26, and Steven Monjeza, 20, received a 14-year sentence for getting engaged.

But a Judge in Malawi was quoted saying in his judgement: “’Malawi is not ready to see its sons getting married to its sons.”

The Mail reported that Uganda also faced the threat of an aid ‘fine’ by the UK unless it abandons plans to extend the death penalty to homosexuality.

Three weeks ago, the newspaper said, Mr Mitchell protested to Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni, who has claimed ‘European homosexuals are recruiting in Africa’ and who believes gay relationships are ‘against God’s will’.

Uganda is due to receive £70million from British taxpayers in 2011.

“Again during a visit to Ghana earlier this year, Stephen O’Brien – Mr Mitchell’s deputy – told President John Evans Atta Mills that Britain would cut its aid unless he stopped persecuting gays,” The Mail claimed.

However, the threats to cut the aid to Ghana appeared to have little effect. Even though Ghana gets £36million a year from the UK, its President has vowed to ‘institute measures to check the menace of homosexuality and lesbianism.

And one of his regional ministers called for the ‘immediate arrest of all homosexuals’.

Oct 102011
 

Melbourne – The Labor Party in the Australian state of Victoria has passed a resolution to support gay marriage legislation.

State Victoria’s Australian Labor Party (ALP) on Saturday placed pressures on Prime Minister Julia Gillard to change its policy to support gay marriage.

In opposition to Gillard’s support for the traditional marriage, state Victoria’s Labor conference on Saturday voted in support of a resolution calling on the ALP to amend the party’s platform to support same-sex marriage.

According to Rainbow Labor co-convenor Sarah Cole, who moved the resolution, Labor Party was a progressive party and must support marriage equality.

She said the Marriage Act legalizing marriage only between a man and a woman, sent a message to gay and lesbian young people coming to terms with their sexuality that they were not equal members of society.

“That the happily-ever-after stories that they have grown up assuming will be part of the framework of their lives are not open to them any more,” she told the conference in Melbourne on Saturday.

Australian Services Union Victorian branch secretary Ingrid Stitt said a poll of members in April showed 84 percent of respondents supported a change in the law to provide for marriage equality.

He urged ALP to be in a party that is about equality, respect and recognition for all Australians.

Meanwhile, the delegates also on Saturday voted to urge the federal government to scrap offshore processing and the mandatory detention of asylum seekers.

The ALP’s national conference will be held in December, bringing together State and Territory Parliamentary Leaders to shape a new National Platform and to consider important reforms to the party.

Victoria is Gillard’s home state and is the second most populous state in Australia.

Meanwhile, outgoing South Australian premier Mike Rann made a strong call for the legalisation of gay marriage, warning that not to address this issue ”will diminish us as a nation”.

Speaking in Adelaide yesterday, Mr Rann said it was time Australia legally recognised the equality and validity of all genuine long-term relationships.

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He condemned the ”halfway house” of civil unions as an ”escape clause”, and noted that same-sex marriage was now legal in a dozen or more countries.

”In addition to accepted trailblazers such as the Netherlands, Scandinavian nations and Canada, same-sex marriage is now enshrined by law in Spain, Argentina and South Africa and legislation is imminent in Slovenia, Paraguay, and even Nepal,” Mr Rann said.

Applauding the federal Labor government for amending more than 80 pieces of legislation to remove discrimination against same-sex couples, Mr Rann said this didn’t go far enough.

”It is, quite simply, unfair to prevent same-sex couples from having their relationship – a union that is viewed as equal in every other aspect of the law – being recognised as a legal marriage,” he said. ”It only serves to undermine the legitimacy of their relationship, and their family.”

He said ”same-sex marriage is an idea whose time has well and truly arrived. Not to address this discrimination will diminish us as a nation, as a tolerant community.

”What are we so afraid of? Why is this next step so threatening?” he said.

