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Holland News & Reports 2006-08 1 Dutch official moves to deport gay Iranians 3/06 2 Muslims and Gays play soccer to fight prejudice 3/06 2a Five years of gay marriage 3/06 3 Dutch Suspend Deportation of Iranian Gays & Christians 4/06 4 Iran calls upon Islamic countries to block second part of the Dutch film 'Submission' 4/06 5 Mayor of Amsterdam demands EU mayors protect rights of gay citizens 4/06 6 Netherlands To Allow Gay Couples To Adopt Foreign Children 5/06 7 Netherlands: Asylum Rights Granted to Lesbian and Gay Iranians 10/06 8 Rallying To A Gay Youth's Call 2/07 9 Danny's Boat-- Under-16 Dutch Gay Youth Win Important Victory 2/07 10 Homophobic attacks in Amsterdam: the perpetrators 7/07 11 Amsterdam's gay parade on water adds "hetero boat" 7/07 12 Amsterdam explodes with color as city celebrates Gay Pride festival 8/07 13 Dutch Embassies to Research Gay Rights 8/07 14 Amsterdam Pride - gay party with a political message 8/07 16 Dutch government to promote gay acceptance 9/07 17 Dutch call on aid recipients to improve gay rights 11/07 18 Dutch focus on international gay rights abuses 11/07 19 Dutch government to fight for gay rights, at home and abroad 12/07 20 Gay Iranian Teen Awaits Decision of Dutch Court 12/07 21 Princess to attend gay meeting and discuss prejudice 2/08 22 Dutch stand up for gays at UN Human Rights council 3/08 23 Gay Marriage Costs Him Citizenship 5/08 24 Gay Couple in Netherlands Helps Raise 100 Children 5/08 25 Muslim gang attacks gay catwalk model 6/08 26 Dutch gala raises 800,000 Euros for HIV/Aids help in Africa 6/08 28 Secretaris-generaal Ed Kronenburg op de HIV/aids conferentie te New York 6/08 29 Not all plain sailing for Gay Pride 7/08 30 Dutch Cabinet Participates in Amsterdam Gay Pride 7/08 31 Amsterdam turn into one big party for gay pride 8/08 32 Dutch ministers join 500,000 revellers at Amsterdam Pride 8/08
2 Players of a Muslim team fight for the ball with players from a gay side during a soccer match in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, March 21, 2006. The soccer tournament was organised as part of a conference on fighting discrimination against immigrants who come out as gay -- particularly, against gay Muslims by other Muslims. By Michael
Kooren The soccer tournament was organized as part of a conference on fighting discrimination against immigrants who come out as gay "” particularly, against gay Muslims by other Muslims. As well as gays playing against Muslims, a team of women played Latinos, with some players swapping sides to illustrate competing identities. Long renowned for its tolerance and liberal attitudes on issues such as gay marriage and cannabis use, social tensions have risen in The Netherlands since the 2002 murder of openly gay anti-immigration populist Pim Fortuyn. High-profile attacks on homosexuals in Amsterdam last year stoked a debate about homophobia blamed on the country"s growing immigrant community "” particularly Muslims, who make up 6 percent of the Dutch population of around 16 million. A survey published last week showed that about 40 percent of the gays polled believed that violence and aggression against them was on the rise, while about the same number said they were the victim of homophobic abuse last year, most of it verbal. "Discrimination, intolerance and aggression ... are increasing, particularly in schools. These are developments that are really worrying us," Gilbert Isabella, a Labor politician from the central city of Utrecht, told the conference. Isabella, who said his own sexuality was still a taboo subject when he visited his family on the Caribbean island of Curacao, said a survey had shown that many youngsters did not want to have a gay friend, with Muslim youths most homophobic. Imad el Kaka, a Rotterdam city council official, said discrimination against Muslim gays was particularly intense. "Family structure is so incredibly important for those with a Muslim background. They want to switch off their homosexual feelings so as to not undermine the family structure. It is seen as a betrayal of their background," he said. "Many people believe it is a sickness, a Western sickness that can be cured by turning away from Western society." The Latinos beat the women"s team 8-0, the Muslims beat the gay team 4-0 and the Muslims went on to win the final against the Latinos 4-1. "Unfortunately the women lost and the gays lost but it"s not about winning and losing. It"s about having fun together," Van Dalen said.
03 April 2006 2a by Sebastiaan Gottlieb Registered partnerships South Africa will probably introduce same-sex marriage this year. About 30 countries in the world recognise the so-called 'registered partnership', which is different from marriage in that it does not automatically give both partners parental rights over children. Gay divorcee 13
April 2006
April
14, 2006 Iran's Parliament Speaker Gholamali Haddadadel has called upon Islamic countries to mobilise to block the production of the second part of the Dutch film 'Submission'. Haddadadel said the film represents "a danger for the Islamic religion and a new attack against the Muslims after the publishing of the cartoons offending the Prophet in many European newspapers," international Arab daily Sharq al-Awsat wrote today. His appeal was made to the Islamic parliamentarians who were taking part in the meeting of parliamentary representatives of the countries of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC) in Istanbul. The second part of the film 'Submission', a project on which the deputy at the Dutch parliament of Somalian origin, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, is working (she was also scriptwriter of 'Submission' I), is expected to tackle the theme of the condition of homosexuals in Islamic countries. Theo Van Gogh, director of 'Submission' which denounced the conditions of the Muslim women, was murdered in November 2004 by a young Dutchman of Moroccan origin who was later sentenced to life in prison. (ANSAmed). RED-KWK 25
April 2006 May 3, 2006 6 19 October 2006 7 New York - In a major policy shift, the Dutch government's recognition that lesbian and gay Iranians are a "special group" facing persecution at home and deserving protection in the Netherlands sets an example for other European states of their legal responsibility not to return people to the risk of torture, ill-treatment or execution, Human Rights Watch said today. Human Rights Watch, which worked closely with the Dutch lesbian and gay organization COC on the issue, applauded this change in policy by the Dutch government. "The Dutch government has affirmed its international legal obligations in asserting that it will not send gay and lesbian Iranian asylum seekers to a country where they face the risk of torture or execution," said Scott Long, director of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights Program at Human Rights Watch. "The priority now is to ensure that this policy is implemented fully and fairly, and that no one in the Netherlands is sent back to face torture." Last year, Dutch authorities imposed a moratorium on deportations of failed LGBT asylum seekers to Iran after reports of executions there for homosexual conduct. But in February, Dutch Immigration Minister Rita Verdonk first announced her intention to lift the moratorium, stating that, "It appears that there are no cases of an execution on the basis of the sole fact that someone is homosexual. ... For homosexual men and women it is not totally impossible to function in society, although they should be wary of coming out of the closet too openly." After strong protests from Dutch civil society and international human rights organizations including Human Rights Watch, however, Verdonk reinstated the ban for a further six months, pending a review of conditions in Iran. Verdonk announced the new policy on October 18. It was accompanied by a 115-page report on the human rights situation in Iran, which extensively cited Human Rights Watch's research on conditions for LGBT people there. According to Verdonk's statement, "Iranian homosexual asylum seekers" would no longer have to prove that they individually faced persecution in Iran. Instead, asylum seekers "whose identity, nationality and homosexuality have been confirmed, and for whom there is no counter-indication, do not have to return to Iran." Verdonk reportedly has cited as possible "counter-indications" having a heterosexual spouse or children. The decision also extends for six more months an existing ban on returning Iranian Christian asylum seekers, pending further research into their situation in Iran. "The Dutch government's decision recognizes the reality of persecution based on sexual orientation in Iran, thus taking this laborious burden of proof off the shoulders of gay or lesbian Iranian asylum seekers," said Long. "Injustices in application may persist, but the Dutch activists who pushed for this change have won a major victory for openness and fairness ? one that other European states can learn from." Sweden, which had imposed a similar moratorium on returning LGBT asylum seekers in late 2005, recently announced that it would resume deportations. Dutch activists continued to urge the government to ensure that the new policy embraces previously rejected lesbian and gay asylum seekers who remain in the Netherlands under the moratorium. They also voiced concern that, in evaluating asylum seekers from a culture where marriage and childbearing are highly valued, authorities should not take either as automatic indicators of heterosexuality. Further, in evaluating the status of asylum seekers' children, Dutch authorities should not discriminate on the basis of the asylum seekers' sexual orientation. The Dutch decision was in compliance with international law. The European Convention on Human Rights prohibits states from deporting individuals to countries where they may be at risk of torture, inhuman or degrading treatment, or punishment. Last year, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the Netherlands could not proceed with a deportation to Eritrea due to such a risk. The United Nations Convention against Torture, to which the Netherlands and Sweden are parties, states in article 3 that, "No State shall expel, return ("refouler") or extradite a person to another State where there are substantial grounds for believing that he would be in danger of being subjected to torture." It also requires that "for the purpose of determining whether there are such grounds, the competent authorities shall take into account all relevant considerations, including where applicable, the existence in the state concerned of a consistent pattern of gross, flagrant or mass violations of human rights."
February 15, 2007 8 by Doug Ireland Yes! I support the teen boat, because I agree with Danny that there is practically nothing to do for teens under 16. Unfortunately I cannot join you, but if I could I surely would. Go forward Danny! Yes! I support the teen boat! I'm 15 and it's no fun, because there are no meeting places for gay teens. That must change and there should be a special site for gay teens to chat and meet. Yes! I support the teen boat! Of course! If only such an initiative had be taken when I was in my puberty. With positive role models like you, I would not have been so insecure for such a long time. Yes! I support the teen boat! I'm not out yet and I'm really having a hard time facing up to that. But I think it's a very good idea and I wish you lots of success. Yes! I support the teen boat! My 12-year-old son has just enlisted because he wants to participate. A very good initiative and I support you wholeheartedly. Of course this teen boat should join! I am so proud of you, Danny. I wished I'd had your courage when I was 14. I also knew I liked boys - I was 10 when I found out - but kept my mouth shut about it. As a result I was very lonely. I'll be waving to you from the shore! Yes! I support the teen boat! Danny, you are doing great and I want to join you! Yes! I support the teen boat! This is so cool. I really want to join. No matter what, I don't care about it any more, I will come out right now. I'm fed up not being myself. February 19, 2007 9 I wrote the following article for Gay City News -- New York's largest gay weekly -- and it appears in the current