Oct 082011
 

Philadelphia – A gay Indonesian man fighting to remain in the U.S. with his American husband has been denied a reprieve from deportation – a decision that appears to contradict Obama administration promises that members of same-sex binational couples can be considered lower-priority cases among the nation’s 300,000 current deportation proceedings.

During a brief Friday meeting at Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Philadelphia office, Anton Tanumihardja, who in June married his American spouse, Brian Andersen, was denied a request for what’s known as deferred action. He was ordered to return to the local branch on January 13 for another appearance.  However, shortly after that ICE issued this statement: “ ICE exercised discretion and granted Mr. Tanumihardja a stay of removal pending the decision of the motion to reopen his case. He is not in ICE custody, but is on an order of supervision.”

If the Department of Homeland Security or an immigration appeals board within the Justice Department does not intervene, immigration officers will require Tanumihardja to make travel arrangements back to Indonesia or be taken into custody and removed from the U.S. by ICE.

Lavi Soloway, the couple’s attorney and cofounder of Stop the Deportations, said he believed that the Friday decision means the administration has not implemented recently updated deportation guidelines in the field, which could have severe consequences for binational gay couples such as his clients.

“The Obama administration made a commitment to stop deportations that would tear apart families, including same-sex couples, and yet in its decision the ICE Office in Philadelphia is failing to make good on that commitment,” Soloway said. “The administration must take immediate action to ensure that the new deportation policy is being implemented fairly and consistently by ICE deportation officers in local offices, or this policy announcement is meaningless.”

On August 18, Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano announced that DHS will initiate an intra-agency working group tasked with a case-by-case review of pending deportation orders (the review has not yet begun).

A senior administration official later told reporters in a conference call that cases deemed lower-priority can include those of individuals with “strong community ties, with community contributions, and with family relationships.” That criteria is based on a June memo from ICE director John Morton to field agents and attorneys on prosecutorial discretion in deportation proceedings.

Though gay couples are denied immigration sponsorship rights under the Defense of Marriage Act, they would be included under the definition of “family,” the administration official said in August.

No written guidance on the matter has been issued since, however.

Matt Chandler, deputy press secretary for DHS, told The Advocate Friday afternoon, “The working group is currently finalizing the process for reviewing cases and will begin the review in the coming weeks. While the working group undertakes its efforts, ICE is enforcing immigration law in line with the June 2011 prosecutorial discretion memorandum from ICE director John Morton. ICE is also beginning additional training for field personnel on the proper application of prosecutorial discretion.”

But Soloway maintains that DHS should have placed an immediate hold on executing all final deportation orders until the working group begins its review.

“The problem, which DHS seems to concede, is that the June 19 prosecutorial discretion guidelines are not consistently applied by ICE officers or prosecuting attorneys,” Soloway said in response to Chandler’s statement. “This is patently evident from Anton and Brian’s case. It is because of that lack of consistency that this working group was necessary.”

Tanumihardja, 46, had fought a nine-year battle for asylum that he ultimately lost. Following intervention from LGBT advocacy groups, his deportation was postponed just hours before he was set to board a flight back to Jakarta in February.

But three months later, the Board of Immigration Appeals issued a final order of removal in his case, though one that came prior to Homeland Security’s updated guidance on prioritizing deportation cases.

In June the couple married in Washington, D.C., and filed a petition for a marriage-based green card. If not for DOMA, Tanumihardja and Andersen could request that the case be reopened and remanded back to immigration court, Soloway said.

Andersen, 29, said his husband fits the criteria for what Homeland Security considers to be low-priority deportation cases. Tanumihardja has no criminal record, is legally married, has lived in the country for nearly a decade, and has strong community ties.

“It almost seems like they were written for him,” Andersen said of the guidelines. “Except [immigration officers] are not applying them. It’s very disappointing. At any given time, Anton could basically be deported. There’s really nothing keeping him here if they don’t reverse this decision.”

(The Advocate)

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