issue: The mayor, from the Partij van de Arbeid (PvdA, or Dutch Labor Party), had initially refused permission for the youth boat, according to the national daily newspaper De Volkskrant, expressing doubts about involving "that vulnerable group" in the annual procession. But Cohen changed his mind after meeting with Frank van Dalen (LEFT), the chairman of COC The Netherlands, the world's oldest LGBT group, founded in 1946. The special homojongerenboot, or homo youngsters boat, in the traditionally colorful and festive Canal Pride boat parade - to be held this year on August 4 during three days of Pride celebrations and events - will be reserved for youth between the ages of 12 and 16, according to the Dutch national news agency ANP, and the youngsters will be accompanied on the boat by their parents. The initiative for the boat for underage youngsters came from 14-year-old Danny Hoekzema (RIGHT), a gay youth who campaigned for the idea on his personal Web site. "My goal with this boat is to get more activities for gay and lesbian teens all over the county," he told Gay City News in an extensive interview conducted by e-mail. Danny said he has received an avalanche of hundreds of e-mails supporting him. "Dozens of teens my age send me mails saying they agree with me that there are not enough activities specifically for our age group, " he said, adding: "Some 30 of them have already enlisted to join me on the teen boat. Others write that they support my initiative, but they still don't dare to come out. They hope things will change because of the attention and the growing understanding for gay teens now. That will help them to come out. A mother of a gay teen of 12 wrote me her son has come out because of my initiative. Both will participate on the boat in August." (To read excerpts from these e-mails to Danny, click here.) Danny told this reporter he has the complete support of his parents for what he is doing. "I came out 21 months ago when I was 12 years old. I'm just 14 now. I told my parents by letter that I put on their pillow in the bedroom. The next morning they woke me at 8 o'clock. Then we had a really good talk about it. My mother works as a sales manager for a newspaper and my dad is a bookkeeper. They responded really well when I told them about my initiative for the teen boat at the Canal Parade. They support me and will be joining me on the boat. Isn't that great?" Danny noted that, "All sorts of people who want to show their support send me mails. Like older gay men who remember the times when they were my age. They also knew they were gay at my age, but they were lonely and knew nobody like themselves. And straight people are mailing me as well. They think it's really a cool idea and want to encourage me to go forward with it. The need for activities for gay and lesbian teens is real. People are talking about it now - finally. I'm sure that makes a difference." But the victory for Danny and his boat came only after a media feeding frenzy over allegations of pedophilia from a controversial figure in the Amsterdam gay community, charges that brought a series of death threats to an internationally known gay academic. The background to the firestorm over pedophilia is an ongoing fight for control of the Canal Pride event. From 1996 to 2005, Canal Pride and the other Pride celebrations were organized by Amsterdam's Gay Business Association (BGA), headed by Siep de Haan. But there was growing dissatisfaction with de Haan's leadership, and allegations of financial malfeasance. (LEFT, CANAL PRIDE 2006) "This year, our Gay Pride will cost some 200,000 Euros [roughly $260,000], whereas de Haan, who had a lot fewer events, claimed his budget was three times higher - where did the extra money go?" van Dalen told me, adding, "A lot of bar owners paid him a lot of money, because he told them - If you want to have a street party, you have to pay me. We believe he put the money in his pocket." De Haan did not reply to an e-mail from this reporter requesting his response to the charges. These allegations caused City Hall to withdraw its permit for the Pride events from de Haan's group last year and give it to a new sponsoring organization, Pro Gay, in which COC is a participant. Against this background, de Haan - on learning of the plans for the under-age youngsters' boat - several weeks ago began a campaign to undermine Pro Gay's and COC's sponsorship of the Pride events with charges of pedophilia, according to articles in the Dutch press and accounts given this reporter by local gay activists. And he chose to do so by singling out Gert Hekma (LEFT), an internationally known gay academic who is a lecturer in Gay and Lesbian Studies at the University of Amsterdam. Since de Haan began his campaign, Hekma has become the target of multiple death threats. Hekma, 55, the author, editor, or co-editor of 16 scholarly books on gay studies - a number of them available in English - has written extensively on pedophilia in articles for scholarly journals. The prize-winning British historian and Auden biographer Richard Davenport-Hines - reviewing "Gay Life and Culture: A World History," the monumental essay collection published last year and edited by Professor Robert Aldrich of the University of Sydney, to which Hekma was a contributor - wrote: "Gert Hekma bravely utters some unsayable truths - 'in general young people suffer no negative consequences from intergenerational sex unless it happens inside the family or unless violence is used against them' - and intelligently contextualizes the prevalent Western hysteria about the sexual abuse of children." In explaining the origins of the controversy, Hekma me by telephone, "City Hall wanted to get rid of de Haan and broaden the Pride from drinking and dancing to include cultural, sporting, and academic events." Hekma's name was one of those on the original application for the permit for Pride, and so his name appeared in early press accounts of the planned boat for under-age youth, even though he was not involved with it. De Haan then sent a number of journalists quotes from a 2004 interview Hekma had given to Martijn, a pedophile magazine. "In that interview," Hekma told me, "which was occasioned by the publication of my book 'Homosexuality in the Netherlands from 1730 to Modern Times,' I was untactical, as people would later reproach me, in my expressions. I said that the heteronormative culture opposes sex for the young with so much force, while at the same time we force the young to do other things that are good for them, like going to school, learning how to eat or to swim, etc. And, as I was writing an essay on [the Marquis de] Sade at the time, I invoked Sade and said that it might be a good idea to forcibly bring children to sex. I was being ironic, and perhaps a bit outrageous. What I meant, and should have said more clearly, was that instead of using force to prevent the sexual development of youth, it would be much better to do the opposite and spur them to become self-conscious sexual citizens." Then, Hekma said, the more sensational and conservative elements of the Dutch press, and even some radio and TV stations, "began quoting me as saying 'we should force children to have sex' with no context, and referring to me as a 'defender of pedophiles.' When I was interviewed, I explained that it is normal for an academic to touch on all topics, in particular difficult themes like pedophilia - this I have done throughout my work." In fact, Hekma's academic views are not dissimilar from those of Judith Levine's controversial book "Harmful to Minors: the Perils of Protecting Children from Sex" (University of Minnesota Press), which carried a forward from former Surgeon General Jocelyn Elders, and in which the author wrote: "The threat of pedophilia and molestation is exaggerated by adults, who want to deny young people the opportunity for positive sexual experiences." "America's drive to protect kids from sex is protecting them from nothing ...Instead, often it is harming them," she also wrote. As well, hitting on the theme that Davenport-Hines attributed to Hekma, Levine wrote, "The research shows us that in some minority of cases, young, even quite young, people can have a positive [sexual] experience with an adult." In discussing de Haan's public efforts to sabotage the Pride celebration, Hekma told this reporter, "The main line in the commotion here was the idea that this boat had something to do with pedophiles, and I was supposedly the main transfer point from the boat to the pedophiles." But, Hekma said, "I had nothing to do with the youngsters' boat, and the youngsters' boat had nothing to do with pedophilia. What pedophile would come to a boat that was surrounded by media and parents? And these youngsters would have absolutely no reason to be interested in such a man at that moment." COC's van Dalen told me, "Nobody in the community wants to work anymore with Siep de Haan, who is always trying to create trouble and attract attention to himself. Siep de Haan was behind the [pedophuilia controversy], he's doing everything he can to fight us, including organizing a media riot involving Hekma. Plus, the teen boat isn't about having sex, it's about identity!" Hekma and his university both began receiving a lot of hate mail and death threats. "I opened my computer and there was the first death threat, reading, 'I am going to push your shit through your throat before kicking you to death,'" the academic recounted. "There were six more like that, all signed." Hekma conferred with his dean about the death threats, and the university informed the police - "who are taking them seriously," Hekma said, invoking the recent political assassinations of openly-gay right-wing politician Pim Fortuyn (RIGHT) and anti-immigrant filmmaker Theo Van Gogh. Hekma's right to speak and write freely was supported by his university, but he was publicly disowned by COC and Pro Gay, both of which issued statements criticizing his views. "Hekma is for lowering the age of consent, but that's not on our agenda," van Dalen told this reporter. "And we resent the things he has said." COC's statement criticizing Hekma argued: "Gay liberation focused on the discriminatory aspect of the age of consent, not on the principle of an age of consent as such. As soon as the age of consent for both straight and gay/lesbian sex was equalized [in 1972 in the Netherlands], the age of consent stopped being a matter of concern for the Dutch LGBT movement." "I am a victim of the fight between de Haan, and COC and Pro Gay," Hekma responded. "They dropped me because they were afraid of being called defenders of pedophiles. I've been hurt by my being presented as a pedoprofessor and a pedophile, but I've resisted denying I'm a pedophile on principle so as not to contribute to anti-pedo hysteria. The difference betweeen me and van Dalen is that I'm an academic, open for speculation and some irony, and he as a politician has to think tactically and strategically." Van Dalen said that "there's no place for irony when talking about force." The age of consent in the Netherlands was raised to 16 in 2002. Until then, between the ages of 12 and 16, there was no such thing as the concept of statutory rape on the law books for that age group. As a COC brochure put it at that time, "between 12 and 16 sexual contacts are punishable only when a complaint is lodged.... [O]nly the child, his or her parents, or the Council for the Protection of Children may bring in charges." (RIGHT, COC LOGO) COC's positions pre-2002 versus today suggest a shift in the group's posture. As its pamphlet put it then in defending the existing law, "nobody is allowed to interfere" with adult-child sexual contacts "as long as the situation is mutually agreeable, but should problems arise, then the sexual relation is certainly punishable." Now, the organization's position reads: "COC maintains the need for an age of consent, 16 in the Netherlands. A sexual relation between an adult and a minor always warrants suspicion and the need for an investigation. That such a sexual relationship is punishable by law is justified, because it [is] a necessary warning for pedophiles not to seek such contacts with minors and therefore provides some protection for minors. But COC is in favor and supported the Dutch regulation that minors between the age of 12 and 16 are always heard by the public prosecution before a decision to prosecute the adult is taken." During the media explosion, van Dalen said, the debate shifted from sexual behavior to any discussion at all of under-age homosexual youth. "The tone was, 'How can a 14-year old know if they're gay or not - they're too young,'" he told me. When this reporter asked the young inventor of the idea of the youngsters' boat how he'd answer such criticism, Danny replied: "Straight teens are never questioned about their sexuality. It's the same for gay and lesbian teens. Just read their e-mails to me and the mails of older gay men who remember their situation when they were our age. Coming out young, that's the only thing new." Danny went on to say, "There are simply not enough activities and no specific places for youngsters of my age. Those activities have to be organized. Not by individuals, but by professional organizations. That's why I'm so pleased that COC Netherlands is supporting me. There are plenty of professional organizations working with straight teens. Nobody ever questions the need for that or the intentions of the people and organizations that provide those activities for them. It's just plain homophobia to question their intentions. Why should it be any different for gay and lesbian teens? That's how I see it." Does Danny see himself as a gay activist in future? "This is just the start. I really want to make an impact for gay emancipation," he told me. "I would like to work for COC Netherlands. Make sure that people don't cast gays and lesbians out. Especially teens like me, because right now we are really left behind. But many more people still live in isolation feeling lonely. There's still a lot to be done and I want to help and do my bit to change that." For more information, see Danny Hoekzema's Web site, http://www.dannysparade.nl/ , COC's Web site, http://www.coc.nl/dopage.pl?thema=any&pagina=home ;and Amsterdam Gay Pride '07 Web site, http://www.amsterdamgaypride.nl/ . Note: Though Danny speaks some English, his answers and their translation were prepared with the assistance of COC. GOOD NEWS FOR MANI: Readers of this blog will recall that, last October, I made an urgent appeal for contributions to help Mani, an underground Iranian gay activist who had escaped Iran just one step ahead of the police who wanted to arrest and imprison him. I had previously interviewed Mani about his work inside Iran (see "From Inside Iran, An Underground Gay Activist Speaks," July 5, 2006). Mani had to spend so much money for a "passer" to get him across the border to Turkey that he wound up penniless and sleeping in an Istanbul bus station. Many of you responded with generosity and sent contributions to help Mani. Well, now there's good news. I have just heard from Arsham Parsi, the young Secretary-General of the Iranian Queer Organization (the new name of the Persian Gay and Lesbian Organization) that "Mani has been officially recognized as a refugee by UNHCR (the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights) a few days ago. He interviewed again at the UNHCR for his 3rd country visa and he is waiting for last step of UNHCR's process." This means that Mani will be able to leave Turkey for a gay-friendly country soon. To all those who opened their checkbooks for Mani in his hour of need, a big Thank You!
22 February 2007 9a bySarah Johnson Dutch teenager Danny Hoekzema is 14. He's known he's gay since he was 12. "I had a date with a guy and we kissed and it felt good. It was very clear.The day after the date with the guy I wrote a letter to my parents and put it on their pillow. We had a long chat and it was fine. They reacted as if it was normal.'' Danny is now campaigning to raise awareness that there are many other teenagers like him, but that for those under 16, there is very little support or awareness. And, compared to heterosexual teenagers, very little opportunities to meet each other: ''We can't go to any websites, we can't go anywhere to meet people and I want this to change." Danny says he wants to be more understood. As such he recently fought - and finally won - a tough battle to have a boat for under-16 year-old homosexuals in this year's Gay Pride festival in Amsterdam. ''We're going to decorate a boat at the Gay Parade and we're going to dress normally and let people see that we're normal I've had over 350 reactions, people that feel isolated, people that want to come on the boat and people that just want to support me." But the idea for the boat also sparked much debate in the Dutch media, and had its vocal critics. Some say it would be inappropriate for youngsters to take part in such a sexually orientated festival. Others say that children of Danny's age cannot yet know if they really are gay. There were even questions in parliament about the boat. It seems the issue of homosexuality among youngsters is still very much off limits. But need it be?
July 27, 2007 10 by Nicolien den Boer* The homosexual interest group COC is also sounding the alarm. It says that "old-fashioned queer-bashing" is back. The Amsterdam police have also observed an increase in the number of reports of violence against homosexuals. In the first half of this year a special phone line received 17 reported cases, a higher figure than for the whole of 2006. It is possible that the number of reports has also increased as awareness of the phone line has grown, but Elly Lust of the Amsterdam police thinks there is more to it than this alone: "For a long time Amsterdam has been the 'gay capital of the world', but now that seems to be changing. And of course, it's something we don't want to happen."And although Officer Lust emphasises that although people with a purely Dutch background also harass homosexuals, most of those responsible are Moroccan. "As society has become more diverse, with different religions and cultures, the levels of tolerance towards homosexuality have also become more diverse."Anti-Islamic reaction But Rauf Moussad then wonders why the incidence of violence against homosexuals should have increased particularly in the last few years, when Dutch society has been "diverse" for much longer. He believes it is a reaction to the anti-Islamic sentiments that have permeated the parties of the right since the rise of Ayaan Hirsi Ali. And many young Moroccans feel isolated and frustrated, says Mr Moussad. "They speak Dutch and they're getting qualifications, but they aren't part of Dutch society. Yes, with all due respect, they get jobs at supermarket checkouts. But the media is white and all the other prestigious professions are dominated by people with an ethnic Dutch background." And Mr Moussad believes this is why they are looking to religion and attending mosques where hatred towards homosexuality is sometimes preached. The young people also develop feelings of hatred towards the society which is excluding them, and hence towards all its typical values, such as tolerance of homosexuality. The increase in attacks on Arab homosexuals is easily explained, says Mr Moussad. They represent these Western values. Furthermore, they are defenceless. They keep their sexual orientation hidden from their families, so they are unlikely to report an assault to the police. Pink in blue * RNW Internet translation (mb)
July 27, 2007 11 Amsterdam (Reuters Life!) - Amsterdam's gay boat parade, which each year attracts hundreds of thousands of spectators, will be joined by a boat of heterosexual people this year in a protest against rising intolerance in the Netherlands. The organiser of the "hetero boat", Coos Peterse, said on Friday it's inclusion was a reaction to a growing number of attacks against homosexuals in the Netherlands. Dutch media reported this month that a kissing lesbian couple was attacked in Nijmegen and had to be treated in hospital. In Amsterdam, two gay men were abused and one was seriously injured. "What always bothered me is that the public reaction wasn't that strong. I would expect a much stronger outcry," Peterse, 25, said. "Since I wasn't hearing it, I thought maybe it was a good idea to make a statement, to celebrate with them that you're free in Holland to live to your own preference." The "hetero boat", an old navy tender, will hold about 30 people, Peterse said. Amsterdam's gay pride is celebrated on Aug. 3 to Aug. 5. Hundreds of thousands of people line the city's canals every year to see the boat parade, whose participants either wear flamboyant outfits or not much at all. The celebration then continues at a number of street parties across the city.
August 04, 2007 12 Amsterdam, Netherlands(AP) - Gays, lesbians, bisexuals and a large contingent of heterosexuals put on their brightest plumage Saturday, and a rainbow fleet sailed through Amsterdam's historic canals, as the city celebrated its annual Gay Pride festival. The flotilla and party afterward is one of the biggest of the year in Amsterdam, and one in which the city upholds its reputation as one of Europe's gayest capitals. DJs pump music from ships packed with dancing partygoers, vying for who can put on the best show or provide the most outrageous theme. Visitors saw dozens of well-muscled men wearing leather thong underwear, cowboy hats, disco glitter, and little else. One of the boats featured a bevy of lesbian Elvis impersonators with pink coiffures. Another boat was led by a "Queen" transvestite in fantastic royal regalia; in another, lesbians in bikinis with fairy wings danced wildly; and in yet another, a "mixed" group of party people dressed all in white appeared the model of affected sophistication. For the first time, a designated "hetero-boat" was among the more than 70 vessels officially participating. Hundreds more cruised the canals just for fun. News reports estimated a record-breaking 375,000 to 500,000 people lined the canals to watch the boats pass, basking in the first warm weekend since summer started. "It's so much fun, it's better than in Cologne, Paris or anywhere else," said Janz Froster, who traveled from Germany to attend. "I think it's a great opportunity to promote tolerance and anti-discrimination." The party took place in the shadow of a spate of gay-bashing attacks this year, which has surprised a city renowned for its tolerance. "Social acceptance of homosexuality is not complete," said Tijn Elferink, spokesman for the country's national gay organization, COC. Gay people still can be beaten up, just like that, for holding hands or being in the wrong place at the wrong time," he said. Amsterdam police spokesman Gerard Vrooland said there had been 16 gay-bashing attacks so far this year, compared with 10 in all of last year. Vrooland attributed the increase to police efforts to encourage victims to come forward. Some Dutch blame Muslim immigrants for intolerance. "It's a change, and it comes from the non-natives," said Marianne Kalter, who said she comes from the eastern city of Zwolle to watch the parade every year. "It's getting worse. I hope it will get better, and I think it will in maybe 20 years — but not in 10." Vrooland said the city has set up a 24-hour hot line for victims of gay-related hate crimes, and a network of 30 gay agents within the city's police force helps give such complaints "the highest priority." "Any violent crime is prioritized, but we believe attacks based on race, religion, or sexual orientation are worse," Vrooland said. Elferink of the COC disputed that the rise in attacks was due to better reporting. "People in the Netherlands think this is not a problem here anymore," he said. "There's a danger of complacency." Elferink said the COC is in talks with the country's Justice Ministry over a new law similar to those banning convicted hooligans from soccer stadiums. If passed, the law would allow judges to bar gay bashers from approaching areas surrounding gay bars and pickup spots. In another first, a boat for homosexual teenagers also sailed. Mayor Job Cohen initially refused a permit, arguing that underage participants were inappropriate. In the end a compromise was struck and parents accompanied their gay teens. City officials sailed on a new boat, the "Schelto Patijn," named for the city's previous mayor, who died last month. Patijn famously described Amsterdam as the "Gay Way to Europe."
August 04, 2007 13 Dutch embassy officials in 36 countries where the Netherlands has close aid ties have been asked to draw up an inventory of gay rights legislation. The survey has been commissioned by by aid minister Bert Koenders, the Volkskrant reports on Thursday. The paper says that in 18 countries where the Netherlands is active, homosexuality is illegal. Gay men face punishments ranging from fines and public beatings to, in three cases, a potential death sentence. Dutch embassies in countries where homosexuality is illegal are being told to urge the authorities to scrap anti-gay legislation, the paper says. The results of the survey will be published in a few months but will not be used as an excuse to cut development aid, a ministry spokesman told the paper.
06 August 2007 14 by Maurice Laparlière* Several hours before the 70 boats taking part in this year's gay Canal Parade set off, television crews began to fight for the best spots. Fourteen-year-old Danny Hoekzema, a teenager with a dental brace and acne, was one of the stars of this year's event. More than that, Danny was about to realise his dream, for he's been lobbying for some three years for a boat for gay young people - under the age of 16 - to take part in this annual even. His friend Max has a simple explanation: "The message is: there are a lot of young gays in the world and they are getting younger." Bored too Van Dalen says that Dutch society is looking for a way to get all minorities to live together. Unfortunately, small groups of youths from minority groups attempt to prove their masculinity by picking on gays. Which is why this year's Gay Parade had more boats with a political message. There was a boat with judges and mayors, Amnesty International, politicians, the municipality of Amsterdam, and even a boat full of pro-gay heterosexuals. Van Dalen says they all had the same message: "Keep your hands off our gays". * RNW translation (fs)
16 August 2007 15 By Marcel Decraene and Floris Dogterom Moroccans Baseball bat Frank van Dalen, chairman of the Dutch national gay organisation COC feels it's a pity that the courses are necessary. "But they are, because there is increased violence against gay men. I think these courses can help build a renewed self-confidence. Many gay men in the scene are looking for ways to feel safer on the streets. One of the ways is to follow these self-defence courses."
18th September 2007 16 by Tony Grew Gay rights group COC welcomed the government's commitment, and said that ignorance was the cause of anti-gay feeling. However, they said the budgets for individual departments remain vague and that ministers must bring forward concrete measures. Over half of Dutch gays feel less safe than they did a year ago, a survey carried out in August by current affairs programme EenVandaag revealed. Sixty-four per cent of anti-gay incidents were verbal but 12 per cent resulted in physical abuse. Amsterdam's image in the Netherlands as the 'gay capital of the world' is also under threat as the survey revealed gays there were more fearful than in other parts of country. A substantial increase in attacks in the capital has been reported over the last few years. Of the 23,000 people questioned, including 1,980 gays and lesbians, 61 per cent still maintained the Netherlands is a gay-friendly country. The fact that 72 per cent of respondents claimed to be in favour of gay marriages seemed to bear this up.
November 7, 2007 17 Amsterdam (Reuters) - The Netherlands, a major donor of international aid, will lobby developing countries to legalise homosexuality and fight discrimination, the government said on Wednesday. A government survey showed homosexuality is illegal in 18 out of the 36 countries the Netherlands gives regular aid to, Development Minister Bert Koenders said in a statement, with punishment ranging from prison sentences to the death penalty. "The Netherlands will promote as much equal treatment of homosexuals as possible. We will not avoid awkward discussions about this," he said in a letter to parliament. Koenders has asked Dutch ambassadors in developing countries to push for gay rights unless local human rights organisations object on grounds it would be counter-productive. Koenders said he is aware that the subject is sensitive in many places. The Netherlands, which gives 4 billion euros ($5.85 billion) in aid each year to countries mostly in Africa, Asia and Latin America, became the first country in the world to allow same-sex couples to marry and adopt children in 2001.
8th November 2007 18 by Tony Grew The minister would like the Dutch embassies to make a strong case against penalties and punishment in the countries in which homosexuality is still a crime and to make it very clear that this form of discrimination is unacceptable. COC Netherlands points out that country reports on local human rights conditions prepared by embassies have not always been complete or correct on the position of homosexuals in those countries. In the case of asylum seekers from Iran, based on the inaccurate country report, these people were about to be sent back to Iran, where their lives would be in serious danger. COC is proposing four follow-up steps to fight homophobia in development countries on a long-term basis. One of these is the monitoring of punishment processes involving homosexuals. Another is putting homosexuality on the political and diplomatic agenda. Furthermore it is important that the Dutch embassies, fulfilling a pioneering role, should form coalitions with other embassies on the subject and use their joint influence. And finally, the voices of local LGBT people should be heard and local LGBT-movements supported.
December 6,2007 19 The Hague (AFP) - The Dutch centre-left government has made the fight against homophobia a priority at home and abroad in a move applauded by gay rights activists here. "Never before has a government done so much for the emancipation of gays," said Frank van Dalen, president of the Dutch national gay rights COC, the world's oldest such organisation set up in 1946. "Homosexuality has never before played a role of importance in foreign development cooperation," he told AFP. To form his fourth coalition government, in power since February, Christian Democrat Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende teamed up with Labour. This new centre-left team is focussing more on social issues than its leftwing predecessors. In a letter last month to parliament about Dutch foreign aid strategy, Development Cooperation Minister Bert Koenders stated emphatically that "the Netherlands will promote equal rights for gays as much as possible." In 18 of the 36 countries, mostly in Africa and Asia, that the Netherlands supports with development aid, homosexuality is an offence, with penalties ranging from a fine to a prison sentence. The Dutch will plead in bilateral contacts for the legalisation of homosexual contacts, said Koenders, adding: "We will not shy away from difficult discussions." Relative to its population size, the Netherlands is one of the biggest international donors, giving 0.8 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) or 4.2 billion euros (6.1 billion dollars) in 2006. A few days after Koenders' announcement, fellow cabinet member Ronald Plasterk, minister of education, culture and science who also has emancipation issues in his portfolio, officially presented his plans to set aside 2.5 million euros between 2008-2011 to promote equal treatment for homosexuals. Noting that while gays and lesbians have the same rights as heterosexuals in the Netherlands, "socially the acceptance is not automatic among certain ethnic minorities or people who follow a more orthodox religious lifestyle." The money is intended for campaigns targetting young people, mostly Muslims in schools, sport clubs or neighbourhood associations. "Here again the government is progressing: we have our own minister whereas in previous governments we only had a secretary of state charged with gay rights," said Van Dalen. "Also for the first time the coalition agreement had a chapter about emancipation of gays." But Van Dalen said just stating this is not enough. "The government has taken a moral position without offering a way to implement its stand. Moral leadership is not enough to change the world," he said. There is still much work to be done to promote gay rights, according to the activist. "The Netherlands is not some kind of gay paradise," he said. "According to surveys 48 percent of the population is shocked by two men kissing and 75 percent of people of immigrant origin believe that a teacher should hide his gay orientation," Van Dalen said. In a letter sent to parliament last week ahead of a parliamentary debate about the 2008 education budget, the COC asked that six million euros be earmarked to fight homophobia in schools.
December 21, 2007 20 So scared of being forcibly removed to Iran, Mehdi managed to flee the UK and surfaced in the Netherlands before crossing the border into Germany. The authorities eventually caught up with him and he returned again to the Netherlands. Mehdi had his “day in court” after the Dutch authorities wanted to return him to the UK – there was no suggestion of him being returned to Iran as the Government in the Netherlands has a moratorium on returning gays to Iran. “My main worry is that if they send me to the UK, the Home office would try to send me to Iran without any further review in my case,” he said today in an email. The judge in the Netherlands is now considering the case. She is expected to hand down her decision early in the New Year on whether Mehdi can stay in the country or has to be returned to the UK. During the court hearing, Mehdi’s lawyer said that the Netherlands had an obligation – and the legal responsibility – to let the teenager stay in the country, due to the UK’s “historical attitude” towards Iranian gay men and women seeking asylum. His lawyer argued that Mehdi should be allowed to seek asylum in the Netherlands. Last night, Mehdi gave an emotional “thank you” to his many supporters. “I would like to thank the many people who have followed my case and have given me huge support over the past 15 months,” he said. “I am sure I would have been dead by now if I you guys weren’t supporting me,” he added. His supporters are led by his uncle, who lives in the UK. Mehdi also said that he had received fantastic world-wide support, including from the Toronto-based Iranian Queer Organisation, gay support groups in the Netherlands, MPs and other individuals in the UK ¦ Don’t Leave Iranian Gays Abandoned. – read Mehdi’s story, including how his boyfriend in Iran was executed, HERE.
27th February 2008 21 by Tony Grew Frank Van Dalen of Dutch gay rights group COC said: "This will be a historically significant royal presence. This is what we have been hoping for a very, very long time. It is the first time a member of the Royal Family has attended a meeting with such significance for gays." Holland has a reputation as one of the most tolerant countries in the world. In 2001 it was the first country in the world to allow same-sex marriages. Amsterdam's image as the 'gay capital of the world' also under threat, however. A substantial increase in homophobic attacks in the city has been reported over the last few years, leading two of the government coalition parties - Labour and the Christian Democrats - to call for tougher punishments for anti-gay violence. In August 2007 half of Dutch gays said they feel less safe than they did a year ago in a survey carried out by current affairs programme EenVandaag. Sixty-four per cent of anti-gay incidents were verbal but 12 per cent resulted in physical abuse. Of the 23,000 people questioned, including 1,980 gays and lesbians, 61 per cent still maintained the Netherlands is a gay-friendly country
4th March 2008 22 by PinkNews.co.uk staff writer "This year marks the sixtieth anniversary of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights," he said. "This unique document sets down the 'values of the world': justice, equality, solidarity, humanity and liberty. Human rights reflect these values; they are what bind us together in this world. Human rights are not a Western invention. In 85 countries, homosexuality is still punishable by law and people can be prosecuted because of their sexual orientation. In five countries in the world, Afghanistan, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Yemen, consensual sexual acts by people of the same sex are even capital crimes. There is no excuse for the humiliation and exclusion of homosexual people, let alone for imposing the death penalty on them. Decriminalising homosexuality and countering discrimination based on sexual orientation are priorities within Dutch human rights policy. The Dutch government subscribes to the Yogyakarta Principles on the application of international human rights law in relation to sexual orientation and gender identity. I call upon other states to embrace these principles as well. Tradition, culture or religion must never be used to justify the violation of human rights." The Yogyakarta Principles, named after the Indonesian city whey they were adopted, were launched in March 2007 by 29 international human rights experts at a UN Human Rights Council session. They address issues such as rape and gender-based violence, extrajudicial executions, torture and medical abuses, repressions of free speech and discrimination in the public services. Last year 54 member states of the UN Human Rights Council asked the council to act against violations of the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. The UN Human Rights Council was established in 2006, and is holding its seventh session in Geneva from 3rd to 28th March.
May 02, 2008 23 by Bruce Crumley/Paris "France does not recognize marriage between people of the same sex as the Netherlands does, and therefore considers Mr. Minvielle an unwed man living with another man," explains Minvielle's French lawyer, Caroline Mecary. Because of that, she says, France has applied the bilateral accord the way it would to any single French national adopting Dutch nationality: by revoking French citizenship. "It marks French exportation of marriage laws discriminatory to same-sex couples to its citizens abroad," Mecary continues. "In this case, that means applying French laws to a citizen with the result of stripping him of that very citizenship. That has proven to be a staggering loss to Mr. Minvielle." Minvielle was not available to respond to TIME's requests to discuss his case, but he has told French media he feels humiliated and repudiated by his native country. In addition to feeling cast off by his motherland, he says, Minvielle has also said being shorn of the liberties and legal rights attendant to French citizenship has left him feeling like he's been treated as a criminal. Ironically, it was his effort to exercise his rights and duties as a citizen that led to Minvielle's troubles. Following his visit to the French embassy in Amsterdam in late 2006 to register for France's then approaching presidential elections, consular officials forwarded Minvielle's dossier to justice authorities for examination. When the review ruled that he had surrendered his French citizenship according to terms of the bilateral accord — and in light of France's refusal to recognize gay marriage — Minvielle was ordered to surrender his passport and French papers last December. Despite the summons, Minvielle has held on to his French documents, and is fighting to have his citizenship restored. There may be hope of that happening. Mecary says she has been told by French and European authorities that France has applied to revise the terms of its bilateral accords with the Netherlands to take into account social and legal changes that have taken place in both countries since its last update in 1996. Though Mecary says she's still awaiting official confirmation of that move, she notes it would only be the first hurdle. "When it comes to decisions of citizenship, especially revocations based on legal grounds, the state is entirely free to do as it chooses," she warns. Still, Mecary hopes France will do right by native son Minvielle, if for no other reason than to avoid more bad publicity over gay rights. Last January, Mecary notes, the European Court of Justice overturned French court rulings barring a single lesbian from adopting a child, judging French regulations blocking the adoption to be discriminatory. Meanwhile, France's history of social enlightenment and pride as the birthplace of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights has been overshadowed as nations like Spain, Belgium, and the Netherlands have passed progressive laws on gay rights while the French have lagged behind. Given that, critics argue the real solution to resolving Minvielle's case isn't tinkering with bilateral treaties, but modernizing marriage laws in France
May 09, 2008 24 by Shannon Firth 30-Second Summary However, many social conservatives like Dr. James Dobson disagree, claiming: “[T]he majority of more than 30 years of social-science evidence indicates that children do best on every measure of well-being when raised by their married mother and father.” An ACLU press release rejects old rhetoric like Dobson’s, stating, “Children without homes do not have the option of choosing between a married mother and father or some other type of parent(s).” Opposition to gay adoption often overlaps with concerns over homosexuality being “contagious.” Blogger Greta Cristina believes the gay community is fixated on persuading straight people that children they raise will not necessarily turn out to be gay.
June 6, 2008 25 by Tony Grew "Mike got dragged down by his arm," she said. "They pinched him, he defended himself and then the guys of immigrant background started to hit him." Police arrived on the scene but it is unclear whether the ten homophobic Muslim youths were arrested or charged. MPs have raised the incident in Parliament. "This shows how strong the Islamic gay bashers feel they are," said Party of Freedom MP Martin Bosma. "Even at daylight, on Queen’s Day, in the heart of Amsterdam, they strike. Only the hardest measures could turn this sick trend. The Dutch nationality of the gay bashers of Rembrandt Square should immediately be taken from them and they should be expelled from the country today. The Netherlands can show no mercy for these people who damage our society in this way. Either they will win, or we will win." In December the mayor of Amsterdam commissioned academics to study a spate of attacks on gay people in the city. A substantial increase in homophobic attacks in the capital has been reported over the last few years. More than half of Dutch gays feel less safe than they did a year ago, a survey carried out in August by current affairs programme EenVandaag revealed. Sixty-four per cent of anti-gay incidents were verbal but 12 per cent resulted in physical abuse. Amsterdam's image in the Netherlands as the 'gay capital of the world' is also under threat as the survey revealed gays there were more fearful than in other parts of country. Of the 23,000 people questioned, including 1,980 gays and lesbians, 61 per cent still maintained the Netherlands is a gay-friendly country. The government of Holland has committed itself to the active promotion of acceptance of LGBT people in the light of several high-profile homophobic attacks in the country. In a memorandum on the 2008 Budget, the coalition government's Cabinet said that respect for difference is a basic condition of Dutch society. They committed millions of euros to fight homophobia and promote acceptance. The University of Amsterdam has been commissioned by the city's mayor to carry out the research into homophobic attacks.
08 June 2008 26 A yearly benefit gala in the Dutch capital Amsterdam has raised a record 800,000 euros for HIV/Aids research in Africa and Asia. The AmsterdamDinner was attended by more than 1,100 guests and saw a host of musicians perform for free. The funds will be used to follow the development of some 4,000 HIV/Aids patients in 25 African and Asian countries over the next five years. In many developing countries HIV/Aids drugs are not available and their cost can be prohibitive. For more information go to: |